Thursday, January 31, 2013

Walt Disney World Half Marathon & Marathon (Goofy Challenge 2013)

I haven't talked much about running at all lately and here we are at a race report.  I've been dealing with injuries since my marathon in November.  They were serious enough that I knew the Goofy Challenge was the last thing I needed to put my body through.  I thought about calling the airline and resort to see what type of bullet I'd bite if I canceled the whole trip.  And then the very next day Disney sent me my final trip documents and the excitement of going to Disney itself was too much.

My injury issues get worse the farther I go and I feel worse after a run than before (pretty much the opposite of the knee issue I battled right before the marathon).  Those two things are usually signs you just need to stop.  Getting worse the farther you go is terrible news for a marathon.  Feeling worse after a run than before is horrible for something like the Goofy Challenge.  I was willing to give up the half but was invested in finishing the full.  I was pretty sure I could get through the full marathon but wasn't so sure I could hobble through it the day after a half.

The Half Marathon

I flew to Disney armed with two race outfits but wasn't sure what I was going to do about the half.  I picked up my race packet and still didn't know.  I laid out my race outfit for the half and still wasn't fully invested.  I set my alarm for a 2:30 am wake-up and still wasn't 100% sure I'd wake up and do the race.  To add insult to injury I had a slight head cold when I arrived at Disney and I wasn't sure if that would worsen and make the marathon a no-go.  The only reason I did the half was because I woke up at 2:20 am before my alarm and didn't feel the need to fall back asleep.  If I was up anyway I should just run, right?  If I had been awakened from a deep slumber at 2:30 am with the need to hit snooze, I probably would have skipped the race.

In order to prevent my leg from combusting I decided I would walk 0.5 mi of every mile the entire race.  I stuck to this plan the whole 13.1 miles.  There were plenty of times I wanted to extend the run segment but I kept repeating to myself, "You may not have been out here at all!"  There was no point in finishing faster or running farther.  Just experiencing the race was my reward today and I had to save myself for the marathon.

My leg was tight the whole way but overall I felt pretty good.  I even walked from miles 12.5 to 13.0 of the race.  It was so hard not to run but I just kept repeating my mantra of the day and kept myself contained.  I finished with an amazing PW of 3:07.  But I got my Donald medal and got to experience one of my great running loves of Disney races.

The start!



My first view of the Castle is always during the half. Love.

I have now done 11 Disney races and find myself not needing to stop and take photos with certain characters.  Not a huge Disney Princess fan so bypassed the monster line for this photo-op.


Not me, but the cast member I gave my camera to thought this group belonged to my camera so I got a freebie.


The last time I ran the half I brought my sunglasses along and never needed them.  Left them at home this day, but being out there so much longer could have used them.  Pirate photo-op I skipped on the left.

Crossed the line, got my Donald medal and immediately went to the med tent to get ice for my adductor injury.

Walking so much, I finished the half feeling as if I hadn't gone for a run at all.  I got back to my hotel room and did a series of yoga stretches and stuck my legs up the wall while I iced my groin again.  I usually hit up Animal Kingdom after the half for a short amount of time and then go to Downtown Disney to watch a movie and stay off my feet the rest of the day before the marathon.

One thing I didn't take into account is that my legs are not used to so much brisk walking.  I also walked very quickly for fairly long distances after the race because I almost missed the showing of "Finding Nemo the Musical" that I wanted to catch and then was running late to the movie show time I had wanted to catch (in case you were wondering, it takes about an hour to get from Animal Kingdom to Downtown Disney via resort transportation).  There was a little niggle in my left leg Saturday evening after the half from the brisk walking, but I wrote it off as something that wouldn't give me any trouble (ha!).

The Marathon (#37)

I woke up at 1 am and couldn't fall back asleep.  Bleh.  I got out of bed about 3 am and had that awesome deja vu feeling that always comes with the Goofy Challenge.

My strategy for this race was to take a walk break every 2 miles or so and then see what happened.  For 6 weeks before the Goofy Challenge I hadn't run more than 19 miles in one week.  Read that again and weep with me.  I knew eventually the lack of training was going to catch up with me but I figured I'd enjoy the day and my favorite race.


This sign always cracks me up.  Nothing rational about running a marathon.  I also get goose bumps when I see this.  Those lights ahead mark my favorite race start.

I told myself to soak in the start.  I love this race so much and I don't get to be here every year.




The race started and I felt amazing the first 13 or so miles.  My leg was actually feeling pretty good and unlike the day before I was allowed to run.  For the first time in a long time I felt like a runner again.


They changed the course this year.  We ran around the race track and had lots of what I'm sure are interesting and cool cars to look at (not a car fan).
I may not know real cars, but I appreciate the Pixar themed ones :)

I actually stopped to get a photo with these two, realized they were just NOT cute, and snapped this and moved on.


