of random thoughts and pickled cabbage
30 Nov
Splits (I ::heart:: Garmin):
Mile 1 - 13:17 (Verrazano Bridge)
Mile 2 - 11:29
Mile 3 - 11:26
Mile 4 - 11:24
Mile 5 - 10:57
Mile 6 - 10:22
Mile 7 - 10:27
Mile 8 - 10:46
Mile 9 - 11:17
Mile 10 - 10:28
Mile 11 - 11:11
Mile 12 - 11:16
Mile 13 - 10:14
Mile 14 - 11:17
Mile 15 - 12:38 (Queensboro Bridge)
Mile 16 - 13:36 (Queensboro Bridge)
Mile 17 - 10:11
Mile 18 - 10:32
Mile 19 - 11:37
Mile 20 - 11:59
Mile 21 - 12:01
Mile 22 - 11:49
Mile 23 - 11:05
Mile 24 - 11:35
Mile 25 - 11:50 (cramp)
Mile 26 - 11:45
Mile .2 - 9:33
FINISH! - 5:05:45
Avg pace: 11:39
Avg HR: 156
2006 Houston Marathon Time: 5:45:55
Avg pace: 13:12
PR of 40 minutes!!
*********************
The New York City Marathon was absolutely incredible. Going into this race, I told myself this would be my last marathon - finally, I could stop running and get my evenings and Saturday mornings back. But the second I crossed the finish line in Central Park, I wanted to do it all over again. (as it turns out, I am - the Houston Marathon on 1/13!) And as for my super shocking, “where the hell did that come from” 40 minute PR, I attribute it to the awesome weather, the screaming crowds and the kick-my-ass SMART training program. But who cares about PRs - I beat Katie Holmes! woohoo!
Pre-Race (Friday):
My first agenda item after arriving in New York was to pick up my race packet and bib from the Expo. After wandering around Times Square with my friend Abe, searching for the non-existent Expo shuttle, we ended up walking to the Javits Center.
When we arrived, the Expo was buzzing and packed full of runners. The butterflies in my stomach went into overdrive (and would continue until I heard the beep of my chip crossing the starting mat, two days later). Even Abe, a non-runner, was impressed. We took some pictures, gazed at the race course video, then wandered up and down the aisles checking every booth for free samples of food. The back of the Expo was filled with Asics branded Marathon gear, and of course I plopped down
some alot of money for obligatory souvenir gear.
Afterwards, we took the marathon shuttle back into Midtown. Sitting behind me were two guys - one from Paris, the other from Orlando - who tried making small talk. Below are my favorite parts of their conversation:
Orlando Guy: What other marathons have you done?
Paris Guy: Mostly in Europe. My last one was the Amsterdam Marathon.
Orlando Guy: Amsterdam? Where is that?
Paris Guy: It’s a the capital of The Netherlands.
Orlando Guy: Netherlands? Where is that?
Paris Guy: Holland. Netherlands. You know, dutch people. Van Gogh.
Orlando Guy: Is that near France?
[silence]
Orlando Guy: So, are there tall buildings in Paris?
Paris Guy: Yes, we have many tall buildings.
Orlando Guy: Wow! I should go there someday.
18 Oct
Well, I’m back in the States, and trying really hard not to be depressed about it. Seoul was wonderful. I’m already scheming a return (more on that later).
I didn’t blog as much as I’d planned. Two weeks is a short visit, so the days were crammed full. Virtually all of our time was spent visiting family, and taking care of grandma. She’s in the beginning stages of alzheimers, so she swung back and forth between complete lucidity to asking who we were. She can’t walk on her own, although she tries to, so someone had to be with her at all times. And now she has heart failure. So, it was a wonderful and meaningful two weeks, but blogging wasn’t something I was in the mood for. Plus, I never got a chance to hang out with Elaine (booo!). Anyways, here’s a summary of the Korea visit….
