Wednesday, October 24, 2012

A tale of two rides

This is a race report about my training for the Wildflower triathlon ….. and what I learnt. The ride itself was almost 6 months ago, so I hope the details have not dulled in my mind though that might have the pleasantly surprising outcome of cutting my report in half :)

The idea of doing a triathlon was by no means new to me. Way back in 2003, I ran my first marathon, and the next logical step to me seemed to be to try a half ironman distance triathlon. The circs. were thus. I volunteered at the Santa Cruz half, and saw an Asha alumni, Rajesh Agarwal participate, and was mightily impressed. Enough to quickly buy a couple of books on triathlons and swimming in particular. I made my own attempts to improve my swimming but sooner than later frustration got to me and I gave up. No, I sort of put it off indefinitely. I guess "indefinitely" = 9 years. 

When Chakri sent out a discount coupon in Feb this year for the Wildflower triathlon, I was quite amused that I had somehow made it to the list of folks considered interested in (capable of?) tris. I had been biking and running the last two years but a triathlon still seemed a stretch, but it did occur to me that I could actually do a relay with someone doing the swim leg and still feel like I have been part of a triathlon, and that reeled me in. If I was going to do this, where else than the prestigious Wildflower ….. and I quickly registered a team. Eventually, after some anxiety about Raghu's readiness to swim the distance, Vivek Kini agreed to swim for me.

Wildflower, Chakri kept assuring me, was not going to be easy, and we had to train hard. I was very ready for that - I just loved biking anyway. We rode quite a bit from Feb till May. I consider myself a much stronger biker than runner, but Wildflower cutoffs seemed very aggressive to me - 56 miles of quite hilly terrain in 4:15 was 13-14 mph on average, and everyone promised it would be blistering hot. The run, in comparison was 13.1 in 3 hours and didn't seem as daunting. And so I put in all my work on the bike for the most part. We did a few bricks, but I surely didn't do any justice to the run department. To be precise I did 2 bricks, one was a 6 mile run that we ran at a very easy pace, after a 50 mile flattish ride. The second was a 6 mile run that turned into a 2 mile run and 2 mile walk after I had too much back pain …. this after a 70 mile hilly ride.

May 5th was the Wildflower Long Course, as it was called. Long course, because they do not have an ironman distance triathlon, just the half, and so that was the longest there was (though I did hear rumblings that they plan to start a full next year!)

Two weeks before that Chakri said we should go on a test ride of the same route - an on-location simulation, if you will, and I was more than ready. I felt confident I had done my training. 56 was easy for me on the bike, just that I had to do it a bit faster than I was used to, but Chakri and Chandrika had periodically pooh-poohed the idea that I might not be ready for that. I treated it just like another of our weekend training rides ….. we got up early on Saturday morning and the four of us, Chakri, Chandrika, Stan and I drove down in Chakri's car to Wildflower. Chakri has a 4 bike rack, that made the decision very easy as to who would drive :) Chandrika was signed up for the long course too, and Chakri and Stan … well they just love to torture themselves anyway :) The plan was to get there early before the sun started torching the place, and maybe swim the 1.2 (not me of course) before biking and running …. 

You know what they say about the best laid plans …. we got there only by around 10am. Stan busily wolfed down bagel after bagel on the way, but I could hardly ingest any. I normally don't eat much before our regular bike rides, choosing instead to consume on the ride in abundant quantities - a fact well documented by most of my fellow riders! Coffee, on the other hand, is a must for me before any ride or run. I hadn't slept much the previous night either and that always leaves my stomach a little more confused. The last few miles of our drive were spent pondering if swimming should happen or not, and the verdict was a no as it was already late. We changed into gear somewhat lazily …. I carried a camel bak full of water as there were absolutely no water sources on the route and it is usually scorching hot. Just as we were about to head out, Chakri tried picking up something and felt a twinge in his back! Worse timing, he could not have had (Hmm… Yoda :)) Unfortunately, he had to sit this one out after all :(

The 3 of us set off on our bikes. I was feeling confident and good - we had done a lot more mileage quite many times in training with more elevation gain. I was less concerned about the biking than the running. I had reached the point where 56 miles felt like a short bike ride. Such is the power of training! We got past Lynch hill very quickly, and I smiled to myself at the acclaimed steep 1 mile hill at the start - it wasn't anything to worry about really - and were out on the rollers very quickly. I didn't pay too much attention to time - I was sure Chandrika and Stan would take care of that. We went about 20 miles before taking our first break. Most of the time I was ahead, but slowed to keep with them. 20 miles was a lot more than I was used to doing without stopping though. And my stops in training were always nice and long, and filled with adequate munching and chatting. Stan and Rika were all business! They grabbed something to eat, quickly sipped and headed out promptly, claiming I would catch up anyway! I was just getting set for a nice chat and drink and munch! Hmmph! So much for the fun part of bike rides! Rika always had this crazy notion that I am a much faster biker than her. I took my time - though not as much as I would have liked to - I didn't want to lose them completely! Much of the course was long straight-ish roads with almost absolutely no trees anywhere. The whole place even looked very hot and dry and quite drab too for that matter, reminding me of the hot and sunny plains you see in old westerns. 

I continued alone now but I could see them in the distance and I was determined to catch up with them before the next break. I pushed harder than I would have liked to, and the flats were often really false flats that made you think you should be going at a faster pace then you were. Yet, they seemed to be keeping the distance between us intact! It was easy to keep sight of them; there were almost no other riders, very few cars and hardly any trees. I kept pushing and made up some distance by the time I got to Jolon road. Jolon had a few more rollers. Interlake until then was pretty much flat with a little downhill thrown in. I steadily kept pushing - the rollers seemed to be on my side as with each roller I found myself seemingly closer to them. Maybe my reputation for being good on hills was paying off finally. I finally caught up with about 3-4 miles left on Jolon before turning right just before Highway 101, and winding through what I seem to remember looking like vineyards (but now I am wondering why if there are really vineyards in that area?). I hadn't paid much attention to my drinking in my focus on catching up, and I tried to make some amends now. In spite of that, it seemed like I was quite a ways through my water reserves. We turned off of Jolon road, and for the first time I started feeling some fatigue. I checked the odometer - we were just at 32 miles …. that couldn't be right - I was a good rider and 32 should be a cakewalk. Maybe carrying the 3L camelbak and Chandrika's extra bottle in my back pocket was weighing down more than I expected? I felt lower back pain inching in and the shoulders were hurting a bit. By this time the sun was really started to burn the place up. I shrugged off the pain and tried to talk some confidence into myself and slowed down just ever so little. Stan by now had let Chandrika go ahead and was riding with me and trying to see if I was doing okay. Maybe he could see trouble coming before I could :) The road curved back and forth with very small rollers, and I kept looking out for the famous Nasty Grade. It seemed like it would never come! I realized I hadn't been eating much in my rush to keep up with the two of them and their break strategy. Finally the left turn onto Nasty Grade showed up. I had fallen a bit behind, and I stopped for a quick break for food and water. My back was hurting more but I was still optimistic that things would be fine as Nasty Grade was here, and hills were my thing. Once up it, it would be just a 10-12 mile home stretch ride back and then the run. 

Nasty Grade started off nice and easy, and I was happy that all the Montebellos of the spring had done their job. But very soon, I started getting tired again. As we moved further on Nasty Grade, the heat started building up. The walls on both sides grew, and it was like we were in a canyon. There air was absolutely still and the sun was scorching. I could feel the heat radiating around me, and it was started to feel like my arms were on fire. I could see Chandrika in the distance also seemingly struggling. Both of us had slowed to snail's pace and were just pushing to keep moving. There was close to zero shade anywhere in sight. We found one tree and headed straight for it, gulped down water and paused for breath, and set off again. Another mile maybe, and we saw another tree up front, and without thinking or looking, I veered onto the left side of the road and pulled under it. Chandrika was already there, and just about ready to head out again. We cursed the heat and she left. I followed shortly, but there was just no respite from the sun. Another mile or so later, she pulled up 100 mts in front of me, got off and bent over the bike like she was going to throw up. I managed to keep it together, and slowly pulled out past her and further up the hill. This was the slowest I had ever done a hill before. I was having to do a bit of zig zag every now and then to keep balance. I saw a gate up ahead and the road turned left and I prayed it was the top, but there was no sign of Stan. By now I was feeling really drained, and set my goal as the gate. I would stop there no matter what. I did. And I saw Stan atop the hill still a good 300 mts away I think. It gave me some strength to know the end was near. I got back on and worked on my mantra - left foot, right foot, left foot, right foot - all the way to the top just looking 2 yards ahead of me. I finally made it and pulled myself off the bike feeling exhausted. I am not sure if Chandrika was behind me or ahead of me anymore, but we got there within minutes of each other. We took a much needed break. Stan was out of water!! I tried offering him some but I too had not much left, and he decided to wait till he really needed it. 

Well, it was just down to 12 more now, but I was beginning to feel pain all over, and my head wasn't feeling too good. It looked like we were falling behind on time as well, but that wasn't a big concern for me anymore. I was still trying to convince myself I would feel better on the flats ahead and recover a bit of energy, enough to get the run in somehow. We started off again, those two looking much fresher than I was feeling and they went on ahead. Whoever said it was all flat after Nasty Grade was smoking something. It was definitely uphill for a good bit more and then rolling for another couple of miles I think. Finally the much talked about long downhill came up. Stan had been riding back and forth, and promised a nice ride, and said its just 10 miles from here, and 2-3 of those are downhill. As I started down, my muscles felt like they were hurting, and I had to keep stretching my back every chance I got. Leaning forward on the downhill was hurting my back too much. Just as we finally got to the bottom, I felt a slight cramp in my right hamstring. I quickly relaxed the leg and started focusing on kicking from the hip and leaving the leg muscles loose. As Stan came by, I told him I was cramping and he said take salt … it hadn't even occurred to me! I stopped and took a couple and drank a lot of water. Now even flats were feeling like torture. Chandrika had disappeared ahead of me somewhere. I kept telling myself just 8 miles more and pushed as best as I could. The cramp came back, this time stronger and in the quads too. I kept adjusting and trying to move slowly. In a few mins the left leg started cramping too at the calf. I stopped and stretched a bit, and kept drinking water. Stan was by now staying behind me all the time. I put in another mile and was feeling like I was going to pass out and found a tree on the left, and found my way across the road for some much needed shade. My head was not computing anymore and I was unable to focus on much. I accepted that I would not be able to run anymore, and told myself I just needed to get back to the car. 

After a longish break, I gulped more salt pills and water and started back with Stan saying just 6 miles more or something like that. By now I was just looking in front of my front tire, and not really registering much, just saying keeping pedaling. At one point Stan said "pothole right in front of you" and I just had enough time to veer around the edge of the pothole. I wasn't thinking anymore. I just wanted to get back. The rest of the ride was the same. Lots of cramps in both legs, periodic stopping and drinking and getting painfully back on. Even the tiny rollers on San Antonio felt like big hills and I could barely keep myself moving. Stan drifted back to Chandrika, and I figured we were close to Lynch hill. That was a 1 mile downhill, so I just needed to get to that left turn. I kept my eyes peeled on the road for the yellow left turn marker, but it never seemed to come. Soon I started going just slightly downhill, and it puzzled me a little as I didn't remember this when coming out at the start. Nevertheless I continued, until finally I saw a Run course U turn marker. I was sure as hell we didn't' pass this, so I pulled up, and called Chandrika. VM. I called Chakri. VM. Tried again, and got him, and he confirmed that I just missed the left turn and went by. I had not even noticed that Stan and Rika just ahead of me had taken the left. They were so close they thought I would have seen them. I turned around and saw the road snaking ever so gradually uphill, hardly a 2-3% grade. But I was beat. Mentally I had decided there was no more uphill, and my mind just gave up. I asked Chakri to come pick me up, found the nearest tree, let my bike drop to the ground and collapsed beside it. 3 or 4 times along the last 8 miles I had felt like passing out and I felt like it again. A huge headache was building up and I was feeling nauseous. Finally Chakri arrived. Having tweaked his back, he could not lift anything, so I had to put up the bike myself on the rack. I am not sure how I found the strength to do that. I walked over to the passenger side and saw something on the seat, and quietly walked across to the other side rear seat. I didn't have the mental strength to think of clearing the front seat!

