Here I go again!

Parks Half Marathon

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Location:

Washington,DC,

Member Since:

Jan 01, 2009

Gender:

Female

Goal Type:

Boston Qualifier

Running Accomplishments:

Two Marine Corps Marathons: best '09: 3:55;
10k PR 46 something

Half marathon PR: 1:42:50

Short-Term Running Goals:

3:40 at Shamrock Marathon in VA Beach, March 20

Long-Term Running Goals:

Stay healthy and fit!

Personal:

I'm a very clumsy and injury-prone 31-year-old Argentine runner and biker living in beautiful Arlington, VA.

Favorite Blogs:

Click to donate
to Ukraine's Armed Forces
Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 0.00 Year: 0.00
Mizuno Lifetime Miles: 401.24
Saucony Lifetime Miles: 289.49
Race: Parks Half Marathon (13.1 Miles) 01:42:50, Place overall: 320, Place in age division: 17
Running MilesSwimming YardsBike Miles
13.500.000.00

**Official results** 1:42:50!!!
17th place in age division (30-35), out of 191.  (That means I was on the top 10 percent of females on my age division!!!
Overall: 320th place out of 2,061 runners.

So so so so so so so happy - when the race pics come out I'm going to look so ridiculous, with a huge smile as if I had won the oscar or something... too funny.

Going into the race I did not feel confident that I could reach my goal of 1:45.  My last half marathon, 2 months ago, was 1:48. But, I thought I'd try and keep an 8-min mile pace for as long as I could and see how it went. 

Started out waaaay too fast.  I felt good, so I thought I could hold a sub-8 min pace for a while... so I think the first 6 miles were all close to 7:45. Around mile 8 I started to feel the crash. Oh yea, I should've started slower...  It's hard to pace yourself when you're running in a narrow bike trail the whole time, miles 1-4 were pretty crowded, then it thinned out.

So I was pretty much cruising till mile 8 when I started feeling like I was going to die and thought I was going to have to stop and walk the rest of the way. But I kept pushing. I wanted to cry. I kept looking at the volunteers asking for their mercy. Nothing. Mile 11 was the big hill - I thought I was going to pass out. Miles 12 and 13 were on the Capitol Crescent Trail, where I run all the time. So I knew the end was near. But it didn't make me feel better.  I knew I was ahead of pace, so I could slow down - but I felt like I was running 10-min miles... so I kept pushing... I thought how embarrassing would be to be one of those girls who have to be taken in an ambulance.... the horror... Then the tunnel - I can make it, I can make it, it's almost over... Then the last 200 yards, the finish line is right there!!! And look at the clock, it says 1:44... no freaking way!!! If that was the clock time, my chip time was better than that? Yeah! So I sprinted to the finish.  So excited. So happy. So tired. Had to sit down and keep my head down cause I felt like I was really going to faint. Got food, water, felt better. Saw my friend Brent, he did pretty good, 1:48.  Saw my co-worker Matt, who couldn't run because he was sick, and his wife, then we walked to the finish line to wait for our co-worker Mike. He finished in 2:15, I think, his first half marathon and he hasn't been training that well in the past 2 weeks. He has twin girls, 2.5 years old, and another baby on the way, so he probably doesn't have a lot of time on his hands!

After the race we all went to get brunch. A happy day.

 

Split Time
1 0:07:31
2 0:07:28
3 0:07:57
4 0:07:42
5 0:07:36
6 0:07:53
7 0:08:03
8 0:07:44
9 0:07:45
10 0:07:59
11 0:08:07
12 0:08:28
13 0:08:24
14 0:00:11
 Summary 1:42:53



































































































Saucony Miles: 13.50
Weight: 0.00
Comments
From Bonnie on Sun, Sep 13, 2009 at 14:57:57 from 75.164.109.117

HOOOOORAYYYY!! Way to Go Rocket Woman!

I am SOOOOO happy for you, I will grin all day too! HUGE HUGS!

From josse on Sun, Sep 13, 2009 at 15:08:28 from 70.193.165.88

Way to go that is great. As you found out the end of races are pushing yourself beyond what you want to do. And you did great, you really didn't slow up that much. Way to push through it:)

From jtshad on Sun, Sep 13, 2009 at 16:58:50 from 69.20.183.178

Congrats on a strong race and meeting your goal! You ran awesome!

