Ironman Cairns 2015 Race Report

A five week taper is not necessarily the best approach to achieve what one hopes to be their fastest Ironman to date…but that is exactly what I was facing as I woke up on race morning, June 14. 

Because I had to back out of racing Ironman Texas 70.3 in April due to an extreme reaction to seasonal allergies and resulting bronchitis, Coach Cliff and I put the May 17th Challenge Knoxville race on the schedule.  I was excited to race Challenge Knoxville, mostly because it meant I got to see my sister, but also, because I love this race course and love racing Challenge Family races.  Five weeks out from IM Cairns (one week from Challenge Knoxville), I tapered for the Knoxville race.  Knoxville was an unremarkable race for me in that I did not have a great race in the pouring rain; it was just kind of…blah.  That being said, I had a VERY remarkable pre-race as I kept the anxiety way under control -- told it to take a hike and it listened this time! 

 

Returning from Knoxville on Monday morning, I had a day of rushing through airports, missed meals, a very hungry belly and a near miss of my last flight.  As I was rushing to reach my connection gate, I grabbed a cheeseless pizza, ran onto my flight and then was told that I had to eat the pizza before the doors closed.  Ugh.  I had no hand sanitizer, could not get up to wash my hands and therefore I had two choices, let them throw out my pizza and endure the 2.5 hour flight having not eaten since early that morning (“hangry” wouldn’t even BEGIN to describe how I was feeling at that moment) OR, eat my pizza with hands that have probably touched every germ in the Charlotte airport.  Double UGH.  I said a quick prayer and swallowed the pizza whole. 

Tuesday morning, three weeks and five days out from IM Cairns, I woke up feeling like someone had taken a brillo pad to my throat.  Crap, crap, C-R-A-P.  I got up, ate Wellness like it was candy, shoved oranges down my throat two-at-a-time and just hoped a day or two of rest would be all that I needed.  I was at the acupuncturist every other day.  Meanwhile, those one or two days off stretched into seven days.  I have never been so sick in my life.  It was the most horrendous phlegmy-cough that kept me up all day and all night, even WITH the codeine cough meds.  Clearly, going home from Charlotte airport an emaciated, starving mess would have been a better choice over eating that pizza with my germy fingers.  Even as I got back on the saddle, basically giving me one good week of training before leaving for Australia, I had to cut many workouts short and could not go at intensity because I was overwhelmed with coughing fits.  The swimming was the worst.  Biking and running was fine as long as I didn’t stop, but the swimming was just this: breath/hack/stroke, repeat.  I was able to get one or two good runs in and a solid day of bike training, which gave me a boost of confidence as I prepared my belongings for the long journey Down Under.

I am grateful that I was able to fly first class over to Australia, which involved a Benadryl-induced sleep coma, so I woke up in Brisbane refreshed and ready to tackle the three-hour ride scheduled for that day.  I was absolutely THRILLED to see that my bike and luggage had made it to Brisbane, and I dragged it all through customs and hopped on my connection into Cairns, eager to meet my lovely homestay hostess, Nerida.  I arrived in Cairns at noon, and as Nerida’s house was literally five minutes from the airport, we made it back quickly to her place.  She kindly held my bike frame while I built up my bike without trouble.  I then set off to ride with my new Cairns training buddy, Nerida’s co-worker, Lena for a good two hour easy ride. 

Riding on the opposite side of the road…not necessarily something that I would consider an arduous task, but pair that with a brain that has NO IDEA what time it is and having to go around traffic circles in the opposite direction and that yields a girl who looks like she is riding a bike for the first time in her life.  Lena, the most perfect riding companion that a girl with the gift of gab could ask for, led us north on Captain Cook Highway and then into the village of Palm Cove- where the swim start of IM Cairns was going to be.  The sea looked: ANGRY.  Lena says, “don’t worry, it’ll calm down for race day.”  Lena and I chatted the whole way back and then I threw on my running shoes and did a quick 30-minute run on the course.  It was dark, but the pier at the Cairns Esplanade was super safe with many families grilling and other runners/walkers taking advantage of the exercise path. 

The rest of the ten days leading up to the race were pretty uneventful.  Training days were going OK; I definitely felt more sluggish than I usually feel pre-race which made me uncomfortable.  I definitely felt like I had lost some fitness from the killer watts I was throwing down right before Challenge Knoxville, but I just shrugged it off as a jet-lag thing.  I knew FOR SURE that this race was going to be amazing.  I did not have the slightest concern for the powerhouse FPROS I would be facing on June 14.  Foof made it into town a couple days after me, which was nice.  I quickly realized that not only did I really have THE BEST hostess in the whole world, but also she had introduced me to THE NICEST temporary training partner: Lena (who would also be racing IM Cairns, her first iron-distance race).  Nerida made sure that everything was taken care of, and since she worked for the main IM Cairns sponsor, she was very knowledgeable about where I needed to be and when.  She even knew that when I came home with nothing but my bib numbers from registration that I needed to get right back up there and get the back pack that I should have been given when I checked in.  She drove me on the bike course, which, other than a couple of butt-kickers looked fairly flat-ish.  Foof and I took one of the pre-race days to slowly travel 15,000+ feet above sea level (we were at sea level in Cairns) in the Skyway gondola above the treetops of the rainforest, stopping and learning about the rainforest along the way.   Then we took the Kuranda Railway back down to Cairns.  The first two days I was in Cairns, the weather was BEAUTIFUL.  Although it is winter in the Southern Hemisphere right now, going to Far North Queensland in winter is like going to Florida in the winter for us Northern Hemisphere folks.  With about a week prior to race, the rain set in, and it just didn’t seem to want to move on. 

