I am not
sure what kind of appetite you have right now, but if it’s huge, turn this off
and read it another time. I don’t want
to be the cause of its demise.
I stalk people’s calves.
It’s a horrid, horrid habit. I wish I didn’t have it. But luckily, I only have it during triathlons. And even more luckily, I only do triathlons 3
times a decade.
This latest one was tremendous. I am going to have to say *SPOILER ALERT*I
finished it, and I didn’t break. But actually,
finishing a triathlon where only the last quarter of a mile of the three was in
the sun was a great feeling. Breezy,
shading trees by the lake for the first 15/16ths of the run portion!? Yes please.
Add in a guy running in crutches with only one leg, and you
could even call that last bit inspirational.
I truly felt a breath of fresh life.
A race can do that. I don’t care if you’ve never done one or are
afraid of not placing well. I think
everyone deserves a spot out of their comfort zone to zizz up their lives a
little. You truly deserve to do a race.
There are benefits. On this race, I made a lot of friends. It’s true, mostly all we said was, “Passing
on the left,” and, “Good job, keep it up,” but in that respect, the friendships
I made were simple and uncomplicated. There’s
no threat of any one of them being offended by my stance on guns or babies, for
example. Ahhh, breath of fresh air.
Breathe, America. Simplicity
is running forward. Biking forward. Swimming forward.
So yes, back to the calves, and me,
their stalker. Everyone has a Sharpie
date at the start of a triathlon.
Someone with a Sharpie writes your race number on your shoulder and your
lower leg, and your age on the other leg.
I have several theories as to why this is, but only one of them is
suitable for printing: it’s to make me go faster. Not because these numbers are on ME , but
because everyone else is advertising now what AGE group they fall under.
And I stalk their calves to see if I
should pass them or not. Straining
forward in the bike seat, or leaning forward on the run, I must see: are they
worth sprinting past?
Now in some cases, the answer is
no. I mean someone could be in my age
group and CLEARLY have me outclassed in either bike status (cost in the
thousands? Forget it, you go ‘head!) or body fat.
Contrary to how crass this sounds, I
am NOT REALLY judging people during a race.
Because I KNOW for a fact that less body fat means that person’s body is
more efficient, and so, they most likely will “smoke” me. Regardless, I am encouraged again… to eat
more carrots instead of muffins (MUFFINS! STEALTH ONES!) so that I can BECOME…
faster and stronger.
I suppose this would be a good time to mention The Vegetarian
Viking. I am telling you. There is always one Intimidator in the
race. By this one, I was so scared: had
the height, not the bulk, just MADE OF SHEER MUSCLE. I felt like I should fashion one of those aforementioned carrots into a hammer, like Thor’s, and carry it as defense along the
ride. Bad choice – no carrots around –
but I was still scared. I resolved two
things: 1) Avoid the Viking. 2) Become
the Viking.
To satisfy your belief that I CAN be
superficial, though, I will toss you one thought. I did get really upset when I saw someone
passing me in the outfit I had wanted to purchase. The material is silky smooth, thick enough to
be flattering, and some combination of blue and purple. This is how it went, in my head.
“Hey, she’s passing me. HEY!
SHE HAS ON MY OUTFIT!!!!!!!!!!
GRRR, MUST PASS.”
For these and other reasons, my competitive edge, lately happily softened
out by beautiful cozy cuddling children, was sparked anew. I can thank people’s calves for that. The stalking never stopped, the whole hour
and 15 minutes. I was constantly evaluating
what place I’d be in. I even printed out
this year’s age group results, for what I call Frameable Motivation. I’m taking a poll: should it go on the fridge
or bathroom mirror?
I am certain no one was afraid of me this year. I came out of that lake a hot mess. I wiped my face and my hands turned
brown. I fancied calling myself the
LakeMess Monster while I biked those 9 miles through town. I am pretty sure the guys with the six-pack
trying to cross the road that Saturday morning (WHAT?! – it’s NOT beer thirty!) weren’t smiling but
laughing at me as I yelled, “Good morning!” but who cares. At least my teeth looked whiter: swimming in
a lake saves you $269 of Zoom treatments!
Who knew!
Looking back, at least the water was nice and warm… in 80
degree air. And at least on the top two
inches the water was clear… yellow. And
I couldn’t see much below me but I did hope I would have the energy to wave at
the rescue boat if I should succumb to my panic…. From leaches? Snakes?
WHAT is scraping me (another swimmer trying to get by, phew!)?! Ewww, what did I just SCRAPE (someone’s
unshaven legs, oh thank heaven I shaved this morning)!?!?
Yeah, the swim sucked. The bike was okay – far fewer people passed me
than on my last triathlon (primarily because I had the right kind of bike this
time AND I trained on it more). The run
was glorious because it was the end. Many
mentioned that it felt like time had slowed down on those last three miles, but
my goal was to finish, and I did, and so I can’t complain.
Not even about the Vikings and
leaches and snakes, oh my!
Flexing
my calves for YOUR benefit,
#139, Age 36
#139, Age 36
No comments:
Post a Comment