Tuesday, February 28, 2023

Finding February

February 2023 in review!

Total mileage for the month: 371.7
  • Jan. 30-Feb. 5: 73.0
  • Feb. 6-12: 90.8
  • Feb. 13-19: 91.2
  • Feb. 20-26: 94.2
  • Feb. 27-March 5: projected at...probably 100
Races:
  • Feb. 18: Run with the Wind 25k in 1:51:37 for 2nd OAF, 1st masters female, and a pretty poorly executed race.
  • Feb. 25: Running from Yeti Marathon in 3:09:34 for 1st OAF - because why not run a tiny hilly marathon that is 20 minutes from your house for 50k training?!
Workouts:
  • Feb. 9: 4 x (1200 m threshold, 400 m jog, 400 m harder, 400 m jog) in 11.4 miles total. My running buddies and I were going to do this workout on February 8, but pushed it back a day due to moderately heavy cold rain that morning. February 9 wasn't really any better, with light cold rain and 20-30 mph winds. I took splits on the track but I didn't look at my times during the workout and still haven't, and I think it's better that way considering the weather and that I hadn't worked out in about 3 weeks. I think my effort was correct and I bet my paces were slow!
  • Feb. 14: 5 x 1 mile threshold by effort with 1:30 recoveries in 6:07, 6:09, 6:07, 6:05, 6:03. Another day where I didn't look at my watch during the workout, but feeling strong and Casey's encouraging "we are going fast!" when looking at her splits clued me in that I was running well. This was faster than I expected it would be, so yay!
  • Feb. 22: 5 x 1 mile progressive with 1:00 recoveries in 6:47, 6:52, 6:47, 6:22, 6:09. We started at Sierra's half effort for 3, then did a "finish strong" 1 and a "faster" 1. I had a really poor night of sleep prior to this and felt that, but it was a nice morning with Sierra and Casey.
  • Feb. 25: Running with Yeti Marathon at moderate. This was quite a hill workout!
  • Strides: Feb. 2, 7, 8, 12, 13, 17, 20, 24, 28.
  • Doubles: Feb. 13, 16, 20, 27, 28.
  • Favorite workout: Feb. 14 - I felt so strong! Plus I used Feb. 25 for my favorite long run.
Prom photos after Cabin Fever, which I run-spectated

The post-finish area was a high-school cafeteria

Finished our long run in time to cheer for the racers

Long Runs:
  • Feb. 4:  20 miles (7:54) that felt harder than it should have. I included 20 x 1:00 pick ups, about one per mile, because I knew I was too weak to do a real workout.
  • Feb. 5:  16 miles (8:17) that felt better than the day before.
  • Feb. 10:  23.4 miles (8:09) that felt a lot better than the 20 miler the week before, even though I'd done a workout on Feb. 9. The 23.4 was just where I happened to be when I got back to my car, but I liked the number (I was aiming for 22+).
  • Feb. 11: 16 miles (8:17); I didn't necessarily plan to run this far, but I just kept going with the group and it was good.
  • Feb. 18: 19.4 miles total, including the Run with the Wind 25k. Yeah, should have done 20, but I didn't do the math on my warm up + race + cool down until later that day.
  • Feb. 19: 17 miles (8:15) that I didn't really think I was going to do, but you know.
  • Feb. 25: 28.2 miles, including the Running from Yeti Marathon.
  • Feb. 26: 14.2 miles (8:25) that was very easy paced, but felt really great after 28 the day prior!
  • Favorite long run: February 25, because it produced one heck of a runner's high!
Running Highlights:
  • Snow runs: Feb. 1 and 2.
  • From Feb. 5-11, I ran 96.3 miles in only singles, which is definitely the most I've done in a week on one run a day. Daily miles were: 16, 9.1, 10.3, 10.3, 11.3, 23.4, 16. I didn't plan to do this, but these things happen when I don't have a training plan, lol.
  • I won a marathon, which I hadn't done since November 2015!
Life Highlights:
  • Photos below!
Employee Appreciation Night

