Saturday, November 29, 2008
Pity to the brothas
Now, compound on top of the usual "congestion of pregnancy," the occasional cold I pick up working with sick people all day. This was how I discovered that the sleeping problem is really just with Nick and not my own. Last night, I was so congested that there was NO airflow through my nose, thus no turbulence, and no rattling of airway passages. As we were falling asleep he asked me if I could sit up or something because I was snoring. False! I was obviously not snoring. I was just breathing quietly through my mouth. When I realized this and pointed it out, I don't think the difference mattered to Nick. Then all the stories of the boys sharing a room and Nick doing horrible things to them for making any kind of noise came rushing back to me. This should really only go on for a couple months more, but my pity goes out to those of you who spent more than half your life in a room with someone who really won't be happy until you quit breathing.
Thursday, November 20, 2008
26.2
Enough of the days of yesteryear. Instead of just talking about the run in general, here are a couple of observations I made along the course.
Mile .00001: I was wondering how long before someone would make the obligatory “are we there yet” joke. Not anymore.
Mile 1: I’m feeling pretty good at this point. I didn’t expect anything less but I kept having these weird quasi-dreams about cramping up or having my knees buckle or ankle twist in the first mile, or slipping on some empty Vaseline tubes.
Mile 2: Best sign so far: “You Are All Kenyans!” It reminded me of when we would tell Samantha: “Sheena of the Jungle!” and she would take off running as fast as she could. But don’t worry, I didn’t fall for this sign. Now if someone would have said “the power of ten tigers” all bets are off. In fact, just call me “The Phantom” from now on.
Mile 3: I just got rid of my long sleeve shirt that I started the run with (it was 39 degrees at the start). Apparently they give all the clothes to charity. I also wore some black gloves with the Tweety bird imprint on them that have been in the family for decades. I was going to throw those to the side but decided to hold on to them for posterity. There are just some things that are too important in our family history to get rid of, like the slot machines, dad’s key chain collection and especially mom’s hot glue gun collection.
Mile 5: I see Jenn and Trevor waving and cheering me on. I feel like a gazelle.

Watch out Plains of Serengeti!
Mile 6: I’m just starting to notice different teams. Some teams are running for charity, others for a cause or cure, and others have the same family name on the back of their shirts. Next year we should run it as a family. No, serious.
Mile 13.5: The marathon leaders are doubling back during a small section of the course. All I can say is “WOW.” These guys are flying at a 5-minute mile pace. The only time I’ve ever run that fast was after I broke the jalapeno jar.
Mile 14: What is mentholatum doing on the course? Why are people handing it out on popsicle sticks? Were they expecting a runny nose outbreak? Is it like using Vaseline? I am full of questions. I thought I knew everything about the marathon experience. They didn’t tell me about this. Where do I apply it? I don’t even know who I am anymore.
Mile 15: Most annoying, overused sign: “Don’t look now but someone is chasing you.” Don’t look now but that sign was old at mile 1.5.
Mile 22: So far as I’ve seen a giant turkey hat, a bare-chested guy with a Santa hat, and a dude with a model 747 on his head. I was also just passed by two ladies in pink tutu’s. Umm, I got crazy and wore gray underwear…
Mile 23: I’m eavesdropping on a conversation between two runners. Apparently Lance Armstrong said that in a marathon, the halfway point is mile 20. I’ve also heard that the last 5 or 6 miles is all mental. Yeah, let me tell that to the guy whose legs are cramped up and being worked on by medical staff: "c'mon man, it's only a compound fracture, it's all in your head!" That always kills me – of course it’s physical. If it weren’t, you could run forever. That’s like chanting overrated – it just doesn’t make sense. Chess: now that’s mental.
Mile 23.5: Nearly three miles to go and I can’t believe I haven’t heard a sound from my knees. Of course I’m afraid to look in case they fell off at mile 21.
Mile 26: The finish line is in sight and Jenn is there to give me a high five, Trevor yells “no retreat, no surrender.” I yell back, “they all doubted me!” The finish couldn’t have been better.
