“No one ever said it would be easy. They said it would be worth it.” Those words echoed through my mind on
Saturday October 11th through the quiet storm of emotions that were raging as I ran down the steamy Queen K highway.
I’ll be honest. I
did not want to write this race report. There
are multiple reasons for that, most of which are rooted in my own wanting
to avoid reliving the experience and longing to move on without having to
rehash the painful details. After the
Ironman World Championships, as I sat with a good friend on a sunny balcony
listening to the sound of cheerful banter of my Coeur Sports teammates with the
waves crashing in, she became the voice of reason. She said, “I think it’s important that you
share your experiences as a pro, Kim, especially experiences like this one. Many people don’t get to see the hard side
where sometimes things fall apart despite your best preparations. Sometimes pros
gloss over it like it was no big deal or just another day at the office to
avoid looking vulnerable or looking like they made mistakes. People who have loved your blog in the past,
have loved it because you never did that.
Don’t you start now.” I told her
my reasons for the shiny happy blog, including me not wanting to make my recent
race something more important or significant than it was, but she wasn’t buying
it. So thanks, Michelle. This one is for you.
Lins, Krops and I
Three amigos at the pro meeting
I came into the World Championship tentatively
optimistic. I’d been nursing a hip
/glute / hamstring issue through September and early October, but it seemed to
be holding up well due to some great PT with Vesla 360. I had come to the big island earlier than
usual to prepare my body for some of the challenges I didn’t deal with as well
the previous year including heat, humidity and nutrition. My mental outlook felt good and I was ready
for an incredibly hard mental and physical day.
When I lined up to tread water with the 35 best women in the
world, I didn’t feel pressure. Hearing
the helicopters buzz overhead and the voice of Mike Reilly announcing, I didn’t feel I had anything to prove. I prayed for a super solid day where I would
celebrate this season and get to use my gifts to their utmost ability. I looked into the eyes of the other women who
I’d seen grace the covers of magazines, holding banners above their heads and
knew for the first time that I belonged with this group. It was a good feeling. I came to compete and it was going to be a
great day.
When the cannon fired, blood coursed through my veins like
hot lava...breath, stroke, breath, stroke.
There was no time for sighting; I followed the bodies around me by
watching them underwater mirroring their every movement. For a full minute, I was redlining in harmony
with a small group of five to six women which I knew included Beth and Linsey,
so I was exceptionally happy with my position.
Then, just like that, out of the corner of my eye the body at my right
swerved and I was caught alone. I looked
up just in time to see the group start taking a beeline closer to the buoy and
with that I knew I had to find the power to surge. It was now or never. Unfortunately, my body’s answer was "no" and the group gapped me by five
feet. I continued to push, but they
moved farther and farther away and I knew it was going to be a very long 2.4
mile solo swim. The swell was up and it
seemed to catch the group in just the right way leaving me high and dry. It was hard to sight and the buoys seemed
incredibly far in between. “Just keep
swimming hard,” I told myself for the duration, but it was hard to stay focused on straightest course, especially on the way
back. The current seemed to be pulling
me too far to the right inside the buoy lines.
I heard kayakers yelling “LEFT!!” for a majority of the return
trip and I kept thinking “TRUST ME, I’m TRYING!!” I tried not to swallow too much salt water,
as I know that can be a recipe for disaster, but at times I’d turn to breathe at
exactly the same time as a swell or chop and get a nice big gulp.
I heard other athletes being announced as they were coming out of
the water, and tried not to let it get me down.
Ironman is a very long day and would not be decided in the first hour of
a nine plus (or even longer in my case) hour day. I excited the water, ran through T1 and
almost had a small heart attack when I saw the time clock at the bike mount.
Out onto the bike I felt optimistic. I’ve been biking well lately when my hip was
willing to push and my coach and I had taken a conservative plan for the first
portion of the race to make sure that area was happy and not overworked. It would also give me a chance to start
eating and drinking early and with my sweat rate of 60+oz per hour in hot
conditions, this was key. Heading out to
the turn-around the highlights were hearing plenty of great cheers and of
course staring into the face of a smiling ear to ear Chrissie Wellington. My heart
rate was soaring and my power seemed a little slow to respond. I could feel my glute not wanting to push
quite as hard as I was hoping, but it often tightens up with the rest period
during taper so I wasn’t overly concerned.