We got back to the start point where we found Chandrika and Stan looking tired, but already a lot fresher than on the ride. I was completely out. I didn't want to take a step out - I just wanted to be where I was and sleep. Chandrika got some paracetamol from some other nice people nearby, which I took and collapsed back in the seat. Chandrika and Stan looked like they could do a run, but they finally decided against it, and we left soon enough to go have lunch. Through all of lunch, I was quite out of it and only started feeling a little revived by the time we got close to the bay area. 

The next few days were spent trying to forget how it all went. I was mentally demoralized. I could barely finish the ride without passing out, didn't do 56 and still didn't make the time I needed to. Forget that there was a 13.1 mile run to follow! I felt like a failure and didn't want to think about it. This had been a mistake and I wasn't ready for tris or tri-relays. Only an idiot would have picked a really tough half to do for a first tri, even a relay! On the way back from our training ride, Chakri suggested I get someone to run the run side for me even now. I didn't say anything, but it was clear he didn't think I was ready either. Chandrika interjected and said "No, let him try, I think he can do it". I smiled. Good old Chandrika, always so optimistic and good to me. After a week went by - enough time to forget the pain and hurt, I resolved to do this by myself. I probably would not finish but if I gave up now and got someone to run for me, it would feel more of a failure than if I tried. I just wanted to get past the bike and into the run - that was my new goal. I talked to Coach Char, Stan, Vinod and Anshu. Took whatever advice I could get, thought about everything that went wrong and tried to fix as many of those things as possible. I started talking confidence into myself again, and prepared to have a good time if nothing else.

The last week was spent making arrangements. Umesh was joining us and also registered for the long course. He had been coming along really well and was surely ready to ace the course. Rajeev Shankar and Harpal Kochar, two other triathletes, and friends of Coach Char would meet us there directly. I drove and took Umesh and Vivek. Chakri, the angel that he usually is, decided to come along just for company, and drove Chandrika and Char. We came up with everything we needed from one of Mouli's prep lists, put everything in and headed out. We found out Umesh is much more OCD than me when it comes to preparing for trips like these :) Being part of SVTC, he also had access to some premier campground space and assured us we were welcome to use it. While a bit hesitant that we would be one member and 5 pile-ons, we accepted eventually. The drive itself was quite uneventful, as we had been there before. We all took Friday off to get there early and "chill". Umesh wanted to check out the famed bike course on the way, and we did. Driving Nasty Grade felt so easy, but memories of our time two weeks before were still fresh in my mind so I treated it with respect. After we found our spots and settled down, we went down to the start point to pick up our gear and check things out. It was a bloody steep climb down, and this was pretty much going to be part of the run course!! Not fun! Anyway, we picked up our goodie bags and got ourselves marked up with our bib #s. This was one of the best parts. I already felt like a celebrity athlete! Just like those guys you see on TV with numbers on their calves and arms! Totally rad! A little more walking around the expo, checking out the transition area, finding the India flag, and finally we were heading back to our campsite. The climb seemed tough even walking! It was already evening, and we got comfortable, fixed up the bibs on the helmet and bike and got everything ready for the next day. I found I was short of Cytomax, so I switched to Chandrik's Perform (not a good thing to do on race day!). We feasted on lemon rice and curd rice that our TA chef Bhanu had sent with us. I quietly spirited the last remaining part of the lemon rice out to a ziploc for my ride the next day. I had also prepared my jam sandwiches from the bay area itself, something I love for bike rides. Then we sat around the fire as it grew dark, everyone talking excitedly about the next day. I fell silent trying hard to keep my confidence up and focus on getting a good night's sleep. Chakri and Chandrika had individual tents, and the rest of us 4 shacked up in a luxurious 4 person tent Umesh had got. We slept at about 10:30, and sleep came easy, but I was up at 2 or so, and the butterflies started interfering with sleep from then on. Nevertheless I can't say I didn't sleep well. Going by Stan's advice, I had also taken care to sleep early every day that week and try to get as much rest as possible. 

We got up and started doing the morning prep. Coffee for me, and this time I followed advice and wolfed down a couple of bagels even though I didn't feel like it. I was already super nervous. Everyone seemed very calm and relaxed. And then it hit me. These guys were all ready. This was easy for them. I was the only one here who would not be finishing the course! And that was all I could think about. It was quite depressing ….. We got everything ready and headed down to the waterfront. 

The place was already teeming with athletes. The transition area is just something else. You have to see it to understand it. It is just so much more exciting and happening than the start of a marathon and I wouldn't even mention the start of a bike ride in the same breath. I got into the area by displaying the tattoos :) and went over to my spot, put up the bike and arranged everything else carefully, ready for my bike->run transition. Now the wait would begin for Vivek's swim to get over. He wore the all important timing chip, and got into his wetsuit - quite a performance in itself. We went towards the waterfront and watched the waves start. Waves of swimmers go out based on age, category and sex. Starting with young males, to young females, ending with relays. Umesh went first, followed by Char, Chandrika next, and Vivek in the last wave. Vivek likes to go at the end of the wave to avoid people climbing over him - a sensible thing I suppose, except for the impatient biker waiting his turn. I was keen to get any extra time I could from him :) His wave started at 9:25, the swim cutoff was 10:30, the bike cutoff was 2:45 and the run cutoff was 5:45. I was hoping he would save me at least 10 minutes so I had 4:25 to do this whole thing in. I figured I might need that time. Wave after wave went in, and finally Vivek's turn came up. Chakri and I saw him off and moved to the tunnel for incoming swimmers heading to the transition area. We found Umesh, Char and Chandrika - they all came out looking great and very confident. Saw them to their transition areas and saw them off on the bike leg too. Meanwhile I was getting nervous. Where was Vivek? If he didn't make the cutoff, it would be a great pity - I wouldn't even get to try anything at all!! Well, I hoped they would at least let me do the course anyway. I think they would have. He finally came in with a time of about 51 mins and I was willing him very hard to run all the way to the transition area :) My telepathy clearly need lots of work. I had been all packed and ready to go for ages now. All I wanted was that damn timing chip :) He made it into the transition area, and OMG, was he actually going to stop to pick up a cup of water or something?? Yes, he was. I cursed under my breath, and waited impatiently. As soon as he got there, I grabbed the timing chip, strapped it on, and rushed out. You have to "walk" your bikes out, but I ran as fast as I could manage with bike shoes on! And finally I crossed the mat. My ride had begun! My race had begun!!

While Vivek was in the water, I had been reciting to myself everything I had planned to "do right" this time. I quickly checked my watch - it was 10:22. So I had about 4:20 to do this. Temps 2 weeks ago were in the 90s, today in the mid-80s - significantly better. I went up Lynch hill very smoothly and out onto San Antonio in no time. I had packed enough Perform for 8 bottles - yes I planned to drink 2 bottles every hour - one of the fixes from 2 weeks ago. I drank regularly and often. There were bike aid stations amazingly frequently - one every 6-8 miles!! Total of 7 in 56 miles Who ever heard of a ride packed with so many water stops! I had done the math way too many times. I needed to average 13 mph with stops to do 56 in 4:15. To account for Nasty Grade I decided it prudent to keep to about 14 mph till then if I could. I didn't want to push it any more for fear of draining out my legs like 2 weeks ago. As Vinod and Char had suggested, I was trying to do no more than I had to, to get within the cutoff. 

Overheard on Lynch Hill:
Rider 1: biking in granny gear very slowly up
Rider 2: walking her bike up
Rider 2 passed Rider 1
Rider 1: "Sheesh, you are much smarter than me"
Rider 2: "Well, my coach said if you can walk your bike faster than you can bike it up a hill, do it."

San Antonio went very smoothly. There were not too many riders behind me, but I was continuously passing those in front - a good sign? I hoped I knew what I was doing, and they wouldn't be sailing by me again at mile 50 or something! I was very conscious of the no-draft rule in triathlons, and the 3 biker distance check, and kept switching out a little very often. No way I was going to get disqualified :) The first water stop came very fast - doh - 6 miles is barely a warm up! I took one bottle of water and poured it right over my head, hyperventilated for a bit, to the amusement of the water stop vols, grabbed another full bottle and filled the one I had already finished. Filled it with Perform and replaced it in bottle cage. Reached around for lemon rice, quickly gulped a few spoonfuls down, grabbed a piece of toast/jam, put the food back, adjusted the bandanna I got from Vinod around my neck - gyan from Vinod - and started out on the course, bread in hand. I checked the watch - less than 2 mins. Good. All was going to plan. This was to be my routine at every single water stop from here on. Meanwhile, while I was racing through my routine, I noticed many bikers didn't even stop or were even faster than me, choosing to grab a bottle while riding and eating on the go! So this was the secret! The next stop was at 12 miles, and was mostly downhill and I was doing good. Same routine to the letter. Except to down 2 salt pills - it was almost an hour into the ride. The water stops were stationed well - such that I hit one almost every hour, so I didn't have to stop for salt in the middle. Brilliant! After stop 3 at 19 I tried not to think about how fresh I was still feeling and not jinx it. I was quite good at 20 even 2 weeks ago, but this was still reassuring. All through Interlake and now Jolon, I was keeping up very high cadence - usually around 90! - good advice from Stan, and my quads were really feeling fresh and not taxed. Waterstop 4 at mile 26 came and went, and I was doing about 15 mph so far. I even dared to pick up some food, esp bananas from the stops. But never more than a 2-3 min halt. By waterstop 5 at 35, I was trying to control my growing confidence. No pain whatsoever, and I was doing great on time. The sun was out and the heat was picking up, but I was feeling good. Finally got to Naciemento and turned onto Nasty Grade. Mile 40 and I was doing fantastic. Now just had to climb the hill and I should …. should ….. have enough to get back in time. Waterstop just before the climbing started. Gosh, they had placed them to perfection! I have to say I was really very impressed with the organization. I added the extra bottle of water on my head this time. 2 downed and 1 refill. I had kept up the furious drinking pace of 2 bottles an hour! Of course, it had necessitated 2 restroom breaks …. And now for Nasty Grade! I could picture vividly how it felt 2 weeks before. It felt nothing like that this time. I raced past people huffing and puffing and was at the top in record time (well, not hard to beat my previous time :)) Wow! I just had 12 miles left. The time was 1:45. 1 hour left for 12 miles of mostly flats and a downhill. I knew I could do this - I had enough strength left. I had almost conserved too much, so I decided to push it a little going back. With goosebumps, I started racing back - most of the time passing lots of riders. I could not understand how most of them weren't more concerned about missing the cutoff - I was probably going to make it back with 10 minutes to spare …. 

The last 12 miles were brilliant. I ran away with it, the excitement growing at making the cutoff and actually being able to run … this was all I had hoped for! It all went by in a rush and I was at the tunnel at 2:33 - yippee!! I dismounted with the largest grin on my face, just absolutely thrilled, and walked over the mat. The volunteer stopped me and ….

Vol: "I am sorry sir, you did not make the cutoff. I have to take away your chip"
Me: "You have to be kidding me. I am sure I made it here at least 10 mins early"
     Suddenly I couldn't compute 45 minus 33.
Vol: "No sir, you are 4 minutes late"
     And while I was gaping in shock, she reached down and pulled off my chip.
Vol: "You can still go out on the run course, sir, but you won't get a time. Sorry"

I was in shock. What could possibly have gone wrong? How could this be happening to me? I walked on in a daze not really knowing what to think. I was just stunned. It felt like the world was crashing down. And then I heard a second voice.

