How I survived the 2011 ING NYC Marathon, part one
Sunday morning I woke up at 4:30 a.m., got dressed in all my running gear (jet-pack? CHECK!), and stuffed my event-approved bag with snacks and a Smurf-blue Snuggie. A what? A Snuggie. You took a Snuggie to the ING New York City Marathon? I took a Snuggie, a six-pack of Bud Lite and a McDonald's Happy Meal. How else were the European runners going to know they were in America?
The event organizers advised everyone to wear cheap sweat pants and sweat shirts over their running gear because the four-to-five hour wait on Staten Island would be freezing. Before the race started we'd be able to discard this extra clothing and they would donate it all to various charities. I think this explains why I saw a teenage boy in Bangladesh wearing a pink hoodie that said "Miss Varsity Club Homecoming Queen 1998."
When I ran that half marathon in Moab I watched other runners struggle to discard those extra layers, many of them getting their shoes caught in the hem of a cheap pair of sweat pants. I immediately thought, come on, guys! It's 2011! AND THIS IS AMERICA. We don't have to expend energy removing clothing before a race. DAMN STRAIGHT. You can drop a Snuggie like a cigarette butt. Also? It won't get tangled in your holster.
Do I have to do all of the thinking?
(Photo courtesy of team member Amy Siegel who said that this was clearly my cape)
The whole team gathered near Times Square and hopped on a bus that took us to Staten Island. We drove over the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge that connects Staten Island and Brooklyn and also serves as the first two miles of the race. At one point we all looked at each other in horror until someone said, "THIS IS THE LONGEST BRIDGE IN THE WORLD." I added, "I HEARD THAT IT DOESN'T EVER END." Someone else said, "ACTUALLY, IT DROPS US OFF IN VIRGINIA AND WE HAVE TO WALK BACK."
It was the beginning of all that horrible thinking that goes on when all you can do is wait for the anvil to fall on your head the race to start. To give my shaking hands something to do I started to fill an adjustable waistband with chocolate GU packs that I'd be eating along the route. A few of them. Okay, fine. Ten of them. The team was like, are you running back to Utah? Because that is a lot of GU. And I was like, listen. When you get to mile 19 and wish you had something to snack on, I'm going to point to my waistband of GU with my middle finger.
Better to be over prepared than dead.
Here's how much I over prepared: the previous day I had pancakes with syrup for breakfast, toast and a potato for lunch, and a giant bowl of pasta and chicken for dinner. So if during the race my body could not find those carbohydrates, I had plenty ON MY PERSON. Do you see all of this thinking?
The team got to start with the first wave at 9:40 a.m. which meant we had to be in the corral by 8:55. That gave us almost an hour to stand around and mumble OH MY GOD, OH MY GOD, OH MY GOD, WHOSE IDEA WAS THIS, THAT SUPERMODEL DUPED US WITH HER HIGH CHEEKBONES. As the giant mass of bodies moved toward the starting line, people began to discard their extra layers. The only problem was that we no longer had access to porta potties, and in every direction there were humans casually pulling down their pants to piss on the ground. Penises and vaginas everywhere. An occasional hairy buttock.
I thought, genius. How else were we supposed to know which ones were Europeans?
There we were, human flesh as far as the eye could see, a bed of discarded and urine-soaked clothing underneath our feet. That's when I remembered our cab driver from the first night we were in the city. In a thick New York accent he told us that many years ago he and his buddies signed up for the marathon and barely trained for it. On race day when they got to mile 18 and hit the wall a few of them tried to quit. But he grabbed one by the shoulders and said, "ARE WE NOT MEN? ARE WE NOT MEN?"
The mother who gave birth without drugs in me wanted to say, you know, being a man has nothing to do with it, SIR. But his accent was so adorable, and his story was just begging for a Sylvester Stallone interpretation. I decided I'd steal his mantra. So I told this story to Erin, Executive Director of Every Mother Counts, and said that if we stuck together and hit any rough patches we'd need to ask ourselves that question. And then reach down and scratch our balls.
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tokenblogger said:
I was really pleased when you finished. I don't know why I got so excited --- it wasn't like you could even hear me cheering you on all the way down in Kentucky!
11.09.11 - 12:44 PM / 1tokenblogger said:
The first commenter? I am so unemployed.
11.09.11 - 12:46 PM / 2KatR said:
This already might be the most horrifying story I've ever heard.
11.09.11 - 12:52 PM / 3Steph at UM said:
You are such a freaking ROCKSTAR!
11.09.11 - 12:54 PM / 4The Dalai Mama said:
Awesome. I will never run a marathon (as fun as you make it sound) because of the arthritis in my knee. But I assure you when I prepared for my first Century--I had many of these same thoughts.
Glad you were able to channel your inner "Are we not men?" and kick ass. Way to Go!!
11.09.11 - 12:57 PM / 5Daddy Scratches said:
If there was any part of me that was on the fence about running a marathon, you've almost fully knocked it into the "Or not" zone. I'm guessing Part 2 of this entry will finish the job.
Congrats on toughing it out, tho.
11.09.11 - 01:00 PM / 6slappyintheface said:
urine soaked bargain basement sweat pants .... file that under "things I didn't know about marathons and didn't really want to know ... EVER!"
11.09.11 - 01:12 PM / 7Amy J. said:
Someone has probably already sent it to you, but I thought you'd dig this alot!
Sort of majorly mind boggling you were in this video!!! Seriously you should be very proud of yourself Heather!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZDb_Hi7dzRU
11.09.11 - 01:19 PM / 8Amy J. said:
P.S. Are you serious that people pissed in the street!!?? On the clothes they were supposed to donate to underprivileged people!!??
