Sunday, January 25, 2015

New year new adventures

My first trip to India was planned months in advance. In addition to the work trip I wanted to make sure I saw someplace new. Not that India wasn’t new but honestly there are many other places I want to see first. My belief is that I shouldn’t fly that far around the world and not have something personal to show for it. I envision being 80 years old talking to my grandchildren about where I’ve been and not wanting to make a lame excuse that I was too busy or too scared to spend a day seeing something more significant than the inside of a hotel or office building. I am very lucky that Dan supports me in this because he is the one that bears the brunt of my being gone longer than necessary. I could have gone to Paris but I have been there before (I am not sure you can go there too many times but bear with me I am trying to be adventurous). I decided on Dubai. I had hope along the way that a few work colleagues would be able to join me but in the end I went by myself - something that seems well and good on paper but is scary as hell in the execution.  The day before I left Megan broke down crying about how much she will miss me. I like to tell myself I am providing a good example of independence, self sufficiency and adventure and this may be true but these times also make me feel like a complete asshole. 

Preparing for a trip like this is a monumental task. First thinking about the household needs while I’m gone; shopping, pre-making food, arranging babysitters and dog walkers, refilling toilet paper holders; the list is endless.  Packing enough without over packing is an art and the amount of time putting my spreadsheet of outfits together makes me feel like a deviant. It seems that I have more food and medication than clothing on this trip. I have a whole pack work gave me in case I get sick, plus all my remedies - Advil, Emergencee, sleeping pills, uppers, downers, probiotics, vitamins, snack food, sea salt, you name it I have it. And honestly I wish I brought more.

For this trip I flew Emirates which was nice; they give you a mattress to put on your flat bed seat which makes a big difference; between that the and the sleeping pill I am out for a good 6 hours - a personal best for sleeping on a plane. When I get to Dubai I am amused to find the customs officers dressed in traditional arab headresses. Of course this is their country and I am not sure why I find this amusing except to say that traveling in places like this just assaults your senses in every way. I was advised to take a pink cab to the hotel. This is basically a fleet of cabs driven by women. Some say these aren’t safe because they wear berkas that cover most of their faces; one guy told me not to take them because “you can’t see shit when you wear a berka”. But at the time, being paranoid and ignorant I reasoned that getting in a car accident was better than getting raped (I have made no secret of the fact that I am a drama queen). 

My hotel room is gigantic with 2 bathrooms, a kitchen with a washing machine and a giant living room. For the first time I can remember I capped off a 30 hour trip with going to the gym.  It was a great way to press the reset button but I got into a little squabble with the guy on the treadmill next to me who was talking - no screaming on the phone in arabic. I finally asked him to stop but quickly remembered I was in a gym alone with a large arabic man and maybe I should just keep my mouth shut.

I usually go to the Pats home playoff games so I was very sad to find out that a trip that was planned months ago overlapped with 2 games. I made elaborate preparations to watch the Baltimore game in Dubai - called the hotel to see if they would have the broadcast and considered buying Sling Box until my friend offered to let me sign into his. I went in search of dinner at 10 pm but in Dubai most restaurants and many hotels cannot serve liquor. In fact locals have to have a license to buy alcohol and the quantity you buy is dependent on your income.  It would seem the poorer you are the more alcohol you would need but whatever. 

Anyway after 30 hours of flying I wanted a drink and some football. I found a sports bar close to the hotel but I had to walk through a little dark mini desert to get there; not a long walk but pretty frightening. The hotel kept telling me that Dubai is very safe; that they put people in jail and throw away the key for even minor offenses like stealing pocketbooks. So I adventure out and end up sitting next to a Russian guy who ran the Aldo store in the worlds biggest mall.  He proceeded to tell me how bad Americans are and how nice Putin is. I just laugh and agree with him and slowly try to get away from him by befriending a woman from Atlanta and her German boyfriend. It doesn’t seem safe to argue with a Russian kid who seems to be missing his faculties in a foreign country. After watching the first half of the Patriots game with a crowd of people watching me watch the Patriots game I decided to go back to the hotel to watch the second half where I signed into sling box, fell dead asleep and missed the huge 3rd and 4th qtr, waking up in a panic to find out what happened. 

It is evident that whoever designed this city had been to Disneyland. If I had to describe it I would say its a combination of Vegas, Disney and Miami; amazing architecture, neon lights and the “city on the ocean vibe”. Everywhere you go you see gigantic parks like the Atlantis, an enormous outdoor jungle, an indoor ski area, etc. People watching in Dubai rivals Vegas. There are so many nationalities here that English is the only common one so everyone speaks it with varying degrees of proficiency. 

The work week here is Sunday to Thursday because Friday is a holy day. On Sunday I met up with a friend of a friend who is living here with his wife who is an EXPAT.  He took me to lunch at the Dubai Mall which is the biggest mall in the world.  The malls here are beyond enormous and overwhelming and they have everything you can possibly think of; cinemas, ice rinks, aquariums, fountains, indoor ski areas and every store imaginable. One of the things I found so curious was all the women in burkas shopping for Louis Vuitton bags and Ferragamo shoes. If you’re wearing a giant black sheet every day I am not quite sure why you need Ferragamo shoes.  As if confirming the ignorance of the average American I can also say that I don’t give a shit why.

The largest mall is at the base of the worlds tallest building the Burj Khalifa and has a famous outdoor fountain where we sat in the hot sun for an amazing lebanese lunch. (I have to say I feel this building is cheating since the top is a gigantic spiral with nothing in it).  At random points in the day they play what sounds like super loud songs or chants over loudspeakers all over the city. It lasts for 10 minutes or so and my friend tells me they are prayers. I was so thankful to be driven around; they drive on the same side of the road as us but the highways are 8 lanes and up and the traffic patterns very strange; you have to drive around in endless circles to get to a place you can see right across the road.  Gas is very cheap and everyone is super rich so mostly you see Lamborghinis, Bentleys, Mercedes and all kinds of other premium cars large and small. Everything here is under construction. There are cranes larger than skyscrapers all over and the city seems to be either all concrete and sand with some glass mixed in.

We drove all over the city - driving by the Burj Al Arab on the water, the worlds only 7 star hotel (of course Dubai tourism is always making up distinctions for themselves). I had looked into staying at this famous hotel but quickly ruled it out when I found that one night is 7,000 US dollars. I also looked into going into the hotel just to see it but you have to have dinner reservations which I considered making a few months ago but never did. We drove out to the waters edge to the palace of Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan who is more officially referred to as His Highness Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan (LMAO). His palace goes on for miles on the water then there’s a section that also goes on for miles for the palaces of his wives.  We stopped at the beach then drove over to the Palms where all of the rich people laundering money in Dubai live. I capped off my visit with a dinner by myself on the beach section called Jumeirah. 

Overall I like Dubai and I am glad I saw it but I don’t have much of a desire to return. Everything is so contrived and devoid of personality or history - like some fictional city you read about in the Hunger Games. I could have stayed longer to go to the beach but I can think of much better places to go for that.  I happily begin the trek to Bangalore via the Dubai airport. This would be  my last glimpse of society as I know it for a few weeks.

In Bangalore I had a driver because you can’t drive yourself and my work will not allow a random cab for safety reasons. So my driver picked me up and I head to the city which is an hour plus away.  Everyone knows driving in India is insane but no words could do the experience justice. They drive on the opposite side of the road, lanes are not observed and cars weave in and out all over the place beeping their horns every 2 minutes. There are mopeds, bikes, rickshaws and people walking along the highway going the wrong way. I don’t know if there’s a speed limit but there are people going 10, 40 and 70 miles an hour all on the same road. It all seems like some kind of meticulously choreographed routine; miraculously working despite the extreme chaos. People pile onto mopeds with little kids slumped over the steering wheel, large parcels on board and some driving barefoot. I saw rickshaws with more people in them than you can count.You can practically smell the breath of the drivers next to you.  You will be on what seems to be a highway but it has speed bumps at random spots.  Pure insanity.

