After the half, I ran with the man in the red jersey for a bit, then moved back into No Man's Land. Although I felt fine enough physically, I went through my roughest patches mentally during this portion of the race.
Thoughts like, "I'm never going to be good enough to run the 2:45" started creeping in. I began wondering if this race was worth it, knowing I wouldn't PR or run the standard. Why had I trained for so many months to at best run a 2:48? Was I even going to make it under 2:50? I was disappointed that race day magic hadn't made 6:15 feel easy and maintainable. I was angry that I couldn't force my body run a faster marathon. I wondered what I'd done wrong, and what all of the women ahead of me were doing better.
But I fought the negative, reminding myself of the progress I've made and how just 18 months prior I'd never have believed I could run a marathon at 6:2X pace. It's so easy to want more, but often so hard to appreciate how far we've come. I reminded myself to be thankful that I'd made it to this marathon, after how poorly my training cycle had started. I was truly thankful, but sometimes when I'm getting tired it's more difficult to remember!
Based on my posture, this was probably taken after mile 20, but I need a photo! |
The half to mile 20 was a net uphill, and although it was hardly noticeable when running, it influenced my splits particularly in miles 17 and 20 (I think it's clear why from the elevation profile). I am thankful for many reasons that I didn't run this race by my watch, and this is one of them! My Strava grade-adjusted paces were more even than my actual splits, which I am very proud of.
The closer I got to mile 20, the more runners I started reeling in and the more spectators I saw lining the streets. The mile 20 clock read 2:08:5X as I passed (officially 2:08:51), and I told myself to give it my all and try for a sub-40 final 10K. I took an inventory of how I felt, and noted that I had more left than I'd had at that point at CIM (but also that my time at 20 at CIM had been 2:06:10). Nothing hurt or felt off. I was fatigued but didn't feel like I was going to bonk, which is always promising! I reminded myself to run the final 10K with joy and thankfulness, with all my legs had in them.
Elevation profile |
Splits |
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