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Monday, July 20, 2015

Virginia in Vignettes

Bonfire!

Blackbird singing in the dead of night…” was always the start to a good night, at home or in along the Blueridge Parkway. Singing and interpretive dancing around a fire was especially exciting!

One of the joys of small town life is finding ways to entertain yourself. I suppose the same is true for nearly all college students, regardless of the geographic setting, but there were so many memories I treasure that came from my small town college experience. Like bonfires.



The sound of guitar strumming and gentle singing subtly shifted to watchful contemplation of the fire. Which lead to interesting observations about the wafting smoke rising from the fire. Which lead to giggling interpretive dance – including for the still strumming guitarist.

Thursday, July 9, 2015

Lake Winnipesauke, New Hampshire

“I’m sailing! I’m a sailor!”

That is usually the first thought I have when I think of Lake Winnipesauke, NH (thanks Bill Murray!) But, as much as I love What About Bob, my personal connection to Lake Winnipesauke is deeper.



While I was settling into life as a grad student in Boston I was trying to figure out how to have some balance in my life. One day a good friend of mine invited me to go to a party. Turns out this party was not like most parties. This was a feet themed party – “sweet feet” was the theme. There were even feet shaped gingerbread cookies. And the goal was to convince people (against their better judgment, and coerced by recent consumption of sugar ;) to commit to running a half marathon on team Sweet Feet.

I was convinced I was only there for the cookies, and maybe to make a few new friends. But, after watching the inspiring video about the team from the previous year there was a glimmer of possibility. Who doesn’t want to be a part of something bigger than themselves? Or to conquer a fear or something that seems impossible?

When I left I told myself something crazy: if I could get up the next morning and run the mile from my apartment to Davis Square and back without stopping, I would pay the significant sum ($45 – hey, I was a poor, starving student!) and commit to the race.

Just to add a little perspective, in college I had taken a jogging class. Our final was a 10k, which at that point was the farthest I’d ever run at one time. So, this was going to about double that distance if I committed to the half marathon. And even more telling, I was committing to get up in super early to run outdoors. In Boston. In February. It was a wicked cold and snowy winter, and I think part of me was sure that there was no way I could succeed, and then I’d be off the hook from running.

Somehow, I pulled myself out of bed and pulled on warm running clothes and headed out the door. I got to Davis Square okay, and then when I turned around to run back I knew it was going to be rough. When I stopped at the top of my street to stretch and then walk home, I thought I was going to die! My lungs no longer knew how to function. Even though I had run there and back, I was sorely tempted to give up right then based on how terrible my mile run had gone.

Then I mapped it. Turns out I’d actually run 2.25 miles. Say what!?! I knew I had to do it – I had doubled my required distance, and at the halfway point I had felt fine.

Three months and dozens of miles later, I was picked up by my carpool and we made our way up to New Hampshire to run 13.1 miles.

I started out running with two friends who are much faster than I am. After about a mile I knew if I was to meet my goal of running the whole time, I couldn’t stick with them too much longer. After about another mile they knew that if they were going to meet their goal of running in under 2 hours they could no longer stay with me. So I waved them on, and found myself alone in the middle of a crowd of people.

Since I had trained almost entirely alone, I didn’t mind running alone during the race either. The scenery was magical. I loved running along that lake. I loved having trees overhead for so much of the course. And I was incredibly grateful for the terrible hill coming up Chestnut Ave near my first place in Boston – turned out I was better prepared for the hills along the course than I had anticipated.

Running was also such a great, introspective time for me, and it was powerful for me to look back over the months of training and preparation that led up to that moment.

As I approached the end, I was very proud of myself. Even when I signed up, I felt this goal was absolutely unreachable. And here I was, so close to completing this seemingly insurmountable challenge.

With the finish line in sight, I realized this was one of the first things I did 100% for me. Not because someone expected me to. Not because it would make it more likely for me to reach some different goal. But because I wasn’t sure I could do it, and I wanted to try.

I cried as I crossed that finish line and realized just how true it is that we can do hard things if we put in the effort and time.

I often wear the shirt they gave me as a reminder – hard things can be done!