We made a last minute decision to stay at a nice resort in Palm Cove the night before the race, since the race start was 30 minutes north of Cairns (where Nerida lives), which is where transition 2/bike finish/finish line was.  Good decision- this afforded me an extra hour of sleep and the opportunity to just roll right out of bed to the beach start!!  The night before, I had my chat with Coach Cliff, we had dinner early and then I prepared my special needs bags and bike/run bottles with my nutrition.  I have been doing the same thing for every race and it works for me: all liquid nutrition with Carbo-pro/nuun/Base salt in the bike bottles and then a lick of Base salt and cups of Gatorade and water at every aide station on the run.   Mistake numero uno: NEVER TRY ANYTHING NEW ON RACE DAY.  You’d think I would heed my own damn advice.  I did not do my research, just assumed that IM Cairns would be serving Gatorade on the run course like all Ironman races.  You know what they say about assuming.  It makes an ass out of…well, it just make me a total ass.  Different country, different carbohydrate bevvie on the course.  I did NOT want to drink the Enduro, not because it wasn’t delightfully refreshing, but because I was not about to try it out for the first time for 26.2 miles and hope that my stomach was OK with it.  Because I was not able to carry enough bottles on my Fuel Belt, even WITH stopping at special needs to reload halfway through the run I decided to make two super-concentrated 8 oz. flasks of Gatorade that would sustain me, calorie-wise, all the way through the marathon run.  In theory, my genius Gatorade slime solution was the perfect solution.  In the belly, that slime did not operate as I had expected, but more on that later.

As I was preparing to settle down and get some sleep someone I know said some super ugly things to me via text, which ate away at my brain ALL NIGHT LONG.  I did not get one wink of sleep in the night before the race and what is worse, I let this RIDICULOUS situation completely erode the pre-race zen-like state I was in.  I got out of bed the next morning to even more angry texts, at which point I asked Foof to block the number all together, because I could not be dealing with that horse shit right before I am about to swim 2.4 miles, bike 112 miles, and then run a damn marathon.  Why this person chose to start trouble before I was about to partake in a grueling 9+-hour day of RACING, I will never know.  I am not just playing pick-up sticks for over nine hours when I do these races; I am pushing my body to its limits ALL DAMN DAY.  Therefore, I ask this of anyone who feels that have an ax to grind with me: could you PLEASE let it wait until AFTER I have raced??

Needless to say, I had a MAJOR setback as far as pre-race anxiety goes that morning.  I was in a full-on tailspin into panic attack and despite trying my diaphragmatic breathing techniques, meditation, even a quick jog -- I just couldn’t get the “ick” of everything that had transpired in the previous ten hours out of my head.  Foof and I began walking down to the race start and FINALLY I was able to pull back on the anxiety.  I felt exhausted from the attack I had experienced, but was proud of myself for being able to eventually pull out of the panic attack before it got to the point of no return. 

Staring out at the sea about 30 minutes prior to the pro women’s race start, it looked like it had calmed a bit since that first day Lena and I had seen it.  We were called to the beach start and without ANY warning, the horn went off.  The start felt jolted -- I was expecting at least a, “OK ladies, you have 30 seconds before the horn goes off.”  This swim course was unlike any I have ever done.  We swam out and around two buoys in a rectangle fashion to the other end of the beach, run around a timing mat at the waters edge and get back in to head back to where we started; however, on the way back, we followed buoys that traced an “M” pattern through the ocean.  Draw a picture during your Ironman swim, check.  The first 200-300 yards were not too bad, the water felt calm and I felt that my handle of things was OK.  However, for me, it felt like it quickly changed after that.  The water seemed rougher, the swells felt bigger.  The garmin file from the swim leg shows a SWOLF change, and my pace drop.  My mind was STILL swirling with that argument and I was losing that main pack of women.  I angrily got through the swim, feeling pretty wiped out.  THANK GOD for some of the best volunteers I have ever run into, as they talked me out of giving up.  I was fully prepared for that swim to take longer than what I had hoped, since I missed so much swim training in the last few weeks, but was NOT prepared to have to fight through the ocean like that.  I ran through, picked up my bike on the glorious red carpet laid down throughout the bike racks and took off on a 112 mile spin. 

Swim split: 1 hour 4 minutes

The bike course had us riding north along the coast of the Great Barrier Reef, up ranges that lent glorious views of the South Pacific to the athletes and into the town of Port Douglas, where we met screaming spectators.  We then headed south back to a point just north of Palm Cove and turned around to do the Palm Cove/Port Douglas loop again before heading to the bike finish in Cairns.  I can’t say I was feeling particularly strong or solid on the bike, but things got far worse when the wind and rain set in.  I was very cold -- shivering at times, couldn’t see from the pelting rain and nearly went down several times from slick road conditions.  My left adductor was VERY tight and I think it was at about mile 80 that I just felt like giving up.  There were no competitors to be seen, except for the female age-grouper that took full advantage of drafting off my wheel.  The headwind was so wicked from Palm Cove to Cairns and although I needed to get that last bike bottle of nutrition in, I just couldn’t.  I wasn’t sweating, wasn’t absorbing the calories and so there was nothing else going into my system at that point.  I FINALLY reached Cairns and got off my bike about 25 minutes AFTER what I had expected to do, and thought for SURE there was no way I would have anything left to start the marathon.

