The time has come, the time is now,
to move beyond, to race again…..
You have to have a few “bad” races
to appreciate the good ones. You have to
be beat down to really appreciate how tall you can stand…..so here it goes….
There is so much to say about Worlds
Toughest Mudder (WTM) that this will have to be a multipart write up. This is
the raw, emotional part of my WTM experience. It is a long read and kinda sorry
but it’s what happened. The next installments will be much better, and
educational as I will talk about all my new friends I met along the way, the
awesome athletes I saw on the course, my amazing support both on course and
online, my gear, and the good, bad, and the uglies :)
So here it goes.
Last year I was too traumatized to
write about my experiences. This year I am not. I have already let go of the
night, the dream, the pain, the glory, the cold, and the isolation. Letting go
of it all so easily leads me to think it wasn't really as meaningful to me as I
had imagined it would be, feared it would be, and thought it was.
If you haven't heard the news I am
not the worlds toughest mudder and dropped out at my favorite spot - the 4.5
lap mark. In many ways it was almost a complete deja vu of last year. I choose
to drop out, I could have waited out the night, could have pushed through the
cold and the pain but I simply didn't want it bad enough. I had come to WTM
2012 to win, not to "finish" as many others had. I think I may have been
able to add a total of 3 more laps during the night and likely long after the
24th hour but that would not have been enough, not even close!
In some ways the decision to drop
out was easy, but in some ways it was very painful. My demise started about mile
8 of the 4th lap (38 miles total), probably somewhere around 11pm, on the
"lake side" of the course. I had finished swimming across the lake,
hopping across the floating islands, swimming under the barrels, and climbing
up the ever so difficult and treacherous cargo net with numb hands. The
obstacles were beginning to ice over, the "mud mile" was ridiculously
slimy and I seemed to be the only one sliding in and out of the mud trenches.
My legs didn't want to bend anymore and I was getting stuck in each mud trench.
After about 11 hours of fighting the resistance of a compression 5mm wetsuit my
joints were jello. I lifted knees instead of feet, literally crawled and rolled
between the trenches. I felt alone. I started getting frustrated. Frustrated
that I was cold, frustrated that I wasn't even close to the leader, frustrated
that my hands were swollen (again), frustrated that I wasn't keeping it
together mentally. I started making animalistic grunting noises in attempts to
avoid an all out scream or cry. I grunted, signed, groaned with each step. I
tried to turn off my meltdown button and thought of all the people that inspire
me, I pictured the poster in my tent. I thought about my dad and began saying out
loud "Padre", "Padre", "Padre". Before the race I
imagined that thinking of him looking down on me and being proud of me would
give me strength...but it only made me sad and I cried more and more each time
I said his name. Clearly that strategy wasn't working and so I blocked him out
of my mind. I emerged from the mud mile defeated, crawled my way under
electroshock therapy without getting shocked and ran the mile to the
"finish line".
At the finish to my 4th lap the
medic asked me how I was doing. I could barely speak. Partly because I had just
tried to push back about an hour of crying, partly because I had two wetsuit
hoods literally compressing my jawline upward into my face and forcing my mouth
shut. I told him I was OK but my feet were cold. "What are you going to do
about it" he so condescendingly asked. I asked if there was hot water and
he directed me to a med tent which the prior year I had spent many hours in.
The med tent sent me away, told me I couldn't come in without being
disqualified and that there was hot water in the middle of the tent pit area. I
felt a small burst of energy and headed through the "pit" to my tent.
I had a plan. I would pour hot water on my feet and shoes until I could feel
them, pour water on my gloves until they were clean enough to take off and add
another layer of neoprene. There was no hot water anywhere, no one had any idea
what I was talking about, 5 empty thermos’s sat on a folding table, and people
started to get rude. At this moment I was keeping it together. I grabbed a Tupperware
from my tent, filled it with water and went to heat it up in the one microwave.
No go. Three other mudders huddled around the ONE pint size microwave and
watched it countdown from 5 minutes as it heated up a chef boy or dee noodle
cup. I started to get cold. I didn't have time to stand around and wait for the
microwave. Time standing meant time freezing. I made a decision. I needed more
layers.
In order to put on more layers I had
to take off some that I was wearing. I ripped off my last muddy pair of gloves,
took off my windbreaker and tried to take of my wetsuit vest so I could change
the battery in my deeply buried electric rash guard. My arms twisted around my
shoulders and I tugged at the vest with all my strength but couldn't get it
off... fail. The vest would stay on and I would continue the next lap with a
dead battery in my rash guard.
I grabbed my final layer which was a
shorty suit, and changed out my windbreaker for a warmer one. My layers now
consisted of a 4/5 compression full wetsuit plus 4mm hood, a polypropylene farmer
john style battery operated heated rash guard with a dead battery, a 3mm
vest/hood combo, a 2/3mm shorty suit, a windbreaker, and my bib. It was clear
that my gloves were no longer going to fit as I had barely got them on for the
last lap, and they were now caked with mud. I grabbed a pair of wool socks, put
them on my hands like gloves so that my thumb was in the heal part of the sock,
and my fingers were in the foot part. For a minute I felt proud of my
innovation and my hands were relatively warm and dry for the first time in
hours. I tried to eat some of my food by my mouth didn't want to chew with my
jaws wired shut by neoprene. I drank a Frappuccino and headed out. This time my
friend Jeff headed out with me, hobbling along with his hurt ankle and attempting
to be whatever "legal" emotional support Tough Mudder would allow.