Ozark Mountain Ridge Runners
Annual Banquet

Forced photo before her
Winter Homecoming dance

Albani's Science Olympiad team is state-bound

Miles from Mentor game night

Books:
  • The Huntress by Kate Quinn
  • Hunting Prince Dracula by Kerri Maniscalco
  • Notes on an Execution by Danya Kukafka
  • Wish You Were Gone by Kieran Scott
  • Remarkably Bright Creatures by Shelby Van Pelt
  • The Extraordinary Life of Sam Hell by Robert Dugoni
  • The Lost Girls of Willowbrook by Ellen Marie Wiseman
  • Love and Other Words by Christina Lauren
Theme for the month:
  • Things will always change. I was up and down this month, and it's always easy to think things will never change (get better or get worse, depending), but that's not true. When you're down, things will get better. When things seem perfect, odds are they won't stay that way. Just a reminder to always appreciate the ups and know that you'll get through the downs.

Monday, February 27, 2023

Running from Yeti Marathon

The short:

I never thought I'd run a small, hilly marathon called Running from Yeti, but it took place 20 minutes from my house and I was planning to run 26-28 miles on February 25, so it happened! I planned to run no faster than 7:45 pace for most of the race, probably dipping down to 7:30 towards the end, but I ended up quicker, mostly thanks to running with my fast friend Colin who was also running it for 50k training - but I stayed controlled enough that I felt great running 14.4 miles about 20 hours later. I ran 3:09:34 for overall female, and it's really fun to win a marathon, even if it is tiny!

Official results are here.

My Strava activity is here.

Finish smile + holy quad

The long:

There's a bright side to almost everything, and the end of my sub-3 streak meant that I could return to running training marathons without worrying about my times. I used to do this often, but hadn't since 2015 (which was also the last time I won a marathon!). Last year I saw advertisements for the Running from Yeti Marathon in Springfield happening on a day I was doing 26 miles for 50k training. I considered running it for training, but didn't want a non-sub-3 official time. This year my sub-3 streak had already perished, and the timing was the same, with it being 4 weeks before Prairie Spirit, so I was in.

The start

My friend Colin also ran it for 50k training. He is significantly faster than me, but we were planning to run easy together. I told him I wasn't going any faster than 7:45 pace, but it was probably partially my fault that we got out at 7:30. It felt like 8:30! Adrenaline, you know? Pretty quickly after the start, we were in 4th and 5th overall people, 1st female for me.

The race also had a half marathon, a 10k, and a 5k, and with all of the distances together there were 600 people running onto a bike path. The start was on a road, but less than 100 m in it narrowed down. They started the marathon first, then the half a minute later, then the 10k and 5k. I'm not sure how all of that went since we were out of it, but a couple miles into the race my friend Sierra who was racing the half passed us. I expected she was running 6:45ish pace. We were also passed by some men in the half and a couple 10k and 5k people, I think. Then we were running the opposite direction of mobs of runners.

The races went north and back first, then south and back for however far each distance needed. The half and full ran the same 13 mile course to start, then the full did the same course again. Almost all of the course was on a paved running/bike path, and with the out and backs and doing the course twice, there were nearly always people around (a good thing except when I peed by a tree), though Colin was the only one ever running the same pace as me. I've run the trail before and I knew it was extremely hilly, on the south end particularly. I knew what I was in for, but it's still the hilliest marathon I've ever run with 1283 ft of gain, even more than Heart of America. There are a handful of reasons I wouldn't race this marathon, but the elevation is a big one!

Oof

As we came back by the start after the first loop of the course, I had the normal thought of, "I have to do that again?? Should have done the half...". Mostly I wasn't looking forward to the worst of the hills again. But, I also felt like I was on a training run (I have very much dreaded those hills on training runs on that trail too!). We passed a man around mile 16, moving Colin into 3rd overall male, and the turn arounds showed me I was very secure in my position of 1st female.

I felt great on the flats and rolling hills, even though I could feel us getting into a moderate pace zone for me. I knew if I slowed down I'd be running solo, and to me 7:30 alone feels about the same at 7:15 with someone else. There were 6 brutal hills each lap, and on my second lap I counted them down..."just 3 more...only 2 more...last one!" Colin gapped me pretty good on the longest hill around mile 20, and as he pulled away I started wondering if I was slowing down, but I was staying steady - he just dropped to 6:45ish to finish. 

