Let Me Explain

"If a person's bodyweight is at least 20% higher than it should be, he or she is considered obese. If your Body Mass Index (BMI) is between 25 and 29.9 you are considered overweight. If your BMI is 30 or over you are considered obese." - Medical News Today

That is fact. It's not an opinion on the topic, but merely a definition. I don't believe you have to be skinny to be healthy.

This is about my misadventures in finding a FIT and happy place to be.
Showing posts with label Memphis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Memphis. Show all posts

Friday, March 6, 2020

The Little Marathon That Could...

Okay, so I know somebody wants to hear the entire story of my 2020 Little Rock Marathon experience... right? Well, I promise this isn't going to be just another race report. Those are like super boring. Mostly.

Anyway, if I do this right, you'll be all up in your feels by the time you get to the finish line. Kinda like I was. So grab a cup of coffee or a cup of tea, whatever floats your boat, and get comfy. I don't know how long this is going to take me, but I want to tell the whole story.

I think I'm going to do this blog thing monthly rather than weekly. I feel like I can pack more useful information into a single post, plus it takes too much time to write something worth reading every week. I would like to start adding in my meal prep recipes and workouts, along with the fun theme and song.

Also, I'm totally welcome to feedback. So if there is something you would like to know or would like me to cover, please feel free to email me. It's allisoncassatta@gmail.com. If you want to chat about weight loss, exercise, triathlons, and fabulously stupid things like marathon running, I'm game. I pretty much stay attached to my email so I promise you'll get a response.

Now for the fun stuff...

If you've run a marathon or not, I think everyone can agree 26.2 miles on foot is a lot. It's not something anyone would call easy (not a sane person anyway.) Sure, it becomes less challenging the more you do it, but still far from anything easy. That's why I think the perfect theme for this blog post is "What Doesn't Kill You Makes You Stronger."

I will absolutely be the first person to say your race day experience is what your training makes it. If you slack off on your long runs, you'll pay for it come game day. If you don't log the miles, expect it to hurt. I'll also be the first to admit when I "dog it" as my friend Mike McCord would say. I totally dogged it this time around. I went out of 2019 marathon training, straight into Half Ironman training, straight into 2020 marathon training.

The burnout was real and abundant. I didn't get quite enough long runs in. One twenty miler instead of the two on most training  Whatever, I did one and maintained better than a 12:35 pace. I was going to be okay. But then my hip would hurt after thirty minutes on the treadmill and I would swear I was doomed. So I had concerns. Big concerns. I told myself I wouldn't finish, while telling myself a 5:30 finish was totally doable. Insanity. I know. I had this conversation with myself. <insert a winky face here>

Mentally, I was a mess.

This is the starting line on Saturday morning. I, like a lot of my completely insane friends, decided to do the combo (5K and Marathon) because seriously, if you're going to make the trip, get the extra bling. #nojoke

I practiced control with my pacing, ran the whole 3.1 miles with no walking and negative splits. Felt awesome coming across the finish. No pain. Stretched. Walked it off. Sat down for a bit. Boom. My hip started hurting... @#%$!!!

We went to dinner at this AMAZING little cafe called The Root. Took a Lyft there and walked back. Which was hella smart, because walking it off eased the pain. I woke up the next morning with zero aches, and in a pretty damn good place mentally.

I keep telling my friends they need better friends...

While I was trying not to be all up in my head about my race, my poor friend Cheryl was all up in hers about her first Half Marathon. For those who don't know, that's thirteen-point-one miles, and a pretty daunting prospect if you've never done it before. She had concerns too. Big ones. I did my best to give her a good pep talk, promised she would be okay and she would finish. She was more than ready. It's sometimes easier to tell other people the things you should be telling yourself. We can be our own worst enemies.

She finished right around her goal time, said she felt pretty good the entire race, and isn't put off by the idea of doing another one. Go Cheryl!

Running... It can be a little addictive.

So here goes the big part. The part about extraordinary people doing super hard shit despite their challenges. It started from the moment I lined up in my coral and didn't stop until I crossed the finish line. Remember... what doesn't kill you makes you strong.