Vol 2: "Oh, he's in a relay"
Vol: "Sir…, you can take the chip, but you have to be out of there in 5 mins"

I didn't stop to wonder or say anything. I grabbed the chip, and ran to my transition area. I ripped off clothes caring not a hoot for decency or what people thought. Off came the shorts and shirt, replaced by running shirt and shorts. Switch the socks and shoes and grab a cap, 2 packs of Gu, one water bottle from the bike, put up the bike on the rack and I ran like mad for the mat. I just had to get past it! And I did! Wow, there must be a god somewhere. The whole transition was about 4 mins.

After about half a mile, the adrenaline wore off, I slowed down, and realized my lower back was hurting like crazy. I slowed down almost to a walk, and tried chatting with a couple of other runners to try to get my mind off the pain. Soon I had to let them go. The pain got steadily worse and I could not run anymore - I walked very slowly, wondering when I should call it quits. If waterstops were aplenty in the bike course, there were ridiculous on the run course. 1 every mile or less!! The first one had a hose to spray down runners!! This was A.W.E.S.O.M.E. I stood under it for a few seconds. It had gotten really hot by the time I had passed Nasty grade, and this was extremely welcome. I realized in my rush to transition, I had forgotten to take the Perform with me. I had to rely on the Gatorade they had now. I had also run out of sandwiches on the bike, so I took whatever food they had. Unfortunately, I don't remember anymore what they had at these stops. I walked some of mile 2 as well, and the pain decreased a bit now, and so I started back on a slow jog. Waterstop came and went with the same routine for me. Now I started trying to recollect what Umesh had said about the run course. He had a whole plan for this but I had never paid attention to the run course at all. I remembered he said something about a hill on mile 4 that I should walk and a stretch of shaded 2 miles from 7 to 9. Then open terrain till 10 and uphill to 11 or something like that and then home stretch he called it. But what took the cake was surely the mile 5 waterstop. He said it was called the Naked stop because all the vols there would be naked!! We had elaborate discussions about this the previous evening at camp, and I found it hard to believe this could be true. But I was just too curious. I had to get there at least to find out! 

Mile 3 started, and umm….. that dreaded feeling came to my right leg. I started cramping. Ugh! I immediately reached back for the salt tabs, remembering I had forgotten to take them at the transition. Well not only that, I had also left them in the bike in my hurry!! I drank a lot of gatorade and focused on walking carefully without using the muscles much. It wasn't bad, but it kept catching for about a mile. At mile 4, there was this angel on the road, asking if we wanted salt tabs!! Sent straight from heaven, no doubt. I took two, held on to two more and thanked her profusely. Mile 4 was indeed a hill, but I was walking anyway. Miraculously the cramps disappeared slowly, and I started running slowly again. My stomach wasn't feeling good, and I didn't feel like eating anything but I forced a banana down. We descended to a dirt track. Till now we had been running on the road or a trail right next to a beautiful lake, but it is hard to appreciate it when you are so tired/hurting. Mile 5 waterstop! Grrr….. wait till I got a hold of Umesh. What was all that rot about naked vols?? There were just scantily clad, but so was everyone else on the road, runners and many others. The heat didn't leave you much choice. We started up on this steep hill. Everyone around me was just walking up the hill, and even that was hard on the achilles! How the heck did the pros run up this thing. It was very dry and dusty and, did I mention …., STEEP!! I started to feel a bit nauseous and my stomach was churning a bit. Finally mile 6 came and we were on top of the hill next to San Antonio. Phew! It was mostly flat from here, with rolling hills. By now I had fallen into a simple pattern - walk anything the slightest uphill and run downhill and flats. The running was still very slow. My stomach had that feeling I usually get in mile 22+ of a full marathon. It feels like it is eating itself up, and becoming smaller and smaller, and pulling on all sides to get free. I can almost feel every bit of my abdomen on the inside …. Mile 7 crept up, and it occurred to me I was past the half way point. For the first time, I wondered if I could actually finish the run course in time. I spent a few minutes thinking about the finish line and running through the chute - reminded me of seeing Chakri and Mouli at Vineman 2 years ago. I felt some tears prickling in my eyes at the possibility. But hope is an amazing thing. I felt a wave of new energy, and starting moving a little more determinedly. Soon the campgrounds came and the with it the promised shade. Cheers and encouragement helped too. Mile 8 waterstop came and went. After mile 4 the hosepipes had stopped. I substituted by picking up 4 or 5 cups of water to douse myself. I was going to stick to plan no matter what. Well, the vol at mile 6 was nice enough to interject in a timely fashion "Uh …. I think that's gatorade" just before I poured it on my head :) Bandanna had been forgotten at the transition too, but now that seemed less important. Mile 9 waterstop passed and then we saw him - the naked guy! Yes, right in the middle of the trail giving hi-fives to all. Maybe this is what Umesh was talking about? Hmm… oh well. Finally the trail ended and we came up on San Antonio going down towards mile 10. I finally worked up the courage to look at my watch - I had not done that since the start of the run. It was 4:25. I stopped for a minute - I had less than 4 miles left, and about 80 minutes. This was a done deal!! I could even walk this and do it! I felt a joy I could not explain - I was ecstatic. But more than that I felt immense relief. I suddenly felt like I didn't care about anything anymore. I started back on the course with a huge smile stuck on my face. And then I saw Chandrika running back - this section was an out and back. She was probably a mile and a half ahead of me. She seemed genuinely thrilled to see me - I wonder if she had expected me to pass out by now :) We hugged and talked briefly, congratulating each other, but I was eager to finish this now. It was downhill to 10 where we turned around ….. YES, that same damn spot I crashed down 2 weeks ago at the end of my bike ride. I almost tried to run back up to mile 11 but even adrenaline can only take you so far :) I had to walk it. From 11 it was flat to 12, and I walked/ran as I could. When I saw the marker for 12 in the distance, all hell broke loose, I knew it was down Lynch hill for the last mile, and I could not wait anymore. I ran the rest of the way, holding nothing back anymore and raced down that chute to the clock ticking in the distance. It felt exactly like 2 years ago at Vineman, except I was the one running through that finish line this time. About 30 mts from the finish, I spotted Chandrika, Char, Rajeev, Umesh and Harpal sitting in the stands cheering. And I finally crossed the finish mat. The time was something like 5:20

A volunteer gave me the medal, and I saw Chakri and Vivek right after the finish. Vivek seemed very pleasantly surprised to see me, and I gave him a big hug. It hadn't sunk in to me yet. I walked around to the other side where Chandrika had come down to congratulate me. And then it struck me … I had done it. I had done the impossible. What a race! Who would have thought 2 weeks ago, I would finish this. Making both the cutoffs, and finishing way stronger than then, and feeling better and better as the run progressed, finishing feeling fresh. And then the tears came. Pouring out. I had never believed I could do it. Not till mile 7 of the run. Luckily Chakri was nowhere nearby :) Chandrika said "Okay, now pull yourself together before you embarrass Char" :) I did. It was finally over. I could say I had done a Wildflower relay, a triathlon relay! It was a wonderful feeling I could not explain. Not just pride, but something more. The others of course, had finished easily - this was more a training race for them for the IM distance tris they were doing later in the year. Our final stats - Vivek did a 0:51 swim, I did a 4:10 bike ride (though my bike comp insisted I did 3:55 riding and 4:05 total - imagine that … 10 min stopping in 4 hours - Stan would be immensely proud of that), and a 2:39 run. In the end, I did phenomenally better on the run than I would ever have thought. I had completely ignored it in training and this course was by no means easy. Maybe I am a good runner after all :) I always keep saying I am really a biker and not really a runner. Probably time to stop saying that :)

The rest of the day we spent packing up and Umesh was in prime form …. I almost envied him his skills of cleaning up :) We got dinner on the way back to the bay area. At dinner, Char was talking about Expedition man - a triathlon he and Chakri were going to do in August, and he said "Why don't you do the half there, we will find you a swimmer". I thought about this for a minute, and it occurred to me … yes I could if I wanted to. I can't tell you how good it was to feel that way, to know that I can do things like this now …. that it is indeed a possibility. I had finally entered the tri-world, even if it was just a relay. The only down side might be that I have finally run out of excuses to not start swimming :)

I learnt so much from Wildflower. Much more than I have from any other race I signed up for. You can do way way more than you think you can. Even when you think you are out of it, you body can do more. Train your mind to believe - that is a huge part of doing. Small things make a huge difference. I fixed a bunch of things and it made a world of difference. On the first ride, I didn't drink enough, I was heating up and didn't know it, I didn't eat enough because I was trying to take the same breaks as Chandrika and Stan, but that is not how my body was trained, I pushed just that bit more to try to catch up with them, killing my quads, I didn't go high enough cadence, burning up my legs, didn't eat enough before the ride, and didn't sleep well the previous night. I fixed all of that, and it made all the difference. Belief and confidence is key. Trust in your training, it will see you through. 

My deepest gratitude to everyone mentioned in this report at various points, in particular to Char, Chandrika and Chakri. Today, as I write this report, I know I can do a full Ironman distance triathlon some day, and I will and it is because of you. Heartfelt thanks to Vivek for swimming for me - you enabled me to be a part of something I dreamed of for many years, and had more or less given up. There are others not mentioned who helped in many ways - particularly in providing constant encouragement, you know who you are - thank you. 

PS: I didn't notice any wildflowers during the real race either, Stan :) Context: during our practice ride, on the way back, Stan asked if we saw all the beautiful wildflowers on the course, and Chandrika and I gave each other a look and decided not to comment :)

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

STP 2012

As I started out writing this report, it was starting trouble as always. I started off with when I woke up on race day, but then … I thought maybe I should start from when we left home - Silicon Valley - to drive to Seattle. Hmm…. no, I think a race starts from the day you register for it, if not right from the time you first seriously think about doing it.

And so, my STP 2012 really started in May 2011. Anshu was registered to do STP 2011 and used to train every Saturday. That was the first I heard of it. I had just started biking in April 2011, and was training for a 100 mile ride later in the year. 200 miles seemed daunting. And then he mentions he is doing it all in one day!! This seemed incredible. Well, incredible or not, Anshu did it in mid July …. almost 16 hours straight of endurance biking! I knew then I had to do it too in 2012, and so my race had begun.

The rest of the year went by in training for our Napa 100 miler in August, and some winter rides, more for fun than for any particular goal. Meanwhile I casually asked Raghu if he would be interested in doing STP and, quite surprisingly, he jumped in without much hesitation! On another ride, I asked Prakash and Sunil without really expecting a positive response, but Prakash sounded quite optimistic. STP registration opened up on Feb 7th 2012 - I had been waiting for it eagerly - and I wasted no time in booking my spot. I pinged Raghu and Prakash, and in the space of 30 minutes we were all set ….. jersey and shorts included (at, IMO, quite an exorbitant price, but you only do it once …. famous last words? :)) We now had a target, and the date July 14th was etched in my mind. It became a focal point around which most everything else in mid-year revolved.

We had ample time to train - the event was in July, and I had a relay triathlon to train for in May anyway, so we kind of took it easy. My excuse was that I was already training anyway, and I hoped Raghu would start biking with us too. STP puts up their own schedule for the 1 day ride that starts in Feb but Anshu started in May, so it was easy to take it lightly. Besides, we had the TA Biking program starting in April so we would be riding anyway, albeit short mileage. Well, March turned into April, and April into May, and before we realized it we were now way behind the STP schedule. We made up our own schedule abridged from the STP suggested one, with all our endurance activity experience, and felt very satisfied now that we were on our way. Just around then, Prakash announced he would be going to India for 6 weeks, coming back in mid-June with 4 weeks left and would switch to the 2-day event! That was disappointing, but I still had Raghu to train with. Training these long rides alone is not easy at all, as we had seen from Anshu's experience the previous year. With about 9 weeks to go, our schedule read something like 60, 70, 90, 70, 110, 70, 130, 70, 50 (yeah, I like the 70s :)) for the long Saturday rides, followed by about 40-50 on the Sunday (TA) rides. Things didn't all work out as planned. Raghu often had to work, and was not well one weekend. Not to mention, he was also training for the SF half in parallel, 2 weeks after STP! I brought up many times how this was an insane idea to be training for both, but Raghu is not one to yield easily. He made only every other Saturday ride, but he managed to join me for the all-important 110 and 130 rides. For my part, I diligently followed the schedule. The 70s became 80s thanks to missed roads and wrong turns on the route maps.

