One More Year

IMG_1342.jpg

The times, they continue to change.

IMG_1342

I have a list as long as my arm – leg – okay, maybe body – about topics that I have wanted to blog about but hadn’t. the couple of posts a month is probably a really clear indication of how crazy life off of the computer has been. I have really needed to focus on joy right now and unplugging a bit. But as I have said before, a source of joy is this blog, which is causing me to set the goal of blogging 5 times this week. More times than I’ve blogged in the last month! But I am ready to get back on the wagon.

I’ll start with my birthday. I turned 26 (gulp!) last Saturday. I was approaching this particular birthday half with anxiety, half with ambivalence. 25 was exciting, plus I’d just moved to SF and started a new life so there were a lot of milestones going on. 26, however – different story. On the one hand, I’m all for celebrating every birthday. It’s a time to celebrate yourself, do what you want, reflect on your life. Why should anyone wish a birthday not to come? It’s so much better than the alternative! But of course, that self reflecting piece has gotten the best of me these days. Lots of time spend wondering where I am in life, how I got here, where I wish I was, and how to get there. So the birthday came with some baggage, but the good sort – the kind you use for positive growth.

I definitely was not going to let a birthday pass uncelebrated so I planned a three-part celebration to make sure everyone could take part that may want to. The morning sent me on a quest for bocce ball and picnic food, and then my sister officially began the party when she showed up fresh-faced from Berkeley. We set up shop at the lawn at the Conservatory of Flowers for a picnic.

IMG_1335

IMG_1316IMG_1317

IMG_1365

We were blessed with amazing weather! It’s rare that I feel comfortable in gauchos and a t-shirt in SF – correction, that never actually happens. But it was a perfect day. Lots of friends, friends of friends, cheap wine, kettle salt and fresh ground pepper chips, birthday cake oreos, and general fun times.

I felt very blessed to get to spend my special day with so many awesome people.

IMG_1346

The evening activities commenced with a trip to Top of the Mark – blogger fail, no amazing pictures of the skyline! (Oh wait let’s remember – the last three months of my life have been a blogger fail.) Top of the Mark is at the Mark Hopkins Intercontinental Hotel at Mason and California (1 Nob Hill). You pay $15 for an unremarkable martini, BUT the 360-degree views of the city can’t be beat! It’s definitely a special, once-in-a-while spot, so I was excited to get there again along with a bunch of friends who had never been before.

IMG_1371

IMG_1372

The party continued across the street at the Tonga Room – no pictures here either, too busy drinking the lava bowls full of sugary rum punch and dancing away on the dance floor.(For anyone who has not been to the Tonga Room, it’s a historic “tiki bar” on the bottom floor of the Fairmont Hotel in Nob Hill – literally across the street from Top of the Mark. It rains inside and generally has a very cheesy but fun ambiance with drinks served in punch bowls and a live band that plays on a “boat” in the middle of the “lagoon” inside the restaurant. If you like tiki and love cheesy, you must come here.) The next day’s continued celebration brought pancakes and a stroll across the Golden Gate.

IMG_1389 IMG_1379

I had a great birthday day, but also have enjoyed ruminating on my goals and dreams for the next year of my life. 25 was not a great year – it was an important year, a transition year, but not a “wonderful” year. I believe I started many processes of personal growth and development that will ultimately make me the person I am going to be, but I haven’t gotten there – yet. however, I am looking forward to 26 and figuring out more about who I am and who I want to be. And I’m really grateful to have true friends to share it with.

  • SIMILAR POSTS YOU MIGHT LIKE . . .

    Share
  • Sidelined

    MarathonBeer.jpg

    Not being able to run sucks.

    It just totally sucks. But the funny thing is, it’s not the simple “not running” part that’s getting to me.

    Yes, running is a great activity. I love the way it makes me feel. I love the high I get at the end of a run and carry with me all day. I love feeling powerful and fit and strong. Even though my body is not perfect, when it carries me 16 miles easily and all before breakfast, it’s hard to begrudge it for what it is not.

    Whatever the injury is I am dealing with, I don’t believe it is severe. Yet. It could easily become so if I don’t get the right diagnosis and treat it accordingly. I am likely looking at about a month without running if you count the last two weeks (2 runs in there somewhere) and what I assume will be 2+ more weeks off. It’s really nothing compared to any legitimately serious injury!

    But yet I feel so horrible and I realize it’s not necessarily about running.