I’m told Bangalore is a safe place to be relative to other India cities but my hotel security is very tight.  Every time the car drops me off they search the car, checking the trunk and hood and an old decrepit lab sniffs the whole thing up and down. It mirrors airport security with the mandatory scanning of all your bags each time you enter the hotel. This seems aggravating at first but does serve to make you feel very secure. My hotel is a highlight of the trip. The service is amazing. All the waiters and bartenders are men and there are 4 of them for every customer. The minute you enter the hotel there are women walking around with drinks - juice, champagne, whatever you want. They all memorize my name. At the hotel gym the second you finish a bottle of water they bring you another one and they offer to wipe the sweat off your brow. At one point the gym attendant was spotting a few guys lifting weights and helping to stretch them out.  I am there for so long they start to learn my needs and bring me things I want without my asking. Being in the hotel you could be anywhere; there are a lot of Americans, Brits and Germans as well as arabs and Indians from all states. Its the only remotely easy thing in this visit.

Food was a major issue for me. Most people have the same issues but the diet here is opposite of the way I eat. The water can’t be trusted which means I can’t eat salads or anything that has been washed and not cooked. I brush my teeth with bottled water and nervously breathe from my nose while showering so I won’t get water in my mouth. I am not sure if the water is bad or just bad for people who aren’t used to it but I guess it doesn’t matter. There are many options for food but I don’t recognize many of them since I don’t even eat Indian food at home and everything is covered in mystery sauce. I eat the same thing practically every day at home and in order to not starve I break my rule of no bread for lack of anything safe to eat.  Of all the differences between home and here I find this the hardest to deal with.  I subsist on Quest bars and almonds that I brought with me.  

My first week here I was by myself and tried to take advantage and recover from jet lag. I fell asleep early but woke up at 3:30 every morning, taking a few cat naps until I finally got up in frustration to go to the gym.  This pattern repeats itself for a solid week. I survive on adrenaline; my body has no idea what the hell is going on. I find myself asking what the fuck time is it every half an hour for 24 hours a day; its 9.5 hours ahead and its the half hour that really throws me off.  Its hard to stay in touch with anyone because I only have wifi when most of the world I know is asleep. I end up Face-timing the kids at 6 am when they in bed and I’m rushing to get ready for work.  Getting up at 3 or 4 every morning works out well for me to watch the AFC championship.  My WIFI signal fails me and I end up going to the lobby for coffee and meeting an Israeli expat who is watching the game via the NFL pass. We sit in the lobby having breakfast and watching the PATS. By the time its over I am late for work, spending 12 hours blissfully unaware of deflate- gate. 

The traffic is so bad that it takes an hour to get to and from work each way and I spend 2 hours a day staring listlessly out the window at all the sights while my driver weaves in and out of traffic like a car chase scene from the Bourne Identity.

The purpose of the trip is to meet my new group in my new job - I have already met over 80 new people and this is a continuation. This job is new in every way; new industry (HR) new division, new role and new focus. I am WAY off the ranch of my comfort zone - a place I continually force myself to be but question myself when I get there. I get bored, force myself to make changes then spend months questioning it until gradually it becomes my normal.  I was in my last job for 7 years which is a personal record;  I was established with a significant amount of freedom including working from home and making my own schedule.  I probably should have made a change 3 years earlier but I tried to stem the intellectual boredom by fiercely embracing every ridiculous hobby you can think of: making everything from scratch including brownies, gluten free bread and granola bars, marathon running, blogging, photoshopping, halloween craft making - you name it.  In the end I needed a challenge at work.  I find it very annoying that I can’t just accept a good job that allows me freedom to be the best mother/wife/self actualized person I can be. I just can’t pay attention to anything when I’m bored; succumbing to chronic procrastination and laziness in all things. Its unfortunate that I force myself to make changes yet I don’t handle them well and I exist in a perpetual state of self doubt for months while my husband and good friends talk me off the ledge, convincing me that I need to give it time. Add to this the newness of going to 3rd world countries and I am orbiting in a new galaxy that I struggle to put into words.  My life’s achievement may be to be comfortable not being comfortable.

The people at the office are great hosts; they bend over backwards making sure my stay is comfortable and I have everything I need. They are very sincere and wonderful people. But the combination of everything being new is overwhelming and it seems to require that I get an extra 3 hours of sleep a night while I am barely getting half of what I get at home.  I am feeling torn every hour between being homesick and excited.  I go from being hyper with excitement to beyond exhaustion within a 5 minute span.  

On Friday my boss and other co workers get here which as it turns out is just in time because I am starting to feel completely insane for having decided to come here by myself.  On Saturday we set out on a temple tour. I had hoped we would go to Taj Mahal but its thousands of miles away. Our guide was a local co-worker who took us to only local places no sane American traveler would go to; they were not typical touristy destinations. Along the way he explained the history of India and some of the religious customs; patiently putting up with our incessant questions the whole way.  I practically forced my boss who is a man to sit in the front seat. I am not even the type to ride a Disneyland swirly tea cup ride never mind to sit in the front of an Indian driving odyssey without blindfolds. 

We stopped for lunch along the way and saw many emaciated dogs hanging around. This is an epidemic in India and its one of the worst things for me to see. The dogs run all over the place in and out of traffic like they own the city. There is an initiative going on to neuter the dogs but they are still everywhere. I ended up feeding a little hungry boy my lunch then I torture myself the whole way to the temple wondering if I over fed him and made him sick. 

Our first stop was Halebidu Temple which was about a 2 hour drive from Bangalore crossing everything from highways to small side roads littered with hoards of goats, cows and donkeys.  Along the way I finally stopped taking pictures of cows because they have now become routine for me; cows in the median strip, cows tied up outside shacks, COWS. The temple is an operational Buddha temple with a village at the base. On our way we were accosted by locals selling souvenirs.  Thankfully the local I was with took charge of the negotiation, haggling for a Ganesha statue that we bought for $20. After we erie away the local said the woman told him it had tarn her 5 days to make it. This made me feel really bad. These statues are everywhere and we learned that Ganesha is a hindu god with an elephant head and gives you peace and tranquility when the trunk is down and wisdom when its up. My co worker explained that Ganesha has an elephant head because his father cut his head off, not realizing it was his son. When the mother told him to fix it the father (who was a god) replaced the boys head with the head of an elephant which was the closest living thing.  I take no responsibility for the veracity of these statements I am merely document what I remember for posterity and to explain to the kids why I bought them so many elephant statues. 

To climb the temple we had to buy socks and walk with no shoes up the the temple via very steep, uneven stairs covered in sand.  Huffing and puffing up the stairs someone in front of us lost their lunch and I had to negotiate around it to get up the stairs; challenging every fiber of my sensibilities. When you get to the top there are people praying and meditating and we got blessed and marked with a bindi in return for a donation. At the base of the temple they sell coconuts which they hash open with a machete, give you the juice to drink then cut up the inside of the coconut. We couldn’t eat it because its unsafe given that you don’t know if or what the machete has been washed in and the only way to drink the coconut is with a straw of equally suspect cleanliness. 

We trekked to the Chennakesava Temple which is an operational Hindu temple built in 1117 AD. We saw amazing architecture with plenty of locals in traditional sarees and Indian garb.  This also required us to take our shoes off and re-outfit ourselves with filthy socks.  To me this only enhanced the adventure and was worth the discomfort for the amusement of my straight laced boss and his despair over the whole process. We had a local tour guide who took us into the pitch black back of the temple where there were Hindu statues lined up.  He led the way through with a small pocket light while I verged on the brink of a panic attack. Had I not been with a local I would have surely had heart failure.  

