Wednesday, December 30, 2020

2020 Recap

As we continue to see COVID-19 cases soar and the number of hospitalizations continue to rise, I continue to feel anxious, sad, mad, and at the same time thankful. I am anxious about all the potential for sickness and death. I am sad to see so many people suffer from the direct effects of the disease to the indirect effects the disease has had on people's livelihoods and their ability to provide for themselves and their families. I am angry that our country has not done a better job at containing the spread of the virus. And I am disgusted with the injustice people of color continue to endure at the hands of the white authority. I don't really feel like i have done much to try to counter this injustice but I have to mention it because I feel strongly about it and mentioning it is the absolute least I can do. 


T
he United States put a man on the moon over 5 decades ago. We have robots that can dance and AI assistants that can make dinner reservations for us. We can replace parts of the human body with artificial parts and have mastered a myriad of other medical technological innovations. And the list of amazing accomplishments goes on an on. However, when it comes to containing COVID-19, we have not done such a great job. Sure, it is not easy. I know that. But it seems like as a society full of super rich and super smart people, we could have done better. That is just how I feel about it.

And now onto the last emotion. Gratitude. I am thankful for so many things. I will list some of them here:

  1. I am able to work from home 100 percent of the time. In fact, my productivity has gone up since moving to a WFH schedule.
  2. My wife and I have both been very busy at work which helps keep our minds focused on positive things. 
  3. I lost 10 pounds since the first lockdown in March.
  4. I have gotten leaner as I have added weight lifting into my training regiment. 
  5. I have added more Yoga, Pilates, and other types of training to supplement my running and biking (no swimming right now).
  6. I get more sleep since I don't have to commute to and from work.
  7. I walk more which seems to have many benefits. 
  8. I have saved money on eating out as I eat at home the majority of the time. 
  9. I drink more water than I ever have in my life I think. 
  10. I took the first college class I have taken since the early 90s and found it challenging but also really fun. I am looking forward to next semester for the next class.
  11. I completed all 34 Ironman Virtual Racing Club events and got recognized as an IMVR legend. HA! 
  12. I am on my way to completing a 21 day IMVR Club challenge where the grand prize for doing all the events is a free entry into a 2021 IM event. Fingers crossed. 
  13. My wife and I have started playing cards and other games while listening to our favorite tunes as an alternative to simply watching TV. This seems like a healthy way to spend more quality time together although we are still enjoying many quality shows (currently watching The Queens Gambit). 
  14. My family has stayed healthy during this trying time.
  15. At work, I have had time for leadership courses and other technical training which is helping me become a better manager and a better technician. 


As I close out the year, I am hopeful that there will be more vaccines available leading to the eradication of this virus so we can all go back to doing some of the things we love doing. In 2021, I am hoping to toe the line at least some of the races that were deferred from 2020. I am hoping to learn new things and add even more variety into my training with the hopes of becoming fitter and more well rounded physically and mentally. 

Thankfully my 2020 experience has been mostly positive in comparison to so many people in the world who are suffering and I feel quite privileged to be in this position. Who knows what 2021 will bring but I hope we start to move in the right direction. 

I may write another recap with some of my 2020 Strava Stats just for fun but until then, Happy New Year everyone. Peace and love to you all. 



Thursday, May 7, 2020

COVID-19

At the beginning of March I finally finished up my November, 2019 RVA Marathon race report and was looking forward to ramping up my race season.  Everyone knows what happened then. A global pandemic was spreading fast across the globe and in order to mitigate the spread of disease, countries around the world instituted new social distancing and stay-at-home orders. The upshot of these new rules meant all the races I was planning on doing were canceled. 


One by one, events were canceled and athletes around the world voiced their varied opinions about how the race directors were successfully or unsuccessfully handling this monkey wrench. As someone who has been a race director for a small 5K, I could feel the organizers pain and understand where they were coming from. We were all just going to have to suck it up and be thankful that we were not in a worse situation. For instance, dead or worse, gravely ill. 

Personally, I got over it pretty quickly. I use races as a fun motivator and as a test of my fitness. I like to finish as high as I can in my age group so I am competitive but I do not stress about it too much. I am in this for the long haul. Racing helps me stay fit but overall health is my goal. If I have to modify how I get there due to circumstances beyond my control, I am intrinsically motivated enough to keep moving. 

Here is the list of events that I was planning to do. 