I was unsure what we needed to achieve in training, apart from doing the mileage. By this time, we felt we could do 200 given time. It was the 16 hour cut off that worried us. We had to average 13 mph with stops to get there. By the time July came by, my mom would have been amply proud of my ability to multiply numbers in their teens at great speed. All combinations of mph and time to get to 204 or thereabouts were uppermost in my mind, including factoring in stop times. It seemed evident we had to maintain a riding speed of about 17 mph to survive this, and I was keenly aware how hard that was in general. We did the early 60 miler around the Canada area but took about 5-6 hours. It was one of Raghu's first rides though this year. Our 90 miler turned into an 80 miler around the Uvas area and we took a good 8 hours. Raghu seemed a little disappointed, exclaiming "This is pathetic. I am a 10 mph rider!" I tried to be supportive - "there's still 7 weeks" with doubts creeping into my mind too. We did the 110 in east bay across the famed Calaveras "wall" and back. Our goal was 8-9 hours. We figured the 40 miles of flats in east bay we would race through. We took 4 hours for that segment, thanks to a ton of headwind, and took just 3 hours for the 40 miles back over the hills! A solid 10 hours end to end. Not to mention we (at least I) were quite drained at the end of it, having run out of water a couple of times in the middle as well. Not very encouraging. I did the 70s turned 80s by myself up to San Bruno and down to the airport and back along the bay. Both of them I pretty much did 80 in 6 hours after pushing real hard to get to 13 mph. I started too late on both, and had to stop because of darkness on one and have Raghu pick me up. After the second of those rides, I was completely drained …. with just 80 miles …. and I was beginning to get scared. Raghu was always the epitome of optimism, so much so that I stopped believing his attempts at consolation …. He pointed out that there was a lot of headwind, it was really hot one of those days, I was riding alone and the elevation gain was a little more (proportionally) than what we would see in STP. All true, but I hated to hang my hat on things like that.

With 3 weeks left, we were at 130 finally. Prakash had come back from India as well, and would be joining us for about 80. I was adamant that we really had to do this one right. I had always suspected that our lack of overall mph was thanks to stop signs and lights on our regular routes, and so I suggested we pick one free of such interferences. I chalked out a loop around the Uvas and Chesbro reservoirs - a 33 mile loop that we would repeat 4 times. We would drive there, park our car, and use it as SAG once every 33 miles. There were just 5 stop signs on the entire loop and no lights. Raghu was good with it and the plan worked like a charm. Raghu and I did 4 loops, Prakash, 2 and a bit. Our splits were 2:20, 2:30, 2:30, 2:25 with about a 10 minute stop after each loop. So we did overshoot by about 25 mins, but the distance was more like 133 anyway. The best part was our consistency and we even felt like we could have gone for one more loop after that. We were finally there! I had been rapidly losing hope we could ever maintain 13 mph on a long ride, and we had very close to done it! I had told Raghu before the ride "give me 130 miles in 10 hours and I will be happy" and I was. This might have been the single best thing that happened during the training. Finally I started to believe, very cautiously, that we could pull it off - even Raghu :) Yes, I had been very worried that he would not be able to stay with that pace, and the dilemma had been voicing itself more and more as July came by - should I stay with him or should I try to do it under 16 hours, if it came to such a choice. I knew he would say of course you should go for the 1 day cutoff, and I realized I was leaning that way too, and it made me feel bad.

It was the crunch time now. There were 2 weeks left. Training was pretty much over. We solidified plans for the trip - places to stay in Seattle, Portland and along the way, packet pick up, driving logistics, took printouts of everything we would need. and logistics of synching up with Prakash. I got my bike tuned at Sports Basement 2 weeks before the ride. On the very next weekday ride, my chain fell off 6 times in the space of 20 miles and I almost had a heart attack. I took it right back to SB for a quick check and they assured me it was all fine. I reluctantly conceded. But as I mentioned to a couple of friends, butterflies were beginning to form colonies in my stomach already. I got that spare tire for my car that was missing since September when I had my last flat!! I asked Raghu if we had to worry about booking a place mid-way, just in case we didn't make it in one day, and he said, with absolutely no hesitation, "No". It was very decisive, and I didn't ever think to revisit that question anymore. Our plan was clear - leave Thursday afternoon, stay at Roseburg that night, drive via my friend, Sanjay's house in Portland on Friday to drop off some clothes for Sat night after the ride, get to Seattle for lunch to meet the rest of our one-day riders, stay at Raghu's friend Akshay's house on Sat night, drive ourselves to the start on Sat, ride on Sat to Portland, rent a car back to Seattle on Sunday morning, drive both cars back in time to see Prakash finish, drive to Corvallis on Sunday evening and stay at my friend Sourabh's place, and drive back on Monday to the bay area. I have to say these logistics went almost perfectly to plan, except that the times kept moving out :) We listened to podcasts along the way and shared the drive and on the whole we had quite an uneventful journey, not counting a speeding ticket, and I, for one, was not complaining about a lack of excitement. We kept checking the weather too, and as it had been all week, it was predicted to be in the high 80s reaching 90 in Centralia, the 100 mile point. I had cursed the heat all week long - I don't work well in the heat at all - my body heats up quickly and I start fading very fast after that. I would need to pour water on my head very often but the rest stops were not less than 25 miles apart. I didn't know how to handle this. If we were pacelining, I couldn't ask to stop off every dozen miles to buy water - that would just kill the paceline and pace. Finally I decided on carrying my camelbak and filling it with water as soon as it started getting hot. Extra weight, but might be completely necessary …. I had even got a Bento Box in the front near the handlebars to hold the salt tablets and food so as to avoid reaching back when pacelining. The night before we left SV, Chakri had come over and done a complete oiling of my chain and any moving joints - one more detail attended to! Details details details, but I felt confident I had thought of almost everything, and I liked that feeling.

We met the Asha Seattle folks for tea at Victor's Celtic Coffee Company on Friday evening, which was when we first met our co-one-day riders, Sankar, Aravind and Sai. Jyoti had introduced us to Sankar a few weeks earlier, and Anshu confirmed that Sankar had ridden with him in 2011 as well. It was with great relief that I read Sankar's first reply - he knew all about how to do this …. he had done it not once but twice before, and I was thrilled he would be with us. I told Raghu I would stick to him l like a leech. That way I wouldn't have to worry if we were going fast enough, or if our breaks were too long. He knew what to do to get there before the cutoff and I would just stick with him. It felt like we knew an insider in the mob. Sankar pulled out the plan from last year, and changed it around a bit for this year. We were to start at 4:45 am - the earliest they allow you to start, and finish by 6:45 pm ….. 14 hours later!! This was way more aggressive than we had planned, but we were sensible enough not to say anything. Sankar turned out to be quite the athlete as we found out at Victor's, a really good runner, biker, swimmer etc. People assured us he would vanish on the hills on the bike ride. I made a mental note of that with a little trepidation. Sankar rode his motorbike to the coffee house prompting Srijan's comment "he's a biker and he's a biker" - I thought that was funny. It was good meeting old friends and future co-riders. Most importantly, I really wanted to know what they looked like to find at the start line the next day. I dreaded having to find someone in the midst of 10000 people.

I got to Akshay's by about 8. My original plan had been to sleep at 8:30 and get up at 3:30 - a solid 7 hours - Stan always said sleeping well the night before was the most important part. Well, there was little hope of that now. In fact, we realized getting up early would be too hard, so we wanted to ready as much as possible that night itself - I even considered changing into biking gear before sleeping! We did everything we could, attach bib #s to jerseys, helmets, and bikes, fill up air, ready food and electrolyte/salt that we would carry, put aside gloves etc. And then we ate a hearty delicious meal, and went to bed at 10:30. We had to leave by 3:30, Sankar had said, so our alarms were set for 2:30 am. We would have to make do with 4 hours. It was very fitful sleep. I kept dreaming and waking up, but it wasn't all too bad. It was quite a warm night. At last check though, the mid-day temps on Saturday had dropped a bit according to Prakash's weather app. Mine still said high 80s. Oh well, it was what it was.

I got up, I am sure, at the first ring of the alarm, and went about trying to rouse the others. Raghu seemed bent upon grabbing another 15 mins and was getting me very anxious. Still we were done and ready to leave by 3:40 am. Sankar was already on the road! We opened the car door to put our bags in and heard a loud hissing noise. My front tire was leaking rapidly and went flat in a minute! We decided getting to the start line was more important, and raced off. There were unexpected freeway closures, we missed our exit on an on-the-fly reroute, and almost couldn't find the right parking lot, but still managed to get to the start point by 4:45 am. Raghu called Sankar and he was still there, ready to leave. We told him about the flat and starting fixing it, my mind racing, anxious that we would miss the Seattle folks. I cared much less about starting at 4:45, but I felt we needed to be with them to have a chance. We found the puncture, a hole in the tire, used a dollar bill to patch that, and had a new tube in in under 10 minutes. That might be most I have ever bought for a dollar in my life. One quick picture together, wished Prakash a good ride, and rushed off to find S, S and A. Finding them was easier than I thought. Sankar was in his TA jersey and it stood out a mile. Finally we were waiting at the start line together for the next wave. I felt the same nervous excitement I had felt 2 years ago, before running the Chicago marathon, as I looked around me. It was cool but not cold enough for warmers. Phone, Id, keys, Perform, 50 salt tabs, 3 bars and my faithful 2 sandwiches of toast and jam - something that has been with me almost every ride in the last one year - were all I carried.

5:00 am, and our wave was off. I reset my bike computer and looked at Raghu and smiled. The clock was ticking. We had 16 hours to do this. Would we keep up with the Asha Seattle riders? Would Raghu stay with me or fall behind? He had been a bit rebellious at pacelining in practice, insisting he didn't feel much benefit and often times would ride too far away or by himself, all of which worried me. The same question came back to me - what should I do if he didn't keep with us …… I was afraid without company he would find it that much harder to finish in time …. but I put off worrying about it to when I needed to.

The first 24 miles went by in a rush. There were a so many riders, I was focusing more on not crashing into someone - the last thing I wanted was a fall now. Dealing with a flat first thing in the morning had been enough excitement. The crowd was so thick, it was only moments before I couldn't spot Raghu behind me anymore. I slowed a bit and looked for the others. Sankar was right next to me - true to my promise I had focused on staying close to him. I noted that Sai was in a green jersey and Aravind in a blue one. Raghu, Sankar and I were in TA jerseys. Eventually I spotted Raghu and continued, a bit more relieved. We didn't bother pacelining or anything - it would have been too hard. Besides there were just so many riders in front of us, I could easily feel the draft pulling me in. It was like pacelining behind a big truck!! Traffic was stopped for us for the most part till we got to the REI headquarters at mile 24. Nahappan caught up with us along the way, making us a solid half-dozen. The first rest stop was teeming with riders. I was extremely conscious of not wasting any time. I would even have skipped that stop happily. I parked the bike and raced off to check out the food, restrooms, and Nuun, the electrolyte on offer at STP. Nuun was odd, somewhat sparkly, and advertised boldly the lack of calories. Chandrika had switched to Perform because it had more calories than Gatorade! Very puzzling all this, but I was in no mood to investigate. I would go the road more travelled by and stick to my Perform. I finished and rushed back to my bike in minutes, only to get tired of waiting for the others and went back to find them. They seemed in no great hurry, and had found Varadan too, and were chatting :) Oh well, maybe we were okay on time after all. I checked emails, saw that Anshu wanted check-ins at every stop and decided to accede - he was, after all, my inspiration for STP :) It was about 6:40 am.