I found my pacer, and older gentleman with a welcoming smile and a big personality. He was eager to chat with everyone, and meet everyone who would be running (or attempting to run) this race with him. We had two first-timers and I was honestly excited about that. It can be pretty fun helping someone through their first 26.2. He proceeds to tell us that there may be cameras and news following him. He was doing his 512th full marathon... WITH STAGE FOUR PROSTATE CANCER! Whatttttt....????

I stood there, staring at this man who looked perfectly healthy, and I couldn't speak. Like. Maybe people do this all the time. Like you read stories on the internet of people who overcome massive adversity to conquer insane goals, but how often do you get to spend five and a half hours chatting with them and soaking up all that strength? Well, I didn't get that much time either because I couldn't keep up with him. I lost him around mile fifteen. He honestly made it look easy, like he wasn't struggling for a second. Wow. Just wow.

So I was holding a really good and steady pace for a while. At least half the race. I stayed about two minutes ahead of my pace band, like I wanted to. Fuel was on point. Stomach was good. Weather cooperated. Hip did too... until around mile nine.

The pain was sharp. Like a Charlie horse right in the glute or under the hip bone, or over, or in the front of my thigh. It felt like it was everywhere, to be honest. All over my right hip. I hissed and walked for a bit. Then tried to run for a bit. My brain went straight into surrender mode. Like Allison, don't be an idiot, you can't do this. Of course, my heart knew walking it off helped last night and would surely god help today. My heart is the more stubborn of the two vital organs at least ninety percent of the time, and even that little soldier was ready to raise the white flag. My chin started to quiver. I was going to cry. Stupid. Soggy. Losery. Crying. UGH!!!

No. No crying. Walk it off. Walk it off. It didn't even take half a mile and I was back on my intervals (run three minutes, walk one minute.) Life was good again. I slowed my pace just to be careful, but finishing seemed possible again. Then around mile fourteen-ish, the pain came back. AGAIN. Maybe even a little more relentless than before.

I decided then if I had to, I would walk the rest of the race because I'd gone too many miles not to get that ridiculously huge, ridiculously sparkly medal. My stubbornness can be infuriating and it can be life saving. Life is about balance.

So this guy in a Navy 10NM shirt looks back to me and says, "you okay?"

I was like "yeah, I'm good" in my totally defeated voice. Then I asked him if he was okay because he seemed to be limping just a little bit. That question sparked a conversation, that lead to one of my favorite and most memorable race experiences ever.

BJ, Mike, and Me around Mile 22-23             BJ, Me, and Mike at the Finish    
A lot happened in the almost twelve miles to the finish. My hip hurt off and on, but not nearly as bad as it had. Mike's knee was hurting him, making it really hard to run for any length of time. He attempted Little Rock last year and was unable to finish due to his muscles all locking up on him. He was bound and determined to get that giant medal this year. I told him I would stay with him and we would both finish. Because I'll tell you something, when you're alone and things start hurting, marathon running gets at least fifty percent harder mentally.

Mike and I met another gentleman whose name I didn't get. He was seventy-two years old and running his 16th full marathon. Read that one more time. 72 years old. 16th full marathon. Extraordinary, right? I told him I wanted to be like him when I grow up. He was a cool guy, said Little Rock Parks and Recreation sponsors his running group and they run different parks each weekend. I feel like this dude was special and probably has a fun little tribe. He kept losing his stuff. Lost his phone. Mike somehow managed to bend over, pick it up, and stand upright again. Props to that. Mike gave the man his phone back, and he proceeded to tell us how he'd lost his water bottle full of pickle juice. For those that don't know, it helps with muscle cramps. Mike then gave him his last little bottle of pickle juice. We still had like ten miles to go...

Around mile 20-21, we met BJ. Now, BJ had passed us a while back and was running pretty solid, but he hit that wall that most first-timers hit where another 10k feels freaking impossible. Mike, again, asked "are you okay?" BJ shook his head.