From Eric Day on Sun, Sep 13, 2009 at 18:10:26 from 189.169.237.133

Wow Lucia !

Super time, super race.

You see? You CAN do great! Awesome !

Now, I have to run another HM and redeem my country after your sensational result.

Congrats and hope you have a good rest.

From seeaprilrun on Sun, Sep 13, 2009 at 19:33:38 from 68.103.250.39

Awesome job! Those are great splits for all you felt like you were crashing it did not reflect much in your splits--you hung in there! Fantastic job! Way to push through when the hurting started!

From Snoqualmie on Sun, Sep 13, 2009 at 20:48:32 from 24.18.192.33

Congratulations! You are tough!! What a great job you did!

From Burt on Sun, Sep 13, 2009 at 20:50:52 from 98.167.151.26

Great job Lucia (wow, I didn't call you Rocket.) Way to stay strong. Even though it hurt your times didn't slow down too much. You'll be getting that BQ for sure.

From Sasha Pachev on Mon, Sep 14, 2009 at 14:25:26 from 192.168.1.1

Finally a race that is beginning to reveal your potential.

I do not believe there is such a thing as starting out too fast. If you start at a pace that is faster than what you can sustain without trying to go out faster on purpose, what that means is that some of your subsystems are ready to run that pace all the way, but others are lagging behind. While it is true that starting out slower would have given you a faster time in that particular race, long-term starting out at a natural pace has the potential of eventually pushing you to run that pace to the finish as the results of the experiment clearly point you in the right direction in your training. You start out fast and say - wow, it really felt easy for the first 5, I wonder what happened, why couldn't I keep that up? When you start out slower, you might be tempted to think that you cannot run any faster without working on your speed.

I think neuromuscularly were ready to run 7:30 pace all the way, but not aerobically and from the fuel perspective.

From MrsFIT on Mon, Sep 14, 2009 at 15:23:05 from 205.127.241.18

Nice run Rocket, that's a great time :)

From LuzyLew on Mon, Sep 14, 2009 at 15:53:26 from 208.187.197.42

Thanks for checking in, I'm glad you did so I could check on you and say CONGRATULATIONS on this race!! Wow, it's really inspiring to see how far you've come. I only get inspired when I know it's taken work (blood sweat and tears) to achieve the results. Talent is just luck. Acheivement is earned. This was awesome to read! So glad to know you're not wired or fractured in this moment. Way to go my ARgintine friend!

From Sasha Pachev on Mon, Sep 14, 2009 at 16:18:20 from 192.168.1.1

Talent is more than luck. Starting with a spiritual perspective, there is a reason God gives you certain talents in certain measures. I see the presence and discovery of a talent as an implicit call to serve at some point in your life using that talent.

Moving on to temporal. What we call talent is 50% if not more in the environment and proper development and less than 50% in the factors we cannot control (genetics). I compare it to a fruitful apple tree that produces juicy apples. Yes, you do need a healthy seed to start with. But you also need good soil, proper watering and weeding, and whatever else farmers do to make it grow.

When we look at a runner we often say he has talent because he can run quite fast with hardly any training. While there might be some luck involved in finding a good seed, what we forget is that he is not a seed at this point anymore. He is a budding apple tree. He has already been raised to a point in good soil. Training will only sweeten his apples. And it is by far not just luck that his apples have the potential to become sweet. That potential would not be there had the farmer been slacking.

Why make a big deal out of this? Because I believe we are making a strategic mistake when the concept of fertile soil and plant nourishment is gone and we only think of maturing the apples as opposed to the whole process that starts with cultivating the soil. This affects not only our running performance but the health of our nation in general.

From Huans32 on Mon, Sep 14, 2009 at 16:30:26 from 138.64.2.76

AWESOME RACE ROCKET!!!!! You are the ROCKET!! Very nice race and you did wonderful. WTG!!!

From argentinerocket on Mon, Sep 14, 2009 at 17:17:21 from 74.9.147.114

Thank you my friends!

Sasha, when you say that I wasn't aerobically ready (the fueling issue is a different story) does that mean I need to do more long runs?

