Name: Susie Duke
Age: 39
City/State: Grinnell, IA
Occupation: Associate Director of Global Courses at Grinnell College
Age: 39
City/State: Grinnell, IA
Occupation: Associate Director of Global Courses at Grinnell College
Hobbies/interests outside of running:
I work
international education and always have opportunities to travel, which I love.
But truly, I am most recharged by time at home with family on my farm. I have
horses to ride, a bunch of chickens, a way-too-big garden to manage, and we
keep bees. When I’m not outside, I love cooking and fermenting. I always have a
batch of kombucha and sauerkraut going.
When did you start chasing the OTQ and what inspired you to
try?
In 2014, I
qualified for the 2016 Trials. Soon after running 2:42 in Indy in 2014, I
injured my back. I was a wreck. Overtraining combined with a few other SI-joint
injuries—including a snow sledding accident and some unfortunate horse
episodes—had weakened my low back. One morning I just woke up, bent over to
pick something up, and it felt like I’d been run over by a truck. With a
herniated L5-S1, I spent the next several months just getting back to walking
without pain.
About a
year later, I ran the very hot LA Trials. I only did it because I’d earned the right
to be there. I was in terrible shape and in pain. Eventually, late in 2016, I
had surgery to clean up the messy disc. I have and will always have permanent
low-grade numbness in my right foot/ankle. Surgery was the best thing I could
do to move me past much of the chronic pain that was holding me down. It took several
years after my injury to get to a place where I could actually train consistently
again. In the fall of 2018, I ran a 2:53 at my hometown marathon. That got me
to thinking that maybe I could get within OTQ range. I started chasing the 2020
OTQ in the spring of 2019.
Tell us about the races you attempted to OTQ at and the outcomes.
Tell us about the races you attempted to OTQ at and the outcomes.
Fueled by
my previous positive experience, I chose Indianapolis for my attempt. I knew the
course and amazing elite organizers. And I have family in Indy, so it was an
easy choice. But, the race felt like a struggle from the start. I felt cooked
not long after halfway. My pace slowly declined over the second half. There
were many points where I had a mental pity party, planning how it would be my
last marathon. I finished in 2:46:23, wrapped my head in Mylar and cried for 30
seconds. Then I snapped out of it.
Until
November 9, 2019, Indy had been the only attempt on my calendar. Later that day
after the race, I started to look for other options. I decided on Rock ‘n’ Roll
San Antonio that fell a month after Indy. It was a total long shot because my
family went to France for Thanksgiving. We got home 48-hours before taking off
to fly to Texas. I was jet-lagged and sickly with a sinus infection, but I felt
great running. I probably felt too great and pushed a bit too hard the first
half. Then I hit the hills. I had a perfect 20-miles and then bombed the last
10K. I finished first but in 2:47:something. So another miss.
At this
point, the obsession was high. I decided that I wouldn’t be able to let it go
if I didn’t give it one more go, since I still had time within the qualifying
window. By then Houston was full, I decided to race Rock’n’Roll Arizona in
Phoenix. The weeks leading up to Phoenix were actually perfect. I felt like a
good day was possible.
Then we
had a blizzard the weekend of the race. I was to fly to Phoenix with a friend
on Saturday morning. Just a quick, direct flight down and then back late the
night after the race. I didn’t want to miss work or make a big deal out of it.
Just go and get it done. It’s never that simple. The forecast was bad enough
that the airlines allowed flight changes. I moved to a Friday flight, but I
didn’t choose a flight early enough. We got caught right in the middle of the
storm. The Friday flight was cancelled. We were stranded in an airport hotel—a
really nice one with a sweet pool, sauna, hot tub and solarium, which was a silver
lining—then had to be rebooked but my original flight was full. AH! So we had
to be routed through Philadelphia. I spent 14 hours on a plane waiting,
deicing, and then flying across the country only to arrive in Phoenix less than
12 hours before the start of the race. I ran a shakeout mile on the hotel
treadmill at 8:30pm and went to bed.
It was an
absolute whirlwind getting there. So stressful. So tense. The race went as
expected after all of that. I felt horrible from the start. Tired.
Weighed-down. Just bad. I hoped that I might shake it and did from about mile
5-10. I thought I might settle in and be able to pull off a miracle, but then
the sun came out and started to roast us. It was hotter that day than the
previous several days. I don’t run well in heat. Somehow I hung on and ended up
finishing fourth in 2:47:something. I’m consistent to say the least.
What did you gain from this journey?
What did you gain from this journey?
I loved
the training. I loved all the long miles. Through all of the training and then
running three marathons within 10-weeks, I fell completely in love with the
marathon all over again. And I’ve run a lot of marathons. Actually, a product
of all of the OTQ attempts was something I’d been hoping to do, which was make
my 2:42 less of an outlier. My 2014 Indy race was my only 2:40-something
marathon I had run, but I have run in the 2:50s five times. Now I have several
2:40s to add to my resume.
What are you most proud of about your OTQ pursuit?
What are you most proud of about your OTQ pursuit?
I am proud
that I persisted each time. In each race, there were many miles where I knew it
wasn’t going to happen. As one of my good training buds exclaimed after
Indianapolis, “You knew for 12-miles that you weren’t going to do it, yet you
didn’t give up!” I guess I am proud of that. I’m also pretty glad that I didn’t
listen to myself when I thought about throwing in the marathon towel after
Indianapolis. The other races—while not the outcome I was hoping for—were so
much fun and great memories.
Do you have any regrets or things you wish you’d done differently in your OTQ pursuit?
Do you have any regrets or things you wish you’d done differently in your OTQ pursuit?
I only
wish that I had started trying sooner. When I was in the thick of recovering
from my injury, I thought that I might never run another marathon, at least not
race one. Then one of the things that put me over the edge with recovery was
hopping on the indoor bike trainer. I started doing Zwift early in 2019. My
fitness skyrocketed. As I got stronger, I was able to run more and more miles.
I regret some of my months of recovery were spent moping about how I’d let
myself become so injured rather than actually doing something about it.
What message would you like to send to those following your running pursuits?
It’s never
too late. I have run most competitively in my 30s. I have a goal to PR in
several distances later this year. That way I can claim that I truly am faster
as a Master.
Tell us something unique about yourself.
Tell us something unique about yourself.
I ran 30
miles on my 30th birthday. But it was a Thursday and the first day
of school—I was teaching at the time. I had to get up and start running at 2am
so I had time to get back for school.
What’s next for you?
What’s next for you?
I’m going
to try really hard to not run another marathon this year. We’ll see. First, I’m
going to train for some speed and shorter events and see where that takes me.
I love this! It's women like you and her that inspired me to believe being in my 30's didn't mean my PRs were behind me.
ReplyDeleteShe is such a stud running 3 fast marathons within 10 weeks! I have PRed in everything in my late-30s so it's definitely possible - although like her I hope to beat those when I turn 40 so I can say I'm faster as a master. I KNOW your marathon PR is ahead of you, most likely in April. :-)
DeleteI love that, faster as a master!
Delete