We found out that the decision to do the marathon was a spur of the moment thing for BJ. Now, you might say what kind of fool just decides to do a marathon without training? Well, BJ had made a joke about it in front of the wrong little ears, and there we were. He said his son looked up at him and said "I think you can do it, daddy," and that was all he wrote. BJ was a man who ran three miles a day on a treadmill before work and was now doing a full marathon. What the what?!?! 

Just for the record, he's living proof that it can be done, but it's not gonna be easy.

We rounded the corner after the giant uphill at mile 25, with less than a mile to go and a spectator yelling "make those boys move, Allison!" Sorry, that was cute. I giggled a little. I looked back at them and told them both it was all downhill from there. Beautiful thing, that downhill, because god knows there was plenty going up on that course.

We got closer to the finish and this little human comes running out "Daddy! Daddy!" It was BJ's son. Mike told the kid to come run with us, to get on the course. I joked that he could have Daddy's big, sparkly medal.

The kid grabbed his father's hand and we all started running. Fast. Too fast. Ouch. Ouch. Ouch. Okay, slow down, y'all. BJ's legs went straight and he came to a dead stop. We weren't even a tenth of a mile from the finish. Mike and I both said, "keep moving! Keep moving." If BJ had stopped then, he might not have crossed the finish line. I grabbed his hand and off we went again. 


Mike got his huge medal to hang next to his wife's 2019 medal. 

I got my medal and another #finishingmove (that's a whole story. Adrenaline got the best of me.) 

BJ's son was right. His daddy could do it and the kiddo got to be there for the hardest part of it. 

We all hugged, and I think we all got a little choked up. I met BJ's goofy friends and one of them hugged me and thanked me for sticking with him. I also met his wife and son. 

At the end of the day, we were three strangers selflessly helping each other do something big and all for different reasons. None of this killed us and it definitely made us stronger. For me, it helped my soul (not sole.) My give-up was strong that day and those dudes totally pulled me out of my head. If they needed my help or not, I needed theirs, and that was completely okay. When asked what the most rewarding thing about being part of the running community is, I think the story of my 2020 Little Rock marathon sums it up perfectly. 

Wednesday, September 6, 2017

Marathon Training - Week 11 Wrap Up

Aug 27th-Sept 2nd ~ 25.8 Miles

Day 72 ~ Recovery Run (3.4)
Day 73 ~ WRWM Coaching (3 miles)
Day 74 ~ Boot Camp
Day 75 ~ Base Miles (6.18)
Day 76 ~ Walked 3 miles (after packing the car)
Day 77 ~ Set up camp and ate camp food, then did planks by the river... on my rest day.
Day 78 ~ Long Run (Traded 14 pavement miles for 10.34 gravelly, hilly miles.)

FOOD PREP MEAL -  Chipotle Chicken Quinoa Burrito Bowl

Week eleven already seems so far away, that I had to go back and look at the pictures to remember everything I was feeling/enduring/or fighting to push through the previous week. I'm telling you, three days of quiet time on the river was everything the doctor ordered. Okay, maybe I could've done without the rum and the Fireball, but this girl had needs, and getting sloppy ass drunk was one of them. I'm such a lightweight, however, sloppy ass drunk is one rum and diet coke and a single shot of Fireball. Don't hate me because I'm a cheap date. LOL

It's pretty safe to say that each run felt pretty good. I think the only day I absolutely didn't want to do anything was Thursday, and that had everything to do with having to pack up the car and nothing at all to do with exhaustion from training. So massive bonus there. Boot camp Tuesday morning was even awesome. I had slight pain over my left knee, but Dr. Wonderful took care of that for me.

My long run wasn't 14 miles like it should've been. Mentally, I was there. I was ready to do it. I told myself that just because I wasn't at home didn't mean I couldn't do those miles. That was before I realized that getting out of camp was ALLLLLLL up hill, and I mean up long, tall, gravelly hills. So in reality, for the effort, I might've done 14 miles. I will say that it was a fun and somewhat frightening adventure. My love of horror movies made the adventure better than the run. I'm woman enough to admit that. There are more pictures on my Facebook and Instagram.

