I Can Do Hard Things

May 02, 2024

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Location:

American Fork,UT,

Member Since:

Nov 27, 2009

Gender:

Female

Goal Type:

Boston Qualifier

Running Accomplishments:

St George Marathon

2011 - 4:11:52 

2017. -4:01:17

2021 - 4:03:05

Salt Lake City Full Marathon

2013 -  4:23:03 

Ogden Marathon

2012 - 3:58:35

2013 - 4:17:20

2014 - 4:02:51

2017 - 3:55:22**

2023 - 3:57:09

Utah Valley Marathon

2019 - 4:05:37 

Top of Utah Marathon

2014 - 4:09:27

Mt Charleston Marathon

2019 - 4:05:33

West Mountain Marathon

2015 - 4:42:34

 

St George Half Marathon

2012 - 1:55:00

2013 - 2:03:00

2014 - 1:46:00

2015 - 1:48:00

2022-  1:42:45**

Salt Lake City Half Marathon

2012 - 1:51:00

2014 - 1:44:01

Hobble Creek Half Marathon

2001 - 1:40:00**

2011 - 1:45:00

2012 - 1:43:00

2013 - 1:43:00 

2022 - 1:48:53

American Fork Half Marathon

2013 - 1:48:24

2014- 1:53:23 (pacing Tim)

2017  - 1:47:54

2018 - 1:48:12

2019 - 1:47:50

Timp Half Marathon

2012 - 1:47:18 

2022 - 1:49:40 (AF Cancer course)

Utah Valley Half Marathon 

2011 - 1:55:00 

Top of Utah Half Marathon

2010 - 1:48:20 

The Haunted Half Provo

2018 - 1:51:28

 

Goblin Valley 50K

2014 - 5:58

Red Mountain 55K

2018 - 7:31:37

Antelope Island Fall Classic 50K

2017 - 6:14:23

Antelope Island 50 Mile

2015 - 10:10:00

Antelope Island 100 Mile

2018 - 26:53

 

 

**Personal Best 

 

 

Short-Term Running Goals:

 

 

Long-Term Running Goals:

To qualify for Boston

Personal:

Married for 23 years. I have 18 year old triplets and a 15 year old. I love to sew, garden, and run!

Favorite Running Quotes: 

1.  

"Sooner or later the serious runner goes through a special, very personal experience that is unknown to most people.

Some call it euphoria. Others say it's a new kind of mystical experience that propels you into a elevated state of consciousness, a flash of joy.

A sense of floating as you run. This experience is unique to each of us, but when it happens, you break through a barrier that separates you from casual runners. Forever. And from that point on, there is no finish line. You run for your life. You begin to be addicted to what running gives you."  

~Nike Poster

2.           A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.

Lao-Tzu

You’ve no doubt heard this.  And you’ve probably recited it in your mind on a run or at the gym when you’re just beginning to get in shape.  You have a goal in sight and this quote brings you back to the current moment.

 

But the problem is that many runners forget all of the steps between the first one and the goal.  If your goal is to run under two hours for the half marathon then you need to be honest about all of the little steps to get to that goal.

 

…and what I’d rather see you do is to get the goal out of mind completely, but rather focus on the process, not the outcome. -Jay Johnson Process orientation, not outcome orientation.

 

You should have goals, but you should take it one step at a time.  And you should be honest about the fact that you don’t know how many steps it will take to get there. ~ Vernon Gambetta

 

3.  Human beings are made up of flesh, blood and a miracle fiber called COURAGE! ~ George Patton 

 

4.   Find the courage to be patient.

Favorite Blogs:

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Miles:This week: 11.80 Month: 0.00 Year: 515.24
2014 - Minutes Lifetime Miles: 28605.00
Slow milesFast milesTotal Distance
10.100.0010.10

TT:  1:31:31

AP:  9:04

9:34, 9:21, 9:21, 9:16, 9:04, 9:04, 8:42, 8:38, 8:51, 8:51, :45

N County Blvd - round  about - SR 92 - 100 E

I had no pep this morning and it seemed like the perfect day to keep everything slow.  I've done a lot of faster miles this week and last week.  Everything felt very creaky and I'm excited for my rest day tomorrow.  Got my calves worked on.

 

Quick stretch and foam roll.

 

Here's a little thing I wrote for our family blog:

 

The Journey

 
Awhile ago, I painted a pretty picture in my head.  It was of my journey to qualify for the Boston Marathon.  It was like one of those sports movies with music that played at just the right parts and the underdog always won.
 
But the actual movie has been nothing like my make-believe movie.  My actual movie has played out like this:
 
On a Friday,I ran 18 miles alone and finished by 6:30am.  Which means I started and ended when it was dark.    Then on the following Monday, I ran 11 miles....in the dark.  BUT 10 months ago, running this kind of mileage wasn't even imaginable.  Or being mentally tough enough to run it alone.
 
I haven't been doing speed work on the track.  The thought of doing intervals makes me want to vomit.  It gives me anxiety.  And It is hard.  BUT I'm running almost 45 seconds per mile (in training) faster than I did 10 months ago.  And I can still get to puke zone doing it.
 
My body is full of niggles right now.  Training aches and pains.  The hypochondriac in me is going crazy.  BUT they are not full blown injuries and I can still train.  
 
I had a goal of getting to a certain body fat percentage by race day.  I can't get there if I really like sugar cookies.  The demons laugh at my self mastery.  BUT I'm getting closer to that number, albeit slowly.
 
I feel like my journey is in a constant state of change.  I'm changing.  I've come a long ways in the 10 months I have been training.  Though I haven't conquered all my demons, I'm getting closer.  I've conquered other things along the way which has made me a more disciplined runner.  There are things that I once thought impossible or hard that I can handle semi-gracefully.  
 
The journey that I thought I was going to experience is nothing like the journey I'm on.
 
Silken Laumann, an Canadian Olympian, said, "It's important to know that at the end of the day it's not the medals you remember.  What you remember is the process--what you learn about yourself by challenging yourself, the experiences you share with other people, the honesty the training demands--those are the things nobody can take away from you whether you finish twelfth or you're an Olympic Champion".
 
I'll find out how this movie plays out in 8 weeks.
 

2014 - Minutes Miles: 91.00
Weight: 0.00
Comments
From allie on Wed, Mar 26, 2014 at 12:42:17 from 172.56.9.142

great run and great thoughts. i like that quote at the end. 8 more weeks! you have done so well thus far -- so much progress and you are right on track. there may be some hard things ahead (such as the marathon itself)...but don't forget your blog title. you can do it. :)

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