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Lake Placid Recap

Coach P-
So nice to see you at LP! Just a short recap of my race (which I think I totally spit out at you at the finish line...sorry...i was estactic!!) 

Race Week-totally a blast enjoying the Village of Lake Placid.  Kept away from crowds which settles my mind.  Went to top of ski lifts and kept nutrition mostly in check.  We stayed at Hampton right at swim start.  Highly recommend.  Three goals in mind for this race:
1.  Swim smooth & calm adding in tweak to stroke.
2.  Have courage on descents aka don't freak out!!
3.  Walk as much of marathon as I could safely but be ok if I can't/pull out of race.
  

Race Morning-rocked! They say never do "firsts" at a race well these were great firsts:
1.  Got to transition early 4:25 and was in and out in 10 min.  no crowd.  able to go back to room, chill, and avoid drama. My husband thought the wrong women woke up beside him....i'm rarely early!!! 
2.  30 mins of light yoga/stretching pre-race.  not stressful at all.  great warm-up. 
3.  Ate mini-breakfast at 3:45 AND 6:15....nutrition I was determined to stay on top of...last summer I got behind the eight ball a couple of times on this.... you said eat when i felt good (but never overloaded tummy).  Used that all day to fuel.  It works!!

Swim- Goal 1:40 Actual 1:28 
Felt amazing about this swim as I was implementing a tweak to my stroke.  Nerves about the same.  First time to use a sleeveless wetsuit in a race.  Enjoyed the feel immensely.  From the get-go was able to get into a smooth 3-stroke bilateral breathing pattern.  I never allowed myself to "work" to hard.  I could feel HR in check throughout.  Was amazed how few times I needed to look up even not being on the chord/line thingy.  Didn't freak out on the turns.  Thank you for telling us in 4Keys that those turns are busy and tight.  Helped me tremendously stay alert and confident.  Kept saying to myself stay smooth and don't try to make anything happen.  2nd loop just stayed as steady as possible.  Never swam too hard.  Crazy pleasant start to the day!!

Bike-Goal 8:30 Actual 7:13
This leg of the race was giving me actually the most anxiety.  I had totally freaked out on descents at CdL in 2014.  I got a flat 6 miles into my practice ride on Friday so wasn't able to do the descent to Keene beforehand.  Also because of my ankle I was nervous about climbing since I wasnt suppose to get out of the saddle.  ALSO, I've only been able to ride on my trainer at home for safety reasons.  I honestly thought I was going to just be lucky to make cut-offs.  With all this churning in my head....I took off for what was one of the most beautiful and doable rides of an IM.  I was thrilled.  

I'm not a fast cyclist but going to cycling camp helped tremendously.  I mentally had it Sunday.  Weird serendipitous thing happened as I was coming out of that first climb out of town....my gearing mechanism stripped out leaving me totally in the small ring.  Again....mentally I felt pretty cool about it.  I was like hmmmm....glad I'm not stuck in the big ring.  haha!! that thought would stay with me ALL DAY and SUCKED!! I spun out so many times but just kept a smile on my face thanking the bike Gods it wasn't the other way around.  I think it actually saved me from overdoing-it and maintaining some sense of control and patience.  

First decent into Keene....what can I say.....I was finding all kinds of new courage.  Got down in my position, weight forward and into my pedals, relaxed and had a crazy good (for me) first decent topping out at close to 43...ok, another first!! It ws definitely part exciting part terrifying.  My turning with courage was so good! I'm a little heavier than I usually am on race day so that probably helped (hard to admit).  

