This is a blog by Betsy “Boots” Nickle.  It’s been some time since we’ve someone else write here, and some of you may have forgotten that wussies.net is not my personal blog and is a platform for all wussies to publish race reports, videos, random freeform train of thought, and poems.  You can even register and publish it yourself (or I’m happy to post it if you email it to me).
Holiday Lake 50k
“Mindfulness is about being fully aware of whatever is happening in the present moment, without filters or the lens of judgment…Put simply, mindfulness consists of cultivating awareness of the mind and body and living in the here and now.†– Stahl & Goldstein
At Holiday Lake this year, I tried a different approach than years past. I ran mindfully. It meant that I evaluated my thoughts carefully (i.e. notice when I was agitated and identify how it was manifesting in my emotions). This approach gave me the space to enjoy the experience much more.
In the past, I have tried to push past the basic realization that this race should be a training run for me because of when it’s held. I have experienced the great crash, burn, and self-loathing for several miles. Even if you don’t want to admit it, we have all had those moments where the following questions arise: Why did I pay to run a race? Or is it okay to sit on the side of a trail on a flat runnable course because of the pain in a particular part of my body seems crippling at this time? By employing mindfulness early on, I quickly realized that this race was going to be a training run. Since this race was the only thing that I had to do on 2/14/15, being mindful forced me to be in the moment as much as possible.
I noticed so many beautiful things that I have overlooked in the past like the lake with docks along the course, the sunrise, or even the pine trees that lined a part of the course. As I ran this race, I found myself really dipping into the experience. I embraced setting a pace that suited me and ran my own race, which reduced the impact of difficult emotions.
In our lives, we have so many emotions coming and going at times and barely enough time to notice them.         During this race, some difficult emotions arose for me as a result of being cold.  By giving myself the space and time to identify my emotions than push them away or ignore them. It allowed me to label them and become more compassionate toward myself. When I labeled the emotions, it enabled me to feel them and let them go.
I have found that a deep exhale is one of the best ways to deal with difficult emotions that arise on the trails. Along the course, I strategically used well timed exhales to release emotions that arose that would not help me proactively finish the race. Funny thing is that exhaling is so easy, which is exact reason why I overlooked doing it for so long. I found that balancing my inhales and exhales made a major difference for me because it gave me a technique to get out of my head, come back to the present moment, and connect with my body again.
By embracing running long distance as extended meditation, it became seamlessly easier for me. Yes, there were times when I had big dreams and other moments where I wished the scenery would change. Yes, I felt tension in my muscles. Yes, my butt hurt at one point and my knee at another point. Those pains were just a time and a place in the run. By being mindful, they did not become a dark cloud that did not pass during this run. I found that coming back to the moment (i.e. the place where the mind-body connects). It was one of the most refreshing experiences in trail running because it creates a sense of being alive.
Along the course, I found myself embracing the core tenants of trail running: nature and community. I noticed the beauty of winter because it allowed the sun to shine on the trails creating shadows on the trails that looked like elaborate patterns.
I also interacted with some neat people on the trails. I enjoyed chatting with a young woman who had completed several Ironmans. Holiday Lake was her first 50k. I had a guy comment on my shoe (a regular occurrence in every Horton race/training run). In the past has bordered along the lines of creepy because I was seemingly alone in the woods with a limited exit strategies running with a man who openly shares his foot fetish. This time, I just laughed it off. Finally, I found myself running along side of a woman who continually sounded like she was going to cough up a lung. I provided her with a 5-minute pump up talk, where I continually re-enforced that she would finish the race. When she came across the finish line, I saw her with tears in her eyes looking for a hug. I provided it to her only to receive a huge thank you.
Honestly, I find that the courage and strength of trail runners is amazing and invigorating. It gives me hope in humanity because every time it shows me that when people put their minds to something they will achieve it regardless of any initial perceived obstacles.
Often I bomb down the hill at the finish, but I didn’t this time. I took it at a steady pace. I saw my friend Martha. I stopped and we talked for a few minutes. It was uplifting for me because I was happy to see her and celebrate in her success of setting a course record. When I crossed the line, I was pleasantly surprised at my 5:45 time. That was good enough for me! The next day, my body felt relatively good for a person who has not run a 20 miler in the past month. I attribute to the fact that I kept my mind relatively calm during the experience, so my body did not take a beating (i.e. mind-body connection).
At the end of the day, Holiday Lake helped me to re-kindle my love for running again. I had been put on hold for the past month as I made a huge transition in my life (a job change). I connected with old friends. Most of all, I spent time with one of the biggest love affairs in my life ‘trail running.’ I really live to explore the world through the medium of running. I love putting on a pair of running shoes and going to play in the dirt. I end up with more dirt on me than you can ever imagine, but I continue to run dirty because it teaches me more then I can ever put into words!
