Showing posts with label Yearly Stats. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yearly Stats. Show all posts

Saturday, December 31, 2011

La Vida Es Un Carnaval - HAPPY 2012

(English follows Spanish text)

Todo aquel que piense que la vida es desigual, tiene que saber que no es así, que la vida es una hermosura, hay que vivirla. Todo aquel que piense que está solo y que está mal, tiene que saber que no es así, que en la vida no hay nadie solo, siempre hay alguien.
-Ay, no hay que llorar, que La Vida Es Un Carnaval, -Y es mas bello vivir cantando. -Oh, oh, oh, Ay, no hay que llorar, -que la vida es un carnaval -y las penas se van cantando.

Everyone out there who thinks that life is unfair needs to know that's not the case, because life is beautiful, you just have to live it. Everyone out there who thinks they are alone and is feeling bad, needs to know that's not the case, because in life no one is alone, there is always someone. Ay, no need to cry, because Life Is A Carnival, it's more beautiful to live singing. Oh, Ay, no need to cry, because life is a carnival, and your pains can be alleviated through song….

… and running…

2011 is over. Started pretty much with breast surgery in January to remove pre-cancer cells… when can I run again Doc? I asked. “Use common sense, though I know runners have none…” he replied.

Year ended as the best running year I’ve ever had. Stats are pretty neat, with all the races I could run: Across the country from Washington State to Florida, and across the globe from home at 48° parallel north to daughter’s home at 48° parallel south in New Zealand. PRs in most of the distances… I’ll let the numbers talk to you.., and remember: Life Is A Carnival... and your pains can be alleviated through song….  and running…

Have a great 2012.

2011 Stats

52 races
Distance
PRs
3
Marathons
4:44:04 – 10:51 min/mile
1
30K
3:16:05 – 10:32 min/mile
1
15 Miles (24K)

21
Half Marathons
2:07: 21 – 9:43 min/mile
1
10 Miles (16K)

1
15K
1:31:12 – 9:47 min/mile
3
12K

7
10K
56:22 – 9:05 min/mile
2
8K (5 Miles)
48:50 – 9:50 min/mile
1
3.8 Miles

9
5K
26:19 – 8:29 min/mile
1
3K

1
Relay 187 miles

                       
0
Injuries
0
Blisters (one tried but didn’t succeed)
2
Partial black toenails (Coeur D’Alene Marathon and Tacoma Narrows Half)




 



Sunday, January 9, 2011

A Year Ends... A Year Starts

I love the end of a running year to collect all my stats and see how it went. Though is something I can tell throughout the months, just having all the numbers together gives me a better picture of how wonderful 2010 was for me.

Here are my stats... and I am proudly keeping my title of a "Racing Fool".

1,140 miles / 1,820 Km 

31 races:
  • Two Marathons
  • One 30K
  • One 15-Miler
  • 14 Half-Marathons
  • Two Ten-Milers
  • Two 12K
  • Five 10K
  • One 8K
  • Three 5K
One injury (bone bruise due to a small accident) which sidelined me for 3 months.

    I closed the year the way I like it, running a half-marathon on New Years Eve. It was a fantastic race, at 27F / -3C, with the beautiful scenery of the Olympic Mountains. The event was organized six weeks prior to the 31st as a 30-person run, but ended as a race with 282 runners. It was a success.

    2010 was definitely a successful running year, being the highlight events the two marathons: Eugene, Running in the footsteps of legends, and New York, confirming that the best of times is now.


    My new goal, set after NYC marathon, is the 50/50.  I will continue racing as a fool. I will continue dedicating my weekends to get up at whatever hour is needed, to drive as many miles are needed, to get to whatever race is available. I just love it, and that is the fuel that keeps me going.

    2011 is here, the race calendar is filling up pretty quick and the racing started. A nice White Elephant 5-miler with my beautiful daughter around our state capitol. Gorgeous!!! And I was so lucky that I won a pair of running shoes... Oh, and I PRd....

    A Year Ends... A Year Starts... 

    -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Last race of the year 2010. Yukon Do It Half Marathon - New Years Ever, Port Orchard, WA



     
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    First race of 2011. White Elephant 5-miler, Olympia, WA (And I PRd, BTW)




    Monday, December 28, 2009

    Another Suitcase In Another Hall

    As the year ends, we, type A runners, start counting and recounting numbers, piling them up and calling them the stats of the year. Well, I ain't no different.
    • Total mileage 567 over 8 months of running (May-Dec).
    • Participated in 24 races (eighteen 5K; four 10K; one 12K; one Half)
    • Got a nice 5K PR of 27:27
    • Got a "for sure" 10K and Half Marathon PR, as it was the first time I officially ran the distances (1:00:31 and 2:23:21 respectively)
    • Got two 1st places in my division (5K) hurray!, two second places, one third, and placed nicely in most of the rest 5K. At longer distances (i.e. 10K, 12K and Half) I placed in the middle of the pack.
    • Didn't run a Marathon
    My favorite 2009 running pictures are shown here. One, above, was in the Fall Classic in Monroe. The photographer really captured my state. It was my hardest 5K race, to the point I thought I was going to DNF. Following Pre's words I ran with everything I had: "If I am still standing at the end of the race, hit me with a board and knock me down, because that means I didn't run hard enough". I almost collapsed at the finish line, interestingly, it was not my best race. The second picture, below, my Half marathon medal, with our beautiful city icon in the background, Seattle's Space Needle. Awesome picture taken by my daughter in law, photographer Shelly K. Moreno


