In which I run my first 5k

June 10, 2010 · 18 comments

Running is something that other people do.  You need special shoes, special sunglasses, and a special snobbish expression as you pass by walkers.  You need to run up impossible hills, time yourself on impossible watches, and breathe in a special way.  You need to run track in high school, preferably cross country, and be imposibly skinny.  You need to get up at 5 am to drink special protein shakes.  You need to do something called weight training.

This is what I used to think about running when I was smaller and pudgy and not aerodynamic at all.  I hated running around the track in high school-I was always last and the breath would come hot, fast, and sharp at the back of my throat as I struggled to finish a mile while my friends were already chatting it up at the finish line.  I hated them, but more importantly, I hated myself.  I was rotund, unathletic, and that was another world.

What I hated most was when my parents made me run.  Concerned for my health, they would tackle the issue by coming into my room on Saturday mornings and physically pull me off the bed as I cried that I didn’t want to go.

I hated running all the way until college, when I decided to try it on my own terms, without the constant nagging from a number of sources.  I started cautiously on the treadmill, walking for ten minutes.  In five months, I was running two miles at a time.  In a year, I was running three miles outside on campus.

Then, I got married I became zaftig and happy with Mr. B.

Then, I decided I was tired of feeling like there was one more thing I couldn’t control in my life, and I started running again, and again on my own terms.  I started extremely slowly and I knew it would hurt like hell.   And it did.  It wasn’t glamorous and it wasn’t fun.  The only thing that kept me sane was Cardio Trainer (who are definitely not sponsoring this post), which is basically an application I use on my phone and it tracks down to the foot how far you’ve gone, how fast you’re going, and how many calories you’re burning.  And it talks to you in a nice British accent as you run.  Because I am anal-retentive, I really appreciate the fine level of detail and it’s the only thing that pushed me through a run, aside from my music.

So, after a couple of weeks of trying and pushing and crying myself, I started to feel better. And started pushing myself harder.  And, as a reward, got myself new orange sneakers.  After that, I kept going.

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And then my friend for forever Mer, who is crazy in her own way because she just ran a marathon, encouraged me to do a 5k.  So I signed up.  And I ran it.  And it was amazing.  It was lots of fun, despite the fact that it made me want to throw up and give up.

I didn’t finish with a great time.  But I finished, and that’s the most important thing.

The first mile, I thought I would die, because it was uphill and it was already starting to get muggy and everyone was passing me and I was afraid I’d come in last.  The second mile was easier, but little kids passed me.   The third mile was hell.  But in between the moments of hell, I saw that I was running in a forest, and I realized that I was lucky enough to be able to use my body to run, in a forest, during the summer, and I felt good to be alive.  Then I continued to curse my existence.

Although a man with two children in a stroller and a woman who was 6 months pregnant finished ahead of me.  But it’s ok.

So, what’s my point?  Nothing, other than the fact that people can never make you do something until you take control of it yourself, and that anyone can run.  It’s not a cure-all for weight loss-I haven’t lost a significant amount of weight and am still pretty terrible at running when compared to other people-but it is a really great confidence-booster and good for setting goals.  I’m already planning another one for July 4.

{ 18 comments… read them below or add one }

Irina June 10, 2010 at 7:27 AM

Вика, ты молодец!!! Поздравляю! I won (!) an entry in Cherry Blossom 10mi and didn’t run it. Why? Because I hated running and the motivation wasn’t there… I’ve had this huge fear of riding a bike after a pretty bad accident (broken bones and chronic shoulder joint pain, hundreds of dollars worth of PT, etc), so I got myself a bike. And fell off it again. And got a nasty scrape that left an ugly scar on my arm. Last night, after a long conversation with myself, I finally I biked for the first time in and with traffic to my aikido practice, which is 1.5mi away. I almost got hit, more than once actually, but I made it. I still cannot signal, because I squeeze the handlebar like my life depends on it, but I am slowly getting rid of the silly mental block. So, I hear you and now know it feels. Congrats again!

