I’ve been moving at a snail’s pace since Sunday’s Toronto Marathon. This is probably the second most sore I’ve been after a marathon — I bounced back almost right away after the two last fall, but this one’s taking awhile.
In any case, that’s why this race report is a whole three days after the fact!
On Sunday, I ran the Toronto Marathon. It was my sixth marathon and it’s actually the race I ran for my very first marathon two years ago.
I didn’t set out to run a marathon this spring. I thought I’d do a half (to give myself a break — having run one full each season and then two marathons one month apart last fall), and then I added running Around the Bay 30k. And what happened is that training for Around the Bay was so difficult with the cold, cold, cold winter, and I realized that to run a spring marathon would just call for about one month more of training after Around the Bay. So I figured “why not?”
Which isn’t exactly the best attitude going into a marathon. You should really want to run a marathon.
Maybe for this reason I was particularly anxious about the race. Add in the fact that I didn’t get a ton of speed training done leading up to the race (I was out of town a lot in April). I had nightmares of missing my race a good two weeks ago (I normally manage to refrain from being anxious about a race until the week prior).
The week before the race, too, didn’t help things. I had an extremely busy week, and I was up early every day (so was lacking sleep) and had not one but two tough workouts (one with celeb fitness trainer Tracy Anderson — yes, the one Gwyneth trains with). Tired and sore, I was stressed at not being rested enough to run my 42.2k.
I decided to aim conservatively for this race and printed a pace band for a finish of 3:58 (just one minute faster than my PB in Philly in the fall). But I wasn’t sure if I could achieve it and didn’t set my heart on it. I just wanted to be realistic; I wasn’t feeling as strong as I have for other races (especially when I used my Around the Bay time in a race predictor and it told me I was slated to run my second slowest marathon ever — although I realized after I entered a slower time, oopsies).
But then I started the race with a friend, and she’s faster than me. And I felt good. And the weather was perfect — chilly at about 3C and sunny (but it was very windy at times). But with the good running weather and having a good time running with my running pal, I did precisely what you’re not supposed to do, but I was well aware of it — I started out too fast, but I was willing to take the chance. We stayed together til about the half-marathon mark, and it was great — the first half of the Toronto Marathon is a fun route (down Yonge where there are people cheering, and then it’s pretty around UCC and then I love the downhill leafy part going on Rosedale Valley Road).
The last half is a different story. It’s out for about 8k and then back. It’s near Lake Ontario, but it’s not as scenic as you’d imagine as you’re not right by the water. And I always find it hard to be running and having all the people faster than you on their way back to the finish line.
I started feeling like it was a grueling run at the 29k mark. I can usually manage to hold out until 32k at least before I started feeling that way. So my internal monologue included lots of “Just keep going” and “Go, go, go.”
Came across some greet supporters along the route. At one point, I was having a particularly dark moment and I swear, I think this woman could tell because she cheered “You can do this!” and it was just the perk up I needed. At another point, when the elite half-marathoners passed by me and my friend and we called them incredible, a girl cheering overheard us and said, “NO, YOU’RE INCREDIBLE!”
And then to the guy who said on his megaphone, “You look sexy!” and made me laugh. My first reaction was “Seriously, dude?!”…and then I remembered what I was wearing: a Nike top that reads “I run to be sexy.” And I had a good giggle. Thanks, guy!
And let’s not forget the friends who came out to cheer. I’ve said this before but I’ll say it again: If you have a friend who runs a race, go out and cheer for them, even if they don’t ask you to. Seeing a familiar smiling face, even though you only see each other for 10 seconds, is the best. And I was lucky enough to have several friends come out to cheer, and with a cute little banner, too!
In the end, I finished in 4 hours (I forget the seconds, I think it was just under 4:01). Which I’m pleased about as I finished my two marathons in the fall (in the Nike Women’s Marathon in San Fran and in Philly) in 3:59 and 4 hours, so I feel that’s my solid time.
Now to get faster for my next marathon!
(For more pics from race day, you can check my Instagram! And follow me on Insta while you’re there on my account!)
May 7, 2014
Still a bit dazed about the fact that I ran 42.2 kilometres on Sunday. Wowzers.
(oh, and it’s a personal best–okaaaaay, so it’s a PB automatically since it’s my first race of this distance; I still think I set the bar pretty high for myself off the bat
Sort of lucked out with the weather — a bit too sunny and warm at 18C for running for many hours (I was thankful the race started earlier this year at 7:30). Definitely better than last year’s rain for the same race when I ran the half-marathon.