I couldn’t help but notice the other girls bombing down the other side
of the road before I was even close to the turn around, but I tried to ignore
it. I repeated my mantras for the day
“patience pays off, smart consistent following the plan, leave the outcomes
alone” hoping they would ward off any negative thoughts. I slugged down two
28oz bottles in the first fifty minutes so I was feeling pretty good about my
nutrition progress. Headed out on the Queen K, I wasn’t really thrilled
with my power average, so I attempted to start pushing on it, but the hip
just didn’t seem to love my effort so I backed off. More patience necessary. The age group men caught me much faster than
I anticipated, and by 30 miles, I was already dealing with their constant
passing, but this year I was mentally prepared for it. I stayed away from their riff-raff and made
sure to maintain a good distance.
The middle miles up to Hawi started getting windy and I
started to let the negative thoughts creep in about my glute not functioning as
well as I’d hoped. I thought hitting
these powers was going to come easily and it seemed to be anything but. The goals coach and I had set were the exact same as I had done the last two races, but unfortunately, my body didn’t seem to be pulling it off. Slugging back Powerbar Perform, I soldiered
on, but not with my usual gusto. I
started doubting myself and my body already, wondering if I was going to even
be able to pull together a solid day. As
the winds to Hawi worsened, my outlook grew dimmer and I started thinking about
just trying to enjoy the scenery out there.
I watched the blue water while the men passed me, drafting in
droves. I tried to enjoy riding my bike
as that was one of the reasons I came, to enjoy the day.
We hit Hawi and were finally rewarded with some nice winds
coming down the mountain. I remembered
my coach's instructions, that if I had to make decisions out there, I should
make them in light of preserving the last 30 miles of the bike as being my
strongest of the day. At this rate, they
were bound to be as I’d lost so much focus I was just hanging out on
my bike for the first 65 miles. The
thing that worried me most was that I was averaging 2.5-3 bottles per hour and
didn’t even remotely have to pee. My
stomach wasn’t feeling all that spectacular and I’d started skipping gels to
cut down on my carbohydrate content in hopes of feeling a little more settled. When we made the turn toward home back onto
the K, I finally made a decision. If I
did ONE thing correctly on this bike, it was going to be this 30 mile
section. I stopped sitting up (which I
did way too much of the first 60 miles, not very aero in the Kona wind) and
babying my glute. I decided that I came
here to run this body into the ground, so I had better start doing it and get
my act together. Often times the
momentum (or lack thereof) on this very tough section back to town bleeds
directly into the marathon. I was hoping
if somehow I could turn this ride around, maybe I still had the chance to run
up to my capabilities and feel good about my efforts.
I started tussling with the men that wanted to pass me and
then sit up and eat/drink their buffet.
My power numbers started to resemble something of normalcy and I gained
a little momentum back. I was still
worried that I was chugging fluid and it didn’t seem to be moving through my
system, but I knew the answer was not to stop.
That was out of the question. I took a caffeinated gel and pushed as the
tailwind turned into a headwind for the last 20 miles back to town.
I knew by my time, I hadn’t broken any records and was most
likely pushing the very back of the women’s professional field. However, I believed that I could still run a
decent marathon that I would be proud of at the end of the day. In T2, I stopped at the restroom to assess
the hydration and the news was not good.
“I can still do this!” I told myself and headed out on the run. For the first ten miles through town I felt
ok, my stomach was a little testy so I took some gas-X and TUMS, which I always
have with me in my Fuelbelt pouch.
I took some salt tablets too just in case. I couldn’t stand the thought of more sports
drink so I took coke from aid station one right through. My heart rate seemed to be right where it
should be and I didn’t feel too hot which was a big change from the previous
year. I focused on what I could control
and the hip only hurt slightly which was completely manageable.
I heard plenty of cheers and looked forward to seeing
familiar faces which helped out on Alii as we ran. I seemed to be passing a lot of people and I
started thinking a 3:10 or below might be within reach. I started feeling a little more “off” in the
stomach near the turn up Palani near the 10 mile mark, so I took more meds
hoping to solve the issues.
By the eleven mile mark out on the Queen K, my stomach
started feeling like it was carrying a brick. The harder I pushed, the worse the pain
got. I slowed down considerably to try
to keep things moving and maybe see if my body would normalize, but to no
avail. I stopped to try and throw up, no
dice. I started to jog praying for it to
let up, but it continued to worsen.