Bike split: 5 hours, 47 minutes

Exiting transition, my legs were surprisingly (or not surprisingly, I guess) fresh and ready to rip off around a 7 min-mile pace.  I just figured I would go with this pace for as long as I could.  I mean, what did I have to lose -- as far as I knew, I was in last place and out of the money.  I saw Foof and Nerida within the first mile; he told me I was in 9th place and at least 7 minutes up on the 10th place FPRO- yay, I might still be taking home a paycheck, I just need to finish!  He did not know how far ahead 8th place was.  So I continued on my plan of staying around the 7min-mile, hoping maybe it would get me up to 8th place.  My original marathon pace was suppose to be around this pace, and although my swim and bike paces that we originally had planned on (prior to the illness) were so clearly not possible immediately after I started each of those portions of the race, my run is SOLID.  My heart rate wasn’t out of control and I felt good, almost e-a-s-y.  I was consistently getting that squirt of Gatorade and a lot of water after each 1.5km, as well as my Base salt, but I was feeling that left adductor more and more.  I maintained my 7 min-mile pace, with a couple 6:50 minute miles here and there.  Hearing spectators vocally applaud and praise my obviously strong run was such a boost.  I am so eternally grateful for the gift of reliable running legs.  I was bombing right through that three-loop course, but somewhere around mile 12, my stomach started that gurgling—gurgling that I am sure could be heard over cheering spectators.  I took a quick 20 second walk break, said a little prayer for my angels to help ease my discomfort and took the pace back up.  The sour stomach got worse, much worse.  I had to abandon my Gatorade slime altogether by mile 13.  By mile 15, Foof was giving me the go ahead to dial my pace back because 10th place was nowhere near me.  I took my pace down to 8:15 min-miles to see if I could get some of the nutrition to absorb as I had a VERY bloated belly.  I was hurting; I hadn’t gotten the nutrition I needed and I could feel it.  My legs ached, especially my left adductor and left soleus/Achilles attachment.  I came around for one more loop of the run course and have never been so happy to see a finish line.  In the end, those last couple of miles were around 8:30 min-miles, I just didn’t have any fuel left and I felt really nauseous.  I pushed myself as hard as I could and unfortunately, the loss of fitness over the preceding 4.5 weeks, coupled with an incredibly lousy nutrition plan on the run, did me in.

Run split: 3 hours, 26 minutes

Going into this race, I had such high hopes.  My training in Florida this winter was rock-solid and I was running paces and pushing watts I had never seen before.  I fought DAMN HARD on race day just to stay in the game and I suppose, all things considered, I didn’t do too badly for having lost most of the training in the final five weeks.  Things happen, and that is just the nature of this profession; it can be overwhelmingly ceremonious and rewarding or it can be heartbreaking and disappointing.  I am not an excuse maker.  I gave what I had for the day and it wasn’t good enough. But a couple of things went right that day: I pulled myself out of near disaster anxiety levels and I was able to hold onto some AWESOME run paces feeling comfortable running them … before I shit the bed.  As much as I want to just say forget it and quit, as I type this I am listening to one of my favorite artists -- Peter Gabriel -- sing “don’t give up” to me.  And so, I will continue on for another race and see if I can FINALLY pull off that which I know I am capable.

The day after the race, it was nice to spend time with Nerida and Lena at the award ceremony, climb the stairs to take my position on my first ever professional podium spot and know that I was the pro that would be representing my great nation on that podium.  As we all stood on stage, Ange Castle (8th place FPRO) turned to me and said, “Hey, yesterday was a tough day…congrats on sticking it out!”  Thanks, Ange- thanks for reminding me that sometimes it isn’t about what place you earn, but just about having the guts to tough out what otherwise seems impossible.  Impossible is nothing. 

2015 Puerto Rico 70.3 Race Report

Puerto Rico 70.3 2015 Race Report

I got two hands, one beating heart, and I’ll be alright, I’m gonna be alright. (Ingrid Michaelson)

I have spent enough time wrestling over the idea of whether or not I should write a race report for a race that the casual observer would think was nothing extraordinary.  In fact, on paper the swim, bike and run splits look kind of lousy for a professional.   However there is one thing that went VERY right which my overall finish time does not show…and that is my mental state leading up to the moment the cannon went off.

Foof has been bugging me for weeks now: “will you just write the damn report?!?”  Why should I write a race report for a race result that was pretty lame?  I am not one of the well-known professional triathletes.  I am Kate Bruck…I mean, how many people (besides my family, and closest friends) actually READ my race reports?  Why would the random passer-by of my website even care to click on the link for this report?  These are all questions that have passed through my mind in thinking about what I could write to describe my 2015 Puerto Rico 70.3 race.  What I realize is that not all race reports need to go over the minute details of the actual race execution by the athlete in order to be interesting, or more importantly, useful to a reader.

There is something about me that only those closest to me know—and that is that in addition to a multitude of other symptoms, I have suffered from crippling anxiety for most of my life.  I am not quite ready to tell my whole story just yet, and to be honest, even opening up about the anxiety that has all but stopped me in my tracks during the most important moments of my life is kind of scary too.  I have had people tell me that I am making it up.  I have had people tell me that I am just weak and can’t handle pressure.   There have even been a few people who have stopped talking to me because I opened up about my mental disorder.  Would you tell a type-1 diabetic they are weak because they cannot regulate their blood sugar on their own?  Would you stop talking to someone with hyperthyroidism because they have to take medication to regulate their thyroid?  Of course not!!  However, the stigma that still prevails in our society regarding mental disorders and mental illness opens up those of us who suffer from it to ridicule and misunderstanding.