    What upsets me isn’t necessarily that I can’t get in an easy six before work. I can stay active—the gym, walking, hiking when my knee/leg/whatever does not hurt, join CrossFit, find somewhere to swim.

    It’s the weight of expectations that I seem to have placed on running, and the reality of not being able to live up to them.

    Running for me started in Africa where it was an escape. When my mind was concentrating on running, it was easier to block out the stress and loneliness of living in a bamboo hut overseas.

    I decided to run a marathon last year. It was the most empowering thing I have ever done. Every single weekend, a new personal distance record. Every weekend, another step towards doing something I never thought possible. And I’d never been happier.

    MarathonBeer

    That was kind of the theme of 2011 for me. Do what you can’t do. I never thought I’d run a marathon. I ran one and it was one of the most amazing experiences of my life. Then I ran another one at SFM, undertrained but with the goal of having fun (a quad thing knocked me out for a few weeks—it’s likely the same nagging injury that I have yet to figure out). Then I ran a third at CIM without really training for it either. And a fourth in Maui that I didn’t train for either, walking and just having fun.

    And you know what? I was okay with this. I was okay with running “just to finish” and not carrying about time or splits or sub-whatever or any of that other gunk. I just didn’t really care.

    But then something made me start feeling like I’m supposed to care. I’m supposed to be faster. I’m supposed to win an AG award. Break X:XX in whatever race. Even though I’m not good at running, and used to be okay with it, I started not being okay with it.

    Last year I phoned it in. The week after Hawaii was the week I was supposed to start training. Training. Not for anything big, just a goal half marathon, a trail marathon that would get me into Marathon Maniacs, and the Ogden marathon for which I declared 3:55 or bust, and pacing for SFM. I was ready for 40+ miles a week every week, a strict diet, speedwork every week, running up Twin Peaks for fun, dropping 10 pounds, and anything else that would finally qualify me as a runner in my own mind.

    And then that same week I got hurt.

    It’s probably not related to the chaos I’ve created for myself in my mind. But the timing is horribly coincidental. I’ve been dealing with running related injuries since I started running and always just squeezed through them on luck, and I’ve got a feeling that that is over. My luck has run out and it’s going to be a bit of a break.

    And I’ve already seen my goal half marathon and the elusive Marathon Maniacs membership slip through my fingers (toes?). Hundreds of dollars and dreams of goal race glory are on the line. And I can’t really handle it.

    I rarely feel relaxed these days. I feel so much pressure at work. I feel so much pressure in my relationships. In my hobbies. In my schedule. And running is supposed to be the release from all of that. And yet somehow, it’s become an equal source of pressure on me.

    Maybe I need a break. I want to be running and I truly do love it, but my favorite runs are the casual ones with friends when you just chat and you don’t care if you are running eight or eighteen minute pace. The runs back in the day Before the Garmin where I wasn’t constantly berating myself for being fat and slow based on those numbers on the screen. Before I turned the thing that was supposed to free me of stress into a great stressor. Though I believe there is a light at the end of the tunnel.

    DSC09698

    I need to get back what running had always been about for me: Release. Peace. Love. Joy. Not mile splits of PRs or Marathon Maniacs or finally having a 3 in front of my time to feel more legitimate. I have an obsessive personality, and each of my hobbies I tend to go a little too far. I’ve hit that point, and my body is probably doing the only thing it can to protest: screaming ‘ENOUGH ALREADY!”

    I’m going to do whatever I can to be able to run pain free. But once I can I’m going to try to remember why I fell in love with it in the first place.

  • SIMILAR POSTS YOU MIGHT LIKE . . .

    Share
  • Christmas Actually Is All Around

    IMG_0637.jpg

    As I sit here on Christmas evening, I’ve found myself thinking about what Christmas means to different people. It’s Jesus’s birthday, of course, but the holiday is celebrated in many different ways by people who believe many different things. There’s an overarching “holiday spirit” that infects us, and takes on a variety of forms. I’ve seen Christmas manifest itself in several ways over the last few days.

    Christmas is nighttime Embarcadero runs with friends, followed by fries.

    IMG_6125 IMG_6126

    Christmas is a Christmas Eve trail run with mom, a beautiful day with some big hills to boot.

    IMG_6140 IMG_6141

    IMG_6142

    Christmas is cinnamon rolls, cookies, waffles, more waffles, more cookies…

    IMG_6128 IMG_6148 IMG_6144

    Christmas is spending hours setting up what seemed like thousands of paper bags filled with dirt and votive candles two feet apart across two huge corner lots, only to have the end result be completely worth it.