Sankar said it was time we pacelined from here, and started describing how pacelining works. This was a tad worrisome if people did not know yet how to go about it and the 11th hour was really not the appropriate testing ground :) In retrospect, he was probably just going over the rules again as everyone seemed quite adept at it. We found our groove and settled into a nice rhythm of about 17-18 mph till mile 40 or so. Then came the "big hill". For someone from the bay area this would surely evoke some mirth, for it was all of about a mile long at best and about 5-6% grade. I didn't even need to shift off of the upper chain ring in the front. I got my first glimse of Sankar's famed hill-riding, and yes, he was really good at this! I was happy to notice I could keep him in sight all the way. We regrouped at the top and went the rest of the way to mile 54 - stop 2 - Spanaway elementary school - in similar fashion. I got my first mild scare when Raghu dropped behind after the hill. I waited for him and we managed to find our way back to the rest of the paceline - phew! 54 and so far so good. Both the REI and Spanaway stops were very well stocked with food. I ate more than I should have and carried some along with me. Padma's advice came to mind - eat well during the first 100 cause that is your fuel for the second 100, and I excused myself for gorging a bit. We took a few pictures and left there shortly. Arvind did some math and declared we were about 20 minutes behind our plan - that didn't sound bad at all, but somehow I had thought we were further behind. It was 9 am.

The weather till now had been all that you could ask for as a rider. It was on the verge of cold, with dew drops forming on my helmet - wet enough that my bib # sticker on the helmet came off and I stashed it in my bento box. There was dense fog/mist and clouds and not a hint of sunlight. I don't know any other time I would praise Seattle's lack of sun this much. I was almost afraid of jinxing it. We got back on track and eventually hit a long bike trail. It was quite narrow, only allowing for 2 riders in parallel and with all the traffic, somehow Sankar, Arvind and I got a bit separated from the other 3 but I noticed a couple of times that they weren't far behind. We set up our 3 person paceline and did a fantastic job doing almost 19-20 mph at times. It was a beautiful bike trail - I thought - with volunteers blocking off roads so we didn't have to stop. In fact, in almost all the towns we passed through, traffic was usually stopped for the riders. I can't say enough about how good the local communities were to us riders. While we had 5 organized STP rest stops, there were multiple mini-stops run by the communities where we got free water and Nuun, and food for purchase. The water was a blessing and all that I really needed. We took a mini-break at mile 85 at Tenino middle school, where Sankar proclaimed the bike trail to be very boring :) Raghu and I exchanged amused glances - we had found it very beautiful! Raghu, Nahappan and Sai were almost right behind us when we stopped there.

A longer break than anticipated and we were off again. The weather was unbelievably still holding up. This was just amazing. Almost halfway and no sun. We had barely done 2 miles and again Raghu fell behind. I stopped and let the rest go. After what seemed like an eternity in my impatience, I still could not spot him behind me, and finally decided he would find his way there - it was only 13 miles after all, and we had a long break at Centralia for lunch - and raced off to catch the others. Time passed slowly, and I didn't think too much on this leg. I was behind Sankar and was impressed with how good his form was. His upper body hardly moved an inch and his spinning was very uniform and consistent. Very easy to draft behind. I tried to emulate that as much as possible. There were many others on the road, and we kept passing others or getting passed by others. One bunch went by talking and chatting away, and lo and behold, there was Raghu behind them!! He turned, smiled at us, and merrily continued along with them. We had a good laugh and decided it was the beautiful girl in their midst that had given him the extra oomph!

Centralia came and Raghu had drifted back to us and we stopped for lunch. It was exactly noon. I had been doing mental math, and I remembered from Sankar's original schedule that we were supposed to take only 6:30 to Centralia, so we were at least 45 minutes behind schedule now. We had taken exactly 7 hours for our first 100. On the positive side, I was still feeling positively fresh and good! We parked our bikes and followed the others on a quest for lunch. Not the organized STP lunch spot, for the food there was bound to be more "riding" food. No, we wanted a real nice hot meal, and I got quinoa with tofu and veggies and cheese. Mmmm…. this was delicious. Topped off with an ice cream bar. We spent a hearty 45+ minutes here and soon after we got there, the sun came out. The moment it emerged, it started feeling plenty hot, and I was happy we had got through half the ride. It would surely have been too much to expect no sun for the entire 200!

After a brief hunt for the missing Nahappan, we found him and start off on the second half of our journey. We had 8 hours and a bit for the second 100. Given how we were feeling I was feeling guardedly optimistic that we would surely pull it off now, but 100 is still a long way away so I checked myself. Besides this 100 was supposed to have rolling hills. The first part went through mostly fields and we promptly lost Raghu and Nahappan again! This was becoming a regular feature, but Raghu seemed to find his way back to us every time, so I was less worried this time. The sun was beating down more and I could feel the heat. This was the hottest time of day as well. Soon the rollers came … the rollers were not short enough that you could collect enough steam on the downhill to get to the top of the next uphill - you actually had to treat them like small hills and soon we started losing people. We pulled off for a restroom break after a moderate hill at around 111 at Napavines, where most of the 2-dayers were scheduled to stop for the night. Prakash would be staying here too!

We regrouped and started again. The rolling hills made sure everyone was spread out all over the place very soon again. Regardless, I made sure I stuck with Sankar as always. We stopped at a mini-stop at 136 for a restroom break at Castle Rock high school. I found it amusing that we had stopped at Spanaway elementary, Tenino middle and Castle Rock high in order … was it going to be some university next? :) It was decidedly hot and I started my ritual of pouring bottles of water water on my head. Very soon Raghu and Varadan caught up with us and Aravind and Sai followed. It was 3:30. Sankar didn't want to wait too long, and headed out and I went after him. Though we had stopped here, we would have to stop again at 145 as there was no food stop till 175 after that. I found keeping with him was getting easier - i wasn't sure if he was going slow to let me catch up or I was handling the conditions better. We managed to paceline up the rolling hills as well until we got to 145.

I would have checked us in but there was absolutely no signal there. It was 4:30. Raghu came in about 10 mins later and soon after, the others followed. Surprisingly there wasn't much food left at this stop, not too much variety and no vegetarian sandwiches. A tad disappointing. But we didn't need too much anyway. I realized very pleasantly that I was really feeling quite good. My shoulders were still intact and not much pain in the shoulder blades. The last few weeks prior to STP I had noticed that this pain between the shoulder blades below the neck seemed to be arriving faster and faster, especially on flats and downhills, and stretching only held it off for just so long. With advice from the coaches, I had been very consciously keeping my shoulders and neck relaxed all through the ride, and stretching at every stop and often during the ride too, and it seemed to be working! Just about everything seemed to be going right right now. Raghu and I talked and concluded (wrongly) that we had about 55 miles (it was more like 60) to cover in 4.5 hours. We had done better than that till now, but a shade of nervousness started creeping in. We had come so far, we couldn't afford to miss the 9pm cut off at this point! And for the first time I felt some impatience while waiting for the others to start riding ….. soon it got the better of me, and Raghu and I started off followed by Varadan. I tried to convince Raghu to draft behind me, but as usual he seemed happier to stay at a slight distance, enough IMO to make it pointless :) Well, he still insisted it helped my being close by so he could try to keep with me, and we pushed on till we came to the famed Lewis and Clark bridge near Kelso at about 150. I relished the climb up the bridge and raced up it, suddenly feeling new energy in the legs. Sankar had passed by just then and I was eager to catch up. It was terribly bumpy - Sankar had warned me about this earlier, and on the downslope my bottle came flying out. How it made it across one full lane of traffic and then back to the side without getting run over (and there was a ton of traffic on the bridge) is beyond me. I waited for it to come back, picked it up and made haste to regain lost time. For the first time in my life, I took a highway ramp on a bicycle! The road seemed more like a state highway - it had a broad shoulder but cars also whizzed by really fast. There must have been a strong tailwind, because at this point I was just flying. I soon caught up with Sankar, but I was feeling so good, I didn't want to stop or slow down and I just kept racing away. It seemed like I was going uphill, but I was finding it so easy - I couldn't tell if it was the tailwind or some kind of zone I had reached, like a runner's high. I was doing 19-20 mph! I finally pulled over at a mini stop at around 165 to get more water on the head - the sun was still strong and hot. Sankar caught up almost immediately and so did Raghu shortly. We pacelined for a bit while Raghu pulled, and lost him promptly when Sankar started pulling.

The two of us roared away till the next and last food stop at 172 at St. Helen's high school. It was 6:30 - we had done the last 30 miles in 1:45, and I knew there was no stopping us now. We had 2.5 hours for 30 more and I was supremely confident at this point. I checked us in and promptly Pankaj called to ask how were doing. He was with Madhu and Bhanu and we talked to all of them, assuring them we were in no need of reinforcements in the cheering squad. The food was good, but I could barely wait to get back on the road. I egged Sankar and Raghu to move quickly. Varadan had caught up and as we left Aravind and Sai came in as well. We hadn't seen Nahappan since 145 though. Raghu announced suddenly that Prakash was doing the 200 after all!! This was news to me. We had tried hard to convince him to start with us and see if maybe he could keep with us, and he had thought about it and refused, and now he was doing it anyway? From his posts, it appeared he got to Napavines early enough and didn't know what to do the rest of the day, and so decided to finish it off! And what was more - he was keeping pace with us! This was quite incredible. Whoever would have thought someone could train as little as he did and do 200 in a day?

We set out again the 3 of us … one last time I wondered if I should wait for Raghu and finish together, but I found myself too excited to slow down. Besides he looked strong and fine at 172 and clearly didn't need any help to finish well within time. And so we raced off again. Sankar said there were two more small hills at 180 and 190. I barely recognized them to be hills - we just kept chasing that finish line doing almost a steady 20 mph now. All this time I had my bike computer showing me the time so I could take my salt tabs regularly every hour. I finally changed it and started to count down the miles. Around 195 we reached Portland city, and boy was it annoying. We had to stop at so many lights, and it just kept going on and on. We finally crossed the finish line at 8:30. Raghu and I had wondered idly in training what we would do when crossing that finish line. Would we raise a fist in celebration? Would we lift both hands in jubilation? Form V for victory with both hands off the bars? I think we settled the the third option. I didn't get a chance to try anything. The finish line was somewhat dark and narrow and came somewhat suddenly. Besides there were no cameras anywhere! Now that was an omission if there was one! Before I knew it, we had stopped and a volunteer was handing me my 1-day rider badge!! I was smiling ear to ear as I took it and returned Sankar's waiting fist-bump. 15.5 hours! The last 60 miles had been our fastest!

The next 10 minutes went by real fast. I talked to Madhu, Bhanu and Pankaj, and then Raghu rolled in. I waited for him to pick up his badge, and gave him a long hug. I felt a pang of guilt that I had not waited to finish together what we started months ago. I hoped he wouldn't mind too much. Aravind and Sai came in soon thereafter. Varadan had come in before Raghu and I had missed it. After a bit Nahappan pulled in too looking in good spirits. And an hour after Raghu finished almost to the dot, Prakash rolled in looking a little exhausted but looking thrilled and picked up his badge as well. Sanjay was there to greet us and take us home. We had a fantastic meal and finally crashed for the night.

The rest of the trip went off beautifully, though without the pressure of STP looming in the near future, it was easier to be relaxed about everything. We went back to Seattle the next day, met friends separately, drove back to Portland, and on to Corvallis late on Sunday. We took a nostalgic trip down memory lane - Raghu went to grad school in Corvallis - talked at length with Apte about biking and Tour de France, and only left Corvallis at 2:30 on Monday afternoon. We still made it just in time to the wildlife safari near Roseburg on the way back - a well kept Oregon secret - and spent a good deal of time with the animals. Prakash put the sunroof to good use - I think its the first time anyone has stuck their head out of that in my car! We drove back to more podcasts and music through the night and made it home in the early hours of Tuesday morning - 5 am. Spent but very very satisfied.