I did great for about a mile. I
don't know what exactly happened but the brief high of crossing the 4 lap
finish line ended quickly and by mile 2 of the 5th lap I was melting down
again. This time I couldn't hold back the tears. I felt like I was failing. I
felt so badly that I wanted to quit and I knew how easy it would be to quit. I
knew that at any time all I had to do was ask for a ride back to the medic tent
and I would be done. I wouldn't even have to walk off the course. I wanted to
quit so badly but I didn't want to quit. I didn't want to be the same quitter
that I was last year. Besides the mileage difference I was at almost the
identical point this year to last year. Stuck somewhere between the 4th and 5th
lap. If I quit now I felt like it meant that I hadn't learned a thing. I felt
like if I were to quit I was no better of an athlete physically or mentally
than I had been in 2011 and how pathetic was that??? I cursed myself for being
so weak mentally. I cursed myself for not being able to hold it together. I
walked so slow, I cried, I whimpered, I walked on. I bent over, hyperventilated,
cried, walked some more. I wasn't going to give into the fear of the cold, I
wasn't going to let knowing what was to come stop me from moving forward, I
wasn't going to be that girl I was last year. I wished Margaret was there with
me and I shouted for her out loud. Eventually I covered some distance, I made
it over the berlin walls, I carried the cinder block that felt so heavy, I
climbed up cliffhanger, I came to the monkey bars. I sat at the top of the hill
before the monkey bars contemplating if I could even go down there. I looked at
the volunteers and Jeff hoping they would see deep into my eyes and into my
soul and see my pain and somehow pluck me off of that hill and rescue me. I sat
there for what seemed like an eternity. The volunteers didn't see into my soul,
no one rescued me from my own pity.
I wasn't ready to quit. I approached
the monkey bars, socks hanging limply off the ends of my hands and I grabbed
the first bar. I anticipated that I would immediately fall into the cold water
and feel the pain of the night. I didn't. I grabbed the second bar, the third,
wholly F I was doing the monkey bars!! My momentum grew and I made it all the
way across. Not only had I done this with socks for gloves on lap 5 but by
crossing the monkey bars I avoided falling in the water and a 1/8th mile
additional walk of shame. I was so high!!! I screamed "That’s how its
done!" and walked on. I made it about another 5 minutes before I had to
cross the monkey bars again, this time with muddy sock hands, and this time not
so successfully. Big downer and the whimpering resumed. I would walk about 20
feet, lean over put my hands on my knees and want to quit. I wanted to shout
but didn't have the energy. I cried myself into a coughing fit. I started
hacking up mucous so bright green I could see it in the darkness. I felt my
lungs burning and could barely catch my breath. I looked at Jeff hoping he
would give me some encouraging words, tell me to fight through the pain, tell
me I could do it, tell me to go on, but he couldn’t. He couldn’t watch what he
was witnessing any longer. I don't blame him.
I walked a little further, my feet
numb and frozen, my body shivering. I
came to the devil’s beard. In the daytime this obstacle is easy. At night,
alone, it is a pain in the ass. It’s pretty much the equivalent of a human gill
net. If there are a lot of people under it, you can push it up and crawl below.
If it’s just you, it is heavy, and each knit square of it grabs you and pins
you down. I got so tangled. It grabbed my headlamp, my strobe, the stupid
bandanas they made me wear, my bib, my shoe. I lied flat under it like a
pancake. I felt so defeated. At this time I was really letting the little
things get to me. I was getting totally beat by a piece of net, I was acting
pathetic! I started breathing hard(er) I moved inches at a time. Finally a
group of three passed through the net and helped me out. I rolled out from the net
and lay in the dirt looking up at the sky feeling sorry for myself. Oh the
negative things that go through my head in these times.... they are like no
other.
Again I tried to say the things I
said I would say to myself when I wanted to quit: "Its only 24 hours, 1
day of your life, that’s nothing, you don't want the shame of last year, its
only cold, its only mud, you can do it, don't quit, be strong, think of all the
strong people you know" It didn't work. It didn’t work because I think
deep down inside I knew I didn't want it to work. I didn't want to go on. I
didn't want to be strong or brave anymore, my heart wasn't in it. I got up from
the ground and could see ahead of me "walk the plank", an obstacle
that would have me jumping about 15 feet into the water and guarantee that I
would be fully submerged. I didn't want to be wet again but knew I couldn't let
the water beat me. The fear of, and knowing of, an upcoming water obstacle
caused my downward spiral last year. At this moment I had 100% decided that I
was leaving this race, but I couldn't let the same "fear" beat me,
eat me up, and haunt me like it had last year. I so pathetically approached
"walk the plank". I stood at the base of it for minutes just looking
at it. I had to do it. I had to jump before I could let myself tap out. I
looked at the lifeguard at the base of the water and wondered if they would
save me if I didn’t surface.... I wondered if it even mattered. I climbed one
knee, then one foot, then one knee, and one foot up the back of the platform. I
stood at the edge. All the emotions of the night flooded my mind. All the
emotions of 2011 flooded my heart. I took a step back and jumped!
I emerged from the water proud that
I had jumped and ready to leave the race. I was done, I didn't love it anymore,
I didn't want it anymore, I gave it a solid 14 hours and that was all I had to
give. I waived down a volunteer, he cut off my timing chip, and drove me back
to the start.....
Great story. You should be proud of what you did. PS. I shared your story at http://www.facebook.com/onmywaytosparta
ReplyDeleteJeff.
I feel your pain. But you have done great.
ReplyDeleteI stopped after 5 laps - around 13.5 hours myself. I was down on myself, as winning was the goal I had in mind. Next year we will be stronger.