The Sunday recovery miles have yet to disappoint. I know its coming. I know that after running 16, 18 or 20 miles on Saturday there will be a Sunday when the thought of pounding pavement will reduce me to tears. Right now, I plan to enjoy the comfortable Sundays, while doing the cross-training needed to make this whole experience a lot less painful.

The best part of the week, however, wasn't the training or eating the bad foods, but the fact that my LARGE InkNBurn singlets finally fit me in a way that I'm not embarrassed to wear. I started out in an 2XLarge, so this is a huge deal for me.

UPDATE FROM THE PREVIOUS POST....

I'm not one who typically likes to wallow in my self-pity. After an inspiring email from my best friend in the entire world, you guys know her as Pookie, I decided to stop making myself more miserable than I needed to be. Or at least try to. To start that process, I reached out to a running buddy who nearly made me puke all over my Mizunos last time I ran with her. In her defense, she was trying to get me to finish a 5k in 28 minutes, in the middle of summer and on a full stomach. We figured out real fast the three things don't constitute a working combination for me.

Anyway, Kirsten is funny as hell, crazy, and loves to talk, and from what I hear can keep me on pace pretty damn good. She has agreed to do the long runs with me, and since she's all like "I can do a 50k for breakfast" I figured she was just insane enough to get up before the sun and run lots of stupid miles with me. Sometimes training is also about regrouping and finding what's going to work for you. Just because things didn't start the way they were supposed to doesn't mean they can't finish with a stellar ending. In December, I expect to have my stellar ending. To quote Michael Jordan...

"You must expect great things of yourself before you can do them."

Friday, July 21, 2017

Marathon Training - Week 4 Wrap Up

July 9th-15th ~ 17.3 Miles

Day 23 ~ Recovery miles
Day 24 ~ 20 min HIIT (WRWM Coaching)
Day 25 ~ Boot Camp
Day 26 ~ Base Miles, 20 min HIIT
Day 27 ~ Base Miles, 30 min HIIT
Day 28 ~ Rest Day
Day 29 ~ Long Run



Still didn't go to dance class Thursday or lift weights on Wednesday night. I've been totally slacking at that. Not because I've wanted to. Adjusting to waking up around 4am to go run has been a challenge. Usually by the end of the work day, I'm beat and I just want to go home and veg out. Week 5, gets worse. I was on vacation... hahaha.

I had one comical day when nothing came together. Everything that could go wrong did go wrong. Well, almost everything. I didn't hurt myself, but this LOUD bug whose nap I ruined nearly gave me a heart attack, but I couldn't check my heart rate because my watched wasn't fully seated on the charger and was dead when I woke up. That would've been day 26. The picture says it all, right? If everything's going wrong, don't panic. Make the best of it.

Women's Run Walk Memphis started up again. This is my second year as a beginner runner coach. I toyed with the idea of coaching the intermediate group--which is comprised of women who've been running and can hold about a 12 minute or better pace. That would've been a good group for me to coach, but the beginner group is where my heart is. I started there two years ago, at least sixty pounds heavier, and truly having no desire to be a runner, and here I am. I NEED to pass that on to the women who showed up exactly like I did because running has probably been one of the most rewarding and empowering things I've done for myself.

Day twenty-nine I was supposed to run with Breakaway Running (only the most awesome running store in Memphis. It's so much more than a running store) but I had to knock my miles out early because my best friend in the whole entire world was getting married at 2pm and I had a two hour drive to get to her!

As a side note, I drank all the coffee but didn't get a chance to read much of the book.

Saturday, July 8, 2017

Marathon Training - Week 3 Wrap Up

Day 16 ~ Cross Training (Spent swimming Spring River. Swimming against the currents was an awesome all over workout.)
Day 17 ~ 3.1 miles (Stars and Stripes 5k)
Day 18 ~ Rest
Day 19 ~ 4 miles
Day 20 ~ 4 miles
Day 21 ~ Rest
Day 22 ~ 10 miles

(Training schedule thanks to Breakaway Running.)

HUMIDITY that, kiddos, is the word of the week. It's been above 90% all week, and if you live in the south you probably know that feels like breathing through a sweaty sock. It's gross. Point blank. <-- ha ha! Wednesday morning it was as bad as 96%. Storms coming through the area have also been messing with everyone's sinuses, so if you can breathe at all right now, consider yourself lucky.

