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Boston Marathon 2012
"The Hot One"
26.2 for AUTISM
Sunday night...April 15th....after all the extreme heat warnings and a final email from the Boston Athletic Association that almost begged people to defer their entry into the marathon because of the extreme heat....I was kind of thinking that maybe it was gonna get ugly out there on the marathon course for me....but then a reassuring email and numerous facebook posts from the Charity Teams leader, Susan Hurley, made me realize that I was going to be fine. I'm a California girl afterall....love the sun....love the surf....and I have raced in hotter heat before.
I was in bed by 8:30pm on Sunday night and slept pretty well considering all the excitement coming the next morning.
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| Marci and I at the parking garage race morning before I got on the Charity Teams bus to the start |
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| Mary James and Caitlyn Egan |
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| Charity Teams Hop Start Bus |
We had time to hear the following (see video below) an encouraging speech from Bill "The Devil" Pennington and then we put on the party bus music!!!
We had time to get custom Sharpee tattoos and I got to draw a few custom ones for several peeps myself....which is some kind of talent on a slow moving, shaking bus on the way to Hopkinton.
The bus reached Hopkinton and everyone went to their separate locations....my charity team - the Doug Flutie Jr. Foundation for Autism had arranged for us to have a house on the corner a block from the start line.
| Entrance to Athletes Village Boston Marathon 2012 |
talking, listening to music, meditating and freaking out about the heat. Everyone was already sweating in the hot sun that had pushed the thermometer up to 78 before the first wave even started at 10am. I took a video of the village just because I was so in awe of the masses of people all over the place....and although I knew there were over 22,000 runners that were going to line up and run....it was stunning to see them all in the village and around the corrals for the waves along the street.
| Lisa, Sarah, Mary, Chris, Allie & Julia |
| Runners everywhere!! |
| Allie!! |
| Allie and Mary corralled in #5 |
| Mary and Colleen |
| Allison and Mary |
| Mary and Julia |
And then the Boston marathon start....can you say Mooooooo!!
| At the 5k mile marker, the sun was already beating down on the runners and the spectators |
When I looked up the results online, I was shocked to see that she had beaten me by 3 seconds.....oh well, at least she finished even if it was slow!
| Interval walkers at 8km |
Julia and I had a good time walking and running the course to get her stomach feeling better and then when I had to go to the bathroom and she wanted to keep going, I told her to get going, I would do my best to catch up or just make my way to the finish. By this time, I had resolved to finishing the marathon within 7 hours....I wasn't going to injure myself or end up in the medical tent....I was just going to finish. As I was starting to run again I noticed a guy weaving back and forth on the asphalt in front of me and flashbacks to working the Ironman Hawaii run course in the medical van came back to me....this guy was in need of sugar or salt or something....he was going to pass out and it was going to be bad because if he fell, he was going to drop fast and he must have been 6 foot 5 inches or more.....he was really out of it. He said his name was Mike and he just hadn't thought it was going to be this hard or hot. I gave him some jelly beans that a young girl at the side of the road was handing out and told him to chew them up and let the sugary stuff get all under his tongue and in his mouth before he swallowed....this is because the mucous membranes under your tongue will take up the sugar faster than your stomach at this point in a race....you stomach is all screwed up and you might just throw up so the longer you can hold that sugary syrup from chewed up jelly beans in your mouth, the more sugar will get into your system. Mike was feeling much better after about 5-10 minutes of slow walking and chewing jelly beans. I had him take another handful from me for later if he started feeling woozie again and he thanked me and I was on my way - headed for the Wellesley scream tunnel and hoping that Heartbreak wasn't as bad as I had heard.
| Army volunteers in full fatigues in the hot sun pose for a photo |
My running was becoming more of a death shuffle up the hills, down the hills...trying to pick up my pace when I came upon another runner on their side, with no one else around, no concerned friend, I had just passed the biggest carnage scene ever at mile 17 where 5 or 6 ambulances were loading people and assessing people who looked pretty bad, either vomiting or passed out on the EMS gurneys.....so when I saw this runner, I knew they were not going to get any medical attention soon since everyone was back about a half mile away.....I ran over and grabbed his wrist....no pulse in his wrist...not a good sign....lips were ashen color...thank God he was breathing, the very last thing I wanted to do was mouth to mouth on a sweaty runner...so thank God!!...I put his legs in shock position and rolled him onto his back and shouted at him, "What's your name?" He opened his eyes and didn't really even try to talk....just looked at me.