If I thought I stuck out like a sore thumb in China that was nothing. At one point a man started video taping me - presumably having never seen a pasty white girl.  My friends were perturbed by this but I thought it was a riot given that I had been rubbernecking like only an idiotic American can do at everything and everyone I have seen here that is outside my frame of reference. In short, I deserved it.  It is a little weird to think that maybe there’s a video of me on the inter-web being shared in a small village in India. At several places we were swarmed by the cutest little school girls who wanted to have their picture taken with us, screaming “photo!”, “photo!”.  We took pictures and they insisted on looking at them on the camera screen, screaming in delight. 

I spent Sunday alone; I was glad to have the day to myself but it is an utterly foreign feeling for me in the last 20 years to be alone without a single obligation. The driver will take me anywhere I want but its not safe to do a lot of things but shop and I am not a shopper. I read, worked out, and just relaxed. While here I am having deja vu to my 20s when I travelled a lot alone - doing whatever I wanted whenever I wanted. It feels liberating and just plain wrong all at the same time. At one point I felt panicked and homesick and thought I might like a good cry, then went to the sunny pool to make myself better. Problem solved.   

By my second week I had settled in a bit and was sleeping better but the work schedule was grueling, meetings every half an hour until 7 pm then work dinners, meeting and chatting with hundreds of new colleagues. I struggle remembering names and keeping up with the small talk.  I am normally very good at this but it seems to go on endlessly and I feel my adrenaline draining and my head aching with sensory and information overload. The closer I get to coming home the harder I find it to concentrate. 

We finally leave on a Friday night at 1 am. In addition to my driver I have to be accompanied by a security detail because its the middle of the night and I am a woman. I had to wait almost an hour in the customs line and the security line is the biggest cluster-fuck, with separate lines for men and women and 90 security guards checking and rechecking the same things.  I am told the Bangalore airport is much better than it used to be but I am not a fan. After a 4 hour flight we land in Dubai which was intensely crowded with just about every race and religion you can imagine. As we enter the Dubai airport I have an immediate feeling of relief knowing that I can eat anything I want and even the very air seems better. There is no shortage of shopping in and things to do in this airport but its wildly chaotic - there are no protocols for walking observed;  people walk all over in ever direction running into you, blocking traffic. It’s exhausting just to get to your gate. 

In an odd twist of fate I was waiting in line in Dubai for my flight and the guy in front of me looked oddly familiar. It took me a few minutes then I realized he worked for me 10+ years ago but then I couldn't remember his name. All of a sudden it dawned on me that I fired him or laid him off and then he starts looking back at me - every time I see his head slightly move I look back so he can't see my face because of all things after an all night flight from Bangalore the worst thing that could possibly happen would be small talk with a person you once fired? As luck would have it this is the longest line to get on a plane you have ever witnessed and I go to extreme lengths to avoid eye contact with him. I still don't really remember if I fired him or laid him off but I do remember his lack of common sense and the fact that he was really pissed when I did it. Freud would say that I blocked this out? Trauma based amnesia? I don't remember shit anymore anyway so probably just plain forgot.

Once we left Dubai I had a 14 hour flight to Boston. But business class its surprisingly easy to deal with; sleeping, watching movies and drinking anything you want - all for free.  Its such a strange feeling to be on a flight, watch 3 movies and look at the time and realize you still have 9 hours of flying left. 

When I land in Boston the relief is palpable - just to be amongst the familiar.  Ever single thing I see seems like something to be grateful for.  Being able to go to the store without an escort, not having to divide by 60 to determine the price of things, Starbucks, salad, brushing your teeth with tap water, my phone works, roads make sense and they aren’t littered with garbage. Even the traffic on the mass pike seems like a welcome change.


Having gone to India once I think it will be much less taxing to go again. I have to go in March and I am already plotting out how to bring a full cooler of food with me. Until then I am going to enjoy a few weeks at home before the next adventure. 

Sunday, December 14, 2014

Adventures in China

Today marks over a week since I got back from China and I can say I am almost recovered. I have gotten through all my email, caught up on sleep and I am still working on the 5 pounds I gained while on my carb fest.  I have finally processed the adventure. This trip was by far the longest trip I have ever taken; leaving the house at 7 am on Saturday and walking into my hotel 9 pm on Sunday. 26 hours of travel and 13 hours of lost clock time. Don’t get me wrong I’ve lost 13 hours before but it went by much slower.  I am so thankful for business class - no nickel and dime-ing, no lines, free movies on demand, use of Bose head phones, unlimited food/drinks, slippers, lie flat beds - I really don’t know how anyone could do a 14 hour flight in coach. It’s inhumane.  We flew from Chicago north over the north pole which I had no idea you could do. I thought we would fly to Chicago then go west. It was dark when we flew over so I didn’t see any polar bears or elves. I heard later that it was only recently that you can fly this way because of Russian air restrictions. Of course had i known i was flying over Russia I would have been a lot more nervous.  When you look at the map while flying its very true to life (although not completely 3 dimensional) and you can clearly see how close Alaska is to Japan. I’m sure to many this sounds completely ignorant on my part.

Getting off the plane and through customs was easy enough - I was all set for some frustrated communist customs guy to interrogate me about my mission of espionage and I had visions of body cavity searches - but no such atrocities occurred.  The fun began when I took the train to get my luggage and then what seems to be thousands of Chinese cram into 3 train cars with everyone talking a mile a minute. I half expected the whole train to turn into a crazy mob scene like something out of the Deer Hunter (I am nothing if not dramatic). I am a planner by nature but when it came to getting from the Beijing airport to the hotel I thought, how hard could it be? Just find a cab and say MARRIOTT please!  Well I didn’t account for the fact that I had no Chinese currency, no clue what the conversion rate or a reasonable fare was. And it was FUCKING FREEZING. People were everywhere yelling and haggling. I had downloaded a translation app for this kind of occasion but because I’m an idiot I forgot that I wouldn’t have wifi. After traveling for 24 hours I was in no mood to negotiate so I ended up overpaying by a lot to get to the hotel. The hotel was much farther from the airport than I thought it would be. As we drove by high rises I noted that there were no lights in some of the buildings - AT ALL. When we went to eat there was no one in the restaurant at 10 p.m. I swear I’ve seen Anthony Bourdain or some travel show that makes it look like the place is crawling with night markets and people but for us Beijing at night was a snooze. Later our tour guide told us that the Chinese go to bed early.  They don’t drink and they go to bed early - no wonder they are so smart. There goes half my brain cells right there.  

I regretted instantly that I didn’t learn more Chinese; even small things were difficult to negotiate. My 12 year old son who is taking Chinese for the 2nd year did try to teach me more but my 48 year old brain has some significant brain damage apparently since I was able to learn only 3 words despite his valiant efforts. There are some who speak english but its very limited.  Ordering food is a real challenge that degraded from slowly annunciated english to gesturing to pointing.  When no one understood me I would say the word louder or ENUNCIATE it. Do you have any W-I-N-E???!!! It’s really ridiculous but you can’t stop doing it.  Just the process of ordering food takes a lot out of you and the waiter, every interaction an awkward series of talking, gesturing and pointing - clucking like a chicken to clarify that I want chicken and not Duck. 

We went to Tiananmen Square where it was epic just to stand there even though to look at it is nothing special in and of itself. The temperature was about 15 or 20 but you cannot believe how windy Beijing is. I can’t remember the last time I was that cold. There were hardly any people there with the weather which I guess is a blessing since I abhor crowds. Our tour guide Shirley told us that the Chinese don’t know what happened there unless they’ve been out of the country. 

We went to the Forbidden city where the emperors live but they had closed it for some dignitaries to view. We went to the Temple of heaven where there emperor used to go to pray for a good harvest. There were older people doing tai chai outside in the freezing cold and playing chess. They didn’t seem bothered by the cold. There were people from many countries there, some who weren’t told that China is COLD and they don’t heat any of these tourist places. Our hired tour guide took us on an hour and a half drive to the section of the Great Wall. The drive is very strange. Beijing is a huge city, 150 square kilometers (10 miles).  We drove through sections of tall skyscrapers and factories pumping out smog and the roads are crowded with everything from Mercedes to little mopeds loaded with kids and junk. When we went to the wall we drove for miles and we were STILL in Beijing.  There were tree farms everywhere with the bottoms of every tree painted white for miles and miles.  It had an odd feeling for everything to be so similar for miles and miles. 