It was a wonderful trip, and I don't mean just Thursday through Tuesday. No, the trip started way earlier, when we decided to do STP in a day. The journey is the training and everything else. It was very educational as well. We took rather different approaches to the end goal, and I had serious misgivings about Raghu's training, but I have to hand it to him … he did a fantastic job in the end. We are of very different breeds - I am more conservative and methodical, and Raghu is more of a free-spirit, throwing caution to the winds and appearing brazenly confident. Maybe he knows much better about himself than I do. Regardless, I am thrilled it worked. Maybe there is something there for me to learn :) And if I thought Raghu's training wasn't good enough, what is there to be said about Prakash's - his max was an 88 mile ride with a nice hour long lunch in the middle. Maybe these guys are just really strong riders that don't need the training! For my part, I accept that I was probably a little overtrained ….. in the end it felt much easier than I thought it would be. I finished stronger and fresher than any race I had been in till now, and considering we had just done 15.5 hours of endurance activity that was pretty darn good.

It was immense fun, and my great thanks to Prakash and Raghu for being a part of this. Doing it alone would have been immensely tougher and nowhere near as fun. Thanks also to Anshu for the motivation and inspiration, and the Seattle folks for the plan, the company, and the confidence. But most of all, thanks to Raghu for humoring me on my demanding training schedule and idiosyncrasies - there are few, if any, I would rather have done this with than him!

Monday, July 18, 2011

Puzzle 5: Save the prisoners

There are 100 prisoners. The warden will make them stand in a queue and put black or white hats on each of them. Each prisoner can see the color of the hats of prisoners ahead of them only, and not theirs or the ones behind. If any prisoner can correctly say the color of their hat, he/she will be freed, else hanged. They can guess in any order. The prisoners talk beforehand to come up with a strategy to save the most prisoners possible. What is the most number of prisoners they can save?

Monday, July 11, 2011

Puzzle 4: White and black balls

There are 100 white and 100 black balls in a bin. You take out two balls at a time. If both are the same colour you replace them with a black ball. If they are different, you replace them with a white one. When you are down to one ball, what is the colour of that one ball? (No answers on comments please :))

Puzzle 3: Two buses and a bee

Bus 1 is leaving San Jose for LA, and bus 2 is leaving LA for San Jose at the same time. Bus 1 travels at 50 miles an hour and Bus 2 at 35 miles an hour. A bee sitting on Bus 1 at the start keeps flying from Bus 1 to Bus 2 to Bus 1 etc. at 70 miles an hour. If LA and San Jose are 500 miles apart, how far will the bee have flown when the 2 buses cross each other?

Puzzle 2: Handshakes in the world

Of all the people in the world, prove that the number of people who have shaken hands an odd number of times, is even

Puzzle 1: Handshakes in a room

There are 20 people in a room. A number of people have shaken hands. Prove that at least two people have shaken hands with the same number of people (Multiples handshakes between the same two people only counts as 1)

Thursday, November 25, 2010

Chicago marathon 10-10-10

Race Date: 2010-10-10
Race Name: Chicago marathon
Race Distance: 26.2 miles
Finish Time (hh:mm:ss): 04:51:39



Day -364

It had to be Chicago 2010. I had already decided to join TA as a runner the next year, and now I knew I just had to do Chicago. As we heard from our runners about the race, I decided I would be there in 2010. I had always loved Chicago, having spent 4+ years in nearby Wisconsin. 6 years before, I had run the Madison marathon, and had thought then that if I ever ran another marathon, it would be Chicago. Well, the time had come, and I could hardly wait now.

Day -217

Registration was open! We weren't sure if TA SV would even run Chicago as an official marathon this year since Chicago was threatening to close registration in late March, before the TA program even started. Not running Chicago never even crossed my mind, but it would have been nice if the rest of the TA crowd was there. But that couldn't be helped. You take what you get. I heard soon after that Char would be there too. That was enough relief.

Day -2

I packed everything I thought I would need, and it was surprisingly little. I guess running doesn't really need much when you really get down to the basics. I flew to Chicago and stayed with a friend in downtown. Got there past midnight CDT, slept really late after a good deal of catching up and ....

Day -1

..... got up really late too. I was very conscious I had to sleep well these last 2 days. I got a ride to the expo, and quickly got my bib and bag, and Sony/Saumil/Aishwarya's too. The lines were surprisingly short, but maybe I was earlier than most at 11am. I found the TA Chicago booth, introduced myself to Tara Pai, left the bags there and wandered the whole expo. I consciously abandoned everyone's advice about not walking around the expo too much. To me, it was part of the whole experience and I wanted it to be complete, even if it meant wearing out my legs a bit. I went round almost every booth, and posed in front of the huge 10-10-10 sign. The entire marathon had been marketed mostly on 10-10-10. It was kind of cool after all. I skipped the TA Chicago carboload and instead ate at friends' houses. I couldn't insist on a diet, but I figured roti, rice was dal was as good as any pasta carboload anyway. I am still convinced it was.

Mile -50

Yes, for various reasons I stayed in suburban Chicago the night before. I slept early - by 10:00 - intending to get up at 5:00. It was quite hot even at night, and coupled with some nervous excitement, I had a hard time falling asleep. I had also slept a couple of hours in the afternoon, and wasn't really sleepy either. I complained to Chandrika about the heat - more to share the worry than anything else. And then I drifted off ...

Day 0

The first peal of the alarm brought me to, and I raced through the morning routine - the nipguards, the bodyglide, shirt, shorts, shoes, cap, the 2 slices of toast and milk - yes, milk is something I *must* have in the morning - and a banana. Add the belt with a PBJ in it, and my (almost) unique water bottle, and I felt ready. Mentally ready.

Mile ~-0.5

That was the farthest he could drive me in. The milling crowd made it impossible to drive faster than a very slow crawl, so I pulled out my bags and began my quest for the Asha tent. The volunteer at Congress Pkwy and Michigan didn't even know what the Charity village was, let alone where. Hmmph.... Never mind, I looked at the map she held and plotted my way to Columbus and Balbo - where Tara had said the tent would be.

The walk took way longer than the 10 minutes I thought it would. There were so many closed off areas, and still more volunteers who couldn't really point me to the way, and I was getting really anxious as it closed in on 6:45. We had agreed to meet at the tent at 6:30. I finally found the charity village, and started rushing to it. It had taken me 25 mins from when I started walking! It was 6:55 but everyone was still around or just coming in - Nupur, Coach Char, his sister Nandini, Venkat, Satyan and the TA Chicago folks of course. We did our usual stretches next to the tent, and my mind was beginning to race. I was itching to get to the start line. It was past 7:15 already. We started making our way to the start line, and bumped into Saumil and Aishwarya just coming in.

Mile 0

I felt way more nervous than I thought I would. Was it worry? Was it the expectation of what would happen? Either way, a little nervousness is good to keep one in check, I figured. We posed for the before picture against the beautiful Chicago skyline on a gorgeous day - maybe not for running, but for almost anything else - and exchanged "best wishes", and made our way to where we thought we should start. Venkat and I barely squeezed into the 5:15 pace group before they closed that entrance too. It was around 7:30 and Venkat and I were wondering if we should be listening for a gunshot for the elites. None came. But they must have started. It would soon be our turn.

I looked around with a feeling of exhilaration. The crowd of runners was like a sea of colour. I looked at the Chicago skyline and marvelled at its beauty as I have always done. I suddenly had a feeling of deja vu and thought of the last time I was in this situation, 7 years ago, running my first marathon at the time, in Madison. But this felt different. I felt a greater sense of purpose, of preparedness, of appreciation and ironically, of significance, despite being one among about 45,000 runners. I felt very good and very happy though I was not completely sure why. I had been looking forward to this moment for a very long time, and it was finally here and I took in every bit of it. For a few minutes I forgot any worries and revelled in the moment. Life felt good.

The song of the day was "A beautiful day" by U2, Venkat said, and indeed, they were playing it loud and often. One of the runners was juggling balls nearby - I wondered if he planned to do that during the run. The crowd finally started moving, impatient to start, the nervous energy palpable as we waited. We walked faster and faster, and I felt goosebumps all over. People around us started a slow jog when they could but we kept walking till the start line. We finally got to and crossed the start line. I started my stopwatch and began to run. I think, without my cap, my hair would have stood on end. The crowd was roaring and it felt quite electrifying.

Miles 1-2

We went slowly, and I kept with Venkat for the first mile. I took 12 mins for the first and 11 for the second. We went down Columbus avenue and the first over-pass we saw was overflowing with people. There were people hanging off any empty space visible. Many were carrying signs, and many were waving. I had thought that I would wave to everyone cheering but I was suddenly unsure if I should wave back or not. I was definitely smiling my head off, mostly because I was just feeling really happy. As we went under the over-pass, I was thinking how really wide these roads were and we were running both sides of the roads. I guess handling 45000 people is not a joke. We came out on the other side, right in the middle of high-rise and I spent a good bit of that stretch craning my neck to look at all the majestic buildings and the beautiful architecture.

Our first turn came up soon enough. I tried to read the name of the street without success. I wanted to remember everything as much as possible. The next turn came even sooner, along with the 1 mile marker and the digital clock right below it. Of course, this was reading gun time elapsed, and I did a little mental math to figure out how much later we started. It was almost exactly 30 minutes.

We had another turn in somewhat rapid succession and I reluctantly abandoned the idea of keeping mental track of the course. It was easier to not think too much and just soak in the moment. The crowd was still lining every inch along the way and the goosebumps hadn't subsided yet, and it was all I could do to keep my legs from sprinting away.

Miles 3-8

I think I finally settled down a bit and got over the initial excitement. I settled into a nice comfortable pace, hoping to keep to 10:30/mile as per plan as much as possible. Finally the crowds thinned to where you could see the sidewalk. There were lots of people with signs egging on one of their own, but there were plenty of generic signs too. The most popular signs seemed to be "Run like U stole something" and "Your feet hurt cause you are kicking so much butt", but the winner must have been "Beer @ the end". Then there was the whole Chuck Norris theme that I didn't really get - "Chuck Norris is chasing you" and "Chuck Norris never ran a marathon".

We seemed to have hit a long sretch of road going north for most of this section. I ran to the right of the median for the most part, and there were lots of people settled on the median and cheering. One really really old couple were up there too ringing a cowbell and clapping for us. I mouthed the words "thank you" for there was no hope of them actually hearing anything I said. Another lady was trying to call out names, and she struggled with "Venki", which I had pinned to my shirt above my bib. This didn't last long though - I realised I should have used something sturdier than paper folded up - the way we were sweating, that tore off before the 4 mile mark. Oh well ....

I diligently stopped at every water stop and drank gatorade and poured water over my head, but I didn't waste much time at any of them. Waterstops were almost hard to get through because of the number of paper cups in the middle of the road. Everytime I stopped at a waterstop I almost felt a burst of energy starting up again. I decided it was psychological more than anything else.

I did a few 10:30 miles, and once in a while found I had run a 10:00 mile, and had to keep slowing myself down. It was just too easy to run fast at this point. I spotted an Asha shirt a little ways ahead, and caught up with him - it was Bhawani Singh - an old acquanitance from Asha Chicago. We exchanged pleasantries, and then I sped on.

At one point all the runners were looking and waving to the right, and I saw we were passing a senior center, and there were seniors at every window on the second floor holding up signs cheering us on. It was very touching. Many of them looked like they couldn't make it downstairs. But they donned heartwarming smiles and were waving to us, and we waved back.

The high-rise ended in a few blocks, but the neighbourhoods still looked quite upscale. Finally we reached Sheridan road and Lake Shore Drive merged in and we could see the lake on our right. I don't know if it was that we were still fresh, or there was actually lots of shade, but I didn't notice the sun or the heat pretty much at all. We finally took a couple of quick lefts - this was the northern tip of the course - and jumped straight into the gay district.