Little by little I tried to run and then would walk hoping it would go away. The people I had passed on Alii
started slowly passing me back one by one.
Many athletes encouraged me as they went by and told me to keep
going. I tried to stay positive, but
things were going downhill fast.
Somewhere between 14-16 miles, I realized that finishing this race at
all was going to be a real challenge. I
was feeling so sick I wanted to lie down alongside the road and just roll
around in pain. Walk, jog, walk, jog...
watch pro women run by on the other side, cheer for them, repeat. My heart sank. This was the final verdict of my day. I thought about flagging down the medical
team at the next aid station and getting a ride back to town. I passed one pro woman who was also walking
during my slow jog phase and she said “nice running” and I didn’t know whether
to laugh or start crying. We were both
having long days, but she wasn’t quitting either.
I stopped taking in all calories except coke
and began running on fumes. The energy
lab miles were a blur. I’m not sure what
happened in there, but the other top age group women were now right on my heels
and passing and it was great to see my Coeur Sports teammates doing so
well, along with my friend Andrea. In
the end, I had forgotten what it was like to be out among the masses cheering
each other on even when the high hopes were long over. The highlight reel from the last six miles
included lots of puking (and rallying) and developing a very intimate
relationship with a cone at mile 24. The
medical team told me if I didn’t let go, I would be taken in so eventually I
did pry myself off and onto all fours, crawling and eventually walking. Tears streamed down my face through the final
miles just as they had the year before, but for entirely different
reasons. I was disappointed in the times
I’d given up on myself out there, but I was also thinking about my cousin
Mike’s family and how no matter what pain I was in, the pain they faced on a
daily basis overshadowed this small blip of my tough day by leaps and
bounds. The strength they have shown recently is like nothing I have ever seen. If they could do it, I could do it. I knew Mike was watching and I
made a promise not to quit no matter what happened out there. I thought about my QT2 teammates, Beth, Linsey and Cait all pushing the limits out there regardless of the kind of day they were having and about all my teammates, FYP athletes, Pitt tri club members, Boulder Tri Camp members (specifically my friend Ashley C. who just did her first half IM), friends and family back home watching and cheering me on. The rubber had met the road and I’d come out
victorious over the demons telling me to pull the plug and go home. I didn’t break any records. In fact, I didn’t even beat my very first
Ironman ever (10:56) on the big island, but I did manage to finish, which at
times seemed all but impossible. My body
had been wrung out and left for dead, but the spirit was stronger. I wondered if I had let myself quit that day,
would I ever forgive myself for the promise I had made. I decided I wouldn’t and for my own reasons,
I pressed on. Other pros had to make
their own decisions with other races on the horizon. For me, this was the right decision that day
as I knew this was my final race of the season.
Alii drive was lined with friends and family and running
down it still felt like a party with thousands of your closest friends. They cheered like I was winning the whole
race and maybe to them, I was. It was
getting dark and my finish had looked completely different in my mind’s
eye. Instead of barreling down it guns
blazing, I was willing one foot in front of the other hoping my body wouldn’t
shut down minutes from the finish line.
When Mike finally said my name, he saw my expression and announced “it
was a tough day, great job Kim” and I was being caught by the volunteers. Safe at last. Off to the medical tent where I
lost eight pounds and was treated with lots of TLC.
Even now I know this day was bigger than me.
What I wrote on Facebook as my status I believe with all my heart.
"There are days where you ask of your body & it gives you everything it can. Even though it might not be the day you hoped to have, you realize that those are the days where you do exactly what an Ironman does, finish. You finish and give thanks for all the wonderful people in your life. You finish because you made a promise to yourself and someone who you know is watching you from above. You finish because it's a gift & you never EVER take that for granted. Thanks for all your support! I am an Ironman World Champion finisher once again!"
What I wrote on Facebook as my status I believe with all my heart.
"There are days where you ask of your body & it gives you everything it can. Even though it might not be the day you hoped to have, you realize that those are the days where you do exactly what an Ironman does, finish. You finish and give thanks for all the wonderful people in your life. You finish because you made a promise to yourself and someone who you know is watching you from above. You finish because it's a gift & you never EVER take that for granted. Thanks for all your support! I am an Ironman World Champion finisher once again!"