First mile smile

I had a huge runner's high going, and not as much fatigue as a normal marathon, so I thoroughly enjoyed those final solo miles and kept thinking, "I'm winning a marathon!" This was obviously not a large or prestigious event, but it still felt really good. When I could see the finish line in the distance, a spectator said, "Great time, first woman - you're at 3:04 now!" I figured I was about 5 minutes out, so then started thinking "Wow, I could break 3:10!", which was not expected; I'd been telling everyone I was going to run in the 3:20s, and I'd only looked at a few of my splits during the race.

As I neared the finish line, I could hear the announcer saying the first female marathoner was coming, and the volunteers at the final couple of turns encouraged me on. I ran through the finish with a huge smile on my face as I was announced as the female overall winner.

Clock shot

My Garmin measured the course as a little short (25.6 miles), and now I can't find anywhere that it was certified, although I swear I saw it written somewhere pre-race. My pace per my watch was 7:24, so still quicker than the 7:45 I'd planned and a good long long run pace for me right now. My heart rate averaged 148, and I've been able to average 158 for my 50ks, so that gave me a little confidence-boost for my upcoming 50k (also the fact that I ran this with no taper during a 94 mile week, and definitely felt like I could have maintained pace for 5 more miles). Even though we may not have run quite a marathon, I think with the elevation it's kind of a wash on times (I saw another runner's GAP on Strava at -9 seconds/mile). Don't use this one for a BQ though, lol!

After I finished, I needed to go get my gloves that I'd dropped on the first lap, about 0.3 from the finish. I asked Colin if he wanted to jog to get them with me, then jog to our cars, and we did. I kind of felt like we were showing off by running more a moment after finishing a marathon, but I wanted to get to 28 miles for the day. After I picked up my gloves, we ducked away from the finish area to complete the cool down. I got in 28.2 miles for the day, then 14.4 miles the next morning.

My friend Sierra won overall female in the half marathon, during her Boston training cycle. Boston hills are going to feel like nothing for her after this!

Sierra and I with the Yeti pre-race

A tiny marathon for fun and training might have been what I needed right now. I felt far better than in last week's Run with the Wind, despite this course being even hillier. I'm thankful for a really fun and strong-feeling effort, and for a 42.6 mile weekend!

It was windy at packet pick-up



Tuesday, February 21, 2023

Run with the Wind 25k: Not Ready to Race Edition

The short:

I won a free entry to the Run with the Wind 25k by winning overall female in last year's race, so even though I'd missed nearly a month of workouts due to being sick, was still feeling weak, and felt in no way ready to run a race, I ran it anyway. I had pretty low expectations but was hoping I could manage 6:59 pace or win overall female. I did not do either; I went out with the first female for 6 miles, then paid for it for 9.5 miles. I finished second overall female in 1:51:37 (7:07 pace), and got a baseline for the season. I definitely should have started slower but in my mind I am still a little fast, and I am always a lot competitive.

My Strava activity is here.

Fast friends post-race

The long:

I almost didn't go to this race. I had a virus in late January to early February, and missed over 3 weeks of workouts because of how weak I was (once I tried and managed only 7:20ish pace). This was after I'd missed several early January workouts due to hamstring pain after my 6-hour race, which I ran a month after having COVID...it sounds worse all written out like this, lol! I'd been running quite a bit still, but just easy, and also no doubles. I had a lot of easy runs that were much harder than they should have been, and I felt pretty puny for quite awhile. In the 8 days leading up to this race, though, I started to perk back up and had a decent workout that also felt really great. I wouldn't had paid to run the race with not being ready, but since I had a free entry and my friends Amy and Colin were running, I decided to do it. I would be running long that day anyway!

Then the day before the race I was very nauseous most of the day and could barely eat. I also had a low grade fever when I got home from work. Those things lasted only about 8 hours, but my resting heart rate was super high and I was about to resign not going to the race, but after I forced down dinner around 7:30 p.m. I felt close normal again. It was really odd. I may have just eaten something that didn't agree with me, but whatever it was wasn't a confidence boost to my already deflated ego.

