In the early morning hours of May 5, I was running in familiar territory – the Massanutten Mountains of Virginia. My training had been very focused upon this one day for the past five months. I was poised and hoping for a good day; a PR on a course I know well. 21:37 was the mark I was aiming. Failure was nearly inconceivable.
I discussed dropping at Elizabeth Furnace (mile 33) with my
crew made up of my good friends Pete and Jim.
They urged me to go on. I yearned
only to make to simply to Camp Roosevelt (mile 64) where I would have pacers to
the end. “One aid-station to the next”,
my positive self-talk went. I felt
terrible for having them out there with me.
I slogged on in deep contemplation and assessment of my
mind, body, and soul. In the end, it
just wasn’t my day and I put myself out of misery at Habron Gap (mile 54) after
13-hours on the course. I thought about
all this failure meant: Nullification of
my sacrifice of training time away from my family and the loss of 5-years
accumulated tickets for Western States. In the end, I could do no more; or I would not do any more. Whichever it was, it mattered not.I have had plenty of time to dwell upon my failure. My conclusion is that I simply have too many life stresses to focus on training and running 100-miles for the next few years. I believe I was over-trained. On paper I believe my training was spot on – running slightly over 1,000 miles since January with a high level of quality and specification for MMT. What I did not account for was the accumulation of stress from work and home. I have two young children at home and that’s comes with its own myriad of stresses – good and bad – but my job has become increasingly demanding and stressful over the past few years. Unfortunately, I can do nothing about either currently. Guilt constantly riddles and haunts me – my life it not my own.
In conclusion, I still love to run and I still love to race
ultras. I love my wife and two sons
even more though and I value my career and the difference I am making in my community. Sacrifices must be made and some dreams must
be put on hold. It’s simply a season of
life to take care of first things first.
So 100-milers . . . until we meet again old friend!
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