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Vicki June 11, 2010 at 8:49 AM

Ир, спасибо за коментарий! That’s the craziest story ever. I would never, ever be able to get back on a bike after two big accidents, so it’s amazing that you are able to. But I know that you are super-strong, and I look forward to seeing both you AND your mom in the Arlington Bike Race next year ;)

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Brianne June 10, 2010 at 7:35 AM

I’m so glad you did it. Not because of dreams of weight-loss grandeur or because someone told you you had to, but because you derive a sense of accomplishment from it. I’m a former swimmer who is now fat so I think perhaps I’ll go for a swim today after work. :o )

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Vicki June 11, 2010 at 8:50 AM

Thank you! Yes, the issue exactly is that I’m constantly insecure about my weight but I run in spite of it rather than because of it and I don’t worry about it because I know I’m on my way to being physically healthy anyway. Eventaully, hopefully, the weight will start coming off as a side benefit. Did you end up swimming after work? Swimming is a whole new ballgame.

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gatsby June 10, 2010 at 8:28 AM

Congrats on finishing the run! That’s wonderful. I’d say that during training, if it hurts, you’re doing it wrong. Slow down and do less. During a sponsored run when you might be pushing yourself, it’s ok to work a little harder. Just my two cents. Of course, some days may be better than others, but training shoudln’t hurt that much.
Well done again!

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Vicki June 11, 2010 at 8:51 AM

Thank you! What I mean by hurting is that I’m lazy rather than any physical pain. My new sneakers are pretty nice and I don’t experience a lot of discomfort.

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Sophie June 10, 2010 at 12:01 PM

The shoes are amazing!!! and so are you, for doing this thing.

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Vicki June 11, 2010 at 8:58 AM

The shoes are better

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Alena June 10, 2010 at 2:03 PM

Вика, ты молодец! Лично я терпеть не могу бегать (да и коленки у меня не очень-то), но хорошо понимаю чувство удовлетворения от того, что смог себя переломить в момент лени. :) Да и физически потом себя чувствуешь как-то лучше. :) А насчёт того, что пока сам не захочешь, никто тебя не заставит – что верно, то верно. :)

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Vicki June 11, 2010 at 8:58 AM

Спасибо огромное! Так интересно-когда я бежала я видела что беременны женщины тоже бегут и подумала наверно как им по настоящему трудно! у тебя есть планы опять сесть на велосипед весной?

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Alena June 11, 2010 at 1:34 PM

Ты знаешь, если они тренированные и еще не на самых последних месяцах, то не так уж и трудно. Мне сейчас чуть-чуть тяжелее стало ходить (уже почти 7 мес. срок), но вообще всё совсем не так страшно как расписывают (конечно, я понимаю что всё индивидуально и есть женщины которым на самом деле тяжело). :) Я бы и до беременности не добежала наверное! :)

А на велик хочется сесть, конечно. Правда надо велосипед еще будет купить для меня (мы после кражи только Даньке купили). К весне видно будет если это всё реально. :)

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Jane June 10, 2010 at 2:21 PM

You are awesome! Congrats on finishing the 5K … aren’t endorphins the coolest thing?

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Vicki June 11, 2010 at 8:51 AM

They’re the best. Soon I’ll be able to run almost as fast as you :)

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scary azeri June 10, 2010 at 3:13 PM

Fab! well done. I HATE running. :) I am raising my glass of Baileys’ for you right now.

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Vicki June 11, 2010 at 8:51 AM

:D I wish I had some alcohol I could drink AS I run.

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rima June 10, 2010 at 9:40 PM

I am seriously impressed! That is really fantastic. (I’m one of those people who believes I could never run distances).

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Vicki June 11, 2010 at 8:52 AM

Thanks! I also was like this. And I still can’t run distances. I just plod along at my own pace and somehow, some time passes, and I’ve done a mile.

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Mom Polina June 11, 2010 at 9:50 AM

There are uphills ? And you want me to run it and pay for it too ? I am still thinking…. I am proud of you and a bit I am proud of myself too ( I raised you – remember ?). Run, Vicki, run!

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