Not the jump you want to see the day before a race

Like last year, Amy and I rode together to meet Colin at the finish line. Amy and I left bags in Colin's car, which stayed there, and Colin rode with us to the starting line. Also like last year, the race ran from Sarcoxie to Carthage. In theory, it runs the direction that gives you a tailwind, but in reality there is usually a headwind for part and a tailwind for part since it runs two different directions. This year we ran against the wind going west and had a tailwind going north. It was nice going north but pretty demoralizing going west, especially at the end!

I didn't know what I could do or how I'd feel, so I decided I'd go out with the first woman if it seemed reasonable, and see if I could compete for the win. The race director sent out a race manual that contained a little summary of "the contestants", so I knew that the woman who'd gotten second behind me last year was running it. She hadn't been very far behind me, and though I'd tried to use the race as a workout last year, it had turned out that my 50k goal pace was pretty all-out on this race course without a taper. I knew I wasn't in the same place this year, but thought I'd shoot my shot for the win as long as she didn't go out blazing fast. The state record for my age was 1:48:38, so I also thought maybe she'd help drag me to that (I ran 1:45:37 in 2022, though the other 3 times I've run it I did not break 1:50).

Pre-race

I ended up running with the eventual female winner for the first 6 miles, at around 6:45 pace. She was friendly and kind, and I wish I could have hung on longer but I didn't have it. It kind of ended up being 6 miles of racing plus 9.5 miles of struggling. It was weird though, because I knew I was slowing down and absolutely didn't have it in me to speed up, but I still felt strong to keep running. Strong but not fast - as compared to the weak and not fast feeling I'd had during and right after my recent bad virus - so a step.

I remembered the course well from last year, so it was nice knowing where I was. I counted down the miles and never looked at my watch. Once I lost contact with the female leader I was completely alone for the rest of the race. I did all of the positive self-talk I could, and I enjoyed myself even though I wasn't running well. I took a gel with caffeine about halfway and it made me feel like a million bucks for a bit, though you can't tell from my splits. The hills were tough as I remembered, and the headwind for the first 6 miles and especially the final 3 miles was not my favorite. When I heard my watch beep mile 15 and realized I had another half mile against the wind uphill to the finish, I lost some optimism, but ran through the finish as best I could.

The moment I'd been waiting for!

I ended up finishing in 1:51:37, exactly 6:00 slower than last year. I didn't pace well, but even if I'd looked at my watch I really wouldn't have known where to start at because of all of the recent variables in my running and life. I have learned that I am very good at pacing by feel when I'm feeling normal, but very bad at it when I'm sick or weak (refer to my 2022 marathons)! Colin had started his cool down after he'd finished in 1:38 for the male overall win (he was going to run his 50k goal pace but ended up quicker), and when I finished we jogged to his car so I could grab a few things. We then jogged back out to see Amy come in. She finished in 2:01 and set a new state record for age 51!

Like last year, the cool down was a death march (during the race I'd promised myself I wasn't running a cool down, but ended up doing 2 miles my friends anyway). We then enjoyed some soup and socializing while waiting for the awards. They age and gender graded everyone to equalize competition, so although I was 2nd overall female and 1st masters female, I was 4th age graded in the entire field. Amy edged me with 3rd age graded, but I got Colin, who was 5th age graded. After we drove back to the start to get my car, Amy and I found a great little breakfast-all-day restaurant and had breakfast...at 2:30 p.m.! The race started at 9:00 and they didn't do the awards until the last runner was in and age-calculated, so although this race is close to home it's nearly an all-day affair.

The best meal ever

I am toying around with the idea of running the Prairie Spirit 50k in March again. I haven't been following a training schedule but I've been doing lots of back-to-back long runs (I just love running long on both Saturday and Sunday!), my mileage is sufficient, and I'm jogging a marathon on February 25 - so I'd be ready enough. This race showed me that endurance and distance are no problem for me right now, but holding a pace is. Last year I ran 6:44 for this race and 6:57 for Prairie Spirit, so maybe 7:07 would translate to a 7:20 pace 50k? I don't know that I'd be thrilled with that considering my history, but at the same time it seems really hard right now. If I could do it, it would give me the second fastest women's 50k ever run in Kansas, behind my own from last year. I am going to see what the forecast looks like! There is also Frisco as a 50k option...