I'm so hoping you were kidding.
11.09.11 - 01:22 PM / 9crikkett said:
I've run a lot of races and I have NEVER seen people have to piss on the street before a race. Even at the Chicago Marathon. That's insane. Every race I've done that has gates has had a entry/exit point that was manned and you had to show your race bib (it corresponded to the corral number) to get back in. That sounds like incredibly poor planning. I know I must pee 5x more before a race just because of the jitters/nerves.
11.09.11 - 01:27 PM / 10santa barbara said:
i'm so sorry that you ended up with an injury, but i'm so excited that you finished! and with a great time! given how little time you had to train, you just totally blew my mind. congratulations! EXCLAMATIONS!!
11.09.11 - 01:28 PM / 11waitimaprincess said:
The awesomeness that I embody makes me sing "Now that we're men" from the damn Spongebob movie. Because I am that cool.
And since when can someone not in jest describe a free for all pee fest upon cheap, donatable clothing (and have others know that it was in jest)? Sheesh
Congrats on completing the marathon. I'm proud of you; it's quite an accomplishment, especially in the midst of such maybe/maybenotness beforehand.
11.09.11 - 01:31 PM / 12apostate said:
I think the Mormon Pioneers WOULD be proud. I mean, they had to commute farther by foot, but they walked and didn't run. Also, it took them longer than a few hours. And they didn't have snuggies back then. But averaging everything out, all in all, they would be proud.
11.09.11 - 01:37 PM / 13Yolanda said:
I think Snuggie just found their new marketing niche. You are more stubborn than I am. I never could have run across that bridge. And I gave birth to a baby sans drugs.
11.09.11 - 01:39 PM / 14lauriek said:
Congratulations, Heather! I was a naysayer but I am a naysayer no more. And your pacing - all 10 to 11 minute miles. VERY impressive!
11.09.11 - 01:45 PM / 15Failjolesfail said:
I would just like to point out that I warned you about the penises. Comment #65, here: http://dooce.com/2011/09/16/twenty-six-point-two?p...
11.09.11 - 02:07 PM / 16tokenblogger said:
@AmyJ:
Where is she and how did you ever find her?
11.09.11 - 02:20 PM / 17Anu said:
I am so so thrilled that you finally did it! So happy for you! Couldn't wait for you to post so ended up searching for your name in the race results. Sorry about the fracture though, that must suck.
11.09.11 - 02:33 PM / 18elozano said:
okay, seriously, you are my freaking hero! Congratulations over and over again just don't seem to do justice to your accomplishment this weekend. Wow! and, Wow, again!
11.09.11 - 02:45 PM / 19Schnauzie_Mom said:
This may be the best post you've ever written. It contends with my first love, The One Where The Lady Lets 'Er Rip in the Public Bathroom. Seriously, you captured the beginning of a race with perfection!
11.09.11 - 02:50 PM / 20Steph Bachman said:
LOVE the mantra. And the GU belt.
I met a woman who could move her shorts to the side to pee standing up without hitting her shoes. Now that is talent.
Snuggie = total genius.
11.09.11 - 03:20 PM / 21RoseTattoo said:
I have stored my emotions away for years, after growing up as the one who could and would cry over a.n.y.t.h.i.n.g. and e.v.e.r.y.t.h.i.n.g.
I teared up when I saw that you had finished the race. Well done!
11.09.11 - 04:19 PM / 22luv and kiwi said:
Did you cry when you crossed the finish line? I sure did! lol Have the video to prove it. UGLY CRY!
11.09.11 - 04:57 PM / 23SMD said:
Hysterical quotes in this post; thanks for making us laugh as we read about your sufferfest. How many GU did you eat?
Looking forward to the rest of the tale.
11.09.11 - 05:49 PM / 24Lauren3 said:
@tokenblogger, I started watching the video also thinking "Oooo, gonna see H-dawg running!" But I think what Amy meant is that she's SOMEWHERE in there.
Now..
YEAH BOO BOO! LOOK WHAT YOU FUCKIN DID! I cannot wait to hear more about it. Tonight I'm drinking my globe of red wine to you.
11.09.11 - 06:26 PM / 25jenwilson said:
You are a genius. And you look hot in that Snuggie.
11.09.11 - 06:26 PM / 26Balkan Girl Dow... said:
YAAAAAAY!
Freakin' awesome, dude! Congratulations!! I could say so many platitudes but I will just say that you're kickass and you should be so damn proud of yourself for this huuuuuge accomplishment.
Can't wait for the next installment, wheee!
As for people peeing before the starting line, ewwwww. Ack!
11.09.11 - 06:38 PM / 27uvula_envy said:
Congrats. I am really impressed.
I keep hearing Devo's "Are We Not Men? No, we are Devo!"
It's been in my head all day since I read this post.
11.09.11 - 06:39 PM / 28LittlestFinch said:
Now you've got to mention the fact that there were actually instructions "when running across the bridge - make sure to stay to the center because there will be people pissing off the side above you and you will get rained on by urine."
I'm loving how people are in disbelief about this - runners have no shame - I've seen people that have shat themselves during races. No shame.
11.09.11 - 06:41 PM / 29Viastt said:
Congratulations Heather on finishing the marathon, especially with your injury, you're hardcore!
I just had a quick question about the food you ate the day before the race (pancakes, toast, pasta). Since you've been Paleo for the last few months, how did you react to the grains?
11.09.11 - 07:16 PM / 30