Part 1 – The Build up
Saturday.
Up early, but not nearly as bad as the past. Having a room that overlooks the starting line absolutely ROCKS. Bananas, grits, bread and coffee were my breakfast as I prepared to go.
Did I mention the weather? I still don’t know what’s going on at this point. I have figured out that it’s probably going to be warm at the end. But going down to the starting line in the cold isn’t exactly attractive to me. We THOUGHT the weather (rain/snow/mix) that had been bouncing around the forecasts was going to hold off until the afternoon.
Conversations the previous day on twitter help formulate the plan:
- Shorts.
- Compression shorts under (because I don’t wear one without the other)
- Short sleeve tech shirt
- Covered with a long sleeve tech shirt (Because I’m turning into a wimp about the cold).
And then I put the shell on as well, because I don’t want to be wet and cold for 20 miles.
Finally, Gloves. The heavy HVAC ones from Brooks. Because I can run in 60 degrees, and my hands will STILL FREEZE.
So, we meet up with Team Weber in the lobby of the Embassy suite. I’m asked to run in the 3:40 pace group instead. Tempting, but if I’m feeling that good, I’ll make it up there in the second half.
Of course, I didn’t actually put on any of my monitor equipment (HR or GPS), so it’s back upstairs for a final pre-race bathroom break and to get wired up.
Back downstairs and out the door. The Family is going to see me off, then head back to the hotel for breakfast. I make it across the street, realize it’s STUPID for me to be wearing the shell, and start trying to find them to hand it off. It’s 45 Degrees at the start, with a bit of Sun. It’s hard to believe I was worried about the weather, as this is GREAT.
I’ve already figured that I’m going to start around the 3:45 pace group and go from there. I’ve set my goals:
- Finish. Anything else is gravy, but this one MUST happen.
- Sub 4 hours. To come out and beat a 4 hour marathon was definitely something that I wanted. It’s a meaningless number, that somehow has tons of meaning. 4:00:01 is much worse for me than 3:59:59.
- 3:45 or better. According to running formulas, I should be able to run a 3:30 marathon based on my Half and 10k times. I think it’s possible, but it’s going to take the PERFECT day for me to do it.
The start is a rush to me. Nice satisfying BANG from the canon to get us underway. 20 seconds or so later, I’m across the start line, and it’s ON. But I’m very determined NOT to burn out immediately. I’m also very wary of my foot, so sticking a little behind the 3:45 group is definitely part of the game plan.
Catching up to the 3:45 group quickly, I established that the pacer was Eric, from Rocket City Marathon Training. I’d found the blog earlier, trying to get a feel for the course, and was happy to find out that Rocket City Marathon was going to have pacers. As a bonus, he was going to be the pacer for the time I was looking to run. I enjoyed talking with him during the first half. I can’t say we discussed anything that was going to change the world, but it was very nice to have someone to talk to as the miles clicked off.
Mile 2 came up quickly, and as I looked to the right, I saw the family! I thought they were heading to breakfast, but apparently they decided to take advantage of the course design and walked over to cheer. Cutting across the group, with apologies! A quick High Five to my little girl, and a pat on the head to the boy and I was hurrying back to the pace group.

I can’t tell much about the miles after that until we hit the single lane on the road that extends FOREVER. I understand why the HTC doesn’t allow headphones, as this stretch especially would be dangerous with them, but MAN, you NEED them there. I don’t know the area enough to tell anyone WHERE it was, but I’m sure every runner on this course knows what I’m talking about.
Somewhere around half way, Eric had to hit the port-a-potty. We drank at all of the aid stations, which was great, but it was also definitely loading up the bladder. He ran ahead, telling everyone else not to follow. No problem. I basically kept going, speeding up a little bit, thinking that I was probably going to have to do the same soon as well. It would be better to have some extra time when that happened.
And it did happen. About the 500 yards after Eric peeled off, I started looking, with a bit of urgency. Unfortunately, it wasn’t for another 3-4 miles before I saw the next potty. I had picked up a bit of a gap, but it wasn’t enough. I came out behind the group. Now, I’m fairly competitive, so I ran out at a much quicker pace, ate up a fair amount of the difference, and settled down to slowly make up the difference.
I slowly reeled them in until I had closed to about 30 feet around mile 20. That was the closest I got to them again. I had a surprise waiting for me. The Kids and Family had finished their breakfast, had missed me at least once on the course, and made the decision to get ahead of me and WAIT. So, around mile 20, there the kids were, on both sides of the road, undoubtably running back and forth, TRYING to trip any runners.
I had to stop. I wasn’t tired, but this was going to be a stop.
Picture time:




Side note: Don’t attempt this. It’s stupid. Picking up your little girl in a bear hug is absolutely recommended. Doing so at 20 miles into a marathon, with 6.2 to go: Stupid. I lost so much strength doing this, and felt like I was going to fall, with her in my arms. DUMB.
I’d do it again in a heartbeat. I’m not smart.
I think I only lost about a minute there due to stopping, but it doing so killed my 3:45 goal. Slowing up, breaking pace and repetition took a fair amount of energy to get going again. I was off pace. And my feet hurt. Look at those pictures. I told you in part 1, I wasn’t going to run this marathon in shoes. No, I was in my Vibram FiveFinger Bikilas. No cushioning, no padding. And those are the old ones, which have almost all of the rubber worn away as well. The older pavement and roughness was acting as meat tenderizer on my feet, and it was adding up.
Even though I KNEW I was off the 3:45 pace group, I was ok with it. Seeing the kids out there, getting that love, well, I don’t know if it cost me 3:45 or saved my race. Probably both.
From miles 17-20, I was hitting 8:20, 8:14, 8:19 minutes per mile. After that, I was 9:04, 9:03, 9:20 (water stop), 9:04. I knew I couldn’t push ahead to 3:45 again, and I lost my competitive urge to do so. I backed off, without realizing it at the time. Looking at the HR and pacing data now, it’s obvious.
It wasn’t until 24-25 that I hit the wall. My 25 mile pace was 9:45. My feet hurt, and I just couldn’t push faster. I was hitting my low point.
I also couldn’t do math. My foot pod wasn’t calibrated EXACTLY on, and was over reporting my progress. I knew this, and had been able to do the math in my head to adjust. Naturally, as the miles added up, the error margin caused the overall distance to be more pronounced. But now, I couldn’t figure out what the factor needed to be, and determining the distance to go was rather funny. I was coming up with multiple, wildly divergent numbers every time I looked. I slowly realized I needed to forget about what the watch was telling me, and just pay attention to the mile markers and time shouters.
THIS helped me. I realized that even if I walked, I’d finish. Even if I walked, I’d probably finish under 4 hours (although not by much, and as I said, I wasn’t able to do math then.) It also helped that I was picking up some people and shouting for them to keep on pushing. Giving others encouragement to finish was helping me finish.
I didn’t need to walk. Realizing that my goals were in my grasp was all I needed to understand. I kept running. My last mile was 9:10 pace, and I was heading to sub 9 pace for the last .2 miles.
Now, here is where things on the course are fun. You run right by the Emergency room entrance for Huntsville Hospital. In the last .2 miles of a MARATHON. I’m surprised they didn’t have crash carts outside waiting.
The other fun thing was that I couldn’t figure out where the finish line was. I was on the right course, following the signs and volunteers, and I saw something ahead. But I couldn’t figure out what that blue thing was. I knew I had to run into the parking lot of the Holiday Inn, and the finish line was there. So until I was RIGHT on top of it, I thought I had to run through it, and then to the finish.
I did regain sanity. I realized it WAS the Finish. The Clock hanging from it helped a lot.
I’m glad I had my glasses on, because there were tears streaming.

Goals:
- Finish. This finish felt better than anything other race. I was definitely crying, and I was definitely smiling.
- Sub 4 hours. That time is GUN time. Chip time is 3:51:58. Remember what I said about those :59′s versus :02′s?
- 3:45 or better. I missed this. If I had stayed with the group instead of having to catch it, I think I could have done this. But I didn’t, can’t change it. And I WOULDN’T change stopping for the family. I’m OK missing this one. It’s still awesome.
Part 3 – Wrap up and thoughts. SOON.