Sunday, September 29, 2013

Wake me up NOW its all over!






Feeling my way through the darkness
Guided by a beating heart
I can't tell where the journey will end
But I know where to start


A week ago today, at this time, I was heading out on the marathon portion of my Ironman Lake Tahoe experience.  As this week has passed I've read blogs, posts, threads, comments, etc about the day, the challenges, the experiences, etc.  It was cold.  It was hilly.  The day was long.  We are crazy. I finished. There are probably hundreds of race reports that can give you temperatures, percentage grades, elevation changes, interesting anecdotes about naked people outside changing tents, the impact of cold water on virile men, food faux pas, bathroom events, etc.  I saw it all, could tell it all, but have a different goal for this recap.

I have spent most of the week thinking about why I signed up in the first place, what it meant to me and why I really have no need to tackle that distance again for a long time--maybe ever.  There are three circumstances under which I can see doing it again..but they are very specific and very concise and better saved for another discussion.

So why?  Why sign up for a fifteen hour day of exercise?  Yes....a day of exercise.  To call it a race, unless you are a pro who's paycheck depends on it or an elite who stands a chances of being tapped for a "no" expense paid trip to Hawaii, is a bit of a stretch.  For every athlete that stepped up to the beach to enter the water on that brisk day, there is a unique and individual reason for doing such a thing.

For me,  it was to remember how tough I am and that perseverance was not something I lost in the divorce.  To remember that I could once again start something and follow it through to completion--a skill I felt I had lost a bit in the last two years.  To trust in myself again and my abilities.  A friend and fellow athlete messaged me prior to the race after reading a post or blog entry I made and asked me..."how could you doubt what a badass you are Jeanne Jones?"  Perhaps at one time I believed I was...although badass probably not a term I would choose. But I had a confidence about my abilities, my skills, what I offered in this world and to my family that was fairly unflappable.  I missed that feeling and wondered where it went.  Perhaps it fades after a process in which everything you knew to be certain or unshakable gets shook and all that you banked on for much of your lifetime (twenty four years) was no longer the same.  It rattled things up a bit and with it my sense of my own "badass"edness dissipated.  So....instead of reading a self help book I decided to do an Ironman.  Not because of the day itself, but because I knew in order to show up at the starting line, the work I would have to do to get there would take me on a return trip to "badass".

I also had a desire to reunite with a community that I had felt separated from--the Fort Worth triathlon community.  After spending years establishing myself as a coach and athlete over in Dallas, I wanted to come "home".  I left my old triathlon world in June of 2012 (ironically about the same time I signed up for Ironman Lake Tahoe) and purposefully went looking for a group I could just train with, be social with and recapture my love of the sport and the lifestyle.  Never to compare HR files, Power outputs, nutrition logs, or any of the metrics that had been ingrained in all I did....but to just train.  To swim for the love of it, ride with friends and run because it made me feel free.  I found a mosaic of training partners--most of whom were NOT triathletes or Ironmen but found encouragement and progress along the path from all.  I did more yoga than weights, had one long bike ride at 90 mi, I only went to Mount Scott once and I NEVER ran longer than ninety minutes--and that I only did twice.  I played racquetball and tennis, skied and went tubing on a boat.  I ate good food, drank great wine and enjoyed myself along the way.  And yet....I finished...and finished strong. Perhaps not fast, but this was never about fast.  And while I only coached one other IMLT athlete (who I must add also finished..and finished strong) I watched my friends beat themselves to a pulp with training, riding, climbing, running, traveling in a way I knew wasn't necessary....but this wasn't about that either.  ;) They didn't ask and I wasn't offering...just making my own journey.   I had trust and comfort in what I knew to be true about training, taught to me by my first coach and echoed in the methods of my current coach and utilized in the way I coach my athletes.  With that trust and faith came the ability to enjoy the process and the people I brought along the way with me and keep the rest of my life in balance:  time for Abby and Aidan, Cass, family, friends and work.

My "whys" carried me through a challenging day but I never felt like I was wrapped up in the overall difficulty.  I took it step by step, stage by stage, probably leaving a fair amount of my emotional uncertainty along the way out there on the course.  With each level accomplished I felt stronger and stronger. I had a check list that I kept ticking through:  1) Survived the swim (holy shit...who gets in the water in 30 degree weather surrounded by snow capped mountains), 2) survived loop one on the bike (Martis Camp-the "unknown" variable sucked..no other way to put it), 3) survived the second loop on the bike (kind of like the movie Groundhog's Day), 4) made the bike cut off and onto the run 5) first half of marathon done...by 8pm.  It was at that moment that I knew, in my heart and the core of all that I am that I would be an Ironman finisher that day.  I had over four hours to finish the event and was running at about a 10min pace--so really only needed about 2:15 hrs.  Even if I slowed down and chatted with friends along the course, even as I stopped and hugged my kids and my mom and dad, even as I danced Gangham Style with the volunteers at the aid stations(and YES, I did dance).....I was going to finish.   And at that moment, I remembered.....I am a badass!  The last thirteen miles were the freest I have felt in three years---free from pain, doubt, fear, regret, uncertainty.....all of it.  I could just be me.  I was Just Jeanne.

I crossed the finish line triumphant--hearing Mike Reilly shout my name--into the arms of my children who put my finisher medal around my neck.  I got a hug and a kiss from my father who's eyes were misty with tears of pride and relief.  I hugged my mom who was equally teary but tried to hide it behind her camera as she snapped countless photos.  Sure I was an Ironman...but more importantly, came a return of all my confidences in me and what I still have left to do in this world in this lifetime.  I know...a lot for just one race, but really three years in the making and part of the process.  Mission accomplished.

Some people sign up to do something "hard"--I don't know that I can say it was "hard"  The course was difficult and challenging, but not "hard".  I consider myself pretty lucky that I really don't have an intimate relationship with what is "hard".   Failed relationships, lost friendships, job challenges, financial "pinches", disappointments, humiliating circumstances.... these things are not "hard".   Sorry to be the balloon buster....but they aren't.  Burying a loved one who is the father of your children...that is hard.  Losing a child...that is hard.  Sending your spouse, sibling, child or friend off to war to defend our country...that is hard.  Watching someone you care about struggle through cancer...that is hard.  We exercised for a day, had help along the way from volunteers (mostly strangers) and got a t-shirt, a hat and a medal at the end.  I am super proud of my accomplishment but think part of why I made it through the day was I never got wrapped up in it being "hard".  But hey....that's just me. As I sit and type that, I am overwhelmed with the thought of that's just life...you keep putting one foot forward, despite not feeling like going on, you just do.  Your life isn't hard...its just your life!

So tomorrow starts the next chapter---lots to do:  get a job, wrap up some house projects, resume my healthy lifestyle, share it with my kids, Cass, his girls, my friends and family.  I feel different.  I feel lighter.  I feel more peaceful.  We can do anything, handle anything and accomplish anything.  Its just in how we look at it and how little we decide its "hard".

I miss Michael Jordan....JUST DO IT!!!

Anyone up for a bike ride--just for fun?


I tried carrying the weight of the world
But I only have two hands
Hope I get the chance to travel the world
But I don't have any plans

Wish that I could stay forever this young
Not afraid to close my eyes
Life's a game made for everyone
And LOVE is the prize









3 comments:

  1. great sentiments! You are incredible!

    ReplyDelete
  2. How awesome Jeanne! You rock, but more importantly, you ROLL!

    ReplyDelete
  3. I love this! Go get 'em, your fantastic life awaits. :-)

    ReplyDelete