So the short of it is, my finish time was 4 hours, 54 minutes- a time slower than some of my race finish times when I was still racing as an amateur.  However, as I have already stated, the finish time was not the victory of the day.  Starting a race with a manageable level of anxiety made me a winner on March 15th.  Starting my race in the state of mind that was in that morning did not come without A LOT of hard work.  I have spent almost a year tackling all of the ugly that has lain well below the surface of my consciousness.  Unbeknownst to most people I know (save for those closest to me), I have battled and fought with paralyzing anxiety for as long as I can remember.  It has been something that I have just kind of lived with and suffered through in pretty much every moment of my life.  As a kid, I was a worrier and VERY anxious.  I was scared…of everything.  When middle-school and high-school came along, my anxiety only intensified.  Before every swim meet, coach always knew to send someone into the bathroom to find me for my next event.  In college I used to worry myself to tears and hysteria before big tests.  Months before my wedding, I suffered from panic attacks that made me feel like I literally was about to die.  Post-college, while working in the corporate world, the panic attacks intensified and were more frequent.  It also had me feeling VERY depressed for days.  I just wanted to be normal.  Finally I went to see a psychiatrist.  After trialing at least a dozen different medications, I found that Zoloft helped.  The panic attacks melted away.  Life became somewhat normal again.  I started sleeping better.  But as relieved as I was that the panic had subsided, the CONSTANT invasive worrying mind was always present and I felt like a zombie.  It’s like I had no emotions.  I eventually weaned myself off of the Zoloft and thankfully, even though my overactive worrying hamster was still working at all times of the day, the panic attacks did not return.  I was kind of on auto-pilot…but there was still some pretty ugly stuff that I needed to confront.  I knew it was there, but who wants to confront the ugliest, darkest, most hateful memories and feelings within themselves??  So I just ignored it.  If I started feeling like the panic attacks were bubbling up again, I would go for a long run.  I started running more races.  I decided to start running marathons.  Running was my savior.  For as long as I can remember, running has been my “safe place.”  The place I went when I needed to get away from the pain.  Running was my buddy, my best friend, my confidant, my therapist, my punching bag and my feel-good drug.  She was-  and is- always there for me.  She lets me know it’s going to be OK.  She tells me I’m beautiful.  She tells me I’m strong.  She tells me no one can hurt me.  She protects me.  She erases all of the ugly things that were ever done or said to me, because damn it…when I am running, I am a warrior; I am untouchable.  Running is this indescribable person, place, feeling, emotion that I had just for me.  Through all of my running, I met a wonderful training partner who suggested I do an Ironman with her.  I started racing triathlon and felt that pre-race anxiety increasing with each one until it was back to the level that left me hiding in the bathroom prior to high school swim meets.  It would start up days and sometimes weeks before the race, and intensify as race day drew closer.  My pre-race anxiety was absolutely paralyzing.  I couldn’t breathe, I couldn’t feel my limbs, I would sob, dry-heave and have major GI distress.  I was terrified.  I would shake uncontrollably and the constant ringing in my ears was so pervasive that I could not hear anything going on around me.  My GI distress was so bad that the bathroom visits pre-race left me without any of my morning nutrition.  I was starting each race emotionally, physically and nutritionally depleted.  Yet, I soldiered on.  Once the race got started, it was like the hideous, uncomfortable anxiety bubble had burst and I was finally able to relax…only, I had nothing in me at that point to actually execute a decent race.  The anxiety got so incredibly bad last June that three weeks prior to racing Kansas 70.3, I was hardly even able to get through my workouts without bursting into tears.  I decided to pull out of that race and find some help.

I basically put all racing on hold last summer to intensively work with my therapist to address the pre-race anxiety.  I learned a lot about myself and a lot about the anxiety…that it was part of a larger issue.  It wasn’t easy.  I had six weeks of less than 20 hours of sleep a week.  Sleep was like a myth to me, but something I so desperately needed.  The emotional pain was far worse than any physical pain I had EVER EXPERIENCED in my entire life.  I had no idea what I was walking into when I sought out a therapist, and probably would have run the other direction if I had known just how ugly it was going to get.  Addressing all of this “stuff” only increased my anxiety and worrisome state.  It is so much easier to ignore and deny the ugly stuff than to actually confront it.  As Coach Cliff said to me, “not many people would voluntarily go under the knife without anesthesia and expose the root cause of the problem, but you did, Kate- because you are a fighter.”  I learned that my obsessive worrying and constant anxiety was as a result of very deep-rooted feelings, memories and beliefs about myself.  Slowly, things started to change.  The anxiety started to decrease, my internal dialogue improved, and the painful emotions were no longer present when I would conjure up what one might consider as an unpleasant memory.  It seemed like the storm was over; the clouds had parted, and for the first time in my life, I was feeling what it was like to feel safe as I navigated my day. 

I decided to race Key West Triathlon at the beginning of December 2014 and I won the race.  My anxiety level was much more manageable, and prior to the race I felt good mentally.  Not perfect, but getting there!  From that point, I met with Coach Cliff and we decided I was ready to tackle professional racing again.  After months of little to no training, we built a plan that incorporated Puerto Rico 70.3 as my first pro race since my complete meltdown last June.  As I said, the end result of PR 70.3 was not so great.  To be honest, my body felt sluggish, I couldn’t absorb my nutrition, and my legs were cramping once I started the run course.  I wanted to quit, I physically just didn’t feel right that day.  However, for as terrible as I felt physically, mentally was doing cartwheels…because I won!!  My mind was NOT on overdrive that race morning, I DIDN’T feel like I was going to crap my pants or throw-up or both, I COULD BREATHE, I had a smile on my face and actually felt like engaging in conversation with my competitors prior to race start (rather than run the other direction from them, as I have felt in past races). 

I still have a long way to go, but it’s getting there.  And, I can say with 100% certainty that this is it…the horrible mental instability prior to racing is gone for good.  I confronted the ugly and it is in the past…I healed it and it is nothing more than a story of my past rather, than an anxiety-inducing memory. 

So, I write this race report to help others—both those who suffer from anxiety and other mental disorders, and those who don’t quite understand it.  To those of you who are suffering: please know there is help, there is hope, there is a way out of this prison.  Life may seem overwhelming.  It may seem that this is just something that you will never overcome, but don’t give up.  DON’T EVER GIVE UP.  Find a therapist or a therapy that you feel comfortable with, ask the Universe to arm you with supportive people and don’t give up!!!  For those of you who don’t understand mental illness, please show a little compassion or patience for those in your life who ARE struggling.  Remember that their struggles have nothing to do with you, so don’t take things personally.  And try to remain judgment free.  And for F*CK’s sake, keep your comments to yourself.  Don’t judge and tell someone they “have no business being on the start line” if you see the anxiety in their eyes.  (Yes, that was an actual comment made about me, by one of my competitors in my presence.)  Just remember that person may be fighting a battle you know NOTHING about.

Courage does not mean that fear is not present.  Strength is not measured solely by how fast you can go.  The biggest victory is not always standing on the top step of the podium.  Sometimes our greatest strengths and biggest victories are overcoming the fears within ourselves

Lucky number 7 in Arizona!!

