Sunday, November 27, 2011

Starting again

So it's time to start over... again... Yep! I had to restart this year. I had just gotten back to running when I fell. No not running. I slipped on the ice in a parking lot in late January/early February. I didn't think much about it at the time. However, as I got to higher mileage it started to show. Then in April I had some long runs close together that wound up on very hilly courses. On a Sunday it was 16 miles at Tan-Tar-A. Tuesday was hill repeats on Ogg Rd. Saturday was 20 miles downtown with some long steep hills. Tuesday was Ogg Rd again. On the 20 miler I had some discomfort in my foot and had to walk most of the last 3 miles. The hill repeats weren't too bad until the last one. I could barely get up the hill.

So I went to the doc on Wednesday. He said it was a stress fracture of the second metatarsal. Great! Oh but even better - he said "that ankles not right - you should go see your surgeon again." Fabulous! I couldn't get in to see the surgeon until the second week of June. This time the surgery had to wait until July 20. My schedule - his schedule and the holiday just wouldn't let it work out any sooner. Same thing as last time only not as bad. Just torn and "stretched" tendons, the ligaments were not severed as on my left ankle last year. That should make this go even faster for healing, right?

Wrong... Last time I had only been off of running for the 6 weeks. This time I had been off since May 1 (I attempted the Lincoln Marathon with a stress fracture - not good. Cut it off at the half!) It would be September before I was allowed to run. In the meantime, I had started walking the hills again. The Ogg Rd hill... it's a bear. It's the hill that the local runners use to train for mountain trail races. If you can run Ogg, you can run most anything. I started meeting the group on Tuesday's around August 9. Yes... I'm stubborn but I was just walking. Well as much walking as can be done on the steep downhill! Definitely walking uphill.

When I went in for my checkup on September 6 - my leg was infected. The upper incision had not healed. Bummer. No running for another month. I was prescribed an antibiotic - Bactrum (something like that) By Thursday I was having a complete and total allergic reaction to it. Apparently it happens in body heat and sunlight... Definitely ingredients for Ogg Rd in the fall! I had to go to the ER to get a shot to stop the reaction. It took about 7 hours for the itching and hives to go away! I can't recall ever being that miserable!

Back to the surgeon in October and I'm released! YIPPEE! Good thing since I had started running downhill in September! SHHH don't tell! It's much more painful to walk down hill. So now Koach can officially put running on my schedule and start to slowly build me back up. Most runs are more of a run/walk. Trying to keep the distance building while increasing my endurance. This is like starting from the beginning. The hardest part is that my head knows I should be able to run it all - including the hills. AND at the same time my head knows that I'm starting over and will eventually get there. But it's a struggle. Some days are really hard. Some days I can run mostly like before either surgery.

There will be good days and bad days. Right now the good days are starting to take over. It's exciting and can't wait to get back to the trails! That will be in December... if I can wait!

Believe,
Bobbi

Monday, January 17, 2011

Better Nutrition Equals Better Performance

I am learning sooo much about nutrition. Ok.. I was ahead of the game in many ways by being a veghead for the last 15 years. And I had already gone to using extra virgin olive oil for most of my cooking even before that. I’m allergic to dairy. NO… not lactose intolerant but allergic.. you know.. hives! My dairy allergy would also manifest like a bad sinus infection. Problem is/was I LOVE cheesecake and lattes! I have also been allergic to many chemicals throughout my life some we still don’t know. Being around overly perfumed women is really tough for me. They just have to walk by and for many years there was one phone at school that I couldn’t use. Yeah… it’s that bad!



So needless to say, I already knew the health benefits of things like organic food, the variety of herbs for healing, etc. I simply didn’t always put things into practice. Mostly I did this because of what others would think. I am ashamed to admit that. People who follow the natural path for food/clothing/cleaning etc. are typically very liberal. I am not… I wanted to be healthy but did not want to be placed in the liberal category. In a conversation once, a new friend said to me “you’re tree hugger too???” No, I’m more of a conservationist but we were in a bar and that was not a good time to try to explain the semantics of the two.


As you may have read in the early post on my Plan for 2011, I am moving to a raw vegan lifestyle. Not because of animals (although I do love them) but for health reasons. Oh and the conservationist in me! I think by taking care of yourself with organic whole foods you can have an impact on the environment. Research is showing that medium sized organic farms are more sustainable that large factory farms. I try to eat locally whenever possible. The best resource I have for that is Door to Door Organics. They are a great company that delivers organic fruits and veggies to my door step. I get the bitty box delivered bi-weekly. I usually add a couple items. They allow you to sub up to 3 items per shipment and you can set your profile to say never send certain items (for me that’s regular potatoes!) Once when there was a problem with an item that was supposed to be in the weeks shipment they sent out an email saying if you have already received the item (leaf lettuce) they would credit your account or if your shipment was to come still you could sub an additional item or take the credit. How cool is that?!?! But what has been great is that it forces me to eat some things I might not ever pick up in the store. And since I don’t want them to go to waste, I certainly eat them. It has made me plan some meals better and to add more variety to what I eat.