I have no idea if this is Disney related, but they had Christmas music playing, and you know I am a sucker for that type of thing.

Running in Animal Kingdom.  I had made it a goal to ride Everest during the marathon this year.  With the course change I was in this park before the park was open :(  Major sadness!!

Direct sunshine made its debut here.

There has been a lot said about the weather at Disney World this year.  I believe the start temps were in the low 60s and the highs were in the low 80s.  Don't get me wrong, it was warm out there.  But the heat just didn't seem to bother me.  Sometime in Animal Kingdom I remember stopping for a photo-op and being amazed that my tank was totally soaked through.  But I wasn't feeling like I was wilting in the sun which is a little odd since I am a total heat weenie.  Perhaps it was my slow as molasses pace or perhaps it was the 5 Bikram yoga classes the week before.  Who knows.  Yes it was hot but I don't think it slowed me down much.  I don't know who I've become because I actually enjoyed the warm weather for park touring the week after the race.


Waiting for a photo with Daisy and Minnie

At about mile 14 after Animal Kingdom, that little niggle in my left leg from all the walking started to shout at me.  And it started shouting loudly. It hurt to run.  It hurt to walk.  It hurt pretty sharply and badly and I had a brief moment of despair at the thought of having to go another 10+ miles on it.  I started stopping at every med tent to put Biofreeze on it.  I am not sure if it helped but it certainly didn't hurt things.  I suppose that is the nice thing about doing a race 5 times.  Even though I had never seen the inside of a Disney med tent on the course, I knew exactly what supplies they would have at all of them and I knew they would be frequent.

Almost my turn for Pluto and Mickey!

Another change to the course was a run through the Sports Complex.  Two big thumbs down.  So boring.  So many turns.  Bleh!  I actually prefer the old out and back with Disney entertainment which is saying a lot.

I did appreciate the soft track surface.  My left leg felt a little better on it.



They copied what you do at the Disneyland half and you ran through the baseball stadium.  Except this isn't a "real" stadium so who really cares?  They had promised a "Mile 20 Spectacular" which I thought was this stupid run around the stadium.  I was overrun by my friend, Jill, after this and we were both not impressed.  The way they had hyped it up, I was expecting characters in pyramid formations and confetti.

So it turns out, THIS was the Mile 20 Spectacular.  Still a let down though I suppose to see the classic characters out is sort of a treat.
I just kept putting one foot in front of the other.  Forward progress.  Sometimes it seemed to feel better if I ran.  Sometimes it felt better if I walked.  But it always hurt.  I used to wonder about those people you see limping at the end of marathons -- yeah, that was sort of me.

Hallelujah, almost to the finish!
I got a high five from Mickey as I crossed the line!


Finished with a course PW of 5:39.  I got my marathon medal and for a nanosecond got slightly emotional that I had made it with my leg feeling the way it had for so long.  Then picked up my Goofy medal and got my left leg iced.  My right leg that had given me so many problems before the race had actually felt better during the full marathon than the half.  Go figure.


My left leg hurt so badly after the race I was actually concerned I wouldn't be able to walk back to the food court to get myself dinner later in the day, much less go to the parks after the race.  I took a short nap and when I woke up it felt a lot better.  It hurt when walking but if I went slowly it was manageable.  By the next day I could walk normally with just a slight twinge, and by the day after and ever since it has been 100%.


The marathon medal was special for the 20th anniversary and it didn't disappoint.  The Mickey head spins and reverses to a black-and-white Mickey and the inner ring spins and has two Walt Disney quotes on it.  Personally, I am a fan of the Mickey head-shaped medals of the past and that is the only way this thing could be better.

Spinner action

On the new course changes:  Not impressed. I miss the old days of running through Epcot in the very beginning of the race.  Now you get spit out onto the freeway portion and there is just nothing going on until the Magic Kingdom at mile 6.  Also, it is pitch black when you hit Magic Kingdom which makes getting photos with the castle really difficult. I already mentioned that Animal Kingdom is still closed when you run through so gone are the days of riding rides there.  I wasn't so impressed with the run around the car track but it wasn't terrible since they brought out stuff to look at and had music playing. I hated the run around the Sports Complex.  Also, my internal rhythm of the race was upset because we were hitting certain points so much sooner than usual. I'm used to it being a certain mile when I hit a certain point and that was all thrown off.  I felt like it should be mile 17 but wait, we're only at mile 12.  Boo.

Things also felt much more crowded.  I haven't looked into actual numbers but things just felt so much more congested.  There was a LINE over half a mile long to get into the expo.  I have never experienced that at these races before.  The half more-so than the full was also pretty cramped.

The expo is the building on the right.  That is a line I'm standing in to get inside.