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| Running on the hot asphalt caused my shoes to melt in the strike zone at my heel and on the ball of my foot where I would push off |
Would I make it? I had what seemed like a ton of time to get to the finish but a few more resuscitations and I would have to really consider whether to stop and help or just keep going because the stopping and helping was slowly making the time run out and now I had time but I also knew that the closer I got to the finish the more worse off people were going to be that hadn't really trained for this event. The emails that the BAA had sent out begging people to not run the race if they had not trained enough or had other health issues were now coming back to me and I knew why they had sounded so concerned...this was the hardest run I had ever done...walking the Ironman Coeur d'Alene was not as bad as this....and it was actually hotter than day way back in 2006 and I was 40 pounds lighter!!
The hills are in the wrong place on the Boston marathon course....you are treated to so much downhill at the beginning that the hills at the end although they are not really that big or steep, they are simply in the wrong place and your legs just feel like lead with each step....I was so focused on moving forward that I didn't notice the pain on the bottom of my feet until about mile 20 and then as I was trudging through the slosh and pulp of thousands of crushed paper cups by the aid station, I felt the stinging pain of blisters!!! No frickin way that I deserve blisters on a day like today.....I stopped and looked at the bottom of my papercup pulp covered shoes and saw that the soles had melted right at the strike zone of the ball of my foot and guess where my blisters were? Both feet had blisters behind the great toe and second toe at the ball of my foot....OUCH!! I only figured they were blisters because I have had them before on a hot Buffalo Springs Half Ironman run course and the pain was the same. (Later that night in my ice bath....the blisters were not pretty and definitely should have taken a photo but was too tired to remember to do that).
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| Blister grin....ouch! |
At mile 22 I heard my name and Jackie, one of the Charity Team runners who I had tattooed earlier that morning on the bus, was sitting on the side of the road yelling at me...she was overheated and had some stomach issues....I yelled back at her and said, "come on, let's finish this thing!" which got me great applause from the college aged kids that were completely drunk watching the race from their front lawns or hanging out of their windows....Jackie ran to catch up to me and when she did I stopped and walked with her for a while....we still had an hour to finish the last 4.2 miles and she was having the "hardest Boston ever" - she had done the race twice before (if I remember right) as a charity runner....she was bummed about this race and not feeling good after training so hard on the same route with the Charity teams. She told me to look for the Citgo sign because once we saw that the race was pretty much done....so we walked and ran and walked and ran and then I introduced her to Sue who I had ran and walked with earlier and they started talking and were walking slower than me and since I didn't want to walk the last miles of the race and figured that I wouldn't run across any suffering runner this close to the finish line....I started running and kept it up until the pain from my blisters was killing me and then I would walk the aid stations and drink a little bit of gatorade and try not to think about it tasting like warm green sugary slime and then I would run again.
I would like to say that even though this was the slowest marathon that I have ever run at 6 hours 44 minutes and 31 seconds. I am proud of my finish, I am happy that I was able to help others along the course and still finish, I am glad to have been a part of such an amazing team of charity runners and experienced Boston this way rather than through qualifying. What an amazing thing to qualify for this race and then run it faster or slower to enjoy it but knowing that you qualified.....I don't feel ashamed that I didn't qualify, there are runners that would say that the race should only be run by those that qualified but I would disagree since everyone that was there that day and finished this 2012 Boston race was qualified and through finishing they showed that they had not only the tenacity to run 26.2 miles but they had something else.....they had staying power and the ability to slow down so they could finish on this very hot day in April.
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| Chip time 6:44:31 Clock time 6:48:27 DONE! |
Thanks for reading this long post - please comment since I would love to know if I spoke of you or if you too, think I'm crazy...otherwise I won't know how crazy you all think I am.
Cheers,
Mary







You rock! Awesome!
ReplyDeleteAwesome post Mary! I met you briefly on the charity teams bus, it was a hell of a day for sure.
ReplyDeleteJill
I am so proud of you. All your stops to rescue folks along the way, reminded me of your amazing rescue on our hike after Tahoe Relays. I was in awe of you and still am. Way to go and have a wonderful race this weekend. Here is to cool ocean breezes and cool temps!
ReplyDelete