24 Sep
I got cut off during that last post. Anyways, it’s our last day in Cheonan - my aunts left to pick up my grandma, and my mom’s passed out on the bed. I think I’ve gained 10lbs in the past few days - somehow my aunt thinks that “no, I’m really too full to eat that” means “Oh, yes, please give me a double serving AGAIN.” We’re going back to Seoul later today - as much as I love the country, I’ll be glad to get back to the metropolis. I’m such a big city person.
Went for another run this morning, and took lots of pictures. I’m having trouble uploading them on my aunt’s computer, so I’ll post them when I’m back in Seoul.
24 Sep
I can’t believe we’ve only been in Korea for 3 days. We’ve been staying in Cheonan (a couple hours west of Seoul) for the past 2 days at my dad’s oldest sister’s house. It’s beautiful here - her house is in the hills, and she has a huge garden with squash, chili peppers, lettuce, asian pears and dates. It seems lots of retired couples move here from Seoul. The weather is crisp and a bit chilly - I went for a run this morning, and it was soo peaceful. My route was a winding road up the mountain, next to rice fields and apple and persimmon trees.
22 Sep
Greetings from Dynamic Korea: Hub of Asia. That’s the new slogan that’s replaced ”Land of the Morning Calm,” to portray S Korea as a, well, dynamic country. The mascot looks like a cross between a forest spirit from Princess Mononoke and a Pokemon Jigglypuff. On crack.
At Incheon Airport, there was a big “Welcome to Dynamic Korea” poster on the way to baggage claim - it was a picture of four scientists happily working on a robot named Albert Hubo (hubo for ‘hub of asia,’ albert for the creepy plastic Einstein head).
Anyways, I’m in my grandmother’s apartment in Gangdong-gu, Seoul. My mom and I arrived at 4:30pm, after a 5 hour flight/layover in Dallas followed by a 13-hour flight from DFW to Seoul-Incheon Airport. We flew on Korean Air, and the 13 hours really weren’t all that bad. Some highlights:
It took us only 30 minutes to get our bags, go through customs and exchange money. Four aunts met us at the airport, then we headed into Seoul for a yummy shabu shabu dinner with two more uncles and a cousin. Seoul reminds me of NYC - except much, much cleaner.
Tomorrow morning, my mom and I are going to a Korean spa/sauna. Then, we’re going to a wedding, then off to Chunnan where my dad’s oldest sister lives and where my grandmother’s nursing home is. We’re spending 2 days there, then coming back to Seoul with grandma. Other plans in the week include hiking up Namsan, buying jerseys of the Korean soccer team (the white ones they wear at home games), and spending time with grandma of course.
[photopress:Korea_20060921_01.JPG,thumb,alignleft] And lastly, I have to mention the Coffee Suitcase. Giving gifts when you arrive/return on a big trip is very Korean, so my mom brough a suitcase filled with bags of coffee and nothing else (coffee beans are really expensive in Seoul). She ended up liking the smell of the hundreds of bags of coffee so much that she started using extra bags as air fresheners. She planted little bags of coffee all over the house….in the bathroom soap basket, in her closet, in the linen closet, on the coffee table, in my dad’s office, in her car, etc.
Ok, off to try to sleep.
19 Sep
No, I didn’t fall off the face of the earth. Though in a couple of days I’ll be on the other side of it. I’m spending 2 weeks in Korea with my mom. I’m really looking forward to seeing my grandma, our thousands of relatives and hanging out in Seoul. Plus, I get to see Elaine!!! We have plans to find some good jjajjangmyun. mmmm
Ok, random stuff:
Anyways, I couldn’t not blog about my trip to Korea, so here ends my 2-month hiatus/break/procrastination/avoidance/whatever from escapevelocity. It’s been so long since I’ve posted anything here, I couldn’t remember how to log into the backend. Then I spent a few minutes deleting over 2,000 spam comments. geez.
3 Jul
[photopress:JDFarmsMap.jpg,thumb,alignleft] A few of you have asked about the blueberry farm, so here’s a map & directions. It’s a great day trip out of Houston for some delicious berries. If you’d like to meet the owner, he’s at the Urban Harvest farmer’s market on Richmond every Saturday morning.
Click here to download the map as a .jpg file.
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