Date Race Location
Saturday, April 4th   Smithfield Sprint Triathlon   Smithfield VA
Saturday, May 9th   Kinetic Half Triathlon   Lake Anna, VA
Sunday, May 10th   Kinetic Sprint Triathlon   Lake Anna, VA
Saturday, May 16th   IM 70.3 VA Blue Ridge Training Camp  not a race   Roanoke VA
Sunday, June 7th   IM 70.3 VA Blue Ridge Triathlon   Roanoke, VA
Sunday, June 28th   Rev3 Williamsburg Olympic Triathlon   Williamsburg, VA

After resigning myself to the fact that I would not be racing, I started to alter my training schedule a little bit. Ever since the November, 2019 RVA Marathon, I had decided that I wanted to focus more energy on strength training and core work. In fact, I had started going to Pilates and Barre classes before the Ys and gyms all closed. As it turns out, all of these things could be done remotely with online classes. I dove in and started doing more pilates, more yoga, and some online barre classes. I also started my own regimen of weight lifting, push ups, pull-ups, and core work. I continued to run and bike but my volume went down a bit. As I get older, this kind of exercise is even more important so my pivot to more of these kinds of workouts was something I have wanted to do for a while. 




As I mentioned, I did not stop running and biking. In fact, in addition to adding more core and strength training, I joined the Ironman Virtual Club and started doing the Ironman Virtual Race Series. So far there have been 5 events and I have completed them all. Below you can see the events the events that I completed starting in early April. 


As you can see, I have been doing plenty of biking and running. This coming weekend is Ironman Virtual Race #6 and I am signed up for that one as well. The running and biking in addition to all the other exercises has kept me fit through this crisis. Plus I am eating way less and drinking a great deal more water than I used to. Together all of these things have led me to lose 5-6 pounds. That is less weight to carry out there on the run course. Also my fat percentage has dropped about 1 to 1.5 percent as measured by my scale. So I am getting stronger and staying fit. I really can't complain too much about anything since my health is good an I am continuing to work full time from home as my job in IT allows me to do everything remotely. In fact, I really don't ever need to go back into the office. I am sure I will have to one day. But until then I am enjoying the extra sleep and my new routine. I get stir crazy sometimes but writing and doing other creative things helps. I have some projects other than exercising to work on including converting an old laptop to a Linux webserver to host my John Rosen website and some other things. 

Thanks for reading. Stay safe. Stay home. 

Monday, March 9, 2020

Richmond Marathon Race Report +

Well, it has been 16 weeks since the running of the 2019 Richmond Marathon and I have been very delinquent in my blogging. Now that the spring season is getting ready to ramp up, I thought I better get this report out of the way. 

From my last blog entry, you know that I injured myself but decided to go ahead and give the marathon a try and see what would happen. I am not going to go into too many details on this post because frankly, that would be boring. I will try to focus on the particulars and anything else notable for the historical record.

Race day was cold and windy. I opted to wear tights under my running shorts to keep my legs warm which normally I would not have done but with the hamstring injury, I decided it would be better overall to keep my legs warm. 

As I mentioned previously, my goal was to simply finish in about 4 hours. When the gun went off, I started conservatively and ran the first mile in about 9 minutes. The first several miles went well and I was maintaining a pace that would easily put me under 4 hours. I did slow down on some of the more hilly parts of the course but I was able to pick things back up after those tougher miles. 

The wind was a killer. Not only was it physically difficult to run into the wind, it was also mentally tough to keep going with it blowing into my face. Crossing the Leigh bridge was especially tough. There was not much chatter around me as everyone seemed to be struggling. The Leigh bridge section is from about mile 15 to mile 16 on the RVA Marathon course and that is where I really started to struggle. You can see from my splits that mile 16 was the beginning of my fade. I did manage to pick it up again a little later. But that did not last long. Here are my splits for the entire race. 


