Wednesday, April 18, 2007

Boston Marathon Monday




The marathon is over! I'm still not sure what to think of it all. As Scott put it: "It's like the day after Christmas and you didn't get everything you wanted."

A bunch of family flew into town for the race - and one of my brothers even drove 10 hours to come watch! We squished 10 people into my apartment on air mattresses, the couch, the futon, and the floor. The house got thrashed, but we had a great time. While all the adults had fun, the babies made mischief. Bruce threw my parents' rental car paperwork into the toilet, and then a marker lid. Thankfully Scott did all the fishing.

On Marathon Monday, we got up early and went downtown to catch our buses. My bro, Dave, also ran and was shooting for 2:45. I wanted 2:47. I'd decided awhile ago that we wouldn't run together though because I wanted to run in the elite start (how many chances will I get at that?!). I did get very spoiled with the "elite treatment." Everyone else rode schoolbuses to the start, but I rode on a tour bus. There was a holding area inside a church gym with bagels, water, fruit, and PowerBars for us. And indoor toilets - that was the best part.

Everyone sat around and stressed over what to wear for an hour and a half. It was raining off and on outside. Ten minutes before the start, the officials handed out plastic ponchos and led us out there. We crossed a graveyard and went in a gate to the starting line. There was a line of officials that called themselves the "human chain." They stood about a hundred meters from the start and kept us corraled in. I did a few striders and apparently got on TV while doing this. During the race a bunch of people yelled that they saw me on TV at the starting line.

Two minutes before the race, I shed the poncho and took my place on the line. Rita Jeptoo was right next to me; she won last year's Boston Marathon. I poked her in the shoulder and wished her luck. She returned a "good luck."

The gun went off and the race began. That was the last I saw of Rita. I never even saw Deena. She must have been on the other side of the start line. The first few miles were really quick, but they are so downhill that it's hard to do anything else. A girl next to me around mile 4 asked me what I planned on running. I told her 2:47. "Me too," she said. But then she dropped back and I never saw her again. At the 10k, I saw a girl drop out. She just jogged to the side of the course.

It was sprinkling on and off at the beginning. The temperature was fine. The wind was fine one minute, then blustery the next. Around the 10k, I got caught in "no man's land." I couldn't catch the girl ahead of me; she was picking up speed and already 70 meters ahead. The girls behind me were slowing down and far behind. There was no one to block the wind.

I ran alone for miles and miles and miles. I past the half-marathon mark in 1:22 - just one minute off my PR. I knew it was an ambitious pace, but I'd taken a "do or die" approach to the pace. I really wanted that 2:47 despite the weather and figured I'd might as well go for it because I don't know when my next shot will be. Up to the half, I was doing. Beyond that, it was a long slow death. I can't really pinpoint one place where I hit the wall. But after mile 20, my goal was to finish rather than hit a certain time.

Scott, Bruce, Dad, Mom, Dan, Sarah x 2, Eldon, and half of my church congregation was at mile 19. I saw them, but didn't have enough spunk to run across the road and give out high-fives or anything. After the race, I learned that Dave had stopped and given his wife and son kisses before going on.

The last few miles are downhill, but they felt horrible. It only got windier and windier the closer I got to Copley Square so I felt like I was being blown backwards despite the downhill. Somehow I made it to Boylston Street and saw the finish line. It looked so far away. It was so far away. But somehow I got there in 2:56:15 in 37th place for women and 28th in the U.S. Marathon National Championships (that excludes foreign runners). There was a woman that finished 12 seconds ahead of me that won $10,000 because she was the first master's runner. When I saw that, I wished I was 40 years old. Can't wait.

I was led to the "elite recovery area" in the Copley Fairmont Hotel. It was a big conference room with bagels, fruit, water, and other such race food, a few cots, a bunch of chairs, and a few massage tables. I was moving pretty slow. One of my GBTC teammates was volunteering there and grabbed my bag of clothes and helped me and my cramping legs to the bathroom. I took the big handicapped stall and changed every item of clothing on me. My lips were blue and I was showing signs of hypothermia (I anticipated this; last year in perfect weather I got hypothermia, so there's almost no avoiding it), but after changing, eating a bagel, and chugging two bottles of Gatorade I felt much better.

I called Scott, who told me Dave was shipped off to the medical tent. I went and an official told me I had to be escorted in. I looked around and saw Dave, and told the guy that I could see him. He said he wasn't looking. So I walked in and went up to Dave. A nurse was helping him walk around. They were about done. His lips were still blue, but he was in good spirits. He ran a 2:46:32 - just the time I wanted to run! "That's what you get for not running with me," he said.

We left the tent, collected some food, and found Scott. He had parked illegally somewhere downtown, but our car wasn't towed or ticketed so away we went. When we got home, we crashed for a few hours. After a few hours of sleep, showers, laundry, etc., we went to a Brazilian restaurant for dinner. Dave served his mission in Rio de Janeiro, so he appreciated the authentic rice, beans, and meat. I'm a big fan of the Brazilian rice and beans too: that was the only thing I craved when I was pregnant with Bruce.

One of my old BYU teammates, Kristen, came over Monday night with her friend. We stayed up chatting for awhile. Then they slept on a mattress on my kitchen floor. Everyone trickled out in the morning. Dave and Sarah left first. Mom and Dad went next. Kristen and her friend were the last out. Unfortunately, there was a mixup with the shoes. Mom thought Kristen's shoes were Dave's and that he had forgotten them, so she took them. Shoeless Kristen had to squish her feet into a spare pair of men's racing shoes that I had laying around. It was quite funny, and it shows only a glimpse of the chaos that happened at my place this weekend.

All in all, the marathon was a good experience. It wasn't the time I wanted. And I trained much harder than what showed in that race. But I got some elite pampering, got to poke Rita and wish her luck, and run through the legendary streets of Boston. Despite running by my lonesome self, the Wellesley Scream was still exhilirating, there were still lots of cheers ("Great hair!" was the most common followed by "I saw you on TV this morning!"), and I'm still planning on running the Boston Marathon again someday - only faster!

(photos by Ellen Patton)

5 Comments:

Blogger The Colorado Raymonds said...

Hi Emily:

Wow! You finished 37th in the Boston Marathon. I like to tell people that I know a famous marathon runner.

By the way, in that picture on your blog those guys in camo are really giving you the look. Might be the hair.

We love you,
BC & V

8:59 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I think it's great that you feel that all in all it was a good experience, considering how hard the second half was. I hope you have the opportunity to run your 2:47 soon. You so deserve it.

9:40 PM  
Blogger Boston Paynes said...

Congrats on your marathon run !! You did amazing despite the horrible conditions. We watched on tv but missed the very beginning so we didn't see you. Thanks for sharing your experience with us. It was fun to read. Hope your body (and your apartment) is rested and recovered.

11:21 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Congrats on a great showing! I'm sorry that the weather didn't allow for any P.R.s, but you should be proud of your overall performance. Scott's day after Christmas analogy was well stated. I'm not sure if this is a Coach Huntington quote or not, but as you know all that training is just like money in the bank for your next marathon. Speaking of...ok I'll let you catch your breath first. Enjoy some down time and best of luck with your future training! Take care.
Shanna

4:46 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

You are still the fastest runner around, in my book! Congratulations on a great race. I know you can do whatever you set your mind to - so 2:47 is definitely feasible!

5:25 PM  

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