    On the personal side, this was the toughest year of my life. I started and finished cancer treatment, and lost one of the most important persons in my life, the father of my children. Still, I needed to move on. At 52 years of age, I really discovered that tomorrow we may not be around. Though I lost my father 16 years ago, I discovered, with Luis' passing, what death really meant. So those 24 races were my escape to somewhere, to the infinity, to freedom, to acknowledgment of what life is. I breathe, I see, I feel, I sense, I walk, I run. Therefore, I race. No matter the weather conditions, from hot muggy days, to freezing temperatures, I race simply because I can. I am alive.

    To give a twist to the year to come, I decided to place
    Another Suitcase In Another Hall: To change marathon season, marathon venue and marathon plan. I officially registered for a Spring Marathon at Eugene, OR, the mecca of running, and my training will be based on Arthur Lydiard's methodology...

    Thanks to my runner-blogger friends for a year of sharing, looking forward to more adventures together. Special thanks to Craig.
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The last two races of the year
    :

    12/12/09 - Christmas Rush 10K, Kent, WA: 1:02:02

















































    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------

    12/20/09 - 12Ks of Christmas
    , Kirkland, WA - 1:15:39
    Division 33/76 - Overall Female 406/744 - Overall 785/1180


    Great HILLY race. I did better than expected.


    Sunday, December 21, 2008

    Five Hundred Twenty-Five Thousand Six Hundred Minutes
























    Five Hundred Twenty-Five Thousand Six Hundred Minutes
    How do you measure, measure a year?
    In daylights? In sunsets? In midnights? In cups of coffee?
    In inches? In miles? In laughter? In strife?

    In Five Hundred Twenty-Five Thousand Six Hundred Minutes
    How do you measure a year in the life?

    Five Hundred Twenty-Five Thousand Six Hundred Minutes
    Five Hundred Twenty-Five Thousand journeys to plan

    Five Hundred Twenty-Five Thousand Six Hundred Minutes
    How do you measure the life of a woman or a man?

    In truth that she learned? or in times that he cried?
    In bridges he burned? or the way that she died?

    It's time now, to sing out, though the story never ends.
    Let's celebrate, remember a year in the life of friends

    Oh, you got to remember the love, you know that love is a gift from up above.
    Share love, give love, spread love. Measure, measure your life in love.

    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    I could have measured this year in 662 miles and 126 hours of running,
    or in 80,000 calories burned during runs,
    or in 9 races,
    or in 75,000 miles flown,
    or in 40 planes boarded,
    or in 140 days away from home,
    or in 1 lump that changed my life.

    But I am going to measure it in love. I measure my Five Hundred Twenty-Five Thousand Six Hundred Minutes of 2008 in pure and simple incommensurable love.

    God Bless You All
    Merry Christmas and the Best To All of You in 2009


    ___________________________________________________________________

    My last race of the year, the Jingle Bell Run in downtown Seattle on Dec 14, 2008. Temperature of 20F with the wind chill factor. Ice on the streets. With Jingle Bells I also had asthma all the way, but I ran with high spirits. I am resolute. I will keep myself strong. I will keep running. Cancer, hear this out: You won't stop me!

    Time: 31:15
    Placement - Division: 21/138 - Female Overall: 613/2396 - Overall: 1406/4197



    Saturday, December 1, 2007

    Closing the Year with an Everest - We All Have an Everest

    Everything started on May 19, with a regular mom-daughter phone conversation: A decision was made, we'd run a marathon the same day in our respective cities.

    A running plan was developed. First phase of 10 weeks to go from nine years without running, to run for 20 minutes in a row. A second phase, a marathon plan. For the latter many plans were reviewed and discarded. The one selected was one I had since 2005: Furman Institute of Running & Scientific Training, FIRST. It better fitted in my life style as only required 3 days of running. Heard many things: How can you train for a marathon running only 3 days a week? I believed in the Institute results and I followed it.

    As a Project Manager geek I treated this as a project: Plan, Execution and Control; analysis of every week's results and risks to understand what went on and how to accommodate all the variables that play a role in our daily life: work, traveling, getting sick, weather conditions, commitments, sadness, pain, frustrations.

    Good and very bad things happened, but still, my plan was executed to perfection and I feel accomplished for that. During the race I applied everything I learned during 26 weeks. I ran smart, I trusted myself, I put a lot into it, and I enjoyed the journey. I am still in that race bubble as I have now a PR for a marathon, yes, I've established a marathon record, my marathon record.