The whole first loop I was like...this is the most gorgeous course EVER and at one time remember thinking how many more "breaks" i was getting with the downhill and that back flat section...like little times to rest/recover.  Took it super cautious 35-40 like you said and then into town.  Everything you said in 4Keys spot on.  My favorite thing you said that I used during the bike was "find places to find an extra gear".  I loved that and kept using in on the back half of the loops with what gearing I had.  Most folks after a hill would slow over the top.  I found a few extra gears!! It was awesome.   Around mile 90 I started feeling my ankle whisper to me and i kinda was wishing I had a spare lower gear but I made it.  only thing that slowed me down were my two potty breaks....I promise I TRIED peeing on the bike. ugh just couldn't.  my stop in special needs TOTALLY too long because of line at porta-potty.  My other pee stop i just stopped by the side of the road and sat down.  worked in 1/10 of the time.  Nutrition on the bike was great! I eat a bite of banana at most aid stations along with my on-bike gus.  Had a few goodies in special needs (goldfish & chocolate chip cookie).  Took my Hammer/sportslegs supplements on schedule.  No cramping or tummy discomfort the whole day.  I think the weather being cooler probably also helped this!! 

"Run"/Marathon (Goal time none....walk safely as able):

Due to an ankle injury I knew running the marathon was out of the question.  Had totally prepared myself for either not doing any of the marathon or just walking some and taking a DNF.  I was ok with either.  I have a huge fall and early 2018 schedule and did not want to risk reinjury.  Things just happened to come together that I felt like I could start to marathon...walking.  

When I got off the bike I had banked and extra 1 1/2 hrs, was feeling good (enough) so I decided to get a move on the marathon walk.  Never has there been a moment where I had to just keep my head down and in my box.  It was so tough passing you and Mariah walking down that hill.  I wanted to cry.  But I made a joke and kept at it.  At mile 7 I wanted to stop.  Had to just dig deep mentally.  The rest of the way was just patience and thinking of my "two" one things....my best friend from college had passed away this summer. She was just getting back to the gym, remarried, had 2 older kids.  She would message me questions about fitness and triathlon and we both motivated each other even though I was in Mississippi and she in Michigan.  She wouldn't let me quit.  Then there was also a little girl back home home with special needs who I'd see at the pool. Due to a prenatal stroke she had limited use of one side of her body.  She was practicing her 100 yd swim at the pool the day I did my last long swim.  That sight was indelibly imprinted on my heart.  She did her first kids triathlon just a few weeks ago.  These girls gave me motivation to keep going. So my two things:  seize the day (Jenny) and what is my excuse for not trying my best within my means (Adelynne) rocked me through IM #15.   My sweet husband walked me up the hill into town.  The crowd support the last 2 miles undeniably awesome.  Seeing both you Patricks at the finish a sight for sore eyes.  Discipline (not running, going slow, using boot) & preparation (tons of elliptical workouts/practice walking in boot) gave me the tools to finish safely.    Recovery is going really well!!

I just wanted to say again thank you for all that you do and for all the EN provides.  There are all kind of athletes.  You've accepted me where i am, with the race goals that I have, the life that I lead, and the time I can put in to the sport.  Thank you for that! I'm not data driven (but moreso now than a few years ago), I'm not time driven (although I do make some goals), and I've not had the time to post to forums as much lately (gonna get back to it!!).  But I do love and appreciate the team and team concept.  I love that I am a smarter athlete than can execute within my means.  I love it that I have more confidence and more love for this sport than ever!! And love the vision and direction that EN is moving! :) 

Will holler at you soon about direction for Ultraman Florida....just enjoying recovery mode right now with getting kiddos back to school and back to my part-time school teaching routine. 

Thank you, Mariah, Brenda (and yes, Coach Rich)!
Steph :)    



Comments

  • @Stephanie Weldon - what a beautiful report! Thank you so much for sharing. It has always struck me when I see people on the race course, particularly the run and I know they're suffering… That I really don't know what their motivations are or what keeps them going.

     This post is a great reminder that not only can appearances be deceiving, but that the playing field itself is not quite level despite appearances.

    Your ability to overcome the challenges he faced not only in training but on race day is indicative of an incredible internal self confidence you have. If anything,  your race was an opportunity to find an embrace that part of yourself. I'm glad you did and I'm even more happy that you know it.

    I hope your recovery is going well, and I'm standing by to help you with that as needed. We have a little more time before things wrap up, I don't even want to make sure we connect you with Brian and everyone else doing Ultraman so we feel 100% ready. 
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