I FINALLY got to punch Ironman finish number seven in my athlete passport.  I did it.  I raced for 140.6 miles faster than I ever have in my whole life.  And I have to admit, I kind of felt like a super bad-ass coming into that finish line so strong!
 
I arrived in Scottsdale six days before the race and had the pleasure of staying with my teammate and good friend, Andrew's graciously hospitable parents.  I have come to know and love Anne and Gary through races and training camps I have done with Andrew. It was the next best thing to being at home.  What can I get you to eat pre-race?  Do you need a foam-roller?  Make sure you are sleeping well! My comfort was my tri-momma's main concern that week and it took SO MUCH tension off of my mind.  It also helped knowing that I was riding and running faster than I ever had in my life.  My left shoulder was causing MAJOR issues for me while swimming and cycling the last six weeks of training.  The discomfort was most likely due to a bike fit that just wasn't working for me anymore in addition to an ill-placed saddle that was kind of the fire-starter.  I had a little concern that my swim was going to be slow due to the pain and subsequent missed swim workouts, but I really didn't care too much.  I knew I wasn't going to win IMAZ, so my subpar swim time would be overshadowed by my gained bike and run strength. 
 
I had intended on racing with a disc wheel on the back, which would provide me with free speed (read: faster bike split).  I rented a disc wheel with a Powertap hub, but I discovered the Powertap was wildly inaccurate after my first practice ride. Try as I might to fix it, it was clear by Friday that all of my efforts were fruitless and Foof's suggestion to bring my race wheels, just in case, was very wise.  I have so much appreciation for the guys at DNA CYCLES for patiently dealing with my bipolar switching of the race cassette back and forth between the race wheel and the disc wheel.  
 
Race morning was preceded by five solid hours of sleep, which is a record for me.  We were staying about 30 minutes away from the race venue.  At first I was concerned about the distance, but as it turns out, it was the most peaceful outpost and I was not surrounded by the well-known pre-race nervous energy.  Foof and Sherpa Andrew were up and ready to head to the race venue at 4:30a on the dot!!  
 
We arrived to transition and I quickly set up my bike and nutrition.  I got body-marked and exited transition while Sherpa husband and Sherpa Andrew deposited my special needs bags and helped me get my wetsuit on.  We had decided to meet at the entrance to the swim start where I would give the sherpas my shoes (I could not travel to the swim start the same way they did because it would have me on the wrong side of the fence).  Ever since nearly ending my racing career in 2010 by ripping open my foot and plantar fascia at a small race, I do everything I can to protect my hooves, even if that means I am one of few walking to the swim start in shoes.  Once at the swim start, it was clear that my sherpas were way on the outside of the fences and there was no way for me to get my sneaks to them, darn.  Visibly showing signs of panic, a WONDERFUL volunteer, Diana, came running up and said, "What can I help you with?  Do we need to get your sneakers to somebody??"  I showed Diana who to take my shoes to and then thanked her profusely.  Just as she was walking away, she said, "Kate, you're going to have a GREAT race today!!  Love you, girl!!!"  AND THIS, PEOPLE, is one of the many reasons why I love this sport with all of my heart.  It makes me so super happy to race with such a loving, positive and wonderful community of people-- complete strangers telling you they love you...seriously, no words!!
 
The pro women were called into the water, and I made my jump off the pier deep into the water.  This was it!!!  I have waited for over TWO YEARS to put another Ironman to bed and I just KNEW today was not going to be another DNF like Tahoe.  I had been given so many different pieces of advice as far as following the course/sighting buoys on the swim course.  One person told me to swim staying close to the buoys, one person said DON'T hug the buoys, but swim with the curve of the wall, AHHHH!!!  Decided... I was going to just...follow everyone else!  As we collected at the deep-water start line, the sun was just barely breaking off to the east.  BOOM!!!  Love the sound of that cannon!!  I swam hard, but was definitely conservative, needed that left shoulder to make it through 2.4 miles of swimming.  I was shooting for 62 minutes, and with the way the water felt, it seemed that perhaps it might happen.  The water was smooth and calm.  I immediately felt myself surge ahead of a couple of ladies and held onto one set of feet.  After a couple hundred meters, the feet in front were going at a slower pace than I wanted so I worked hard to get around her.  I continued to plug away at a good effort, spotting a group of five ladies all working together maybe 100-200 meters ahead of me.  With maybe 300 meters before the turn to head back to transition, I caught the group of five and easily moved passed all but one of them.  After passing four of the five ladies, the fifth decided to hang on and slap my feet every third or forth stroke.  Once we were westbound, headed back to transition, it was quite clear just WHY the water felt so smooth going out...pretty choppy coming back!!
 
Shortly after making the last turn and heading in the last 100ish meters to the swim finish my toe tickler went around me and I got caught behind two male amateurs, preventing me to match her surge, darn!!  The lake (which was actually a dammed river) had a concrete wall all along it plunging deep into the water, so there were stadium steps set up for us to exit.  We were told at the pro meeting that the volunteers would do a very good job of grabbing our arms and hoisting us up onto the steps.  I threw my arms up, was pulled up forcefully by two strong men and slipped right through the open-back steps behind them!  OUCH!!  That DEFINITELY left a mark!  They snatched me up quickly and I was on my way into the transition changing tent.  Once inside, the tent was virtually empty so I instantly had four volunteers on top of me, putting my helmet on my head, getting my sunglasses out of the case, and helping me get ready to speed out the door.  Just as I was getting up to go, I noticed my awesome volunteer, Diana, who helped get my sneakers to Foof and Andrew.  She looked me in the eye and said, "Love ya, girl, go have an AMAZING race!"  So awesome!!
 
