Getting ready to run. |
After two winters training, notwithstanding some unplanned interruptions by minor injuries, I finally made it to the starting line for the annual Cherry Blossom 10-Mile Run on April 7. I hadn’t run ten miles since my 20s. While I had also made the lottery for the 2012 run (a lottery because the event can’t accommodate all who would like to run), I contracted the flu the day before the race and had to bail at the last minute. No such calamity in 2013. Through my rigorous training regimen (not that rigorous), I’d built up the stamina to jog five miles without collapsing. I figured I’d save the other five miles—and my knees—for race day.
When we arrived at the Mall shortly after 7 am, runners by
the thousands were ambling or shivering or dancing around in their poly-skivvies
trying to warm up in the crisp air. Some
were hopping up and down in line, some in very long lines in front of a battalion
of porta-potties, but perhaps not because they were shivering.
The other starting line. |
The race began in waves, with the world-class and world-class
wannabe runners departing first, of course.
Each wave (around 2,000 runners I think) congregated in their
appropriate zone by color. I was with
the green bibs in the next to last wave, immediately after the orangies, but
ahead of the purplies.
When the loudspeaker finally announced green, our collective
mass of runnerly humanity oozed forward a few inches, then an actual foot or
two, before accelerating to baby steps and slow shuffling. I probably could have read the comic section
of the newspaper by the time we achieved a normal walking pace, which was soon followed
by an almost brisk walk. Perhaps a minute
or so into the “race,” we cleared the official start line and launched into an
actual jog.
We were shoulder-to-shoulder and toe-to-heel by the
thousands for the first couple miles past the Jefferson Memorial and over the
Memorial Bridge and back. Then it was up
the river toward the Kennedy Center, a leg which seemed to drag on and rekindle
my pre-existing doubt about even finishing the race. Finally, we made a u-turn and passed the
marker for Mile 3, almost a third of the way.
I pretty much stayed with the crowd, all of us cruising along at a
10-minute mile pace, give or take.
By mile 4, some us eased up a little to save some juice for
the second half. Then suddenly I was at
Mile 6. Whoa, how’d that happen? While the first three miles had seemingly
taken forever, the next three had gone by in a flash and I was still upright. Six miles without a rest was my best effort
in decades and I thought, holy cow, maybe I can do this. At a water and Gatorade station near the
Potomac Golf Course, I gave myself permission to slow to a fast walk while I
drank a little, then kicked it into gear again for the final third of the race.
Somewhere near Mile 8. |
Then someone on the side of the road yelled “Only a half mile to go!” and I thought they were kidding. Yet up a short hill and around the bend, there was the finish line. And a few yards before it, Kris was there to cheer me on and snap a couple photos of the historic occasion. I showed off a little by semi-sprinting to the finish, then had to instruct my body to stop running. It was over. I’d done the thing in just under two hours and three minutes. That was plenty good enough for me. I’d left more than a thousand other runners in my dust—nevermind the 16,500 who left me in theirs. But watch out. Next time, I’m going for under two hours and a top 15,000 finish. I’m gonna leave 2,500 shaking in their shoes.
Looking back after the finish. |
The top six finishers were from Kenya. |
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