My major beef with Disney races has always been, and still is, the fact that they do not have gender-specific shirts.  I have issues with race shirts that only go down to a woman's small so you can imagine what happens to me when the sizes are unisex.  To add more fuel to my fury is this:



You'd think in a race where the majority of runners are women they would cater to that demographic.  I have three more tech shirts I would love to wear but don't fit.  Thanks, Disney.

Given how my leg has been the last couple of months, I am grateful I was able to finish these races. I love them and to sit out would have hurt my heart.  That said, the last few times I have gone to Disney I have always just sort of stuck the races into my schedule almost as an afterthought. It has been a long time since I purposefully trained for a Disney Marathon.  I think I got into this rut because I never go for a time at Disney since I always stop for character photos and the weather is such a wild-card.

People would congratulate me on the Goofy Challenge after the race and I didn't feel as if there was really anything to congratulate me about.  Anyone can finish a marathon if they go slow enough.  Doing a marathon when you are undertrained and injured is at best stupid and at worst disrespectful of the distance and the people who actually worked for the accomplishment.  I'm obviously guilty of this and it isn't something I care to do again nor do I feel warrants back patting and congratulations.

I decided that the next time I'm back at Disney I'm going to pencil it in as an actual event to train for.  Not an afterthought a week after a goal marathon (see 2011) or a month after running marathons back-to-back (see 2010).  In 2005 it was my first marathon and I trained for it and was so thrilled when I finished.  In 2008, I trained specifically for my first Goofy Challenge and was so incredibly proud when I pulled it off.  I want to give this marathon some respect for a change. I won't ever race it because I can't help taking photos with characters and quite frankly it is a horrible PR course (26.9 per my Garmin people.  26.9!).  But I'd like some decent training in my legs and to push the pace a little when I am actually running.  Perhaps a sub-4 Disney?  That would be lots of fun.

I haven't decided yet if I'll do the Goofy Challenge the next time I go to Disney.  To be honest, even though I have done it 4 times I am not a fan of it.  The first time I really wanted to do it.  Ever since I only keep repeating it because I figure if I'm flying all the way out to Florida there is no reason to not do both races and get to participate in two Disney events.  I may decide to just do the marathon the next time or maybe I'll do some real Goofy training and see how much I can push the pace in both races.  To be determined...


You can check out my previous Walt Disney World race reports here (2010) and here (2011).

Monday, January 28, 2013

Monday Mario


Mario is just not a toy rabbit.  I've bought him rattles, balls, things to topple, things to toss, and he generally says, "meh," to all of them.  Food-based gifts work sometimes (wicker--he is very picky about his wicker, though.  Sometimes he'll munch it up the first day, others he won't touch it at all --alfalfa cubes on sticks) but aren't exactly mentally stimulating.

The one thing he loves is paper to shred and the winning idea was stuffing that paper into his tunnel.  He'll go in there a few times a night when he is out and there will be a great ripping and shredding and interior paper decorating going on inside.

I am trying to get some race reports and running updates into a post.  Stay tuned...

Monday, January 21, 2013

Monday Mario

Hello, there.  You are a handsome fellow.

Can't quite pin down what it is that makes you so dapper...

Monday, January 7, 2013

Monday Mario

Of course everyone is wondering, so what about Mario?

Mario wasn't at our wedding mainly because he is just not a traveling, stranger-loving type of rabbit.  There was also a no-pet clause in our venue contract.  But I definitely wanted to include him in our big day since he is such an important part of my life.

One tip I got when I first started wedding planning was to make a list of things that were important to you and and your partner and things that weren't and spend the money on areas you both cared most about.  Low on both of our lists was the cake.  I mean seriously, the thing is made of sugar and flour and generally tastes sort of meh, anyway.

A few years ago, Boyfriend brought home a Princess cake for dessert.  I can't remember if it was our anniversary or Valentine's day or just-because.  We both took a bite of it, looked at each other, and said at the same time that this was going to be our wedding cake.

And we stuck true to our unplanned decision.

The cake is expensive for a cake its size, but is pretty insignificant cost-wise when you compare it to traditional wedding cakes.  And it is so, so yummy!

I found a lot of stuff on Etsy for our wedding and I came across a woman who made custom cake toppers.  She even included your furry loved one.  The boat ended up being meaningful, too, since we did a couple's relay together way back in the day before we even knew we would fall in love (I ran two miles, Boyfriend cycled 12 miles, and we both rather comically rowed a boat for 3/4 mile together).


The cake topper cost 530% more than our cake.  Boyfriend even said he could make one himself, yadda yadda.  But I wanted it to be perfect because it was the way I was including Mario.

Out of all of the details on our wedding day, this was the one I was most excited about.





I also tucked a tuft of Mario's fur into my bouquet so he would be with me when I walked down the aisle.