    IMG_6145

    IMG_0637(Please note the bottom sign: Occupy Christmas! One man controls 99% of the presents!)

    IMG_0627 IMG_0631

    IMG_0632 IMG_0629

    Christmas is time with family.

    IMG_0650 IMG_0655

    IMG_0662 IMG_0668

    Even the adopted family that barks.

    IMG_0657

    Christmas is receiving Funfetti cake, pancake mix, a waffle maker, and The Stick for Christmas, and recognizing that your loved ones know you pretty freaking well.

    IMG_0677 IMG_0672

    IMG_0680 IMG_0681

    Christmas is watching movies that are definitely Christmas movies, some that are debatable, and others that most definitely are NOT.

    MovieElfMovieLoveActuallyMovieAChristmasStoryMovieDieHardMovieIndependenceDay

    But to me, most importantly, Christmas is a time to reflect on the faith that shapes my life that defines my heart, that gives me comfort in times of turmoil, that gives me hope in times of despair.

    Isaiah-7-14-kjv

    The holidays have been pretty loaded for me these last few years. In 2008 I was overseas and lonely, away from all I held dear; in 2009 I was home for two weeks after 15 months abroad and in extreme culture shock and confusion; in 2010 I had just returned home after 27 difficult months overseas. The post I wrote last year really shows where I was at that time—grateful.

    This holiday season has been hard. Instead of filling consumed by joy and love, I’ve been, to be honest, a bit sad. Loneliness has ruled in my mind over togetherness. Stress has overwhelmed peace. But finally this weekend I’ve been brought back to Earth, to focus on what truly matters instead of getting caught up in everything else.

    This week is my one year anniversary of returning home from Africa, one year since going vegetarian, one year since the most recent chapter of my life began. So it’s a little emotionally loaded. But what I pause to reflect on is LOVE. Just love.

    I’m looking forward to an exciting new year ahead, to new beginnings and endings. And to remember the spirit of Christmas for what is truly is: a gift of love.

    Merry Christmas everyone!

    Courtney

    PS. The winner of the coffee giveaway is MCM mama. Send me your address! : )

    GIVEAWAY

    What does Christmas mean to you?

  • SIMILAR POSTS YOU MIGHT LIKE . . .

    Share
  • Four Years.

    BlogBeach.jpg

    Two things that a lot of you probably don’t know: One, Thanksgiving is my favorite holiday. Two, and more significantly: it’s been four years since I’ve been in America for Thanksgiving.

    BlogBeach

    It’s been a year since I left the continent of Africa and coming up on a year since I returned home to the States after 27 months abroad, so I’ve been thinking a lot about what I’m thankful for. There’s the normal stuff we always talk about—friends, family, health, a roof over our heads—but after living abroad, there are a lot of things that I’m thankful for this year that at my last thanksgiving (2007) I took for granted.

    BlogFamily

    I’m thankful for a shower that delivers hot, soothing water, after years of cold showers or bathing in a bucket. This is something I will appreciate more for the rest of my life.

    I’m thankful for electricity that works, reliably, not once in a while when it feels like it.

    I’m thankful that any runs in with mice, cockroaches, ants, or scorpions are rare occurrences rather than an everyday part of life.

    BlogSnake

    I’m thankful for the ability to pick up my phone and call my parents or friends whenever I feel like it. I complain about AT&T’s horrible reception in SF, but it’s better than having reception disappear for days at a time, prohibitive call rates, and the other difficulties that made communication so difficult for years.

    I’m thankful that when I want to go somewhere, I can get in my car, jump on the bus, or get a cab. I don’t depend on vans that are broken down with a drunk driver and no door with 30 people inside them, or sitting on the side of the road trying to hitchhike without knowing how far I’ll end up getting and wondering if I’m going to have to sleep on the road.

    BlogBoleia

    I’m thankful that I can go running and not have people staring at me, chasing me, or throwing things at me. Rather, I am one of many, and it’s normal. I’m thankful that I have a healthy and capable body that can run 8 miles with my mommy in the freezing thanksgiving day rain.

    BlogRunning

    I’m thankful that at the age of 25 I’ve been able to visit dozens of countries and amazing places in the world.

    BlogSwazi

    BlogTableMtn

    BlogCairo

    BlogThailand

    BlogTower

    I’m thankful for the perspective that spending time in Africa for 2+ years gave me. For knowing that every day for the rest of my life, I’ll be thankful for things I never would have thought about before.