Sooo what’s all this have to do with running? The old cliché “you are what you eat” comes into play here. My first event was put on by the Lawrence Trail Hawks (Coleen’s Frozen Fat Ass) and I did great! I was not sore and felt as if I could have done another loop. I had spent the previous two weeks eating a basically raw vegan diet. I did eat some warm winter soups and we did have one night out for Mexican. And as usual I had my Isagenix. But overall I was raw and if not raw it was vegan. I have found Pure bars and LOVE them. Over time I will be researching ways to include raw natural products into my training. I will keep you posted!

Believe!
bat

PS - check out the app at the bottom on what fruits and veggies are in season!

Monday, January 10, 2011

A Great Start!


FYI this is NOT a race report…


After spending an entire year not doing any events, starting the year at Coleen’s Fat Ass on January 07 was the way to do it! I did not make the decision until about 6:00 AM Friday and the start time was 7:00 PM. On her Facebook invitation I had originally responded “Maybe” – I wanted to but wasn’t sure.


I have been running trails with my friend Cheri in Liberty but we had not run more than 2.25 miles on a trail. My longest run since surgery had been 5.8 miles and it was on a pretty easy road. Sooo… when Koach sent out his email about our Saturday training run on Thursday, I responded to see if he needed waterstop help. It was a 10 mile route that I was leery of. I know that he would find a different way for me or pick me up somewhere if needed but I really hate to do that. If I can’t run the route I don’t like being dependent on him to pick me. That’s not fair to someone who might really need his help. In my email I said I’d just run my scheduled 6 miles on Sunday after Mass if he needed help. But as I sent the email, I made plans to call him and ask about doing two 3.2 mile loops at the Fat Ass. I had all my points lined up… I was already scheduled for 6… I would walk the hills… it’s not a technical course – cross country teams run them. So when I talked to Koach Friday morning on my way to school I explained what I wanted to do. He said “Yes” he could use the help and was ok with doing the event. I was excited ALL day! The kids in my classes even asked what was up!


I changed my Facebook invitation to say I would be there and shortly thereafter got a message from Coleen saying to expect I big hug! I have not run with Coleen since before she ran Leadville 100 in August 2009. She and a small group of girls (eventually some guys) would run the hill on Ogg Road in Shawnee Mission Park. It’s a great hill for training! Anyway, she did Leadville then went to Australia for a number of weeks (6ish maybe?) to visit family. By the time Coleen returned I was done running for 2009 (I was in a boot) and 2010 was all about PT, surgery, recovery and a slow buildup.


As a matter of fact, I hadn’t run any trails since September 2009. I hadn’t seen many of my trail friends throughout that time. Cheri runs with RIT on Saturday’s and we do other things together every now and again… we were running trails once a week at the end of 2010. But all the others… my only contact was Facebook. That’s just how life works…


Anyway… I was very excited to see so many people. Since this is a Fat Ass event there really is no support. There is no timer which is what I needed. I just wanted to run without concern for speed. I could walk when I needed to. This helped make it a perfect re-entry into doing events.


They did have Heed and water but there is no swag, no awards, etc. I told Coleen I’d bring Roasted Pumpkin Soup (it’s a vegan soup). I dashed home from school and began the soup. I added some roasted butternut squash also. It was perfect! As the soup simmered, I got all my running gear together… WOW when you don’t run often it’s amazing how things sometimes get scattered! I found all that I needed, put the soup in a crockpot and headed to Olathe Prairie Center.


When I arrived at the Prairie Center, I was greeted by cheers and hugs. I met several people who I had only known by name. It was great to see many others… Debbie, Julie, Gary…


The best part about the trail/ultra runner community is that no matter what our other differences and no matter how long it’s been everyone is glad to see you. They are also they best support system a person could ask for. No one cared that I was hoping to complete just 2 loops. Nor did they care that I intended to walk part of it. Those that “lapped” me were encouraging as they went by. When I finished people congratulated me for what I had done. I wanted to do more but knew better than to push it. (I actually think I would have been fine since I was walking the hills and whenever else I needed.) I stayed to see some of my friends finish their mileage and to chat for a little while.

It was a great start to a new year... as another runner friend said once "a success story waiting to happen."