Swim Time: 1hr, 6mins
 
Onto the bike, things felt good and even though I was disappointed to not have the free speed of a rear disc, I was happy to have correct data!  With my new Sram Red cassette from CYCLES 54 and an excellent tune-up from Derrick at FLYING FISH CYCLESmy bike was shifting smoother than it ever before!  The bike course was a three-loop course that was relatively flat with just a slight incline on the way out and a slight decline on the way back.  The wind forecast for that day was fairly calm: nothing more than a couple 10 MPH gusts here and there.  In years past, the wind has always picked up in the afternoon; so the sooner you are finished with the bike, the less chance of getting caught up in the head and crosswinds.  When you have a three-loop course with almost no hills, there is very little to break up the field and therefore there is a lot of drafting despite the threat of having to stand down for four minutes if you are caught.  The first loop went well, there were some age-grouper males here and there that passed me, but they passed with such swiftness that I really didn%u2019t have to worry about slamming my brakes on to get out of the draft zone.  I confidently cruised through the first loop staying within the heart rate zones and power zones that Coach Cliff set for me.  Thanks to BREAKTHROUGH NUTRITION, I was staying on top of my Carbopro/Nuun tablet hydration/calorie replacement.  Coming into the second loop, I began to see the large drafting packs that I had heard many other athletes complain about.  I felt like I was being swarmed and swallowed whole by these packs.  It was so hard, virtually impossible, to drop back to the 10-meter zone without the next person cutting right in front.  I felt like I was losing so much time and speed to this, but would rather be the last place pro than ever be accused of not racing fairly.  As one pack of about 10 people passed me, one female competitor looked over at me and said, "I know!!  Isn't this drafting ridiculous?!?"  And then she sped off with the group she was drafting with...I don't know if that was suppose to be a joke, or what!  I somehow managed to get through the second loop without throwing a bottle at the cheaters and hit the turn-around for the last loop.  Despite the headwind that had picked up, most of the drafting issues had dissipated, and therefore made it easier to just do the work and not worry about getting yourself in trouble.  There is a certain satisfaction that comes with knowing that you will blow right past most of the drafters once on the run course!
 
I pulled back into transition and having spent almost all of the five hours in the aerobars (a first for me while racing), my low back felt like it might have forgotten what standing erect was!  I ran into the tent and sure enough, there was Diana by my side!  The volunteers were AMAZING and had my hat on my head, my socks on my feet and my race belt around my waist before I even realized what was going on!  While leaving the tent, Diana shouted out to me, "Love ya, go get 'em girl!!"  
 
Bike split: 5hrs, 17min
 
In the first couple steps of my run it became apparent-- my bladder was NOT going to make it through the next mile, let alone the marathon without a potty break!  In and out as quick as I could, I was fortunate that the first one I ran to was empty!  On my way again, I had with me my salt/electrolyte tabs (vital for me, especially in warmer races) and a small 8 oz. FUEL BELT flask with about 200 calories of Carbopro and water.  My caloric needs had changed a bit with this race.  I have become a more efficient "fat as fuel" burner on top of weighing in lighter than races in the past.  Where I had normally sipped regularly on the extra 200 calories, I would not be doing that this time, relying only on a cup or two of Perform and a cup of water at each aid station.  I was a little nervous about this change and brought the Fuel Belt flask just in case.  With the newly redesigned Zoot endurance tri shorts, the 8 oz. flasks were the perfect fit for the built-in pockets!  I started off a bit wobbly, but my legs quickly adjusted.  Running through the crowd, the hardest part for me was running in the correct zone early on as the crowd can get you pumped up.  My legs felt good and wanted to do 6:45/mile, but I knew I would pay the price if I did that.  The run course was two loops with most of it on concrete and a little bit of pea-gravel trail mixed in.  Concrete tends to be MUCH less forgiving and shock absorbing than asphalt and tends to sap the energy from your legs a lot more. This run course was not pancake flat, but I certainly wouldn't call it hilly, either.  I would say it was a flat course with a couple of smallish climbs.  I eased into a good pace for the first 13 miles, making sure to grab one to two cups of Perform and one to two cups of water at each aid station.  I felt strong and "chicked" MANY male age-groupers and several FPROS, which is always encouraging.  Other than the first mile or two, I was not passed.  I felt very strong, but also knew that I had to play my cards right as it had been over two years since I had run my last marathon and completed my last Ironman.  My body is very comfortable with endurance running, but there were definitely some cobwebs that needed to be blown out.  I wanted to pick up the pace at mile 15, but just felt like I should wait a little longerAnd then it hit, what could have been an end to my race...  The moment when nature calls, and it calls with a BULLHORN! I begged, pleaded and promised God I would be good and always let Foof win arguments if I could just get passed this little unpleasantness.  I ran for as long as I could, found an empty porto-john and prayed to God that it was just going to be one stop... and it was, THANK GOODNESS!!!  Back on my feet I was able to run solidly through mile 20, at which point I felt that I could bring up my HR, if only by a beat or two.  I wasn't really paying attention to pace at that point, it was all by feel.  I brought it home for the last four miles feeling strong and knowing I was going to come in under ten hours!  I hit the last turn, the one that you could either make a left for your second loop or make a right to the finish and one volunteer said to the other, "she is definitely headed for the finish line, look at that glazed look in her eye, all she can THINK about is the finish!"  And that about sums it up!  The last two miles I was able to hold around a 6:50/mile pace and as I rounded the last corner, I zipped up my tri jersey and burned all the fuel I had left right into the finish feeling amazing!!!
 
Run split: 3hrs 20 mins
Overall time: 9hrs, 49mins
 
For over nine hours, I raced.  For over nine hours, I swam, I biked and I ran, and I didn't just go through the motions, I moved at a race pace.  I raced 140.6 miles faster than I ever have in my life.  And despite not hitting the goal time I had in mind, I am pretty happy and incredibly grateful for what I DID do.  Every day of my life I wake up and thank the Universe for giving me one more day on this Earth.  I plan on using my gift of life in the best way possible.  Thank you, Universe. 
 
