The night before: I made poppy seed chicken for dinner, because I was tired of pasta and rice has similar amounts of carbohydrates per serving to pasta. I set up a pseudo-transition area in my bedroom and then packed everything in color-coded Chico Bags (love them) and stuffed it all into my transition bag. I got to bed around 9, and then kept thinking of things I needed to do, but I was officially in bed by 9:50, after some, um, pre-race gastrointestinal issues.
Race Day: I was up and at 'em at 450, and out the door by 515. I got to the race site at 537, thanks to my Nascar-like driving skills. Super-early, but I am so glad I got there when I did. I found a parking spot a block and-a-half from the transition area. As I was getting my gear out of the Beetle, Margaret showed up and snagged a spot right across the street from me. More awesomeness.
As we headed over to the not-yet-open transition area, there were about 15 people in line. I thought, "wow, those are the crazy ones." Um. Then I got in line behind them, thus becoming one of them. Good times. The pay-off for getting there before the sun was awake is that we got great spots in the transition area.
They had the Athenas in the same area as the 40 and ups. Women kept coming up to me and saying, "NO WAY are you over forty!" Me: "No, no. Just fat." At first I just explained that I was in the athena group, but no one knew what that was, so I started being more, um, descriptive about it.
Since we got there so early, we had nearly

As if by magic, it was all of a sudden time to head to the start. Maybe later. Margaret and I went back and forth on a very important issue: wear our pants to the starting line and risk losing them, or bare all and walk down the beach in our bathing suits. My love for my black fleece pants surpassed my modesty, so made the walk in my suit. David showed up around that

Short bus moment of the morning: I thought Marg's wave was about to go off, so I screamed out, "GO MARGAREEETTTTTT!" And then the wave in front of hers started. oops. She was only about ten feet in front of me, which made the screaming more awesome.
The swim: Ok, so for those of you playing along at home, you may remember that I had been sick all week. Sore throat and

As I got out of the water, I had a little case of the woozies, but nothing too bad. I honestly don't even remember what I was thinking. Probably mostly relief that the swim was over and that I was now able to participate in activities that didn't require me to put my face in water. And why is this sand so damn hard to run through? Do those lifeguards think I am fat? Seriously, what is with this sand?
The Bike: And then I was on my bike! As I was in the transition area, it all felt so surreal. I don't feel like I was thinking, I was just following my plan and doing what I needed to do to get out of there and on my bike. I made the choice to leave my heart rate monitor, because what I

I was by myself a lot during the bike, but I managed to catch five or six people, which was cool. There was a woman in front of me on a mountain bike who kept alternating between all-out sprinting and omg slow riding. It was killing me to be behind her. We played tag for awhile, but I didn't manage to leave her behind for good until the second lap. She probably ended up passing me on the run, but I was glad she wasn't in front of me anymore on the bike.
As I approached the turnaround on the first lap, my bike refused to shift out of the large chain ring. Problem! I rode about a mile and-a-half feeling a little helpless. I was resigning myself to a crappy bike ride, when BAM! Someone actually read-ended me! WTF? I cried out and kind of braced myself for what would surely be a horrible fall, but it never came. The woman who hit me apologized profusely, saying she had looked down for a second and didn't see me. Then she left

On the bike, I passed an 85 year-old man. I wanted to say something, but I didn't even know what to say, I was so overcome by his awesomeness. I should have said something. I stared, instead.
The bike-ro-run transition was more mindless plan-following. I took the water bottle off of my bike because I hadn't
The run: Ow! I'm not a fast runner, so I didn't expect to be blazing out of the transition area, but I was pretty slow. My calves started cramping up immediately, which told me I should have grabbed a banana instead of a gel. I run/walked the first half-mile. Once I got up to street level (the first part was on a paved path along the sand), I brained my way through the pain and found a pace. It helped that the San Diego Tri Club was right at the top of that little hill. They didn't know who I was, but they cheered me like they did. Thanks, guys. :)
I passed the finish line around mile one. David was there to tell me that I was 1/3 of the way

Once I got to the turnaround, the finish line, although still a mile away, was visible. That kept me going. The voices in my head were warring the whole time. "Waallkk!" "No. You can see the finish line. Keep going!" etc, etc. I am proud to say that I didn't walk (you know, except for that part at the beginning). As I approached the finish line, I curse the race directors for the uphill finish. MEAN! But, hey, there's the finish line! Approaching the finish, I felt the same way I felt running on the sand after the swim. Is it getting any closer? It doesn't seem like it's getting closer. OMG, is that chafing I feel? Crap. Seriously, where is the damn finish line?

In case you're wondering: there will definitely be more triathlons in my future. I am looking forward to improving and losing more weight and having more fun. It's gonna be awesome.


You can do it, too, ok? I promise you can.
6 comments:
Congratulations, triathlete!
Aiden looks so much like you in that second picture. Or you look so much like Aiden... anyway, it's apparent that he is your offspring in the second picture. :)
Congratulations! If I wasn't so afraid of the swim, I would totally do a tri. Instead, I will run a full and half marathon in one weekend. It's the same, right. ;)
I'm with dvildogprncess :) I do not swim well... so instead, I will join her in the Goofy :) but... seeing as how it will be my third... a tri is going to have to be in my future so I can have something new to work for :)
ps. you ROCK!
Congratulations! You are AWESOME. :)
Jen, that was AWESOME! CONGRATULATIONS! You are SO fantastic and I am SO PROUD of you!
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