So...we will see! Being uncertain about how I'm going to feel makes it difficult for me to decide what to do both training-wise and race-wise, but it's easy to go run every day, usually a long way, because I love and need that part more than ever.

Tuesday, January 31, 2023

Jumping January, another edition

January 2023 in review!

Total mileage for the month: 308.9
  • Dec. 26-Jan. 1: 68
  • Jan. 2-8: 74.5
  • Jan. 9-15: 77.4
  • Jan. 16-22: 82.5
  • Jan. 23-29: 60.1
  • Jan. 30-Feb. 5: 73
#jumpingjanuary
Races:
  • None this month
Workouts:
  • Jan. 11: 3 mile threshold by effort (6:15, 6:14, 6:10), jog to track, 4 x 200 m faster (10.6 miles total). My hamstrings have been struggling to come back from my 6-hour, I think partially because I ran it so soon after having COVID (inflammation city!). I wasn't sure if they'd let me workout quite yet, but decided to start the threshold with my running group and see what happened. My hammies felt fine during the threshold but they are not ready to go much under 6:00 pace, so my 200s were pretty light in 0:43-0:44 each. I didn't look at my watch at all during the threshold and when my running buddy asked what I thought I'd done I said 6:30, so I was pretty happy with what I actually did as a starting point. Working with Casey and Sierra, good weather, and a flat course sure helped!
  • Jan. 14: 2 x 2 mile pick ups to marathon effort during an 18.3 mile run, one mid-way (8.3-10.3ish) and one almost at the end (16.1-18.1) in 6:29, 6:35, 6:38, 6:39. I didn't look at my watch so I'd stay true to effort. I wish my effort would have produced faster paces, but I suppose that is always the case!
  • Jan. 17: 10 x 1:00 at threshold effort/1:00 at marathon effort. I covered 3.16 miles total in the 20:00 and enjoyed this little flux training workout. My paces weren't super consistent, but I also don't think GPS is super accurate for 1:00 efforts. There was a clear difference between threshold and MP at each "shift", which was the main objective. Threshold ranged from 5:42-6:16, and MP ranged from 6:21-6:56.
  • Jan. 22: The workout was supposed to be 4 easy, 5 at 50k effort, 4 easy. I put my Garmin screen on heart rate only and wore my chest strap so I'd keep it at real 50k effort (~158 bpm), but I could not get my HR much above 145 for some reason! I was a bit sick and was running this on fatigued legs by design, but it was odd. So it was more like 5 fast-easy on hills in 7:22, 7:35, 7:24, 7:19, 7:17.
  • Jan. 24: Unstructured fartlek for 6 miles (3 warm up and 3 cool down) because I was too sick to do a real workout! This was completely effort-based and probably not very fast.
  • Strides/Hill Strides: Jan. 3, 5, 10, 16, 19, 20, 27.
  • Doubles: none this month - I'm missing them but not in a place to add them back yet.
  • Favorite workout: January 17 because I love shifting gears like that!
#jumpingjanuary outtake

My favorite of Abby (I'd taken
my shoes off, which was a barrier
to jumping much!

Long Runs/Medium Long Runs (12 miles+):
  • Jan. 4: 12 miles (8:09)
  • Jan. 7: 16.1 miles (7:39), which I felt super good on, which I was super excited about. 
  • Jan. 14: 18.3 miles (7:34), with a workout, described above.
  • Jan. 15: 12.2 miles (7:59), including 1 mile picked up to 50k effort, which ended up being 7:18 up a long constant incline so I'm grading it to 7:08.
  • Jan. 21: 20.2 miles (7:50), that felt harder than I'd have liked for an easy 20, but I had a bit of a cold.
  • Jan. 22: 13.1 miles (7:57), that I also l had a cold during...
  • Jan. 24: 12.2 miles (7:43) that included a 6 mile unstructured fartlek.
  • Jan. 28: 16 miles (7:52) that felt a lot harder than it should have. I started on a Z-pack 8 hours after this run because it was day 10 of that illness!
  • Jan. 29: 12.5 miles (8:28) that was pretty hilly and pretty draggy, but got it done!
  • Favorite long run: Jan. 7 because I felt amazing.
We had more fun on this Jan. 1 run than
the person who hit this sign had on NYE