The long trip to the wall was more than worth it. The mountains are beautiful and its surreal to be there knowing its history and significance.  Later we were told that we had one of the best days anyone had heard of, the visibility was great and since it was so cold no one there. The wall is very steep in places and the view is different at each tower. I wish we had more time there but we had to get to Dalian where our office is located.   

Many wear masks outside due to the pollution. At first it seems odd but it becomes unnoticeable after a while. My eyes were scorched red from the pollution and the dry air. I look like I’m on a bender. The good news is all the Americans on the trip were just as zombified as I am - all of us skipping from one subject to the next making no sense at all. It takes a week to get rid of that feeling which is just about when I returned - exhausted and fatter than a mall santa.  I forgot a few things that I wanted to buy while there but discovered that there’s a 20% tax on anything imported - and practically anything you can find around a hotel is imported. It finally makes sense to me why so many Chinese love to shop when they are traveling.

Our first night in Dalian was spent at the hotel for a late dinner and some asian lounge singing which was beyond entertaining. We laughed hysterically with the asian lounge singers singing old american songs like John Denver and the Police. We laughed all week singing “Every breath “chu" take, every bond “chu" break. 

Sleep was elusive - more a series of naps than an actual sleep. I would sleep for an hour then wake up saying “what time is it?”, “where am I?” Only to repeat the same cycle 3 more times at best.  At night I was exhausted but my mind raced with strange sights and scenes far from my normal existence. We spend so much time in our normal lives ignoring much of what goes on around us as it becomes routine. Spend a week here and your senses are on steroids; images, sounds and smells assaulting you - making sleep an impossibility. 

Everything is a contrast here; things seem so high tech - everyone with giant phones and neon lights everywhere - yet you can’t use google, you tube or facebook.  If there’s a person in China with an iPhone smaller than a 6 I didn’t encounter them.  There are very into an app called We Chat and there’s a whole underground dedicated to circumventing the social media ban by getting VPNs to connect to the US then out to the sites they want to see that are blocked. International phone service is spotty and you end up spending half your first day just trying to figure out how to stop every device you own from displaying a different time zone and or trying to remain connected with the outside world. There’s a part of me that enjoyed not being connected all the time. Laziness for me is staring at the internet for hours mentally dulling your senses.  So I am hoping to extend some of the internet ADD reduction affects into my post communist life.

At the office you have never seen so many happy/nice people. Everyone was so welcoming and concerned about our stay. The meetings that we had were amazing, all of the people I met so impressive. One day of the trip was an innovation conference which was mind bending and inspirational.

The food in china was challenging for me. I eat very plain food and I don’t eat a lot of carbs. One day we had Korean barbecue for lunch. I wanted to be adventurous and let the team order for us but one of my American coworkers saw dog meat on the menu and things degraded from there. One night we went to a dumpling restaurant where an expat took us via a shortcut through a “gentleman's club” to get in.  It’s the kind of club where you can do karaoke with our without the hot girls who come in after.  The highlight of this restaurant was seeing the room where they make dumplings - everyone dressed like it was an ebola quarantine room.  The locals ordered for us most places we went and even then it takes forever with many confusing conversations. You order food before drinks and it takes so long you might get your drink by dessert. Most of the places we went to were brighter than the surface of the sun and they love their christmas music; one place we went to played jingle bells on a loop - over and over. If I had to work there I would stab myself with a dull spoon. There were vegetables but they were usually unrecognizable or fried to obscurity.  The low carb diet has not made its way to the far east yet I can confirm that. Fish heads, chicken cartilage and pickled herring are just a few of the local delicacies that I did NOT partake in. 

Traffic is insane in Dalian- you can’t go anywhere without it taking an hour.  Pedestrians are invisible; walk the streets of China at your peril. I had to close my eyes anytime we were in the car - it’s that scary.  Roads are not one way but there’s an unidentifiable (to me) system where to get to a place you can literally see across the street they take you around in circles sometimes driving on the sidewalks to get there.  

I didn’t go to many local sites but I am told if you go to the Dalian zoo you can buy chickens to feed's the tigers (ps you can buy a live one or a dead one). I guess what I am trying to say is that the Dalian Zoo will never be seen by me.

I was told not to go to any of the bars around the hotel because they are “gentlemen’s bars” so we went to a bar where all the expats go. I was surprised to find not only does everyone smoke but you can smoke anywhere. They play bad older american music like Celine Dion over and over and satellite radio is banned by the government so the variety is not there.

For some reason there are very few flat walking surfaces; in odd areas you will  have a random step up or down or section in the middle of a passageway; its a miracle I survived without falling down and losing my 2 front teeth. Early in the week we would often ask an expat why things were a certain way. The answer? Because…China.

I can’t think of my trip without discussing THE CAN. How could something so basic vary so much? I had heard about the toilets being in the ground. Squatting to go to the bathroom is supposed to facilitate the “process”. Maybe biologically this works but when you’ve been sitting on a throne to do your business for 48 years its just downright awkward. The stalls don’t even go down to the ground which means that if you ware inclined to be nosy and look over at your neighbor you’re gonna see more than you bargained for. Many don’t close the door at all - more than a few times I went into the bathroom to find a bunch of open doors and people doing their thing. At work there is a sign to remind you to close the door (lest the westerners run screaming from the building). The bathrooms have a very distinct smell and not in the way you would think. I am not sure if its a certain chemical or what. In Tokyo you can get a digital toilet with choices like bidet with optional deodorizer and flushing noises. WTF!!

In both Beijing and Dalian airports very limited english was spoken. There are 80 candy shops and toy stores but no restaurants or bars to speak of.  Over the years I have tried to become more patient in general but especially as it relates to travel. I have been stuck on runways for hours, planes delayed and every form of planes trains and automobiles just not all on the same day. I have been close to a meltdown many times - I just don’t handle it well. But with age I seem to mellow - finally accepting that  I can’t control any of it. On this trip I did suffer a mini meltdown while stuck on the runway for an hour where I was one of 2 americans on a very crowded, hot flight where I couldn’t understand the flight attendants. After years of being painfully average I finally understand what it feels like to stick out like a sore thumb. 

On my way back I went through the Tokyo airport; a huge airport but with what seems like a mile between each gate. Here I started to see some Americans who actually spoke english which was a relief after a half day at the Dalian airport.  I was very excited that on the way back you get tail winds - the flight is ONLY 11 hours! I couldn’t sleep on the flight and after a while i decided that it would be best not to sleep at all so that my first night home I could automatically readjust to the time difference.

When I got home I was so used to random frustrated speech with accompanying gestures and loud talking and extreme annunciation that I told the driver to PUUUTT MY BAGGG IN THE BACK while loud pointing at myself. He looked at me like I was an idiot.  My first week back was just as sleepless as the week there. By Wednesday I thought I was normal but this weekend I slept more than 12 hours each night.  I guess I will have to accept that these trips will take a month front to back.  


I am excited to have a month between this and my next adventure - India!  

Wednesday, April 23, 2014

Pain is temporary, pride is forever

Thank you all for your support this year - without a doubt it was the most uniquely amazing experience of my life.  It sounds crazy but I enjoyed every minute of it – not worrying at all about timing; high fiving as many people as I could, kissing a few random students at Wellesley College, stopping to sit a few times and walk/running from Heartbreak Hill to Kenmore Square.  The crowd support was beyond uplifting and my face was sore from smiling. I’ll never forget passing through where I was stopped last year and stepping onto Hereford and Boylston Streets. All along the course countless times I heard people thanking us for running, tears in their eyes, gratitude on their faces. Having been a spectator here I can tell you that showing that level of emotion for the 4 hours of runners streaming past nonstop is not easy. For a runner you can’t describe the feeling of wanting to give up but having someone in the crowd call you by name and give you THE words of encouragement you need to hear: the direct eye contact is so motivating and the look of admiration is so humbling (although while walking there were more than a few times someone screamed at me to get it going you can do it and I thought, no, I CANNOT. I CAN NOT).  