Miles 9-13.1

I have to say that this was easily the neighbourhood with the most spectators. There were rainbow flags everywhere, and tons of people on the sidewalks, in balconies, leaning out of windows and what seemed like rooftops at times! The noise was very loud, and really pumped me up a lot. I was feeling very strong and on a beautiful runners' high. I remembered Mona's words "Run strong. Run beautiful".

I saw the first set of official photographers and posed for a few (still while running of course). The neighbourhood was still largely residential to start with, with trees, and lots of old duplexes/4-plexes that reminded me of the Evanston/Northwestern area. Eventually they gave way to a more urban look as we came closer to downtown again.

People started handing out things - a lady with PBJ sandwiches, someone else with grapes. I heard a loud "High-fives here" from the left side and raced over to get my first high-five of the day. I was having a wonderfully good time.

In one of the neighbourhoods, people had two large water troughs and were handing out sponges soaked in water to the runners. Unfortunately I missed getting one until I knew what it was or what was happening. By mile 10 the trees had disappeared, and the sun had started beating down. I could feel the heat already and hoped it would not get much worse. I was happy we were almost half way there before the heat became worse.

We crossed the river once more - this must be the third time already - back into high-rise. A huge screen bang opposite was showing messages from, I guess, spectators paying to cheer on their friends/family. A guy in a chicken costume had a sign saying "Don't be chicken. Finish this thing". I found that quite funny.

A final turn west showed us the half way mark with a big arch and a big clock. I jumped across the marker and pumped my fist. The crowds had welled up at this point and the energy was high. Boards of "Half way there" and "No point turning back now" showed up. I looked at my watch; 2:16. I realised I was on pace to go close to 4:35, and I really hoped I could. At every mat I crossed I was keenly aware that TA friends in the bay area would be tracking us, and would know how I was doing. I still felt great - better than I had at any of our training runs. I was determined I could and would bring this home, keeping to the 10:30 pace I had been cruising at till now. It just felt like nothing could go wrong and confidence abounded.

Miles 14-18

We passed Greektown, though I mistook the first sign for Russian. A sign for Spanakopitas soon set that right. Some middle eastern music playing somewhere as well. Reminded me of the bands we had passed along the way. One near mile 10/11 had been the loudest, but most of the songs they were all playing I had never heard. One in the gay district had been playing something I knew. And then I heard them playing ABBA - I grew up on ABBA and am a crazed fan, and this was music (no pun intended) to the ears!! They were playing Dancing queen, and I almost slowed down a bit to listen to more. Why they didn't have an AID station right next to it, I couldn't imagine :)

There were a line of children high-fiving runners and I joined the party. Some of the younger ones actually appeared more bewildered than excited.

We moved away from downtown and the neighbourhoods became a little less urban with fields and schools thrown in, until we turned back up east and went through Little Italy. The green and red were displayed quite vibrantly everywhere. The 25k board slipped by and for the first time I noticed I was looking for mile markers. I wondered if I was getting bored or getting anxious. I wasn't feeling tired yet but I knew the business end of the race was approaching and was feeling a little more focused now.

They were finally handing out AccelGel - the only place they were giving out any such supplement in the race, which puzzled me. I had ingested 2 Gus by now and had one more with me but grabbed a packet to be safe.

The sun was really beating down now quite mercilessly, and as we neared mid-day there was little in the way of shade on the roads. Lots of folks had hoses out and were generously spraying runners. I ran through every one of them, lingering momentarily in the spray, pulling my cap off every time. I saw one runner going back and forth a few times in the spray. Not a bad idea. It felt wonderfully good, but within 200 metres I was dry again! The mercury on a roadside bank display read 88, and it was just a little past 11. Still at least an hour and a half to go.

At last the 18 mile marker showed up. 3:09 - wow just a minute off my training run. Just 8 more to go I told myself.

Miles 19-20

By now my stomach was in its usual uneasy state that I figure is caused by all the Gu and gatorade, but this was nothing new. I had seen it in training, but I had never had to go too much farther after this. I gulped down the AccelGel and really hated it. But it stayed down.

To my dismay I realised I was starting to feel a little tired now. I talked myself out of it. I told myself I was strong, and it would be fine. A spectator was handing out Jolly candy, and I took one. It did feel good, but I hate chewing on anything when running - spoils my rhythm since I breathe with my mouth. But this was a welcome change from Gu, and especially to get the taste of AccelGel out. The thought of drinking any more gatorade made me nauseous and I switched to water the rest of the way.

I saw a sign that didn't make much sense - "Go Ale". I wondered if they were cheering a runner named "Ale", or maybe they were referring to the beer at the end? Only when I saw a mexican flag soon after did it hit me that it was Spanish - for "Go". We were in the Latin quarter.

I saw another Asha shirt ahead, and this was Aishwarya. I felt my heart lift a little at the thought of company. She looked a little beat down too - clearly the heat was affecting her as well. She seemed equally releived to see me and said "Let's finish the race together". I nodded, and we ran together for a while, not saying much, just looking for mile 20. We got there at 3:32 into the race by my watch - exact to the minute with my training run. It was almost eerie, but I knew I was more tired today than then. Still something had to be said for adrenaline and race day, and this incredible crowd. I willed myself to believe I could keep this up.

Miles 21-22

I remembered there should be bananas after mile 20 and started looking out for them at the aid stations. We walked through the next 2 aid stations, making them a convenient excuse, and one of them did offer bananas much to my relief. It went down very well, and I felt a little better. By now I was rapidly draining, and was slowly losing faith that I could really pull this off with a strong finish. I dropped the idea of trying to do negative splits, just hoping now to finish under 4:45 and do it running all the way.

In the distance I saw a mile marker and was thrilled at the prospect of getting to 22 in 3:50. Alas, it was a 35k marker, and I cursed the kilometer markings.

I tried to focus on the crowds, the buildings and everything else but it was getting harder to do that now. I saw some Green Bay Packer fans and hollered "Go Packers" more to pep myself up than a show of camaraderie I think. I don't think they could pick me out of the crowd of runners. Yes, the density of runners had hardly reduced since the start of the race.

Firemen had opened fire hydrants now and the race officials had put up the red alert signs. That meant, from what I could remember, that we were advised to walk or stop if needed. I didn't think for a moment of doing either if I could help it.

Mile 22 finally arrived at 3:58 - a minute more than my training run. This seemed incredible except that I had 4.2 more to go, and I was fading fast.

Miles 22-26

I wasn't optimistic at all about doing under 12 minute miles from here onwards, and that is what I would need to finish under 4:45. I had started to walk through aid stations. I picked up more bananas, and somehow pushed down one last Gu shot for the home stretch. Aishwarya and I had started to go back and forth now as we walked bits here and there. My legs were really tired and I told myself I could walk whenever I saw a mile marker, and I did that the rest of the way, but kept the walking brisk when I did. Sometimes Aishwarya would catch up and say "Run with me, Venki", and I would push a little more.

We went next to a freeway for the early part and heard a bunch of ambulances howling down the freeway. A lady running next to me said "That doesn't sound very ominous, does it?" - that was the last thing I wanted to think of right now. I had already started wondering why I was doing this ..... again! How could I have forgotten all this pain from the last time? I had been proudly telling everyone I was doing a full. I wondered if I should have said instead that I was being a fool!

We finally went past the mile 23 marker soon after we crossed what reminded me of military schools in India, and a small band playing what felt like military tunes. Most of the folks seemed to be African American and I guessed we were in South Chicago. People were holding up whiteboards and I wondered why nothing was written on them. On closer inspection they had tons of vaseline smeared on them for runners to take. I was good - the body glide was still doing its magic.

We made two quick right turns to round off the southernmost part of our course. Surprisingly there was a block somewhere around here with absolutely no spectators at all. I concluded they must not have been allowed there. It was the only part of the 26.2 where there were no spectators. We rounded the bend, and an aid station greeted us. I noticed that it was manned completey by African Americans. They had some music set up and some of the ladies were dancing to it, and doing it real well too.

The customary loudspeakers started appearing near the mile 24 marker announcing that we had "only" 2 miles to go. 2 miles seemed an eternity right now. I could barely compute how much time I had taken for the last 2 miles. I just wanted to get to that finish line now - forget finishing strong or looking good.

40k turned up after forever, and I spotted some TA Chicago vols in the crowd. I managed to shout "Go Team Asha", and one of them jumped in and tried to run with me, but I had decided to walk to the 25 mile marker now, hoping for one last burst for the last mile.2.

25.2 was also marked, and marked as 1 mile. I looked at the time. It was 4:37. Oh well, there goes 4:45 I said. At least I would finish under 5:00. I remembered someone cheering at mile 20 saying "Under 5. Under 5. You can do it." And I had thought then that most of us were on pace to do well under 5. This was much closer than I had expected. I started running, and stopped again at the 800 metre marker. Not till much later would I realise that meant 1/2 mile left. The mind was just not computing anymore. Aishwarya caught up at about 400 metres left and seemed to be running energetically. I started running with her, but stopped again at the 300 metres marker, and waved her on. We rounded a bend, and I started to run and noticed it was ever so slightly uphill, and promptly went back to walking. I mentally cursed everyone who had ever told me Chicago was all flat. What exactly did they call this? After 20 miles even a 1 degree rise is not flat I thought. We quickly rounded another bend, and I saw the finish line about a 100 metres away. I summoned up every ounce of energy left and ran for it. No, I can't really call it a sprint, but I took big strides and looked much better than I felt, I am sure. I raised my arms as I crossed the line not so much in triumph as because everyone else was doing so. I stopped my watch at 4:51:41

Aishwarya came back to the finish line to find me and we beamed at each other just extremely happy to have finally finished. We went through the finish area not really feeling like picking up any food, and just grabbing some water/gatorade. The Asha tent seemed miles away, and frankly, it was actually not very close even if we we had not just run 26.2. We hobbled our way to the tent in due course, and finally sat down, spent but relieved.

Day 0.5+

Hours later, I had talked to many folks from Team Asha who called, predictably, to congratulate us on a good race run. When people asked me how it was, I realised I was hesitating before saying it was great, and I wondered why. Had I secretly set myself a time-goal that I had not admitted, even to myself, had become more important than enjoying what I had dreamt of doing for a very long time? Sure, everyone, I think, has time goals, whether they admit it, even to themselves, or not. All season long I had convinced myself 4:45 was what I would probably finish in, based on how training went, and I had rejected any suggestions that I would hit 4:30. I succumbed, however, in the last week, to repeated such suggestions and had allowed myself to hope things might actually turn out perfect. And 4:30 was perfection to me. In the end 4:52 was quite close to my original goal, so I should have been quite happy ...... I think it was more than that. It was not just about doing a time but doing it well. Doing it strong. Doing it on my own terms. Doing it in control of things. Striding through those last few miles feeling strong and good, and smiling. None of which I was doing. Many folks said "You conquered Chicago". By no means did I conquer the Chicago marathon. On the contrary, the marathon conquered me. It took every bit of energy out of me to find that finish line. Yes, I finished the marathon. No I did not conquer it. The last 4.2 were quite brutal, and I pretty much dragged myself across that distance. The crowds were just phenomenal, especially in that stretch (and I did the math later - at 1.5 million spectators, that's an average of 35 per meter!!), but try as I might, I couldn't even use that energy to propel myself on. I had started tuning everything out and just focusing on moving forward. When I was running and someone stopped in front of me, I didn't even have the energy to step aside or stop suddenly. So limited was my focus, I didn't even recognize that I was on Michigan avenue the last 3 miles, until I saw the course map again later. I finally understood what the coaches kept saying about finishing strong. It is not as much about time or even negative splits. It is about finishing with that feeling that you were in control of your entire race. I know the next time I run, I will set a time target again - it is but human to do that, but I hope I will remember that it is not all that matters.

