The main story of today ended up being the weather. It was *quite* a bit warmer and more humid than I expected when I signed up for a mid-November race in Mt. Airy, NC.
It was in the mid-60s--and mostly running in direct sunlight--by midway through the race, where lately most of my running has been in the 40s and low 50s, with a little in the 30s. My body wasn’t ready for this today, y’all!
So, my 1:51 time wasn’t as good as I’d envisioned back when I signed up for this race, but given the conditions, it wouldn’t be accurate to say that I’m disappointed in the performance. It was nearly six minutes faster than my HM in April when the temperature was around 20 degrees cooler than this morning, so that would indicate that I’m quite a bit more fit than I was 7 months ago. And as far as race strategy/execution, I had pretty even splits overall, was able to finish strong, passing quite a few folks in the last mile and a half or so, and never got passed down the stretch. Given the speed of my last full mile and the number of people I passed, it’s fair to wonder if I was a bit too conservative early on, but that’s a minor quibble. (I mean, I was slowing down at the end and I couldn’t run the final .1 miles as fast as I ran mile 13, so clearly I didn’t have THAT much gas left.
I guess all in all, the running/life lesson here is that when you do the best you can despite challenging circumstances, the results may not be as good as you’d hoped for, but you can still be happy with the process. (And after all, I’m supposed to be in this for health/fitness reasons, not fast times. It’s not easy or natural for this heavily numbers-oriented guy to make peace with that, but I’m getting better!
)
I’ve got some work to do in the next 14 weeks if I want to be proud of my first marathon time. (Surely it won’t be warm in mid-February, right?????) Looking forward to it.