After a long frigid winter it was way hotter than I was ready for and I was nauseous for most of the last half.  But this year was worth every step and sacrifice and the horrific winter only made it more meaningful. I struggle to find the words to describe what finishing meant for me because it really has nothing at all to do with the mileage; the 25.1 vs 26.2, or the medal. Last year I admit now and at the time that I felt bitter; I tried very hard NOT to feel that way and to think about all the people who lost their lives or were injured – but it was a struggle right through the winter to shake it.  Thinking about that evil kept me focused on the bad in humanity.

Again and again I told myself that it could have been worse for me – but it never stuck 100%. Maybe it was because I never watched any coverage last year. It was very traumatic for those of us near the finish; watching news of any kind was really out of the question for me and I certainly wasn’t going to let the kids watch. By the time I was ready to absorb the experience it was out of the mainstream and I wanted to move on.  The anniversary of last year this past week was really the first time I ever watched coverage.  Running Monday marked a transition – from anger to gratitude; from pessimism in people to the belief in community spirit.  I am grateful that I ran both years and went through the process to get to get to this year. Running this year made this year even better; turning a horrible thing into a positive. It should be simple (turn lemons into lemonade hello are you a fucking moron have you not seen the sign?). Did I really need to run a marathon to learn that? YES, I DID.  Don’t get me wrong, I am still going to be a sarcastic bitch who complains about stupidity and bad spelling but I believe now in the power of community spirit and in myself.

Huge goals are accomplished with commitment and spirit and one small step at a time. My fitbit said I took 55,000 steps yesterday. That pretty much sums up how I approached training; to me I didn’t run 26.2 miles – I took 55,000 steps. Each step brought its own triumph and its own struggle. There were times all I could think about was my feet on fire, hunger, thirst, aches, sunburn, etc. During the course I thought I’m only on mile 8 how am I going to run 18 more miles? But you don’t – you just take one more step. Then you do it again. And again. There were times I felt like weeping with pride or joy with my mind blotting out everything else and feeling no pain.  I have accomplished other things in life but I considered them mandatory and never gave myself credit. This was something so beyond that – I beat myself. I beat my fear, my nerves and my inner voice that sometimes tells me I CAN’T do something.    

When I decided to run again one of the main reasons was to tell my kids that you don’t back down when you are scared. I know terrorism may be considered an exception but I feel strongly that when shit happens you adjust. My kids have a different life than I did but I want to teach them that the world doesn’t cater to them. Shit happens and you have to deal with it. People will be mean, life is unfair. Chin up. I am not saying I am good at this – I just acknowledge it. Being afraid is no way to live. Having said that, last year was traumatic for them so we made the decision that they wouldn’t go to the finish line. One of the best moments of the race was seeing them at mile 8ish. Dan, the kids, Catie and Mer and Auntie Cheryl – seeing them gave me fuel for at least the next 5 miles.     

The closest thing I can equate a marathon to is labor. During the process is sucks but once it’s over you are beyond happy and you’re shocked when you even consider doing it again. In an odd way I feel the sense of pride may be greater because when I had my kids I felt I was some instrument of Mother Nature and I was letting myself get taken over by an alien or higher power, enduring the inevitable pain in the process (and it’s not like you have a choice once it’s in motion). With the marathon you are fighting against yourself and your body, every single step taken along the training road until you finish – 6 months. Knowing you can turn back but trying to ignore the exit signs and the chairs at the Medical tents with each passing mile.

I am so thankful for the camaraderie of my team and encouragement from friends and family - together you all helped me raise $5,854 for the Liver Foundation.  I learned these past 2 years how rewarding it is to raise money for a great cause and to be part of a team that really cares about what they do. Truth is I never had this experience. I am not going to lie and say that I set out to do this for charity – I saw it as necessary but it changed starting last year as I progressed and met people affected, heard their stories and saw the pride shared by the team. It’s not just the Liver Foundation - the volunteer spirit in Boston was so amazing. 

Everyone was so engaged from handing out packets to water stops - I have never encountered so many positive, caring and enthusiastic people.  There were more than 10,000 volunteers this year! And every single one I came in contact with acted like they were getting paid a lot of money to make it successful.
I am also thankful to all my friends who put up with my nonstop marathon talk – it simply took over my life and was all I could think about between the physical strain and time commitment. I am sure it’s hard to relate to for many and there are plenty who do something like this and do it in silence. I am not that girl and at almost 50 I am learning to accept this about myself. I wear it on my sleeve; the good and the bad. I can’t help myself.     
One of my favorite parts of the experience was the scarves. If you’ve been living under a rock and haven’t heard about it watch this! The guy in the video was the guy who gave me my scarf!!
I went to pick mine up on Friday night and the whole vibe was so amazing, a very enthusiastic group of volunteers were giving them out and it’s such a feeling of pride to know that someone took the trouble to hand knit a scarf for you! The guy in the link above was the guy that gave me my scarf! 

On a random note, I am not a germa-phobe by any stretch but if you are - beware of running a marathon; it has got to be the most unsanitary experience of my life (well since college anyway). I was in no fewer than 10 porta potties/bus toilets; high fiving little kids, college drunkies and everything in between, hugging sweaty people, eating food from strangers and just sweating like a pig. I left my sneakers there – I never want to see those mother fuckers again! Oddly this again reminds me of being pregnant – the first thing I did when I got home from the hospital was throw away any shoes I had worn while pregnant because they were so grossly deformed. 

One of my favorite things about the marathon is the signs. My favorites:
·         Run faster the Kenyans are drinking your beer.
·         Run faster I just farted.
·         Toenails are overrated





Today I find myself feeling accomplished but a little empty – thinking well what the hell do I do now? What’s next? Or -I gotta get me some more of THAT. Even though I may run again I know that nothing can top this experience.








FAQS
Q             What was your time?
A             4:30. My official BAA time was 4:45 and I have no idea why but I don’t really give a shit. If I were to qualify for the marathon I would have to shave 40 minutes of this. I don’t know if I care.

P.s.
Thanks to the BAA for not allowing basketball dribblers and people dressed like hookers.
Thanks to the guys who drank beer at every mile marker. Keeping it real
Thanks to these guys- I wish I had a doughnut in Hopkington I was hungry to start

Random stuff I LOVE
I saw this guy in Wellesley in the scream tunnel; I didn’t get a hug because I was too far over to the right having just kissed a random college boy; what an awesome thing. I watched it at least 3 times and it brought a tear to my eye. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jvn-rgk1bPo&feature=share
My liver team is really freaking awesome. This is about volunteerism and giving back and its funny.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zse4wGzZhJY


Sunday, January 12, 2014

Running long distances is a metaphor for life

My tendency toward over-thinking is well known: there is NOTHING I can’t obsess about. To me it’s not worth doing if I can’t obsess about it – and if I’m not busy obsessing about it good luck getting a nanosecond of my attention. It’s on or it’s off.  If I were over-thinking about wordly matters like inflation or why Roger Waters is fighting with Israeli government that would be one thing but I am obsessing about only things that relate to my favorite subject – ME or ALL THINGS RELATED TO ME. Even before I actually run I obsess over it. The weather, when to go, what if it’s raining, what if I’m in a bad mood or don’t feel good?  Not only do I need 2 plus hours to run but I need several hours to mentally prepare and several hours to decompress.   

