Chasing Iron
  • motivation
  • October1st

    3 Comments

    There are so many words swimming around in my head. So much to say, but lots of time to say it, so I suppose the biggest, most exciting thing is that I feel a spark. A spark of excitement about racing again. Which is probably a good thing, since tomorrow is my first triathlon since CdA. I’m doing the Lake Lanier Islands Triathlon as a relay because I can’t run right now.

    I should probably back up, eh?

    A few months ago my brother asked if I’d be interested in registering, since he was doing his first sprint. I dropped the phone and registered immediately because I was so excited. Having the opportunity to share my love of this sport is awesome, and I’m incredibly proud of my brother for all the work he has done to get into amazing shape. So that was the impetus. To be honest, I wasn’t really all that excited about the actual race…just the idea of sharing it with family.

    I wish I hadn’t let my training go so much over the past year so that I could have trained more with him, but well, you start where you are, right? I’ve wrestled with injury for awhile on and off, and most recently, an irritated disc that put me out of commission from training. As it healed, I became afraid of doing anything that might send me back into agonizing pain. Which means that I’m pretty much starting from scratch in terms of fitness.

    I’ve wondered over the past year and a half when the spark would come back. I’ve had the occasional thought as I watched bits and pieces of races online, or read friends blogs. But I wasn’t really ready to do it myself. I suppose CdA took more out of me than I thought. It’s been a mixture of feelings and emotions as I continued to process those months of training and the outcome of that day in Idaho. Not only was it was an emotional and stressful time in my life because of personal events, but dealing with the disappointment that came with coming up short that day has been tough. I didn’t realize how much of my identity was wrapped up in triathlon, and walking away from it completely for awhile allowed me to focus on some other areas of my life. But I always felt a little tug, something that told me I wasn’t ready to give it up completely.

    So what have I learned?

    You have to be clear on why you’re racing.
    No one else can do the work for you.
    It’s difficult.
    But it should be fun.
    When it stops being fun, that’s when you should ask yourself why you’re racing.
    Triathlon has to fit around my life, rather than my life fitting around triathlon.
    I have to let it go. All of it.
    Crossfit broke me down, but it also made me stronger. And I’ll be returning in some form to complement SBR once I get the all clear to lift heavy things.
    Sometimes doing things the right way, even when it takes longer, is the smartest way.
    Races will always be there. There’s no rush. I need to spend time doing the work to put myself in a healthy spot (and as a side note, I did get the ok to swim and bike tomorrow…:p)
    I am in charge of my success. There are lots of reasons why things didn’t go the way I wanted in Idaho. But when it comes down to it, I made choices that weren’t a part of the plan. And that taught me a really important lesson. And I suppose that when you look at it that way, that day was a success.

    You have to start somewhere. So, here is where I start. With my bike racked in transition, my clothes laid out, and a plan to have fun tomorrow. To not worry about time. To enjoy the buzz in the air, and the feeling of being back in an element that feels like home.

  • February22nd

    4 Comments

    I can count on two hands the number of workouts that have completely broken me. Maybe that’s a bad thing. I mean, maybe the point of every workout is to push you harder than before? And many of my workouts have done that. I mean, most often, I have a sense of accomplishment and pride about what I’ve just done. But there are a small percentage that have literally left me in a puddle, completely broken, angry and defeated. The WOD that did that to me last week was the following –

    For time:
    21 Mankillers* (a burpee done with 2 DBs, a pushup, then a clean and push press at the end)
    28 Plank Rows*
    35 Thrusters*
    42 Suitcase Deadlifts*
    49 Step-Ups*

    *Each move is to be done with dumbbells. Only one pair of dumbbells is to be used for the entire workout. In my case, I used 20# DBs.

    Looking at it, it doesn’t sound that bad. I mean, there are scary workouts in every genre, and I have done other Crossfit WODs that were longer or more daunting (hell, I’ve run for hours and hours, ridden 125 miles, swam 5000m, pushed my body for 15+ hours in Ironman), nothing should break me, right (ha!)?

    This one stuck up on me and beat me up. Maybe because I’m in the midst of changing my diet for the long-term. Maybe because I’ve been dealing with lower back pain for the last few years (which has left me really tentative about anything that makes it hurt). Maybe because out of anything I’ve done, Crossfit has had the biggest learning curve. Whatever the combo was, I just crumbled. I finished the WOD (because quitting lasts forever), went home and got in the shower, and thought about that workout.

    What is it about the ones that have broken me? Tour de Cashiers, BOBBBR, Maui Marathon, ING Georgia Marathon, Ironman. I can unequivocally say that it was 30% physical, and 70% mental. All of those races and events were HARD. And Crossfit is HARD. When it’s just you and some dumbbells, you get a glimpse at where your head is. At where the challenge is. And at what you can accomplish. But it also shows you where the suck is. It doesn’t let you get comfortable with the things that might be a little easier. Because just when you start getting comfy, it kicks you in the face and you end up on the floor wondering how you got there in the first place….

    I like it.