It doesn’t make it sting less, but it does help me to know
that my friends and family are there for me no matter the outcome of one
day. I will not let this race define me
as an athlete or a person. There are
lessons to be learned and I’m still in the process of figuring out what those
are for me. The biggest one was that
sometimes the important part is learning the hard way not to “judge” the race
during the early throws when not much has been decided yet. I lost focus and that was on me. The nutrition piece in Kona is always a tough
one as well and it might have been the salt water sloshing around in my belly
or it might have just been my super sweat rate again requiring the amount of
sports drink that is beyond all normal limits but hard to absorb at that same
rate. Either way, the big island and I
had some time to come to peace afterward and having Kyle with me throughout the
day was a huge reason why I could keep trucking on long after my day was
supposed to be finished.
Some words from one of my athletes, Scott, were a welcome insight into another perspective.
"Adversity introduces us to ourselves. I was more proud to have you as my Coach yesterday than if you had won the whole dang thing. Don't get me wrong I wish you all the best and the race of your dreams but when things all went to hell you kept moving. Anybody can shine when everything is going great, but show me what someone does when it all falls apart and I'll tell you who they are.
You looked into the abyss and you kept putting one foot in front of the other, to me there is nothing more noble. I know something about dark places albeit one of my own making and I know what it takes to keep your feet moving and there aren't many willing to walk through fear and pain.
I don't know why stuff like that happens but I no longer spend a lot of time questioning it. I have found that everything happens for a reason and if I keep putting one foot in front of the other the reason will be revealed. I strongly suspect someday you will be able to draw on Saturday to help yourself or more likely in service to someone you care about.
Whatever the reason, you were a champion on Saturday."
Some words from one of my athletes, Scott, were a welcome insight into another perspective.
"Adversity introduces us to ourselves. I was more proud to have you as my Coach yesterday than if you had won the whole dang thing. Don't get me wrong I wish you all the best and the race of your dreams but when things all went to hell you kept moving. Anybody can shine when everything is going great, but show me what someone does when it all falls apart and I'll tell you who they are.
You looked into the abyss and you kept putting one foot in front of the other, to me there is nothing more noble. I know something about dark places albeit one of my own making and I know what it takes to keep your feet moving and there aren't many willing to walk through fear and pain.
I don't know why stuff like that happens but I no longer spend a lot of time questioning it. I have found that everything happens for a reason and if I keep putting one foot in front of the other the reason will be revealed. I strongly suspect someday you will be able to draw on Saturday to help yourself or more likely in service to someone you care about.
Whatever the reason, you were a champion on Saturday."
12 comments:
Kim,
remember always that you are competing on a world stage, and win or lose, there is a lot to be said about even competing at that level. you are amazing, keep at it!
WOW I LOVE THIS POST!! I hope I get the chance to experience what you did!! Well done!!!! Best wishes from Scotland :)
WOW I LOVE THIS POST!! I hope I get the chance to experience what you did!! Well done!!!! Best wishes from Scotland :)
WOW I LOVE THIS POST!! I hope I get the chance to experience what you did!! Well done!!!! Best wishes from Scotland :)
WOW I LOVE THIS POST!! I hope I get the chance to experience what you did!! Well done!!!! Best wishes from Scotland :)
WOW I LOVE THIS POST!! I hope I get the chance to experience what you did!! Well done!!!! Best wishes from Scotland :)
You inspire me. I had a rough day in my last tri (Boise 70.3 in 2011) but nothing like what you went through. Believe it or not, this inspired me to get back at it. Thank you.
Kim, What an amazing race report. Honest, gut wrenching, uplifting, and life itself. Thank you for writing it - and sharing it. You, and this report, show the reality of a competitor, this sport, the IM, and this specific IM. And it provides the evidence of the champion you are. I look forward to cheering you on in the next one! (a house mate in Boulder)
Awesome job pushing through! The important part is you finished! You are still an IM!!
Thank you for being so brave in your race and in your sharing of your story. There is so much we can all learn from adversity. Your story inspires me daily!
This is amazing, Kim, thank you for sharing. You are an inspiration to me and I am sure many, many people out there.
Thanks for posting this, just came across this on twitter, "Every race I either win or I learn". And you would have felt worst had you DNF, way to be a professional and get your job done!
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