When I set off to run I go through so many emotions. I start out thinking wow I can’t believe I have to run 13, 14 or x number of miles; I feel so overwhelmed and nervous I can hardly get myself out the door - obsessing about whether my shoes are tied right, do I have the stuff I need:  water every 4 miles, too many clothes/ not enough clothes, too warm, too cold. What if I have to pee?  (An inordinate amount of time is spent obsessing about whether I will have to do #2 while running but this could be its own post so I am moving on). The first mile I feel nervous – every ache and pain magnified. I feel overwhelmed with self-doubt –I don’t think I can finish, I’ll just run 2 more miles and be done with it. Every step feels like a mile.  Why I am I doing this? Everything hurts. The second mile I calm down; I focus on the fact that I am making a dent – I am 10% there, 8% there.  Never do I give math such careful consideration.  Sometimes every once in a while I decide to just be; I think about everyday problems that I avoid due to my ADD; miles go by as I concentrate on an issue.  It’s a struggle for me to keep negative thoughts away.  It’s almost helpful to have a big problem to think about, lest I succumb to boredom and start complaining to myself about a billion things I observe (who are the fuckwads who drink nips and throw them out the window? When is the town going to fix this fucking road? Really, is Jesus the reason for the season, you don’t say! Why do people beep at runners? Why won’t those people take down their Christmas tree it’s fucking January 12th). Sometimes I forget what mile I am on and I just put one foot in front of the other.  Sometimes I have to dig deep and think about people who go through much bigger challenges than running another stupid mile. A friend with cancer working through chemo, a mother with a sick child; the pain my stepfather endured with colon cancer – anything to give me strength. Somewhere after 8 or so miles I see the light at the end of the tunnel – I have to keep going because it feels like a waste of an hour plus if I don’t. Once I get within 2 miles I keep going because I am so close.

Lately it’s been helping me to publicly claim what my goal is – on Facebook or wherever. Once I say I will do something to someone other than myself I am much more likely to do it. I don’t know what this says about me that disappointing myself is ok but having to answer a random person who asks if I did it is way too much shame for me.

I really try not to do this but I often find myself wondering if running a marathon is this complicated for other people. Am I the only crazy person who is on such a roller coaster?  It makes me feel like a looney bin.  I picture other people bouncing along on their runs with nothing whatsoever on their minds. This is not the only time I do this comparison thing and it’s a really bad habit to have; comparing yourself to everyone’s highlight reel.  In so many ways these ups and downs with running are a microcosm of my life.  I have days or hours where every thought gets derailed by a fear, nothing is easy and negative self-talk make it harder. Other moments I feel like I have the world by the balls and want to freeze time and think of nothing but being alive and appreciating what I have, grateful for every little thing. I go through all this in one run and the beauty is that I celebrate and overcome a million little things all right away in that short time period and in the process I build up a respect for myself I never knew I had. In the end you can do anything you want if you want it bad enough and running has taught me that.  But like most things for me, it comes with a lot of overthinking.
    
There are times I have set goals and failed; mostly because I fall off the wagon and bully myself about it which only makes it less likely to climb back on the horse and try again. But this has taught me that I can overcome setbacks, small and large and that I have a mental toughness I never knew existed.  Actually I don’t think it did exist until this. I’ve certainly overcome my share of heartache but usually not without massive self-medication of some kind and a lot of time. That’s not mental toughness that’s survival.    I have good minutes and bad minutes running; and I persevere – mostly because I’ve learned that despite all the bullying I may do along the way, I mostly try to tell myself I can do it and I do. And knowing that I have done it before gives me confidence.

I was never a goal oriented person. This sounds funny since I was always hell bent on going to college/grad school/ getting a house, etc. These were necessary things that I never had in life that led to security. This may seem like semantics. The truth is I never considered that I could get by WITHOUT going to college or buying a house; these where the basics for me – struggles in childhood that I couldn’t deal with for myself.  And in having these “goals” they were never very specific. I would get to these things as I could and as opportunities came to me. I wasn’t sitting here every day saying have I reached my goals? And I didn’t even necessarily give myself credit for any of them since they were expectations I had and I never considered not having them.

In setting the marathon as a goal I never realized how specific and unforgiving it would be. If you need to run 26 miles in April you have to build up one mile at a time - the training takes 20 weeks for people who have basic running skills. It’s pretty black and white. People say wow you’re so dedicated to run 14 miles this weekend. It’s true I guess but it doesn’t feel that way – once you agree to do it and people start donating money you feel a sense of desperation; every week is a scramble to figure out when you can find 2 plus hours to run amidst kid activities and obligations.  I don’t dare skip a week for fear I will skip another week and then convince myself that I can’t do it.


I still have a lot of training left to go but I continue to learn more and more about myself with all this time without anything to distract me.  This is a benefit I never expected from training but I am enjoying the process (mostly).    

Sunday, October 20, 2013

Marathon training

Awesome 5 mile run yesterday.  This is not impressive unless you consider that I haven’t run at all since the marathon. This is my second official training run – adding a mile every week until I hit the 20 something mark. This year I NEEDED A BREAK; my hamstring was killing me and I was just plain sick of running.

I thought long and hard about whether I was going to do the Marathon again after last year; if I’m honest I will say that I’m still on the fence even after I’ve paid my registration fees, agreed to raise more money for the Liver Foundation and started training.  I really don’t want to dedicate the kind of time it requires, I hate running in the snow and my family doesn’t want me to do it given the worry of last year. I don’t want to spend every week trying to figure out how I will fit a 3 hours run in amongst kids’ activities and LIFE.  In the end I decided to do it because I knew I would crawl out of my skin watching it and not being a part of it and I want to teach my kids that when you set a goal you stick to it – period. Or maybe it’s as simple as I want to cross the finish line and feel that the medal I got last year is real. The fact that I can eat an entire pizza and not feel guilty after I finish is a bonus.

Yesterday as I was running I thought of how amazing it is to have a goal. I didn’t realize that a difference it would make. I used to run 3 or 4 miles and quit because I was tired or because that’s just what I planned. The truth is that when I have a goal to run 5, 6, 7 or whatever I feel the same at mile 4 as I would have if I quit then and there. It’s just that I know I have to run more, so I do. Just put one foot in front of the other – it’s that simple. It’s been a great confidence builder for other areas of my life when I tend to get overwhelmed.   

This year I have some changes to the plan I would like to make

  1. Run as little as possible. That’s right: I said it. I like boot camp and I want to do that more than run.   I started going to a boot camp in the spring and I have been very impressed by the results (meaning I look less porky than I did when running only). When I started I saw a bunch of suburban mothers and I thought: “I just ran a marathon I can do this!” How embarrassing to discover that I couldn’t do more than one man push up.  It’s like I’m the Pillsbury dough boy from the waist up. Last year in retrospect I was out of balance; over conditioning my legs and not enough focus on the core. No wonder I ended up with a hamstring injury that plagued me all year. I read an article about cardio that made a lot of sense to me; especially when you consider I didn’t lose an ounce during marathon training. Don’t get me wrong I DO love to run. I love the freedom of it – that I can just put my shoes on and go; no driving to class and having to see other people or wait for class to start. I love to be outside and I love to listen to my music and be alone in my thoughts. But everything this article makes sense to me and was proven in my training vs. just a few months of bootcamp.   http://athlete.io/5343/why-women-should-not-run/
  2. Drink more water. God how I hate drinking water. I would prefer to up my quota of wine which is probably not even possible.  I now track how much water I drink and often will take a half gallon and chug as I count to 20. I read somewhere that you should drink half your body weight every day. I wasn’t near that and my boot camp lady says if you work out you should drink even more. When I’m being good I feel like my organs are drowning in water but overall I do feel better.  And at least now I’m drinking more water than wine and that can’t be bad.
  3. Stretching. I started going to physical therapy this summer after the hamstring injury decided to stay around. What an amazing difference it has made. They have taught me areas where I’m weak and what stretches and exercises to overcome. But best of all I get my ass upper hamstring rubbed once a week. Fucking heaven. It’s so easy not to do the stretching; when you get into hard core training and running for 3-4 hours on a Saturday it’s all you can do to make dinner never mind stretching for a half hour. My husband is now used to me sitting in front to the TV contorting myself into a pretzel while he watches the tube.            
  4. Speed work. Every time I increased my mileage last year I got a little slower. This was partly due to the fact that I was becoming more and more injured but also because I didn’t follow any of the recommended training programs on doing fartleks (speed work). The turtle doesn’t like speed work but I am going to try it this year.  Really I am….soon.
I’m just as scared of running the marathon this year as I was last year but I’m gonna try and take it one week at a time. If I didn’t I might change my mind. The hardest part of all of it is being consistent. When I’m good I’m really good. When I’m bad I’m really bad and these things tend to cancel each other out. I try to push myself but I try to give myself a break too. My body feels the pain of my indecision. But for now the goals above are all I’m committing to.