‘So, like, is Holiday Lake your favorite race?’ Â He was a Liberty student I had run with for a stretch who had proudly just completed his first ultra.
‘Holiday Lake is my least favorite race,’ I replied deadpan. Â ‘Trust me, this is the toughest. Â It’s fast and long and boring. Â On the bright side, everything you do from now on will be better.’
Sunrise over Holiday Lake [Photo: Tom McNulty]Holiday Lake fell on Valentines Day this year, and Love Was in the Air. Â Boots was my Valentines date for the weekend, as my Valentines gift to Aaron was to let him spend his Saturday napping, knitting, and squeezing the kitty instead of waking up at 4am to help me clean puke out of my hair and take shit from Horton about his ugly chops. Â Pretty sure that was Aaron’s best Valentines Day gift ever.
I had an explicit goal for HL2015: Redemption.  I had run HL in 2012 and it had been Ugly.  After leading the whole race, I had vomited four times at the last aid station ended up crawling across the line in 3rd place.  Bethany passing me right at the finish line had been particularly tough to stomach.  I’ll never forget the appalled look of Matty Woods, who had been training with me on the track, and knew just how far south things must have gone for me not to be able to hold Bethany off.  After the run, Matt had given me his shirt to warm up in, even though I was streaked with vomit, and nursed me back to life with hot tea.  A kindness I haven’t forgotten.
I can’t exactly say that I was physically geared up for Holiday Lake this year.  Lately I’ve been on the losing side of injuries.  And who is ever well trained for an off-season race like HL?  But mentally I was honed in.  I’ve come a long way since 2012, and even though I still am plagued by stomach problems and vomiting at ultra-length distances  (see my ‘Pussies Fly Together‘ post for the description of my little pukefest at my first 50 miler at Bull Run).  But I’ve had glimmers of what I can do over long distances when my stomach holds, like my CR at Highland Sky, and I sometimes re-read my ‘Keeping it in the Pants‘ post from that day to remind myself that, contrary to some people’s impressions, I’m not an inherently short-distance runner, and my legs are happy to cover an awfully long distance if my stomach will allow it.
Boots was a splendid Valentines date, and we had a merry ride down to Lynchburg and arrived at the Holiday Lake 4-H Center in good spirits, even on 4 hours of sleep.  When I’d done HL in 2012 we’d arrived at the race after it had already started and it was total chaos, so it was especially nice to enjoy a full half-hour to check in, go to the bathroom, and catch up with folks.  I was happy to see Mark and Phillip, Aaron’s friends from Reston, whose intended long Valentines weekend together had apparently been scuttled by Phillip’s wife Marcie, who for some reason objected to the plan (women!).  I was also happy to see John Andersen again, newly anointed VHTRC Rookie of the Year.  I have not forgotten our adventure at Catherine’s Fat Ass, where John had selected to run his first ultra on an awfully tough run through the Massanuttans on a day that happened to be a miserably hot 98F.  In case we weren’t uncomfortable enough, Neal G kicked a hornet’ nest and we all got badly stung.  It was the kind of day that could have been bloody miserable, had it not been for John’s infectious newbie enthusiasm.
Holiday Lake course [Courtesy of Tom McNulty’s GPS]The race started in the dark.  I didn’t carry a light, which served as a good natural check on my speed, and there were many ponytails bobbing ahead of me going into the first aid station.  Even though I’m not a morning person, there is something serene about passing by the lake that first time during the sunrise, and feeling the darkness slowly lift over those opening miles.
Running downhill with abandon has been my signature since I was 14.  I’m pretty sure the only reason Andrish was willing to put off his beloved laundry routine and run with me all those years was because we had so much fun running down the trails in Rock Creek Park.  So what has really killed me about my recent spat of injuries has been what it’s done to my ability to run down hills.  Whether it’s my hamstring acting up or or my foot or my wobbly ankle, I’ve been tentatively pussyfooting down the hills in training for the past couple years, draining all the fun out of running.
But in the last month I’ve been really working on loosening and strengthening my left ankle, stabilizing my hips and core, and starting to feel a little life come back into my downhill descents.  The first real descent of HL comes at mile 6.  I can’t remember the last time I really let loose on a downhill.  Maybe last April at Bull Run?  I don’t care how the rest of the race went, it was all worth it just to fly down that one hill.  It didn’t fit with my race plan to not take the lead until at least the second half of the race, as I passed at least 8 people including Bethany, who was leading the women’s race at the time.  But if my ankle is holding, my hamstring isn’t complaining, and my IT bands are quiet, my self-restraint goes out the window on the downhills.