Things that made it a fantastic race:
- So many friends came to cheer me and it gave me a little boost when throughout the route, I had their happy faces to cheer me on. I had originally thought it’d be fun and more exciting to do a destination race as my first marathon, but I’m so glad I did one here at home. Besides my friends and sisters, so many other people just watching the race, too, would call out my name (the names are on the bibs) and it’s kinda the nicest thing ever to get that kind of encouragement — something to remember if you ever go watch a race as a spectator!
- My two sisters — one’s ran many, many marathons and she ran me in the last few kilometres, which helped me set my mind on getting to the finish line by following her rather than thinking only about how sore and tired my legs felt. She’s the biggest cheerleader — as we ran, she’d rouse up the spectators by saying “This is my sister! It’s her first marathon!!” and people would cheer and clap. She was like a real-life version of that Klondike noise metre at the Raptors games at the Air Canada Centre! My other sister also came out to support — she came on her bike so I saw her many times along the toughest portion of the race (aka the last 10k) and she made the bestest banner inspired by my chevron-dot manicure (it was seriously the nicest banner I saw in the race — I’m not being biased!) (that’s the banner pictured above in case you hadn’t figured that out…).
- I was able to finish running 42.2k. That in itself makes it fantastic to me!
As for how the race went? Well, my goal was just to finish, but in order to take on running a marathon you have to decide what pace you’re capable of maintaining for the whole 42.2k. Based on past races and my training runs, race predictor calculators estimated anything from 4 hours to 4 hours and 20 minutes to finish the whole race (in the anxiety-ridden week prior to the marathon, I think I plugged in every run I’d done in the last year trying to figure out a reasonable pace for myself!). I decided I’d try to aim for four hours, but didn’t set my heart on it too much. So many things can go wrong on race day and it was my very first marathon so I anticipated anything from 4 hours to 4 hours and 30 minutes or even more.
I was so crazy nervous at the start that I was shaking. I’m glad I only got into the start corral with two minutes to race start as that’s when I started to have a mini freak out. I tried my best to forget the three weeks straight of training I missed because of an eye infection and cold. And how I only made it out for hills training once due to work commitments. I just shut it out of my mind and thought “Here goes, there’s nothing else I can do at this point!”
I started out too fast (with some kilometres completed at a 5:10/km pace) so I kept telling myself to slow the eff down. If I kept going too fast, I’d burn out early on. I eventually slowed to 5:32/km, which was still faster than I needed to be, but definitely more reasonable. And I kept this pace comfortably until about 32 kilometres.
And at 32k, that’s when I started to feel tired. Then the 10s-and-1s 4-hour pace bunny passed me. And then the 4-hour continuous pace bunny and I kept passing each other until he drew away and eventually I couldn’t even see him, his pink pace-bunny ears and red Tshirt at all. I just couldn’t keep the pace up anymore, but I didn’t really harp on it. I figured I’d do what I could and that’s all I could ask for. At this point, since I’d already accidentally ripped my pace band, I stopped referring to it and just kept focused on how many kilometres I had left. I knew my sister was meeting me around the 38 or 39k mark so I broke down the remaining race into chunks based on that (“Only two more k til I see her, and then a k or two and I’ll see this friend, and then that friend,” etc.)…
And before I knew it, there was the finish line, yippee!
And it “only” took 4 hours, 6 minutes and 35 seconds.
Notice how I referred to it as my first marathon? That’s cuz, yes, I will do another, I’ve already decided.
Lessons I learned for my next race:
- I need to invest in some BodyGlide; turns out I have a tendency to chafe on one of my arms — bet you were dying to know intimate chafing details! I can Twitpic my arm if you’d like!
- Only drinking Gatorade while taking energy chews for the last three hours of the race is gross. I was so tired of the sweetness that I had to grab water at one of the stations just to get the taste out of my mouth. At the post-marathon brunch I went to with my cheer squad, I had to have something savoury as pancakes with syrup would’ve made me nauseous. Next time, I’ll plan for water in my bottle when I start with my energy gummies.
- Reinforce paper pace bands with scotch tape underneath as well, so they don’t rip as easily. I literally gasped out loud when it fell apart in my hands at the 25k mark.
Marathon #2? Bring it on!
May 8, 2012
…are Heather (who will run the half-marathon) and Cheryl (for the 5k), both of Toronto — please check your email for a note from me! Congrats, ladies, and have a great race!
April 29, 2012