    BlogNalia

    BlogSavannah

    And lastly, I’m thankful for skinny peppermint mochas, and for Starbucks’ ridiculous $5 price point that guarantees I’ll only buy one per year.

    BlogCup

    Happy Thanksgiving everyone.

    Courtney

    What are you thankful for?

  • SIMILAR POSTS YOU MIGHT LIKE . . .

    Share
  • Wake Me Up When September Ends.

    IMG_4301.jpg

    September is over.

    September has brought some really fun stuff in its four short weeks.

    I had an awesome Labor Day weekend.

    IMG_4301

    I spent a week in Utah.

    IMG_4393

    I made a whole bunch of jam.

    IMG_4239

    I hung out with other bloggers.

    Fitbloggin

    I cheered friends at a marathon.

    IMG_4812

    There were a lot of other highlights that didn’t make the blog.

    IMG_4640

    IMG_4662

    IMG_4861

    IMG_4867

    IMG_4671    IMG_4685

    IMG_4751    IMG_4905

    But, I’m going to be totally honest here. September was a REALLY, really rough month for me.

    I have my moments of musing and ramblings but I try to keep my blog generally positive and happy. Which is fine, so long as it’s honest. But pretending like things have been great lately would not be honest. Because they haven’t been great.

    I have been really, really stressed. I wake almost every night drenched in sweat and hyperventilating from some nightmare. I’ve been emotional in ways I am normally not. Some days at the office I’ve had to bite my tongue to keep from crying OR from screaming. I’ve bawled to friends or family on the phone multiple times. None of these are normal.

    My personal life has been a bit hard to keep tabs on. Work/life balance remains a struggle, and behind exhausted all the time lends itself to being a hermit and there’s nothing worse than having a long, stressful day only to go home and sit in your tiny apartment by yourself. I am someone who thinks too much. I need distractions and happy and positive people in my life. Some of my friendships have faltered this month, some things were my fault, and some things I fail to understand. And I haven’t had the emotional energy to deal with it the right way.

    Running has been hard because I’ve been tired and sleeping through my alarms. And running is an escape of sorts, but when my brain isn’t able to turn off and zone out, a six mile jog becomes a mental marathon to get through.

    And body image and stuff remains a challenge. I have toyed with going back to eating meat but haven’t been able to yet. I make healthy choices but then I snack out of boredom or stress constantly. I can’t fit in clothes I’ve been wearing for nine years.

    This month has just kind of been a black pit.

    But it’s over.

    October brings new chances, new changes. A time to start over. A time to reprioritize. When I wake up tomorrow nothing will have changed, nothing real or tangible.

    But I hope I remember that each day I wake up I have a choice. A choice to love my body and thus give it the respect and care it deserves. A choice to let things stress me out and affect my life that shouldn’t. a choice to live each day fully and joyfully.

    image

    I’ve got big goals and plans for October but I’ll let that stand as another post. Until then, good riddance, September. May your happy memories stay with me and your darker moments serve as a reminder when things get rough. There is a light at the end of the tunnel and I’m putting this month behind me and, like my mom says, choosing hope.

    How was your september?

  • SIMILAR POSTS YOU MIGHT LIKE . . .

    Share
  • Worth The Hurt? SF Marathon Recap!

    SFMary.png

    So many of you already know I ran the San Francisco Marathon this Sunday. Here is my story.

    IMG_3433

    I arranged everything the night before and got into bed at like 8PM. I was even tired, and therefore proud of myself—I’d actually get sleep! But then of course I lay in bed for 2 hours tossing and turning and listening to the neighbor’s dog upstairs bark its head off and once I DID fall asleep I woke up half a dozen times ready to go. Finally the 3:15AM alarm went off and it was go time.

    IMG_3434

    I got dressed, pulled everything together, and ate my race-day breakfast (peanut butter and banana sandwich). Then I spit toothpaste all over my race shirt, almost poured flat Mike’s Hard Cranberry Lemonade (who buys that stuff?!) into my water bottles instead of Gatorade, and my cab didn’t come. My “confirmed” cab. Thank God I have a car! Jeez. Left around 4:25 AM and headed down towards the quiet and peaceful Embarcadero.

    IMG_3436

    I was at the start area for a while, just kind of taking it all in (and waiting in portapotty lines). I moved from wave 2 back to wave 4 so I had 20 more minutes before the start. We were SO BLESSED with the weather—it was clear and crisp but not cold! I’d brought THREE extra layers to shiver in at the start line and it was perfectly pleasant. That was awesome.

