It’s time to start blogging again and what better way to jump into the fray than with a recap of a momentous moment in my life: running the 118th Boston Marathon.
I ran Boston in 2010 and chalked it up as a one and done. I qualify every year but it’s an expensive race (Dear hotels: Three times your standard rates—really??) and I never planned to go back.
Until last year.
I knew almost immediately after the bombings that I would run in Boston in 2014. I wanted to be part of the unity of runners—and of a town—that refused to allow a tragedy to mar the tradition and pride of a historic race.
Not only did I want to run Boston, I wanted to PR. My personal record going into the race stood at a 3:29:31. I wanted a 3:25 so I trained for sixteen weeks on a plan to get me 3:20. I knew I’d need the extra five minutes.
FAVORITE BOSTON MOMENTS
It’s impossible to cover the emotion and magnitude of a race as epic as a Boston, so here are just a few highlights of my race.
The Bus Driver. It’s an hour drive to the start line by bus. Our driver was a woman who from the moment we boarded told us, “I’m here to look after you guys. You need anything, you tell me. You’re all heroes.” Before we got off the bus she got on the loudspeaker and gave a short speech about what seeing runners like us return to Boston meant to her that pretty much had all of us hugging each other and sobbing as we filed off the bus toward Athlete’s Village.
Athlete’s Village. 36,000 runners mill around waiting for the start. I am good friends with two runners from GSO, one of them blind without his glasses—a standing joke in our running group. I’m walking away from the bagel table when a man grabs my shoulder and sticks his face into mine.
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