Lap
DistanceTimePaceGAPElevHR
  11.00 mi9:009:00 /mi9:01 /mi-8 ft142 bpm
  21.00 mi8:508:50 /mi8:45 /mi22 ft142 bpm
  31.00 mi8:438:43 /mi8:42 /mift140 bpm
  41.00 mi8:388:38 /mi8:36 /mift143 bpm
  51.00 mi8:428:42 /mi8:39 /mift142 bpm
  61.00 mi8:548:54 /mi8:41 /mi26 ft144 bpm
  71.00 mi8:388:38 /mi9:01 /mi-144 ft136 bpm
  81.00 mi8:498:49 /mi8:44 /mift138 bpm
  91.00 mi8:528:52 /mi8:54 /mi-20 ft136 bpm
 101.00 mi9:009:00 /mi8:49 /mi20 ft137 bpm
 111.00 mi9:169:16 /mi8:56 /mi33 ft140 bpm
 121.00 mi9:139:13 /mi8:58 /mi31 ft139 bpm
 131.00 mi9:229:22 /mi9:16 /mift137 bpm
 141.00 mi8:518:51 /mi8:52 /mi-24 ft140 bpm
 151.00 mi8:588:58 /mi9:06 /mi-55 ft140 bpm
 161.00 mi9:469:46 /mi9:32 /mi34 ft143 bpm
 171.00 mi9:449:44 /mi9:29 /mi38 ft141 bpm
 181.00 mi8:548:54 /mi8:47 /mi32 ft147 bpm
 191.00 mi11:0711:07 /mi11:10 /mi-31 ft131 bpm
 201.00 mi11:2311:23 /mi11:11 /mi12 ft132 bpm
 211.00 mi11:3411:34 /mi11:31 /mift128 bpm
 221.00 mi14:3814:38 /mi14:36 /mi-5 ft109 bpm
 231.00 mi11:4211:42 /mi11:39 /mift137 bpm
 241.00 mi12:1112:11 /mi12:17 /mi-23 ft139 bpm
 251.00 mi13:1713:17 /mi13:02 /mi22 ft143 bpm
 261.00 mi12:4412:44 /mi12:50 /mi-38 ft136 bpm
 270.32 mi3:2210:23 /mi11:29 /mi-96 ft142 bpm

As I ran north on Arthur Ashe Boulevard, it happened. My hamstring decided it had had enough. However, it was not my left hamstring that I had been rehabbing. Nope, it was the right one doing the same thing that the left one had done. I was forced to walk. I walked and hobbled for the next couple of miles. I looked at my watch and did the math. I could finish well within the cutoff if I simply walked the rest. But the thought of being out there in the cold for that much longer was not very appealing. I tried to stretch some but even that was difficult. I was finally able to start a little shuffle and did a shuffle/walk for the rest of the way. It was painful and down right miserable. However, I had been in this position before. During Ironman competitions, the last part of the marathon is always a death march. I knew I could just keep going and finish so I pushed through the misery and ended up finishing. 

Out of the three marathons I have run, this was the slowest. It was even slower than at least 3 or 4 of my Ironman marathons. But I managed to finish and did not really do any damage to my body. 




After the race, I went and got my bag of stuff that I had dropped off at the start earlier that morning. I took off all my wet clothes and put on dry clothes as quickly as possible. I then hobbled my way back to my office and used the bathroom and put on all my jackets and another hat. I also gobbled up some candy and had a Red Bull. 

I was following Melissa on the marathon tracker and estimated that if I hurried, I could catch her finishing. I made it back to the course in time to see her running up Franklin to the 5th street turn. I ran with her for about 25 yards before my legs demanded I stop. She continued on to the finish and I walked down to meet up with her. She had a fine race of course. She is the pacing queen and always knows how to stick to her goal and finish well. I am always impressed with her determination and accomplishments on and off the race course. 

And that was that. I had a nice build up to a potential PR and then blew it by getting injured. However, I learned some lessons that I will talk about in my next blog post. 

Since the RVA Marathon, I have done a few races. I did the Countdown to None 5K in Vienna, VA on New Years Eve and got 1st in my age group. 


Later in January, I ran the Frostbite 15K. I went out a little hot and struggled towards the end but managed to have an OK race. I got 13th out of 50 in my age group on what proved to be a challenging course. 


Yesterday, after a last minute entry the night before, I raced the Shamrock 5K here in Richmond. Considering I ran 12 miles the day before and did a short but high intensity trainer ride afterwards as well as a 1 hour trainer ride a few hours before the 5K, I was pleased with my result. My goal was to keep up with Justin and then try to out sprint him at the line. I was able to hang on to him and then towards the end step on the gas a little to put some distance between us and then finally sprint down the straight away at the finish. I ended up 3rd in my age group. Not too shabby for running on tired legs.


For the upcoming season, this is what I have on the calendar so far:

Date Race Location
Saturday, March 28th 
 Monument Ave 10K   RVA
Saturday, April 4th 
 Smithfield Sprint Triathlon   Smithfield VA
Saturday, May 9th 
 Kinetic Half Triathlon   Lake Anna, VA
Sunday, May 10th 
 Kinetic Sprint Triathlon   Lake Anna, VA
Saturday, May 16th 
 IM 70.3 VA Blue Ridge Training Camp  not a race   Roanoke VA
Sunday, June 7th 
 IM 70.3 VA Blue Ridge Triathlon   Roanoke, VA
Sunday, June 28th 
 Rev3 Williamsburg Olympic Triathlon   Williamsburg, VA