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16 October 2011

"Running is the greatest metaphor for life, because you get out of it what you put into it."- Oprah Winfrey

After completing my first half marathon yesterday some friends looked at me like I was crazy while others admired my courage. I finished the 13.1 mile run in 2 hours and 37 seconds (8th female in my age division). Though I didn't place I'm happy that I completed 13 miles consecutively, each in under 10 minutes.



Yes, it was difficult. My muscles are sore and my feet hurt. I felt tired at times and had to think competetively to keep going. But I feel incredible for accomplishing something that many cannot or are simply unwilling to try. It took weeks of preparation, both physically and mentally. It took commitment and hard work. I put a lot into completing this race and walked away feeling proud with an increidble feeling of self-worth. I also have the motivation to keep pushing myself to the next level. I am capable of anything I put my mind to. I can always do better, work harder and run further.

This idea doesn't just apply to running. Hard work goes a long way. The sad thing is that many people simply lack work ethic. Some expect to simply do better, make more money, and have it all handed to them. Though this may be the case for a small percentage of people, for most of us life just doesn't work this way. To do better you have to work at actually being better. Whether that means logging longer hours at the office to complete a task for your boss, volunteering to learn something knew at work to show your enthusiasm or taking a healthy cooking class to make yourself and your family healthier, you have to put in effort. The doers will continue to succeed while the complacent will continue to not. You will only ever get out of it what you're willing to put in.

Back to running, I trained for weeks to prepare my body. My trainers, Karena and Katrina from Tone it Up, provided me with a schedule for getting ready for the big race. The training schedule included cross training to keep me strong and balanced, stretching to prevent injury, short runs, long runs and sprints. It also included rest. These are ALL important ingredients when preparing for a race. In addition to following their training schedule I also worked in a few extra slow-paced 3-mile morning runs. I cut out the "extra" running 2 weeks before the race, however, to prevent fatigue and injury.


The training worked. I completed the race (running the furthest I ever have) and feel like a million bucks! When you're at an event like this, with people who understand the training you've put in and the personal determination you carry with you, you feel at home. Everyone there has a similar mindset. We congratulate and joke with one another, smile and stretch. We still have our "running high" (a rush of endorphines from physically exerting yourself) which makes the 30 minutes after the race exceptionally light hearted and happy. To make a long story short we just felt good.

Future Races:
10/23: Hilton Head Island Bridge Run (10k)
10/28: Bluffton Zombie Mile (1 mile in Halloween Costumes)
10/30: Alzheimers Walk (3 miles)
11/5: Rock and Roll Half Marathon (13.1 miles)
11/26: May River Half Marathon (13.1 miles)
12/3: Savannah River Bridge Run (10k)
12/10: Reindeer Run (5k)
12/17: Hilton Head Jingle Jingle (5k)
2/11: Hilton Head Half Marathon

Embrace change. Push yourself. Breathe heavy. Sweat. Run. Live.

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