In the Santa Monica Mountains

I’ll get straight to the first ride reports. Clever travelogues sometime later this week.

I’m in the city of Calabasas, CA with two friends, and expecting a third whenever his stand-by flight releases him from sleeping at YYZ. They’re all fitter than me and it’s shown in the two days of riding since we arrived late on Friday night.

True to our expectations, it’s warm – over 20C – and sunny – perfect for cycling in the arid, yellow canyons of the Santa Monica Mountains. Yesterday we went out for a short 1h45, followed by today’s taxing 3 hours. All in, 2,500m of climbing in 120km. The ups were hard but relatively civilized yesterday, but today was rather ferocious for a guy who hasn’t climbed for real since leaving British Columbia 2.5 years ago. Topanga Canyon was the shortest, a mere warmup in the shade. Fernwood, also in the shade, was a series of endless twists. But the final climb in the noonday sun, Las Flores, north from the Pacific Coast Highway, caused a ludicrous amount of slow pedaling, squirming all over the bike, moving maybe 1m per second. I’m certain the roadside cacti were laughing at me (those pricks!). I was out of water by then, and knew there would be no more until we got back to the hotel.

But the descent of Tuna Canyon to the ocean took the most concentration. When you’re dropping down 15 per cent grades, picking up speed quickly, negotiating blind hairpin turns, it’s no time to admire blue skies and jagged rock faces unfortunately. My hands started to cramp from braking, but I’ve broken a wrist on a bike trip before and would rather not repeat that.

We’re up very early for tomorrow’s adventure – bedtime now.

At the crest of Piuma yesterday. The smile is fake. What's real, apparently, is the number of muscles I apparently need to unclip from a pedal.

At the crest of Piuma yesterday. The smile is fake. What’s real, apparently, is the number of muscles I apparently need to unclip from a pedal

 


Toronto Marathon 2013: how to be ok with a personal worst

Yes, it’s true. Your correspondent trained hard and fell far short of his goal. I wanted to go under 3h 15, was on track until about 32k, and finished in 3:31:50.

My strides shortened, and I couldn’t run properly. After the finish, I hobbled off to massage and went into mild shock once they started working on my left hip. So I spent much of yesterday post-race in a medical tent, and then a hospital, still in my race gear with sticky gel containers in my pocket and a salt-encrusted face. X-rays rule out broken bones, but I can’t raise or rotate my left leg/hip without severe pain. I don’t know about muscle tears or strains – specialists will figure that out – but I am using crutches and painkillers.

Yesterday’s experience is on my sports failure podium. On the face of it, you’d think I’d feel pretty terrible. But I don’t.

“Equanimity” is a word we don’t use much. But its definition, “mental calmness, evenness of temper, esp. in a difficult situation” best describes how I felt about it all. Here’s why:

I did what I could: You should line up for the start of your race believing you did all the training and took care of the details. I did all the distance and speed work, saw steady improvement, tested my tempo and nutrition, and even scouted parts of the Toronto course. And my race day plan went as planned – exactly on pace half-way, and holding….until my body had other plans.

“Thank God it was physical failure, not mental!” Arguably, there’s no greater sin in sport than being unable to push through pain. Athletes judge themselves and each other this way. If your body breaks or tears, then you are excused. But if your brain shuts things down to avoid “regular” discomfort, you have shown moral weakness. If I had just plain choked yesterday, rather than broke, I wouldn’t feel a whole lot of equanimity right now.

Our minds are more complicated than bone and muscle. I’m glad I don’t have to delve into my brain to figure out why I didn’t go faster.

Owning my flaws: remember how I said “I did what I could”? If I’m honest I have to say  “not quite”. Physical failures aren’t accidental. I have had some issues with my hip, which I handled with some physiotherapy, some specific exercises, and some rest. Evidently not enough on all fronts. We can’t, or don’t always dedicate the resources or diligence to take care of our bodies so they can serve us the way we want them to. I’m guilty as charged, and can’t go around blaming the world.

Warmth and Sunshine: For four months, I trained in gloomy, often freezing conditions, bundled up in multiple layers. There wasn’t much freedom or joy, running in the southern Ontario winter. Then came Sunday’s clear blue skies and temperatures in the high teens. It was the first time I ran in shorts in 2013. You know that “first day of spring” feeling? I had that yesterday.

Friends doing well: A more cynical soul would say there’s nothing worse than your buddies succeeding when you’re not. But, loitering and texting in the medical tent, I was pumped at the news of past and current training partners setting personal bests in their respective running races. Also, members of my club had good performances at a rowing regatta on Sunday. These people all did that themselves, but it’s nice to feel I contributed to their success in a small way, or even just vicariously.

Now what?: Running is out for a good long while. That was going to be true regardless of the outcome. I have a general interest in trying completely different sports than the linear, repetitive, endurance activities I’ve done all my life. How about I try to see how much weight I can gain (healthily) this summer?