Eternal thanks to my husband for the unending, tireless, and selfless support he provides; to my wonderful, loving and helpful host family- Anne, Gary and teammate Andrew; to my INCREDIBLE sponsors- BREAKTHROUGH NUTRITIONTRISTAR ATHLETES AND CYCLES 54to my supportive and caring friends and family- my support beams; and of course, to the amazing and wonderful Coach Cliff Scherb for making sure I am race ready!  Love and hugs to you all!

Clark, Audry's frozen from the waist down... (AKA MY 2013 IRONMAN LAKE TAHOE RACE REPORT)

After having nightmares all night of the abominable snowman chasing me down on the bike course, I made my way down to the race start at the Lake in Kings Beach.  It was cold.  Correction, it was FREEZING- 27F degrees to be exact.  There were icicles and snow on everyone's bike. I would be a liar if I said I was not downright petrified of what was about to take place.  The little kid with her eyes squinted as she anticipates a jabbing inoculation needle?  Yeah, that was me.  I was very fortunate to sit in Dr. Triestman's heated and fully-loaded camper, complete with my own bathroom to use pre-race.  Foof and I walked over to the beach, with winter hats, gloves, ski parkas and boots on with just about 10 minutes to the female pro race start.  I wanted to make sure I was able to keep my core body temperature up to the last minute.  I waited as long as I could to take my layers off and strip down to my wetsuit.  The lake temperature was actually not too bad, 61F degrees, which was obvious when you saw the tremendous amount of steam rising from it.  The steam rising from the lake was actually very pretty, but I also knew it had the potential for making it very difficult to sight those giant buoys (I fondly refer to them as the "giant doritos").  The beach sand was frozen and crunchy and felt like you were stepping on two day-old snow.  
 
The cannon went off and we set out running through about 100 yards of ankle-deep water.  At the beginning of the race, I felt very confident in my swim, besides the sighting issues from the steam, the water was calm and I was hanging onto the first or second pack of ladies.  Naturally, I did lose about five ladies, but still felt like I was pushing a strong but relaxed pace and when turning my head to breath, I actually saw two or three ladies hanging onto my toes.  The swim course was a two-loop course, set up in a vertical rectangle.  As I neared the shore to start the second loop, some of the faster male age-groupers (the amateur field) had caught up and passed with no problems.  I continued to swim at what seemed to be a good pace, and reached the buoy to turn and do my second loop.  As I was turning, I saw what seemed to be three female pros (we wear different colored caps) right behind me out of the corner of my eye.  It was smooth sailing for that first loop, but when I started my second loop, things got a little more complicated.  Considering the number of people that were entered in this race, I was surprised at how easy it was to navigate around the slower age-groupers.  I was also very happy that even though I could not find feet to draft off of, I was leading a couple of pro ladies.  I had made my way to the top right corner of the rectangle and made my first turn of the second loop.  As it was a vertical rectangle, the top left corner should have come shortly after (like around 2 minutes later).  It seemed like it was taking awfully long to hit the second turn and additionally, it seemed like all of the age-groupers were swimming against me and not WITH me.  I was so confused, I felt like I was swimming upstream and with the massive arms and legs and steam, I couldn't see a dang thing.  I was getting more confused and panicked with each stroke I took and then someone grabbed my leg and yanked it, HARD.  I was startled, shot straight up and stopped swimming.  A kayaker (water safety volunteer) had grabbed my leg and said, "WHAT ARE YOU DOING????  YOU'RE SWIMMING THE WRONG WAY!!"  As it turned out (as evidenced on the garmin course that showed up when I downloaded my data), I must have hit the first turn buoy of the second loop (the one in the upper right corner) and turned immediately right back to shore.  The kayaker sent me back to the turn that I had ALREADY made and got me going in the right direction.  The three ladies that were drafting off of me were LONG gone.  I tried to push the pace for the rest of the course, but I definitely had a lump in my throat thinking about how much time I might have added on...darn.  I hit the beach, looked at my watch- 1hr, 9minutes.  UGH.  Most people would be even more disappointed when they realized they were emerging from the water at the same time as a lot of the age-groupers who started ten minutes AFTER you did, but in that crowd of people was my friend Kirsten, and we ran on that freezing cold sand to the transition tent together.  With the wetsuit off and nothing but a bathing suit on I was a human popsicle running like Fred Munster.  
 
Swim time: 1:09
 
Into the changing tent, I couldn't feel anything on my body, I collapsed and had probably five volunteers using towels to dry me off and try to get my blood flowing again.  I usually race in the same tri kit all day- swim, bike and run in it.  However, since I knew it was going to be so cold, I wore a bathing suit and completely changed into dry clothes for the rest of the race.  There were no space heaters in the tent.  It was 35F degrees out and they did not provide any kind of heat.  I was so cold that I couldn't stand up and every time that I tried I literally fell into the volunteers' arms.  I sat in the transition tent for ten minutes, fully clothed with two VERY caring volunteers doing a sandwich bear-hug move around me to try to warm my body up.  I finally sucked it up and figured I was wasting too much time and needed to get on my bike.  I left the tent wearing two pairs of socks, neoprene bike shoe covers, leg warmers, arm warmers, two pairs of gloves, my tri jersey, a vest and a windbreaker.  I wished I had NOT already had my shoes clipped into my bike as the run from transition to my bike was on soaking wet pavement (in my socks) and my feet froze right back up instantly.
 
I saw Foof right as I was mounting my bike and I cannot even imagine the look of horror I must have had on my face.  I knew that there was no chance of warming up until I hit the Brockway Summit, which was over an hour away.  The first 30-40 minutes of the ride were in the shade with a headwind and slightly downhill.  With the mercury hovering around 37F, it was going to be damn cold.  That being said, I still had hope.  I knew most of this course like the back of my hand and had much more experience on it than most of the pros that were racing.  Pushing through the first hour, I couldn't feel my hands, left arm, legs or feet.  I was not even quite sure what kind of force I was pushing into the pedals; I was kind of just going by muscle memory.  There was one section of the course, the Martis Camp neighborhood that contained a couple cat 3 and cat 2 climbs and we were not given access to it until race day.  I felt a little clueless with what to expect, but figured, "eh, how bad could it be?"  
 
