Age: 29
City/State: New York, New York
Occupation: Corporate Lawyer
Hobbies/Interests
outside of running: reading books (mostly fiction &
memoirs), barre classes, extremely unadventurous cooking and baking
When
did you start chasing the OTQ and what inspired you to try?
I became interested in an OTQ as an eventual goal over the
last year or so hearing how many of the NYC women I see running each day
qualified, and then after running a big PR in the half marathon last March it
seemed like a possibility for 2020. After hitting a few good long tempo runs in
the late summer and early fall, and with a lot of encouragement from running
friends, I decided to go for it.
Tell
us about the races you attempted to OTQ at and the outcomes.
This past fall, I ran the Chicago Marathon (2:47:17),
Indianapolis Monumental Marathon (2:45:15), and California International
Marathon (2:50:15). Three marathons in 12 weeks was very much not the original
plan. Chicago was my third lifetime marathon, and a 10 minute PR, but I had
some stomach issues in the second half and wanted to give it another go. Four
weeks later at Indy, I was devastated when I just missed the standard. I felt
recovered a few days later and had the best long run of my cycle the following
week, so decided to give the four week turnaround another go at CIM but CIM just wasn't my day - I could tell in the first 10k the race was just going
to be a fight to finish and it certainly was. I barely remember the last 13
miles!
What
did you gain from this journey?
I had been running for one New York team the last few years
but as part of this process of taking a step up in training and racing I decide
to join the Central Park Track Club. The combination of speedy teammates
to push me in workouts and phenomenal coaching has been a game changer. As an
added bonus, I've expanded my network in the NYC running community! I also learned
that recovery a strong point for me. With the guidance of Devon, one of the
Central Park Track Club coaches, and some insightful teammates, I found a great
post-marathon system of taking some total rest days to repair but also
jumping back into some really quality workouts after each marathon.
I've also spent a lot of time thinking about the value of
running in my life and really focused on finding ways to use running to
maximize joy over the past half year. Joining a competitive team and seeing my
running improve has been a great confidence builder. I've also prioritized
making plans to run with people every day - I often don't get out of work in
time to socialize during the week, but running is a great excuse to socialize
at 6:00 am!
What
are you most proud of about your OTQ pursuit?
I'm really proud of cutting 12 minutes off my marathon time
in a year! I keep reminding myself that is a huge achievement despite not quite
making the arbitrary 2:45 cutoff. And, I'm proud of myself for putting in some
huge mileage weeks and workouts while working unpredictable hours. There are
days when I sleep 4 hours and get up feeling exhausted to run an 8 miles of
tempo in cold rain before dawn, or get up at 5:00 am on a Saturday to get in 22
miles, but those days really are building the mental toughness I need to
succeed at the marathon and I'm proud of putting in that work.
Do you
have any regrets or things you wish you'd done differently in your OTQ pursuit?
I don't regret anything about my training cycle. I suppose I do regret my 6:30 25th mile at Indy... I felt incredible that weekend but got
a little too excited early in the race and wasted some energy, and then
panicked when I dropped off a pack and ended up alone. With hindsight, I know
the group I dropped from was running well under pace, and I should have stayed
calm and found another pack. I ended up running much of the second half alone,
and wasn't calculating my time well at the end, vacillating between thinking I
was well under the goal and that I'd lost too much ground. I started losing
focus the last couple miles and slowed a bit, though my body was still okay, and
it wasn't until a guy started yelling at me to sprint with a half mile to go
that I realized I was probably just going to miss it.
What message
would you like to send to those following your running pursuits?
Find running buddies to get you out there each day, both
literally and figuratively. I've never had any trouble with the discipline of
getting myself out the door every morning to run or do a workout, but my
execution of workouts when alone was often poor. I would then try to cram
another workout in too soon, and was running myself into the ground without
actually hitting many quality workouts. Running workouts in a pack allows me calm
down and zone out a little, and my workouts more recently have been much harder
but with more recovery days, which has been a game changer.
I am also so grateful for my countless runner friends. Many
of my closest friends are runners, from my college teammates to the crew I ran
with in law school to my New York network. Beyond my regular morning running
dates, I can usually drag someone out with me when I'm traveling for a wedding
or bachelorette party. I'm not sure I ever would have tried a marathon if it
wasn't for the encouragement of many of these special people, especially one of
my friends from law school who taught me to love the journey of marathon
training by letting me accompany her on her long runs for years before I
considered signing up for my own.
Tell
us something unique about yourself.
Unique only for a marathoner - I really enjoy explosive
training like sprints, plyos and lifting. I was a middle distance runner in
college, and I never really lost the satisfaction of getting to rest after just
a short push of hard work!
What's
next for you?
I'll be dropping back down in distance for the NYC and Brooklyn Half Marathons, along with some 5K-10K races, over the next few months! Big picture, my eyes are very much set on 2024 already.
I'll be dropping back down in distance for the NYC and Brooklyn Half Marathons, along with some 5K-10K races, over the next few months! Big picture, my eyes are very much set on 2024 already.
Oh my gosh, 16 seconds! So close.
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