    IMG_3443

    Beforehand I’d run into Cate and Alyssa and then I met up with my new friend Erica in the wave 4 corral. It was SO NICE to see friendly faces in the morning and feel like we were all in it together.

    IMG_3441

    Then the running part started.

    I went out with Erica and that was awesome. I also didn’t listen to my iPod for the first 8 miles which was even awesomer. I told myself the race didn’t start until mile 5 (the first real hill)… the beginning was just a warm up. I ran with Erica, chatted a bit, took in the whole experience, marveled at those out cheering at 6AM. I also went out too fast. I don’t have my Garmin splits (I’m at a hotel in Portland right now…) but I know I ran the first mile in 9 flat, the second in 9:10, the third in 9:05, and the fourth right around there.

    I was feeling rather good and rather fresh up to the first hill up to the bridge. I walked a part of that—I knew this was one of the tougher hills and didn’t want to push it too hard so early on. Then we were on the bridge.

    At mile 6 I was at about 55 minutes, averaging just over 9 minutes per mile. I started feeling pretty dehydrated at this point. I knew I needed to take in more liquid and also energy. I took my first GU at mile 6 and determined at that point I’d walk through the rest of the aid stations to make sure I actually drank at least two cups of water per, and even that wouldn’t be enough.

    Running the bridge was awesome. I’ve run the bridge a lot, but it’s always stressful dodging cyclists, strollers and tourists. This time was really awesome. Though I actually noticed much more that it was a hill! (Photo courtesy SFM)

    sfmbridge

    Before I knew it the bridge was over and we were at mile 10 at 1:35 or so. The next hill in the Presidio was the biggest and I walked a BIG chunk of that. I didn’t feel bad at all, as I was decently ahead of 4:15 pace at this point. The hill wasn’t as bad as I remembered, though, and before I knew it I was running again. We made it into the Richmond, mile 11, and I was thinking that I had gone out much too fast. I had had it in my mind that it would get easier past the Presidio, but that doesn’t mean I didn’t have 16 more miles to run!

    I lost Erica at mile 11 when they split the road right between us and that really bummed me out—the miles had gone by so much faster with her next to me! But I pushed through the hills down the avenues and made it into Golden Gate Park at mile 12.

    I expected everything to get easier here—I was on my home turf! However, I felt the effects of my poor pacing. I crossed the half mark at 2:08.

    2:08 is a very respectable time for a half.

    2:08 is a VERY respectable time for the first half of SF which is verrrry hilly.

    2:08 is an IDIOTIC time for someone who planned to run the first half in 2:12-2:15 and then try to negative split the course as everyone says to do at SF.

    Pushing myself faster than I should have over the first half made the second half very difficult. Luckily miles 13-16 went by pretty fast because I knew I’d have friends at mile 16! The thought really brightened me up when I started to slow. (Photo below courtesy of RoadBunner—look how gorgeous and happy and awesome these girls are! Great signs. Thanks.)

    sfmarycheerleaders_sandra

    At this point I was already taking a LOT of walk breaks. Big Sur was hillier and I didn’t start taking any walk breaks til mile 17 and this was much different. I felt dehydrated, tired, sore, achy, any combo of bad things. It was REALLY hard to keep running already. I willed myself around Stow Lake and out of the park, telling myself that it was all downhill from there (literally).

    SFMary

    I couldn’t even run all the way down Haight Street (my street!) I was just still trying to recover from the worse hills of the first half and the pace. I had told myself I should never see an 8 on my Garmin; rather often I had looked down and seen myself running an 8:30 pace. That is NOT my marathon pace. And I paid for it.

    A guardian angel in the form of a coworker saved my life with a bottle of Gatorade at the mile 20 marker. The steep downhill on Haight Street was rather painful and knocked me out even worse. But then I knew I’d see my sister between mile 21 and 22 so it willed me on… and then the best surprise… MY WHOLE FAMILY was on the corner of 16th and Harrison! What a blessing. They walked up that corner with me and it was awesome. My dad had the app too that gave them my splits.

    sfmaryapp2

    HONESTY: the last 4/5 miles were death. They were just horrible. Not scenic, industrial, ugly, rolling hills, couldn’t really tell where I was going, TIRED. I kept walking. I don’t know if it’s because I didn’t have the physical energy or the mental willpower to keep on going. At mile 23 I said I’d run the last 5K nonstop even if I was practically crawling. I made it 0.2 miles before I had to stop and walk again. It didn’t even necessarily feel like a wall. I just felt like I’d given up.