Monday, April 22, 2013

I “almost” did it

Like many runners, having trained and sacrificed so much I was looking forward to last Monday – to seeing my family at the finish after the culmination of 6 months of work. Here I find myself having “almost completed” the mileage, legs done but my mind still running - stuck on the course like a skipping record; the needle going back over it again and again.  In the last week we have all experienced every feeling imaginable; a whirlwind of physical and emotional turmoil. My friend and fellow runner Paul Joseph posted on Facebook the night of the Marathon, about how he spent the entire day being grateful; grateful for the health to run, for the love and support of family, the opportunity to support a great cause and grateful to have missed the explosions.   

This is how I WANT to feel – but I don’t. I'm PISSED. As a runner, as a person, as a parent – everything. Angry that I missed the best part, the last mile, the turn onto Hereford! Angry that my friends and family sacrificed to be there, angry that someone could do this in our city and hurt so many people. And I’m sad that I can't be more grateful than angry.  

In the end it seems that I will have to use the toughness I learned in training for this race to turn the corner, focusing on the good things; gratitude that my friends and family are safe and for the hundreds of texts, voicemail and emails later from so many friends and family, many of whom donated money and sacrificed to help me accomplish this goal.  Maybe turning anger into gratitude is “the last mile of the marathon” for me, what seems like a bigger challenge than completing the last mile of the race would have been.  

Last fall I decided to run the Boston Marathon with my friend Jacqui.  I thought I could lose some weight, support a friend and, let’s be honest, who doesn’t dream about running THE BOSTON MARATHON?  If you have been to the race just the thought of being on the other side as a runner will give you chills.  But you don’t just “DECIDE” to run the Boston Marathon - you have to qualify by running for a charity and raising at least $4,000 or running a less than 9 minute mile in another marathon and entering a lottery.  I chose raising money for the American Liver Foundation. Like many big goals you set for yourself; you know it’s going to be a lot of work.  And there are several large fees, the $300 Boston Athletic Organization fee being one of them.  There is a reason a marathon is a huge accomplishment; it’s the biggest physical and mental challenge I have ever been through.

I started training last Thanksgiving, running a mile more each week until by the end of the year I was up to 10 miles for my long run. This wasn’t that hard but at the start of the year the weather turned all, um “NEW ENGLANDY” and running was taking more and more time. Every week I mapped out a plan to run my long run on a certain day and every week there was a snow storm. I tried to run on the treadmill. Have you ever run 13 miles on a treadmill? DON’T.  I ran most of my runs in the middle of the street, carefully watching the eyeballs of oncoming traffic one car at a time to make sure I wasn’t going to get run over (if you want to have 18 miles go by faster;  try this; keeping yourself alive is very distracting). I ran in wind so bad I had to run in circles back and forth to keep from getting knocked over.  Week by week, storm by storm, month by month I got the mileage in – and I tried NOT to think about the fact that I would have to do it again the next week only LONGER.  I spent the days after the long run hobbling around exhausted and the weeks leading up to the next long run scared shitless saying to myself how the hell can I run LONGER than that?   

Sometime in the winter my running pal Jacqui got injured. I obsessed: HOW would I do this alone? I don’t WANT TO DO THIS ALONE!  But I had committed and some generous people had already donated and I couldn’t let them down.  When the runs got longer I tortured my experienced friends with questions (is it ok that I skipped my long run because I had the stomach bug or should I have run through it? What kind of socks do you wear? How do I get to the race? What if I have to PEEEE?).  By the time I got up to the longest training run I was at 21 miles and my weekends were fully consumed.  People will say running this distance is a grueling physical challenge and it is.  But for me the challenge was mental; overcoming my mind willing me to procrastinate, take a short cut or give up. I can’t do this I’m too old, I can’t do this I’m too busy, etc.  The further you go the more confidence you build up and the lesson learned in the process is that you can do ANYTHING. What happened later at the race can never take that away from me.  

I went to my first American Liver Foundation practice run in March by myself. I am not a shy person so I don’t know why this was scary for me but it was. I instantly made friends with a fellow teammate Kim, who entertained me during my whole practice run and we fell into an easy friendship, sharing war stories and nervously preparing for the race by texting and obsessing over every detail; what shoes are you wearing, what are you eating the day before the race?? I met some patients and their families who had been helped by the Foundation and started to feel more personal about the cause.  
American Liver Foundation practice run in Hopkinton
Despite this I struggled with the fundraising; constantly posting and emailing. When people donated I was excited but nervous; could they afford it? Would I disappoint them by getting injured or not finishing? Did my friends hate me for harassing them? As you can see my VIRGO-NESS runs my life (this is but a small glimpse into how much I think; it’s fucking exhausting I tell you).    Thanks to the generosity of friends and family I hit the fundraising goal and my focus turned to full on obsession about anything and everything BUT the actual running; how would my family get there, what would I bring in my bag, what would the weather be, should I take the bus with my team or drive to Hopkinton, etc, etc..  When my runners passport came I knew it was real.

If you’ve ever lived in Boston or visited during the Marathon you know that the race is a weekend affair with people from all over the world descending on the city. There’s an electricity and energy I have seldom felt in life and as a runner it was even better.   The day before the race I went to the Liver Foundation brunch with my daughter and Jacqui where we heard amazing stories; one from a nurse who had contracted Hepatitis C from a medical incident and was alive due to the untimely death and generosity of an 18 year old boy from Turks and Caicos.  It was a great way for Megan to see why I sacrificed so many weekends and it made me very excited for her to see me at the finish line. I reasoned that this lesson was more important than all the time I had spent running; my husband taking the brunt of taking care of their needs.

Me, Julie, Jacqui and Megan 
Picking up my number for THE BOSTON MARATHON at the Hynes convention center was so exciting.  Finally - the part of the process I was waiting for!!  The night before the race I stayed overnight at the Westin with my teammates and in the morning we took the bus out to Hopkinton. We laughed because we thought the ride was long – laughing harder when we remembered we had to run the whole way back. 
Arriving at Athletes Village makes you feel like you are in the Olympics! For over 2 hours we anxiously awaited the start along with thousands of runners. The energy there is like nothing you will ever experience. 

Relaxing before our WAVE
 
Tia, Kim and me outside high school near the start
Me, Tia and Kim on the bus to Hopkinton
The thing they don’t tell you is that in order to start the Marathon you have to WALK to the start from the high school for OVER A MILE! My walk was made more exciting when I saw Tedy Bruschi, representing his team. I resisted the urge to get a picture with him (dammit).   As we started there were so many people you could barely see the sidelines. Nothing can capture the feeling of running with this many people cheering you on; my mind was on fire between my internal voices yelling:
  • Please stop doing this it hurts, how many more miles? What’s 26.2 minus 3.7? I can’t run another step. Why the fuck am I doing this? Are there any Americans who go to BC?  When should I eat this disgusting GU crap? Do I have to pee? I wonder how many calories I’m burning. Did I leave the leash out for the dog walker?  
and what you are seeing
  • How awesome are these volunteers? Everyone is so nice! Look at those old ladies on their lawn drinking Miller Lites at 11 am! Check out this 90 pound chick bouncing by me! Wow, there’s an 80 year old woman in front of me I feel like a FAT ASS LOSER! Good for her!  I hope I live as long as her to run this, no I don’t!   WOW there’s a lot of cops here. How cute are the little kids handing out oranges!  
I started out running with my friends but ended up running by myself, taking my time because I didn’t want to get injured or not finish. I stopped for water, clothing malfunctions and to chat/pose for a picture or two with family and friends who came to see me.  For the first 8 or so miles I knew I would see my crew at the end of that leg and I was excited. After that I fell into a slump knowing that I had at least another 8 miles to go until I saw them.  But knowing my friends and family they were tracking me on BAA and waiting for me propelled me forward.  It’s hard to imagine that you can have a good time while running but I did – one guy high fived me so hard I almost fell over.