This was definitely a race that I found it difficult to stay on top of my hydration/nutrition.  With it being cold and there being very little humidity in the air (we're talking around 10% humidity), I was not perspiring and therefore, what I was drinking was just sitting in my bladder.  After working A LOT harder than I expected to get through Martis Camp, I FINALLY made it to the Brockway Summit and I was actually excited!  I got to pass my house AND there was sunshine!  I felt super strong climbing the summit- I OWNED this thing!!  I passed a lot of people and it felt good despite the numbness in my extremities!!  The descent down the other side felt equally good as I had practiced descending on it so many times on banged up pavement and since they had just repaved only the week before, I flew down even faster.  Developing my descending confidence and skill has certainly been a work in progress, but I had a great day that day and hit over 40 MPH both times I descended the Brockway Summit, with which I was very pleased.  Because of the cold weather, the race officials made a special "drop zone" where we could deposit (ok, hurl through the air while we sped by is a better description) any unwanted clothing at one point on the bike course as the temperature was EVENTUALLY expected to rise.  It was not until about mile 60 that I regained feeling in my legs.  My fingers and feet were numb during the entire ride.  As I made my way through the second loop I tried to focus on pushing down through the pedal and even though my bike computer was showing watts way lower than I had hoped for, I tried to keep my exertion level within the plan that Coach Cliff had created.  
 
There are several rules that must be adhered to in order to avoid having to sit for four minutes in the penalty tent, or worse- be disqualified.  As this was a no-draft race, being a pro, we are obligated to keep 10 meters in between our front wheel and the back wheel of any competitor who happens to be in front of you (unless you are passing).  One thing that I found to be a major nuisance and something I had never encountered before was the number of bandits (cyclists that are not registered in the race) that chose to ride on the course.  To be honest- it was really annoying.  It is hard enough to keep yourself riding legal with all of the other athletes, but throw in some locals who have NO CLUE how to conduct themselves on an Ironman race course and it is hard NOT to want to yell at them.  Making my way up the Brockway Summit for the second time, there was a man riding abreast to any athlete who was willing to talk to him.  Course rules are very clear that unless passing, there must be single-file riding at all times.  When I was descending for the second time, the same man came bombing down the summit, weaving in and out of athletes, cutting them off...going down hill fast on two skinny tires the width of your thumb is NOT when you want to be slamming your brakes on because of a reckless cyclist.
 
I finally made my way through the final 12 miles and it was within that time that I thought that the hopes I had for things to turn around were lost.  My heart rate was low, and my low back was very tight and felt as if it would seize up at any moment.  I had a good feeling that between a poorly placed bike seat and legs that were too cold to function, my back had already done way too much work.  I saw Foof as I made the turn into the Olympic village.  The last two miles also happened to be the first two miles on the run course and I saw four female pros just starting their run (in fact one was walking) and thought, "well, you have a strong run, there is no reason why you couldn't catch those ladies within the first few miles."  I weaved my way through the last couple hundred yards to the dismount line, got off my bike and...collapsed.  Down I went, and down I stayed for a good ten minutes right in front of the transition tent, shivering.  And all I could think was, "Did I stop my Garmin??  All of my friends and family watching back at home are wondering what happened, I hope they aren't worried."  Medical came running over, but I could not move, my low back went into full on spasms, something I had never ever experienced in my life before.  My race was over.  All I could think about was the sacrifices I had made, Foof sacrificing a killer 40th birthday celebration (his birthday was the day of the race), the time I had spent in isolation and how DAMN HARD I had worked to have the race of my life.  I was certainly disappointed.  I lay in the med tent for a half hour or so.  It felt so good to FINALLY be warm!  Once the cramping and spasms had stopped, I exited the tent, looking like Charlie Brown with my head hanging low in total disappointment.
 
Bike split: 6:20 (gulp!!!)
 
Run split: DNF (did not finish)
 
I met up with Foof who was anxiously waiting and just said, "Well, at least we can go have beer and pizza for your birthday!"  The Olympic Village, where T2 and the finish line were located was set up like a European ski village with restaurants and shopping centrally located around a town square.  We had a beer (ok, maybe more than A beer) and some cheeseless pizza and tried to dissect what happened.  It seemed that the cold had just gotten the best of me.  After talking with Cliff that day, we also decided that he should have a look at my bike fit since it was giving me some L shoulder discomfort.  I was able to go to bed that night feeling content in knowing that just because this race did not go well, the next one would
 
It was nice to be able to stop in Vail, CO for a couple days and our stay at the Four Seasons certainly helped ease the sting of a DNF.  Thanks to good friend Maddy for helping with the arrangements :) 
 
On our drive back to Rhode Island we stopped at Coach Cliff's and he discovered that my seat was raised so high that he could actually see my hips teetering back and forth with each pedal stroke.  In bike fitting, this is a big error and can cause you to lose a lot of power (read: you have to push on the pedals twice as hard to go the same speed).  Whether it was from a bike fitting I had this spring out west or because my seat had been put in the wrong spot the last time it was broken down/put back together, I will never know.  Cliff marked where he wanted the seat from there on out with some electrical tape.  
 
When I returned home and started riding again to prepare for the next race, I noticed instantly that my power readings went up by about 20-30 watts and I felt so much more comfortable.  My shoulder still felt irritated, but not even close to what I had experienced this summer.  Why did such a huge mistake happen?  I haven't quite figured it out what the reason for the bike seat error; I suppose the short answer would be IMLT just wasn't my race.  The good thing about the DNF is that because I did not run the marathon, the recovery time post-race was only a couple of days, versus a couple of weeks.  I had planned on doing maybe one or two half iron-distance races before the end of the year.  However, because I didn't get to race all of IMLT, the plans changed.  Since there were still three Ironman races in North America, Coach Cliff and I quickly decided that Ironman Arizona would be next up.
 
I had a few days rest and then it was back to the grind...