    Lessons Learned?
    • Planning is a key
    • This endeavor is not a random endeavor that can be achieved without a disciplined approach
    • Unexpected things and frustrations will occur: step back, reorganize and move on
    • Shoes and carbs: key resources
    • Push yourself
    • Fall in love with the worst part of the plan (e.g.: hills?)
    • Monitor progress
    • Adapt training to the available routes (or treadmill!!!). It MUST be fun
    • During training we not only train for running, we train to learn and understand food needs, body's temperature, heart rate, in summary, body's needs.
    • Keeping the goal in mind is important, but no need to focus on it. Focus must be on the present training day
    • Rely on close friends and family for a boost
    • Mind has superiority over the body. We have so much power that we can beat a cold. I did.
    I learned some years ago from a Venezuelan climber something that always have pounded in my head: Jose Antonio Delgado (qepd) always said: "We all have an Everest", yes, we all have a dream and we need to wake up to make it happen.

    • Wake up and make it happen. JUST DO IT!

    STATS

    Total Miles Planned = 423.2
    [
    Phase I=50 /Phase II=382]

    Total Miles Executed = 455.2 (108%)
    [Phase I=82 (164%) /Phase II=373.2 (98%)]

    Total Time = 98h 36m 26s
    [Phase I= 20h 51m /Phase II= 77h 45m 26s]

    Average Pace = 13:00
    [Phase I=15:15 /Phase II=12:30]

    Fastest Mile 11/13/07 = 10:14

    Slowest Mile 05/28/07 = 42:51 (First Day of running: Wasn't Lizzie out of shape? 1 minute run/1minute walk, imagine how I was after the minute run!!!)

    Calories Burned = 46,025
    Pounds Lost = 7 lbs.


    TAGGED
    Ok, I was tagged by Petra and Maddy. I'm it. As somebody said this is the electronic version of chain emails, but ... here I am, closing the year and sharing 5 facts about myself, some random, some weird.

    1) I never went to Kindergarten. As I have suffered asthma all my life my mom over-protected me and didn't send me to school until I was almost 7. Mrs. Mate, a very strict Spanish woman, was the tutor in charge of my instruction since I was 4. She taught me literature and math for 2 years, from 9am to 11am from Mon to Thu. So at 6 I have read Don Quijote de la Mancha, the Masterpiece of Spanish Literature, and I also knew how to divide. But I never learned how to use scissors or glue, so I was and I am a total spaz with my fine motor skills. My sis Sara had to always come to my help because the night before of any art homework I had unintentionally ruined the materials, made holes in the fabrics used for embroidery, mixed colors in a horrendous way, etc. I challenged this 6 years ago and I confess I suffered in the classes, but my first piece was selected for a College Poster and a College exhibit.

    2) I was born and raised in Venezuela, but all the members of my childhood world were immigrants from Spain, Italy, Netherlands, Portugal, Trinidad, France and Colombia, including my family. So, I could not understand when I went to elementary school that there were Venezuelan kids with Venezuelan parents and Venezuelan grandparents.

    3) I had the gift of nursing a kid that was born prematurely four months after my beautiful daughter. Enrique A. Montbrun is 20 today, and has recently initiated his dream: a website dedicated to baseball (beisbol). One of his greatest moments was 14 years ago when he met Andres Galarraga a humble Venezuelan player for the Colorado Rockies.

    4) I wear 90% of my time black & white. 9% brown/beige and 1% other colors and maybe this 1% only happens once/twice a year. All my clothes, work suits, summer clothes, casual clothes, night gowns, swimsuits and running gear are mostly black and white . If they have a color added is because there was nothing else available in the market. If they are of a different color is because somebody gave it to me as a gift. Blue jeans are the exception.

    5) My dad (qepd) was a perfectionist and perfect measurement of time was one of his obsessions. He could not accept to hear "it's 7:10 pm" if it really was 7:08 pm. So he always corrected everybody. The night he was about to die with a severe leukemia that consumed him in a month I decided not to sleep to help him with the oxygen mask, so he did not get desperate. He passed away that night and after giving him a kiss, I saw the clock, it was 4:37 am. I called the nurse and she confirmed he's died. She asked me at what time and I said 4:40 am. At 6:00 am we took mom home and I went to my dad's study room, and sat in his chair to feel his presence. I felt something that touched my hand and I had the immediate need to look at his clock. It was stopped at 4:37 am. When I told the story to my family, my sister's mother in law Luisa (qepd) commented: "He could not permit that you weren't precise with the time of his passing".


    HAPPY HOLIDAYS

    Dear All, I am leaving on vacation next Thursday 12/06 to Thailand to be with my daughter. I will be there for a month and probably won't post anything until I come back in January.

    Thanks for being part of my Running Journey and we'll continue sharing in 2008 our wonderful running experiences.

    God Bless You All, and have a Blessed and Happy Holidays.

    sincere-lee
    lizzie lee