It's true what you said about talent and growth/nourishment. So many people say "I can't run, my body was just not built for it" "I'm too old" or even think they can't walk because they have bad knees. I'm sure it's true for some people, but in general it's clear that they're just being lazy and don't want to do the work, and use something as an excuse to avoid trying harder. This blog is living proof that amazing things can be accomplished by "normal", very busy people, and even people who have or have had important physical impediments, if you only try and train and organize your life's priorities. I know for a fact that there's nothing inherently special about me or my body that makes me a "decent" runner; it's that I work really hard at it!

From argentinerocket on Mon, Sep 14, 2009 at 17:17:50 from 74.9.147.114

Burt, I'm still not sure I can pull off a BQ quite yet, but I'm going to try my best!

From Sasha Pachev on Mon, Sep 14, 2009 at 17:43:08 from 192.168.1.1

Aerobic development is primarily a function of how many miles you run every day. You can split it into two or three runs.

Fuel is a different story. You need to deplete to a certain magic level to provide a strong stimulus for accelerated glycogen storage. That is when long runs come in.

There is a decent amount of interplay between aerobic conditioning, fuel storage, and fuel efficiency training. Long run provides a solid aerobic stimulus in addition to fuel. Daily runs, when sufficiently long (8 miles) help with the fuel as well. Better aerobic conditioning improves fuel economy, so it will take you longer to bonk at the same pace even if your fuel storage capabilities are the same.

Bottom line - you need to put in as many miles as you have time for and as your body can handle without breaking down.

From JD on Mon, Sep 14, 2009 at 20:22:52 from 32.178.218.7

Great job!

From Snoqualmie on Mon, Sep 14, 2009 at 22:27:48 from 24.18.192.33

Sasha - "Aerobic development is primarily a function of how many miles you run every day..." Per DAY? And not per week or other multi-day period? Just want to make sure I understand what you are saying here.

From artichoke on Tue, Sep 15, 2009 at 00:14:37 from 71.38.252.109

Great job! Great time! Great splits! Way to go. I'll be thinking of the Argentine Rocket when I'm running in northern Argentina next week!

From Sasha Pachev on Tue, Sep 15, 2009 at 14:02:07 from 192.168.1.1

If you run at least N miles per day 6 days a week you will run at least 6*N miles per week. I like to focus on the day rather than the week. Here is why:

During the week you can do either 3x20 or 6x10 miles to get 60 miles. It is the same 60 miles, but the aerobic stimulus from 3x20 is a whole lot smaller than from 6x10. Because the aerobic stimulus is subject to the law of diminishing returns over the length of one individual run. You get more out of your first 10 of a 20 miler than out of the last 10. That is why professional runners do doubles.

Also because a day is a whole lot easier to plan than a week. If you say my day does not end until I've run 10 miles, if you've been slacking and it is the end of the day, you only have 10 miles to run to meet the goal. If you go by week and at the end of it find yourself at 0, you have 60 miles to do!

Which would be a very bad idea. If somebody who planned a 60 mile week finds himself at zero at the end of it I would recommend a 5 mile run - he is already too much out of shape to absorb the training stimulus of 10.

From Snoqualmie on Tue, Sep 15, 2009 at 20:34:59 from 24.18.192.33

I seem to do better with a hard day/easy day approach. Not sure how that fits in. Maybe it helps us older runners recover?

From Brent on Fri, Sep 18, 2009 at 14:14:58 from 168.178.30.75

Rocket - nice PR, 300 commando points, working hard smart does pay off. By the say, some people like me, work hard, do have bad knees and are not lazy. Maybe I am the exception.

Stay Kool, Faster and Faster, B of BS Rools out

From Barry on Fri, Sep 18, 2009 at 20:56:10 from 67.60.189.166

I am sorry that it has taken me so long to congratulate you on you race. You did awesome!! One thing that i started doing to help me not run so fast is to try to have my last mile be as fast as my first. That has really helped me to slow down and not take off like a bullet. I hope that helps. Once again congratulations......

From marion on Wed, Sep 23, 2009 at 17:47:23 from 71.213.124.121

Way to go Lucia! I am so excited to hear how the Marine Corp marathon goes :) You are doing SO great! hang in there sister!!! You are a ROCK(et) star :)

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