Sean's in town jumping

Post-long run #jumpingjanuary
Running Highlights:
  • Multiple bRUNches!
bRUNCH #1 - Jan. 2


bRUNCH #2 - Jan. 8

bRUNch #3 - Jan. 16
Life Highlights:
  • It snowed the most it has since we moved into our current home in 2011, with about 8 inches on Jan. 25. It mostly all melted within 48 hours. Then we got a lot of ice on Jan. 29 followed by a lot of sleet on Jan. 30. My mileage has taken a hit; I ran 4 miles on my treadmill on Jan. 30 and just lifted on Jan. 31. I don't enjoy the treadmill and am not training for anything specifically right now, so the only reason for any of it was restlessness!
  • It was pretty low-key month so here are some cute photos of my cats.


That's my road
Books (the ones in bold I gave 5 stars):
  • The Cloisters by Katy Hays
  • I Must Betray You by Ruta Sepets
  • The Rose Code by Kate Quinn
  • Foster by Claire Keegan
  • Little Nothings by Julie Mayhew
  • The Sentence by Louis Erdrich
  • I'm Glad My Mom Died by Jennett McCurdy
  • Local Woman Missing by Mary Kubica
  • Gentle and Lowly: The Heart of Christ for Sinners and Sufferers by Dane C. Ortlund
  • Prodigy (Legend #2) by Marie Lu
  • Champion (Legend #3) by Marie Lu
  • Rebel (Legend #4) by Marie Lu
  • A Christmas Memory by Richard Paul Evans
  • Hopeless by Colleen Hoover
  • Fast After 50: How to Race Strong for the Rest of Your Life by Joe Friel
  • Cilka's Journey (The Tattooist of Auschwitz #2) by Heather Morris
Theme for the month:
  • Learning: I've always been a lot more likely to do too much instead of not enough, but little by little I've been improving at that! 


Saturday, December 31, 2022

2022 Reads

 I read a lot more pages than I ran miles! What I read in 2022:

  1. This Is the Night Our House Will Catch Fire by Nick Flynn (Goodreads counted this for 2021)
  2. Unthinkable by Brad Parks
  3. Good Riddance by Elinor Lipman
  4. Lady Clementine by Marie Benedict
  5. Apples Never Fall by Liana Moriaty
  6. Nancy Clark's Sports Nutrition Guidebook by Nancy Clark
  7. The Devil Wears Black by L.J. Shen
  8. Win at All Costs: Inside Nike Running and Its Culture of Deception by Matt Hart
  9. Say Nothing by Brad Parks
  10. The Cat Who Saved Books by Sosuke Natsukawa
  11. Bewilderment by Richard Powers
  12. The Science of Running by Steve Magness
  13. The Night She Disappeared by Lisa Jewell
  14. The Third Wife by Lisa Jewell
  15. Interference by Brad Parks
  16. Daniel's Running Formula by Jack Daniels
  17. Wish You Were Here by Jodi Picoult
  18. People We Meet on Vacation by Emily Henry
  19. Angel Falls by Kristin Hannah
  20. No Exit by Taylor Adams
  21. Finlay Donovan is Killing It by Elle Cosimano
  22. The Santa Suit by Mary Kay Andrews
  23. The Girls in the Garden by Lisa Jewell
  24. Luster by Raven Leilani
  25. Closer Than You Know by Brad Parks
  26. Greenwich Park by Katherine Faulkner
  27. The Five Dysfunctions of a Team: A Leadership Fable by Patrick Lencioni
  28. How to Change: The Science of Getting from Where You Are to Where You Want to Be by Katy Milkman
  29. A Summer Affair by Elin Hilderbrand
  30. The Last Time I Lied by Riley Sager
  31. The Music of Bees by Eileen Garvin
  32. The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls
  33. Thin Ice (Alaska Wild #1) by Paige Shelton
  34. Reminders of Him by Colleen Hoover
  35. The Book Thief by Markus Zusak
  36. The Whispers by Heidi Perks
  37. The Words We Keep by Erin Stewart
  38. Cold Wind (Alaska Wild #2) by Paige Shelton
  39. Dark Roads by Chevy Stevens
  40. Best Friends Forever by Jennifer Weiner
  41. Half Broke Horses by Jeannette Walls
  42. Book Lover by Emily Henry
  43. Under the Tulip Tree by Michelle Shocklee
  44. Mary Jane by Jessica Anya Blau
  45. It Ends with Us by Colleen Hoover
  46. The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time by Mark Haddon
  47. Honor by Thrity Umrigar
  48. The Candy House by Jennifer Egan
  49. Cat's Cradle by Kurt Vonnegut Jr.
  50. The Kids Are Gonna Ask by Gretchen Anthony
  51. November 9 by Colleen Hoover
  52. The Last Time I Saw You but Elizabeth Berg
  53. The Night Shift by Alex Finlay
  54. Confess by Colleen Hoover
  55. Count the Nights by Stars by Michelle Shocklee
  56. Little Secrets by Jennifer Hillier
  57. Turtles All the Way Down by John Green
  58. The Sanatorium by Sara Pearse
  59. A Good Girl's Guide to Murder by Holly Jackson
  60. In Bloom by Fern Michaels
  61. Dopamine Nation: Finding Balance in the Age of Indulgence by Anna Lembke
  62. Us Against You by Fredrik Backman
  63. When She Dreams by Amanda Quick
  64. Good Girl, Bad Blood by Holly Jackson
  65. The Maid by Nita Prose
  66. Troublemaker: Surviving Hollywood and Scientology by Leah Remini
  67. Goodnight Nobody by Jennifer Weiner
  68. A Flicker in the Dark by Stacy Willingham
  69. The Wife, the Maid, and the Mistress by Ariel Lawhon
  70. We Are Not Like Them by Christine Pride
  71. More Than You'll Ever Know by Katie Gutierrez
  72. Brain on Fire: My Month of Madness by Susannah Cahalan
  73. How to Walk Away by Katherine Center
  74. The Giver by Lois Lowry
  75. The Younger Wife by Sally Hepworth
  76. A Star is Bored by Byron Lane
  77. The Woman They Could Not Silence: One Woman, Her Incredible Fight for Freedom, and the Men Who Tried to Make Her Disappear by Kate Moore
  78. The Measure by Nikki Erlick
  79. Pretty Little Liars by Sara Shepard
  80. The Love of My Life by Rose Walsh
  81. Nothing More To Tell by Karen M. McManus
  82. The Secret Race: Inside the Hidden World of the Tour de France by Tyler Hamilton and Daniel Coyle
  83. Overdue: Reckoning with the Public Library by Amanda Oliver
  84. Without Merit by Colleen Hoover
  85. The Dinner List by Rebeccal Serle
  86. The Summer Place by Jennifer Weiner
  87. Carrie Soto Is Back by Taylor Jenkins Reid
  88. Pretty Little Liars #2: Flawless by Sarah Shepard
  89. One of Us Is Next by Karen M. McManus
  90. Devolution: A Firsthand Account of the Rainier Sasquatch Massacre by Max Brooks
  91. As Good As Dead by Holly Jackson
  92. Gilt by Jamie Brenner
  93. The Counselors by Jessica Goodman
  94. Ugly Love by Colleen Hoover
  95. The Woman in the Window by A.J. Finn
  96. When Breath Becomes Air by Paul Kalanithi
  97. The Paris Apartment by Lucy Foley
  98. Hell of a Book by Jason Mott
  99. Divergent by Veronica Rogth
  100. Geekerella by Ashley Poston
  101. The Accomplice by Lisa Lutz
  102. Legend by Marie Lu
  103. What Happened to the Bennetts by Lisa Scottoline
  104. Insurgent by Veronica Roth
  105. The Hunting Party by Lucy Foley
  106. Allegiant by Veronica Roth
  107. Running Man by Charlie Engle
  108. Fairy Tale by Stephen King
  109. Bringing Out the Best in People by Aubrey C. Daniels
  110. The Lies We Tell by Katie Zhao
  111. It Starts With Us by Colleen Hoover
  112. The Tattooist of Auschwitz by Heather Morris
  113. Between Two Kingdoms: A Memoir of Life Interrupted by Suleika Jaouad
  114. The Amazing Adventures of Mr. Tinker: A Time Travel Novel by Paul Ibbetson
  115. The House in the Cerulean Sea by T. J. Klune
I also read half the Bible; I'm doing a 2-year reading plan. I've read it in 1 year before but it felt a little rushed.
I counted one in 2022 that Goodreads
counted for 2021 (started it in 2021,
finished in 2022)