    Also, the course ran a bit long which made it so frustrating on the Garmin those last few miles. I’m pretty sure I clocked the race at 26.55 miles. That extra 0.35, legit or not, was like, four minutes on my marathon time! So I plan to subtract those four minutes and declare that my new time. Just kidding.

    SFMaryFinishline

    I knew where the finish line was before I could see it. I did everything I can to keep myself going. I’d seen my 4:15 pace slip to a 4:19 and then plus 4:20. I just didn’t want to risk not beating my Big Sur time of 4:27:50 or something like that so I willed myself across the finish line in 4:22:50, a PR by 5 minutes.

    SFMaryFinish

    After those last five miles of misery I was very, very grateful to be done.

    SFMaryMedal

    And to get a heatsheet. My first heatsheet! Courtney’s all grown up…

    SFMaryHeatsheets

    Once I was able to hobble my way out of the finish chute and around to my fam, I immediately stuffed half a banana, half a scone, and a handful of M&Ms into my mouth and then promptly wanted to vomit (but I didn’t so success).

    IMG_3451

    SFMaryFinishMomCait

    Once I could walk and talk normally again we went to the ferry building for bathrooms and to grab some food for the fam. it was SUCH an amazing surprise to see all my family there and it meant so much to me to have them there for me when I crossed the finish line and promptly ceased to be a sentient being.

    IMG_3462

    So I finished alive and set a PR. But how do I really feel about this race?

    Basically, it would be foolish and selfish of me to be anything BUT overjoyed with this race. I have blogged about SFM a lot lately leading up to it, about injury, lack of training, feeling grateful just to get to the start line without being hurt. To have not only gotten to the starting line but also to the finish line in one piece with no injury and even beating my last time is joyous. Especially because I didn’t push myself too hard—I took one day off slightly sore and then went running on Tuesday. Back to normal. (Minus the significant chunks of both my middle toes that are missing… hmmmm.)

    In short I am so happy and grateful that I got to have this race experience, and to share it with family and friends, and to stay healthy.

    But this race also frustrated me. Because it showed me a taste of what I COULD do.

    I made some mistakes in this race and had I just went out a little slower, fueled a little better, and most importantly, willed myself along in those last 5 miles I could have easily run a 4:10-4:15 today. But I didn’t. Part of that is physical. But a big part of that was mental. I couldn’t tell you if, in those last five miles, I didn’t have any physical energy left or if I simply didn’t have enough mental energy to care. I remember thinking to myself, “I’m gonna kick myself for these last five miles” during them, but it just wasn’t enough. It made me realize that I need to get healthier and train better and stop selling myself short and I WILL run that 4:10 marathon or someday a 3:59:59. I’m not fast and I never will be, but I CAN get better at this both physically and mentally and SFM showed me a glimpse of that.

    It’s so easy to focus on the shortcomings—why can’t I be one of those people who runs a 4:00 marathon?—instead of the progress. Hey, when I started running in January for reals, my short run pace was 10:30. Now I can do 8:30s. PROGRESS!! And that’s the great thing about running… you’re only truly competing against yourself.

    IMG_3465

    Around noon, I met up with a bunch of bloggers and friends at Pier 23. I wasn’t really hungry at this point (I’d felt like throwing up for a good portion of the race, and I NEVER really get nauseous,..) but I got a beer (awesome) and some sweet potato fries. it was great to get to catch up with everyone and hear about different race experiences, and find a bit of comfort in that most EVERYONE hated those last five miles!

    IMG_3470

    The day ended with two beautiful things: Ben & Jerrys, and Genki Ramen with Alyssa and Erica. Perfection.

    IMG_3474

    Part of me feels like I let myself down in this race by not pushing harder, and then I remember, I went into this race wanting no pushing at all. I came into this race to enjoy it as an experience, to learn, to take it all in, to fall in love with the marathon. And I did. No matter what, there are going to be things we wish we could change—that’s reality. But most importantly, I did it, I finished marathon #2, and I achieved my main goal:

    I had fun.

    Here’s to the next, hopefully faster, marathon and all the FUN to come between now and then!

    xoxo, courtney

    Check out some of my new friends’/running inspirations’ recaps:

  • SIMILAR POSTS YOU MIGHT LIKE . . .

    Share