The first time around, 7 years ago, I was happy to just finish. I walked more than 4 miles, and I had serious lower back pain by mile 19 making it hard even to walk. I had trained by myself, and didn't do any strengthening, and it was probably showing then. This time, I had trained well, and trained consistently, missing very little and sticking by the rules. I was probably disappointed I didn't do significantly better. Nevertheless, I did do better - by 10 minutes - in worse weather conditions, and maybe most importantly, 7 years later. Having said that, I am still more proud of my first marathon - going through a formal training has made me appreciate how hard this is to do, and how many things can go wrong and I credit general fitness and a modicum of luck for that first time, but most of all I realise more now the motivation it takes to do this alone your first time. But there is one thing training with TA has done that did not happen the first time. Training for the Madison marathon made me a marathoner, but training for Chicago made me a runner. I finally find running somewhat enjoyable, and within a couple of days I found myself wavering when people asked me if I would run another, and pretty soon, I was saying "Yes, I think I will". The mind is foolish, and forgetful, and has a way of holding on to good memories and letting go of the bad ones. God bless our foolish minds. Chicago was an incredible experience in so many ways. The course was magnificent, the organization was exellent, and the Chicagoans were remarkable. And that is what will remain a lasting memory.

SF half marathon

Race Date: 2010-07-25
Race Distance: 13.1 miles
Finish Time (hh:mm:ss): 02:08:36


Beep beep beep .... Beep beep beep .... beep beep beep

Woke up with a start and rushed to find the clock. 3:10. Good, hadn't snoozed it at all. Things were going to plan.

3:15 Brushed and done. Call Shraddha. No answer.

3:20 Shower done. Call Dilip. Hmm..... he sounds sleepy. I wonder ... Quickly get dressed and ready. Readied everything the previous night as the coaches had instructed. No phone. Just DL, $20+$10+$2, keys

3:30 Shraddha calls "I am just stepping out of my place". Eat something. Ah, my favorite oatmeal. After two spoons, Balu's words came back - no milk!! Okay, abandon, and get some toast. Feeling a bit rushed now.

3:40 Dilip calls. "We are both here. Come down". I go and pull out my car. Wait, what's this other car obstructing my driveway? Oh, it's Shraddha's :) Alright, she could get towed for this.

3:45 Dilip reparks Shraddha's car in a tight parallel spot, and we are technically off!!

3:50 Nervous chatter. Dilip confirms he woke up at 3:20 when I called! Almost forgot his bottle. OH, DRAT! I forgot mine! U-turn, u-turn. Heart starts racing. Rush back home. Sprinting in, grabbing bottle, and sprinting out, was, with me, the work of an instant (Cr: PGW). Already feeling warmed up. Drive like the wind now!

3:58 At Caltrain station. Damn, I thought we were supposed to be here at 3:45 :( But there are others pulling in too. Find paybooth. Dilip goes to check out spot #. 64 .... yes. Oh, $3? Grrr.... Balu, you lil' ... (Cr: Simpsons). Borrow 1$ from Shraddha.

4:05 Run to shuttle. Jump in. Ooh, both Balu and Chandrika on our shuttle. Bharath too! Ah, finally off!! Phew! Collect snack bar and banana. Wolf down banana. Save up snack bar for later.

~5:00 Bus pulls up near the start point. Ah, the other buses also there, and lots of Asha folk milling around. Follow crowd. Ah, porta-potties. And no line at all!! We must be real early. Do 'morning business' as Balu put it. Spot Vikram in line. Good. Ah, Meena too. Manu as well.

5:15 At Embarcadero and Folsom surveying the start lines and waves. Ah, there's Mausam. Good. Not that cold actally, which is a good sign. Still have not decided what to wear when starting. Cotton shirt over tech-tee? Garbage bag? Both?

5:30 Find sweats truck. Hmm..... this is quite challenging. Finally found it at Embarcadero and Mission. Swamy was right, while most of the other folk kept pointing in the wrong direction! Hmmph! Spotted Divya, Sudhir. Okay, decision time. Going with only tech tee, and garbage bag in pocket.

5:45 Make way back. Trying to follow Chandrika to Wave 5. Seems like most Asha runners are starting here. Ah, my running buddy Anand is finally here. Can't find Mausam anymore though. Quick spot of stretching. Just waiting is getting unbearable. Thank God it is quite pleasant temperature actually! Not cold at all!

6:00 "A-Bot rocks"? What is A-Bot anyway? Oh well. Just let us go ....

6:05 WAVE 5! And we are off!! Am I running too fast? Too slow? Well, just go with other Asha runners. Oh, set watch timer ... Good. Can almost feel the nervous energy in the crowd. Oh, and there's the Mile 1 marker at ......

6:15 10 min mile. Anand says we are doing 10:30. Heavenly smell of fresh bread. Boudin bakery. Damnit. I miss my morning coffee. Wish I could take a detour. Mile 2 - quick glance at watch ....

6:25 Wow, seem to be getting the hang of this. Isn't it a bit fast though? Coaches said 11 min/mile for the first two .... Ah, Hyde street. This was the turnaround for Crissy field run. Familiar track now! Through the Aquatic park, and over Fort Mason. Our first hill ...

6:35 Mile 3. This is uncanny now .... Never mind. Oh, there are some people cheering us on. I don't know them, but I will use their cheering anyway :) "GO ASHA". Loud familiar voice. Ah, there's Balu. And Bharath. Our first Asha cheering squad! Terrific. Scream back "Balu"! Crissy field coming up. Hmmm, small detour through the field. Weird! Oh there's the marker for Mile 4 at ....

6:45 Oh well, now started expecting this .... But Anand says we are doing 9:40 pace now. Looking forward to the bridge now. Can see it in the distance. Not much fog. Yikes, people are going near the bushes now! Ah water-stop. Mmmm.... Cytomax (yes, I like it!) Anand takes his Gu shot. Should I? Didn't need any for Crissy field .... and feeling very good now .... hmm ... postpone for now.

First big hill coming up. Mile 5 marker half way up at .....

6:55 Sigh!

Q: Which is the steepest street in SF?

A: Filbert (?)

Q: Aren't you happy to be running this hill instead?

A: (My answer) - Hmmm.... not really, why are those the only 2 choices? :)

Hmm.... all the houses are exactly alike on this road. Wonder if it is a military zone of some sort.

Okay, rounding the bend to the Golden Gate now! Finally! "Venki ... venki ... venki ..." I hear shouting. Praveen!! And Sandhya and Chakri!! Terrific!! Find myself screaming everyone's names. Hi-fives all around. That was perfect timing entering the bridge. Feeling very strong now.

Oh wow, the bridge is indeed uphill as Chakri promised. But then, when is Chakri wrong anyway :)

I see the 3:40 pacer. First pacer I have seen since we started running. And there's Matt! Right behind the pacer. Girl with PINK written all over her running clothes in front of me. Wonder if that is a group of some sort. "Run for India" tees all over the place. Wonder which group that is. TA shirts are much prettier ;) 3:50 pacer. Mayank. Vineet. Venkat! Didn't realise he was such a fast runner. All on pace to go under 2. Racing down the second half of the GG now. Anand - "we are doing 9:20 pace". Should slow down.

Vista point. Ah, the mat! Careful step over it :) Take a Gu shot here. Don't want to fade out in the second half of the course. Yes, it's time. Forgot to check watch or look for mile markers since reaching the bridge. Hmm.... no idea about the mileage but the time is .....

7:21 Has to be more than half way through. Less than an hour of running left if we are to finish under 2:15. Back on the bridge.

Me: "Didn't see Dilip or Vikram yet"

Anand: "Oh they went by a minute ago"

Me: "How about the 4:15 pacer. Are we ahead of him?

Anand: "Probably. We crossed 4:00 pacer before the turnaround"

Back on the bridge. Pulling a bit faster now. Having to dodge folks a lot more. Chandrika! Still a sea of people on the bridge. Meena and Manu. And other TA runners. Can see the toll booth. Look for our cheering squad. Who's that screaming and jumping. OMG, it's Bhanu!! Can't see Madhu anywhere. Chakri taking pics of us! Ah, Sandhya and Praveen again. Fantastic! Now for the last big hill.

Q: Which famous actress born was in San Francisco and acted in Clueless?

Anand: Alicia Silverstone.

Me to myself: Wow, I had no clue

A: Alicia Silverstone.

This hill looks never-ending. Going real slow. Waterstop at top! Don't want to walk now. Focus! Right foot. Left foot. Right foot ....

Overheard: "Almost there dear - mile 10 marker at the top."

Quick scan for marker. Yes!! 10 indeed. And quick scan for time ....

7:47 Stop for water. Good excuse to stop!

Anand: "It is all downhill from here."

Me: "Really? Too many people said be careful of the rolling hills."

Ah, amazing view on the right. Beach(es). Cliffside houses. The Pacific. Woods immediately to the right. Curvy road. Crowd thinning a bit. Going real fast. Anand: "8:30 pace. Slow down!" Bobby races by!

Doesn't feel like this downslope is going to end. Not complaining :) Ooh, waterstop again. And Balu! So, just 2.1 left? Can't see any Mile 11 marker. Balu runs a little with us.

Balu: "You guys are doing great".

Anand: "Get us through in 2:05"

Balu: "That might be too hard. You will do 2:10 easily." Leaves us.

City streets. The famous rolling hills. Nice houses. Time to change target to 2:11. 10 min/mile. Can see Bobby 50 metres ahead. Start pushing harder. Try to catch Bobby and stay with him. "Anand, I will take off ...." Slowly but surely, inching up to Bobby. Still feeling strong. Losing feel for distance now. Unsure where the mile 12 marker is.

8:01 15 mins to beat target. Just keep pushing. Still feeling strong. More crowds lining streets now. Cops cheering us on too!! Didn't see that coming :) Mile 12!! Okay, its finally down to 1 mile. Yippee! Mental correction. 1.1. Watch check ....

8:03 Okay, nice and easy. Left turn. Seems like a big road. Right turn into the park. Hurray! Almost there. Don't see no finish line. Right turn. Signs for half and full marathoners. Yay! Finish must be a 100 yards away. Though, still ....

8:08 Damn, this finish line is just not coming. Satish Menon. Legs getting weary. Would love to walk a bit. Focus! Bobby is running like he has a motor on him! Can barely see him anymore. Left turn. Has to be round the bend. No :( Dragging feet now. Right turn. Another sign for half vs. full. Big crowds now. Must be here. Scan crowd for familiar faces. None :( Stop sign up front. Should I? :) OH, there's the finish line!!!!! Sudden strength welling up. Legs take over. Involuntary sprinting. Cross line with huge grin. Turn off stopwatch .... 2:08:31. Nice!

Kiron waving nearby. Pose for picture. Wait for Anand. Oh, is that Bobby coming in now? Hmm..... Bobby - "I took the full marathon lane, and some nice lady told me I was in the wrong place". No wonder. Time to walk up and collect that medal. Sweeeeeeeeeeeeeeet!

Legs feeling stiff. Knees in particular. Abs a little painful. Walked back down the course and ran back other TA runners - Vikram, Abhishek, Dilip, Prema, Divya, Mausam ..... More cheerers joined in - Shailesh, Parag, Madhu, and the ones who already finished. Everyone is just all smiles. A few seemed to be hurting a bit. Still smiling :) Picked up sweats, found lots more folks. Finally time to go back to start line. Samosas and biryani waiting for us there. Grabbed a few biscuits, scones, cytomax, banana, and headed to a ridiculously long line for the buses to the start. Almost ....

10:00 Was later when we got on. Fell promptly asleep till bus parked at Embarcadero. Asha tent and food!! Good. Fantastic. Chakri is back there. So is Praveen. The full marathoners are back too. Arun Sharma. Satish again. Feeling really sleepy now. Slight headache too. Just want to curl up. Closing in on ....

~12:00 Prasanna picks us up. Shraddha, Dilip and me. Promptly fall asleep again, all the way to Sunnyvale. Drop off Shraddha and join the rest of our gang at Peacock - Madhu, Bhanu, Meena, Sandhya, Chakri, Gaurav. The hot chai was priceless. And free :) Got back home around ....

2:15 One long day. One long happy day. One long fantastic day. Half way there.

Chicago, here I come.