Me in Natick
My first trouble was knee pain in Natick. I had never experienced this so I was very nervous I wouldn’t finish.  BUT, running has taught me a lot about toughness; there were many times training when I was sure I wouldn’t make it – pain, wardrobe malfunctions, inadequate preparation, laziness, minor injuries, work interferences, the list is endless. My mental training taught me to distract myself and just put one foot in front of the other no matter what.   I tried to focus on the posture techniques that I was learning. 

There are a lot of things that happen in the race that you can’t prepare for – one of mine was another runner who thought it would be fun to run while dribbling a basketball, THE ENTIRE WAY. She was a fan favorite but I cursed her. Do you have any idea how annoying it is to listen to a bouncing basketball for 5 hours? She stalked me, going slower when I slowed and speeding up when I kicked it into gear. She was like the paperboy in better off dead always there, always yelling: “2 dollars, 2 dollars!!”. 

I was really struggling but when I hit Wellesley College I got the lift I needed. It’s a well- known high point of the race and it didn’t disappoint – I had the best time high fiving people and reading the signs: “Kiss me I’m fun sized”, “Kiss my I’m graduating!”.  After that my iPod died I tried to focus on how many miles were under my belt rather than how many were left.  I was not running my best mental race but I tried to focus on how much fun it would be to see everyone at the end and have the hugest dinner possible. I distracted myself looking at all the people and signs (my worst pain at this point was my neck from rubber-necking and trying to watch everything while running). Tried to look at every sign: Hurry up my mascara runs faster than you!”, Run faster Channing Tatum is at the finish line waiting for you! I was so relaxed I even stopped to have my picture taken with one of them
 
I started to zone out and forget what mile I was on, just running and watching the sidelines. I got through Newton and heartbreak hill without a problem.  By the time I got to BC I was crawling at a snails’ pace. As a former Cleveland Circle drunken spectator I was looking forward to the crowds there but instead I was completely annoyed by the drunk girls who jumped into the race, running around like idiots wearing neon clothes and cowboy boots.  Once I got through Cleveland circle I was looking forward to the homestretch; the end was in striking distance. I had been running pretty slowly but I wanted to start speeding it up. 

Leaving Coolidge Corner approaching Kenmore Square I got my first clue something was awry; half the spectators were cheering and the other half were running from the finish.  I noticed runners talking on their phones and I thought WTF is wrong with people that they can’t run a marathon without yapping on the phone?  I complained to a man next to me and he told me there was a bomb at the finish and there were “major casualties”. I stopped to ask a few cops/bystanders/volunteers and they didn’t know any details.  I felt myself panicking as police cars started racing down the street on the same side as the runners.  I ran for 2 miles not knowing if my family and friends were safe; all I could think about was that if they were hurt the whole thing was my fault.  BUT I have always been calm in a crisis – I thought there’s nothing to be gained by freaking out – keep running.  My mind was preparing for the worst case scenario; what If the kids are ok and Dan isn’t, what if my sister and her family are not ok but my family is?

When we approached Kenmore Square the cops announced on the megaphone: GO HOME, WE URGE YOU TO GO HOME!!?”. Running 25 miles makes you confused – but no details were given and the race just sort of dissipated without water, food or blankets. Some people were still cheering; I saw one of the liver survivor/supporters and l will never forget the look on his face; he stood amongst the crowd, calling my name and cheering but he looked totally confused – torn between wanting to run and not wanting to desert his post.  I asked anyone I could find what was going on but there was no internet/cell service; the only updates coming from people who were texting from home as they watched the TV.  I had no way to get in touch with my family so I just sat down in the middle of Kenmore Square, cold and thirsty – no clue what to do.  I tried to ask a few cops what to do it but was chaos. Confused and panicked; I thought how the hell am I going to get home: I have no money, no phone – nothing!  

It’s funny how different people react to stress; a few people were so helpful and understanding; others going into meltdown mode yelling and repeating the same information. Some people were lying in the street crying, some laughing and everything in between.   Trash was flying around and cars were driving on the wrong side of the road because the barriers were half up. A BU security guard gave me water; another guy offered me a blanket. Afeter a while I finally had the mental wherewithal to stop a guy who had finished running and was walking to his hotel. I used his phone to text Dan and tell him I was safe. Dan texted back right away and said that they were safe at the Westin.  It was a huge relief and I resolved to walk to the Westin – only another mile away.

Every direction I went they closed the street. Every street that closed I walked to the right - casing the Westin until I could get to the front of the building.  I felt like a lost toddler wandering around by myself in a foreign land. When I got there they wouldn’t let me in – the building was being evacuated.  I had nowhere to go so I kept walking to the bus where my bag was. That street was closed too and I waited as volunteers carried bag after bag to the street.  The BAA is a class A organization and either they train their volunteers well or they are highly dedicated – maybe both. I was impressed that so many volunteers were manning their posts despite the complete chaos and extreme conditions.

I texted Dan to let him know where I was – knowing I wouldn’t get an answer. Once I got my bag I stopped to get warm and rest at a medical tent on St James.  The tent was empty except for a supply guy whose pants were covered with blood. He tended to my very minor injuries as I watched the news and charged my phone enough to post on Facebook that I was ok. Exchanging stories with other runners I told a guy that I was mad I didn’t finish and my kids were in danger because I was slow.  He told me that if I wasn’t slow my kids and/or I might be dead.  They wanted the runners to go to the Boston common but there was no way I could walk another mile.  When they turned the heat off in the tent I was on the move again; I asked a cop directing traffic if the Westin was open and if they would let me walk there.  He was nice enough to have someone drive me; by this time I could barely walk.  

When I met up with Dan I discovered that he immediately had the good sense to put the kids and family/friends on the commuter train out only minutes after the bomb.  They had checked my progress on line and saw that I was running slower than expected so they took their time at lunch and were walking back to Boylston St at the time of the bomb, only a block away.  Knowing that they were safely out of the city was a huge relief. Later, talking to my sister she described the panic she was in, thinking the train would be bombed on the way out and the kids witnessing all kinds of panic.  

Dan and I were stuck at the Westin for a couple hours where the giant meal I had been looking forward to was not to be had since they ran out of food.  My adrenalin was on overdrive but we weren’t allowed to leave. When the streets opened we finally got to leave - no post team celebration, no sense of closure. It was after 10, running home to see the kids who were waiting up to make sure we were safe.  Although they were stressed out, they seemed to calm down the minute they saw us.  

We were scheduled to leave for a family vacation the next morning and that’s what we did.  I expected to feel sore for the week but the added feelings of helplessness, shock and confusion took a while to dissipate. Watching the kids having fun and seeing them seemingly unaffected by what they saw has helped.  I tried to ignore my mind and body, ignoring the news, going horseback riding and climbing rocks.  Watching the hard work and bravery that we have seen helps cancel out the bad but it’s still so scary to think that two young people could hate so much, or that their close family members would be so oblivious to the hearts and minds of their own children/relatives.  

For now, it’s one day at a time - each day feeling more grateful, getting back to the business of life ad not taking anything for granted. People ask me if I will run another marathon – some saying “you don’t need to, you ran almost the whole thing”, or “don’t let them win by taking away your accomplishment”.  I am still deciding but I do know that I don’t need to do it to prove that I’m strong. I proved that – with or without the medal.  

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