Flying down the hill had shot my adrenaline high. Â But I made sure to reel it as soon as we crossed the icy creek at the bottom of the hill, and intentionally plodded. Â I could hear Bethany talking to other runners behind me, and I was kind of kicking myself for taking the lead well before I had intended, but I figured as long as I ran real relaxed and easy it couldn’t do much harm.
Some time after the third aid station I felt an urge to pee.  Seemed like a perfect way to make up for my error in taking the lead too soon, and I peeled off into the woods.  It was a cold day and I was wearing long tights, which always make it pain in the ass for a girl to pee.  But I’ve gotten over being self-conscious on trail runs — when you gotta go, you gotta go.  But when I squatted to pee it was very bad news: nothing came out.  I just had this massive bloated feeling of needing to get something to exit out of at least one of the orifices, but nothing was budging.  I had drunk from my bladder a couple times and eaten some peanut butter crackers and gummies, nothing that should have irritated.  Bethany ran on past, and I scurried out from the bushes after her.  She also stopped to pee and we found ourselves running together.  My stomach was uncomfortable, and I decided that the best thing for the time being was to settle in behind her and see if things would calm down if I ceased eating or drinking for a bit.
I had heard stories about Bethany from Aaron — the bubbly blonde girl who was Horton’s protege from Liberty University.  And of course I remembered Bethany from the end of HL the last time I ran it.  We chatted about running and life and such.  She reminded me that Aaron had once saved her at Hellgate when her corneas had frozen, guiding her for hours to an aid station.
At one point she asked me, ‘So you’re a faster road runner type?’
‘I don’t know what kind of runner I am anymore,’ I conceded.  ‘I guess I’m an out-to-pasture-been-running-competively-for-20-years-doesn’t-care-anymore-just-don’t-want-to-puke-anymore-and-run-fast-and-long-in-the-woods runner.’
She told me how she started running after gaining some pounds as a college kid and got hooked into Horton’s running course.  I agreed that people who don’t run competitively on their school teams tend to have longer life spans.
We agreed on a lot of points: the awesomeness of Promise Land, the wretchedness of the Road Across the Sky at Highland Sky, and, we both conceded, how lifeless the Holiday Lake course is, with its boring roads through woods that have been flattened through timber-harvesting.  We came through the halfway point together in 2:10.  My stomach was going in waves, periods where it felt okay, followed by long waves of serious discomfort where I felt like I needed to dash off and scratch some leaves.  But chatting with Bethany made the discomfort much more tolerable, and I fought off the urges to go so that I could continue running with her.  I also wanted to make sure that if I did take the time to stop that something would actually deliver.
One of the nice parts of the out-and-back is that we get to see all the friendly faces on the way back. Â There were lots of VHTRC folk on the course — WH Tom, Rob C., Sara D., Toni A., and of course Dear Bootsies! Â Such a good boost of positive energy at a time when I was in discomfort.
The pain was building, and I realized I was going to have to make a pitstop.  When the crowds coming in the other direction finally thinned out I made my move.  But no relief; nothing would come out.  I couldn’t eat, I couldn’t drink, I would end up going the whole race feeling that way, with the problem slithering up my system into nausea.
But it was tolerable as long as I was running along with Bethany.  So I caught up to her again after my failed pitstop and we ran together up to the next aid station, where Horton reprimanded us that ‘This is a race, ladies!’  We knew that he would be irritated with us running together.  We laughed out how very pissed he’d be if we crossed the finish line holding hands.  I had told Bethany flat-out that I wasn’t racing.  That I had stopped eating and drinking, that my stomach wasn’t right, and that I was happy to just run with her all the way to the finish.  Furthermore, Bethany was wearing a watch, and we reasoned that we were both running much faster together than we would have run apart.  So what could be wrong with that?
Especially since the second half of Holiday Lake is so dull.  Those long road sections that were just tolerable on the way out now seemed interminable.  All the ugly things you hadn’t really noticed on the first loop become apparent.  The clear-cut sections of what used to be forest.  The frozen rutty mud bits that hurt to run on.  Running alone it’s very easy to get negative in these barren stretches, but we clipped along together.
The nausea was becoming intense. Â I tried to focus on slowing my breathing, steadying my stride, nothing jerky, everything calm. Â No unnecessary movements. Â My legs were totally fine, but I could feel my internal system writhing, and I couldn’t carry conversation anymore. Â So we ran together mostly in silence. Â But we were clipping along, at one point doing 7:30 miles. Â As lousy as I was feeling, I at least had the solace of knowing that at any given moment of the second loop I was feeling a heckuva lot better than I had in 2012. Â I can recall exactly where I had started really gagging in 2012, at the first aid station after the turn-around, and the stretches where IÂ started making little mini vomits into my mouth, prior to the big explosion of projectile vomit that came at mile 29. Â So no matter how bad it was, it was better than 2012, and at least I had that going for me~
So it was with a bit of pride that I trotted past the final aid station puke-free. Â I smiled to myself recalling those poor Liberty students who’d watched me puke my guts out and tried to bring me a chair and a towel, both of which I had to refuse so I could try to retain the lead I’d held for 25+ miles. Â I thought gleefully about how pissed Horton would be when Bethany and I crossed the line together. Â It would be such a girly thing to do on Valentines Day.