That's not to say everything about the week sucked. Running before the sun even comes up as been nice. It's been a great way to get the happy juices flowing in my brain before going to work. It's been a great way to wake up. Plus, beating the summer heat has been pretty cool too. The neighborhood around my house has some great hills so there's plenty challenge.

WORST PART ABOUT THIS WEEK: Besides the humidity... I didn't get any of my cross training in, save for the swimming on Sunday. The gym was closed Tuesday for 4th of July, so no bootcamp, and that pretty much set the tone for the entire week. I even skipped my beloved dance class. I skipped Seven every single day and there's really no excuse for that. It's literally less than ten minutes of core exercises that I can do in my freaking pajamas. Pajamas on the couch just sounded so much better. I'm holding myself accountable right now. Tomorrow, when I finish my three gentle recovery miles, I'll come home and do the not-so-intense HIIT training. Scouts honor...

BEST PART ABOUT THIS WEEK: Saturday's long run with Daniella. She's always so much fun to be around. She has a light about her, and an incredibly fun personality. I hadn't put that many miles down in a long time, and I felt it the second loop around Midtown. I wasn't properly fueled or hydrated really, but I wasn't racing. The extra miles were just a bonus. I had a great time. It was an awesome way to end the week. Oh! And churros! I love the night before a long run because carbs!

My week of training ended with me standing at the end of my street cheering on runners as they came upon the third mile of the Hope 5k. It' always cool when neighborhood residents come out to cheer runners, even if they're standing out there with coffee in their hands and fuzzy slippers on their feet. I was still drenched from my ten mile run, but I made it home in time to get my booty out there. I had my coffee and my Oofos. Life was good.


Friday, July 7, 2017

I AM BACK!


I know this blog didn't get going well the first time around, and that's totally my fault. I let the petty grumblings of someone I considered a friend and my own insecurities stop me from doing this, from documenting the work and EPIC FUN to be had when one decides to become a runner, but I'm here now to fix that and hopefully encourage someone else to make the brave decision to do something good for their body and soul. 

"Running is not, as it so often seems, only about what you did in your last race or about how many miles you ran last week. It is, in a much more important way, about community, about appreciating all the miles run by other runners, too." - Richard O'Brien

Community is truly at the heart of Memphis Running. I know that probably sounds strange and ten years ago, when I was living in a tiny Mississippi town and walking a four mile asphalt path alone every evening, I never would've thought that anything related to fitness could be so fun and rewarding. I learned this very quickly when I joined Women Run Walk Memphis in 2015 as a beginner runner. 

I'm reminded of that when I go to the fridge to check out my Breakaway Running (a local shop that is so incredibly supportive of the community) calendar and strap my shoes on for my scheduled miles. I'm reminded of that when a friend on Facebook says "going out for five miles, who wants to join me?" or I get a text that says, "can we run tonight?" I'm reminded of that when I'm struggling to get up that last hill and a stranger pats me on the shoulder, tells me "you've got this," and chases my ass all the way to the finish line. Exercising, jogging... those are chores we do to keep us healthy. Running is a way of life. Running is community. And I can't even believe I'm saying this because three years ago I would've rather had all my teeth pulled... but running is fun.

My new adventure in running is to complete the St. Jude Full Marathon. (Click on the picture to your right to donate. Pretty please!) I've never done a full marathon before and frankly, I'm a little freaked out, but I'm going to trust the process and follow the training plan. I'm going to listen to my coach, and I'll remember the advice of a friend... not a single mile you run will be half as hard as what those kids have to go through. Gah. I got chills just thinking about that. So here's to a new goal and a new start (though I'm already 21 days into the training.)

I would like to leave you all with this video, care of Rob Hunter and the Memphis Runners Track Club. I'll admit I was moved to tears when the Women Run Walk and MRTC Kids came up. I volunteer for both those programs every year, and this video made me super stinking proud of the work we do. This video made me fall in love with running all over again!