The average book length surprised me











2022 Running Year in Review

Quick stats:

  • Miles run: 4,241.7
  • Teams/Support: rabbitELITE, UCAN, Nike, Miles from Mentor
  • Races run: 14
  • Races won (OA female): 8
  • Races won (masters female): 12
  • PRs:
  • Records:
    • Missouri state road racing record for 20k for females age 41
    • Missouri state road racing record for 25k for females age 41
    • Kansas state road racing record for 50k overall female
    • Prairie Spirit 50k female course record
    • Missouri state road racing record for 10k for females age 41
  • Highlights:
    • Being inducted into the OMRR Hall of Fame
    • 11th fastest North American female in the 50k in 2022
    • 6th best North American female performance in the 6 hour in 2022
    • Running in the professional field at the Boston Marathon
    • Zero injuries!

I ran this race sick because I won't
ever have this opportunity again!
Longer impression:

My running evolves every year, and I'm not sure how to concisely sum this one up! Consistency in training was my strong suit, and I continued to enjoy masters running. I really appreciate having masters records and titles to chase, though in most races I enter I'm still hunting an overall female win.

I was happy enough with all of my races considering the circumstances, except for my marathons. While disappointing to have two rough marathons this year, I am still thankful for the experiences and I know that if/when I run another good marathon I will appreciate it more. I am definitely more amazed at all of the good or just slightly off marathons I had before this year now. I had good shorter races and good ultras, so I can't really blame the distance or the pace for my marathon bombs.

I treasure all of my training with my local group, Miles from Mentor. Really every workout is a memorable one with them! I did the big 10 miles at MP+1:00 then 10 miles at MP workout that I've heard about for a couple of years for the first time this year, though I did 4 more miles after the 10 at MP for 24 on the day. My 4 hour training run was also pretty memorable, since I've never done that before! Even the speed workouts and track reps that aren't my forte were extremely fun this year. The every day easy runs always include inside jokes, fun facts, laughs, a lot of randomness, and a ton of endorphins. Running friends truly enhance my life.

I continued coaching several of my running buddies this year, and I love seeing their break throughs! Casey ran a long-awaited huge half PR at Bass Pro (1:21:58, also breaking my age 38 state record) and moved her marathon PR down a notch in Chicago (2:50:59). Colin blazed a 2:41:20 in the Des Moines marathon, even running most of it solo. Amy knocked out super impressive mileage and an age 50 state record in the 25k. Ann ran her second fastest marathon a week after having COVID, and we know she has a faster one in her, because a week off COVID! Spencer PRed with 2:58:24 at GO St Louis and was ready to run a 1:18ish half at Bass Pro but was derailed by illness. Sierra is now training for Boston, Sarah is conquering PA school, and Elise is practicing having two children, with the arrival of a new baby boy on Dec. 22!

I love running just as much as, or maybe more than, ever before. I don't know if I'll ever improve my current PRs, but that doesn't really change anything; I'll be running just as much, because performances are not what get me out there every day. I genuinely love every bit of training, and my marathons especially this year reminded me how valuable training is to me - I loved the process more than I can express, even though I was highly disappointed in my marathons. You'll find me running a ton and giving my all - and whatever that gets me on race day I will try to be happy with...even if I just know I have a better one in me, haha!

Many of the Miles from Mentor regulars

You can read my race recaps here:

Post-50k endorphins
You can read my monthly recaps here:

Casey & Rebecca gave the best speeches at the
OMRR Hall of Fame induction

You can read my previous yearly recaps here:
Twin Cities Pro treatment