My nausea was intensifying, but I was still able to run with Bethany at a good pace.  But just before mile 30 there is a short hill that is steep enough to walk.  As soon as I let my pace slow to a walk I had a mini vomit-gag deep in my throat.  My head started spinning and I got seriously worried.  Moments later I released a gorgeous neon yellow spew of vomit into the air.  No hands on knees.  Full airborne arc.  Pure 100% stomach acid bile, as indicated by the neon yellow hue.  I guess that’s what you get when you vomit on an entirely empty stomach.
I’ve begun to start to grade my vomits on their characteristics of color and arc and volume. Â This one was a 9. Â As John A. would later remind me, it didn’t have quite same beauty as the vomit I did while running Willis River, where I managed to not even break stride and let the vomit just spew down my front. Â But this one I was already walking, so not quite so dramatic.
My post-race demonstration of the arc of my vomit
Bethany heard me vomit behind her, but kept up a strong pace.  I felt surprisingly good after the spew, a little dizzy and disoriented, but nothing like the crippling blow of past vomits.  We trotted together around the little grassy point by the lake, the same spot where Leah D. had passed me in 2012, and headed back along the creek.  There were just a couple miles left to go, and I buckled down to get ‘er done.  I hadn’t really eaten or drunk for hours how, and I knew after the vomit that the depletion would be setting in.  But there was so little left to go, just a climb through the woods and the half-mile descent down the road.
I didn’t realize it at the time, but Bethany had at this point calculated from her watch that we by some miracle were on course record-breaking pace.  I had been in Fat-Ass mode for hours now, understanding that I wasn’t going to have the bouncy Women’s Half Marathon-esque race I had hoped for, but that I could be happy with a solid training run where I managed an unruly stomach gracefully.  I also liked the fact that Bethany and I had teamed up.  Fast women are relatively sparse compared to the men, and typically run alone, so it’s unusual to have the chance to have fast women running together.  As anyone who’s witnessed a Women’s Half knows, I am perfectly capable of turning up the competitiveness when appropriate.  But I also pride myself on knowing when to turn the nozzle down — whether it’s at our weekly WUS runs, or at a fatass event, or just a regular old training run.  Aaron is a shining model in this regard, and I’ve tried to take note.
Looking back on it, I wish Bethany had just told me what was about to take place.  I had no idea a CR was in the cards, and I was just pleased to be still running steadily post-puke.  If she had told me that she wanted to pick it up, that a CR was on the line, I might have been willing to dig deeper, understanding what was at stake.  It’s hard to know in retrospect how much more I had in me, I was pretty out of it at the time. But we’d been running together for hours now, and I might have found another gear if she had directly asked me to. At Bull Run I walked through 8 agonizing miles where I no doubt would have quit had it not been for our women’s WUS team, which needed me to finish.  Or if the sickness had totally blown me out and I didn’t think I could do it, I would have just told her to go ahead and go for it and that would have been that.
Instead, I spent the last stretch swimming in confusion.  Bethany blasted up the last hill, and it wasn’t clear to me whether this was Game On, or whether she was just going ahead temporarily. Maybe the idea of finishing with me was less appealing now that she knew how sick I really was.
First Loser!
Horton exclaimed with great enthusiasm as I finished that I too had slipped under the course record.  It now made sense why Bethany had taken off in the end in pursuit of the CR.  I just wish I’d been clued in.  But overall I’m glad Bethany got her course record, and that I rode out a day where things didn’t go my way gracefully.
I had no Matt to nurse me back to health at the finish.  But that was okay this time, as I was in far better shape at the finish than in 2012.  I poured my own hot tea and apple juice and doused myself down in the hot shower, which is the saving grace of HL.
Re-watching the finish line scene from this video, one would never guess that it was the 1st & 2nd women, and not the 1st & 2nd men, who had just spent hours running together.  There was a turning point where Bethany smelled the barn when a switch flipped, as if the clock had stuck midnight and the fairy tale was over.  There were no hugs at the finish.
Bethany Patterson, 1st woman
The way the race had ended was not ideal. Â But from a larger perspective, I had to be satisfied that I had managed to run just 20 seconds off the course record (it turned out that Horton was mistaken and I was a bit over) on a day where I felt lousy. Â I had barely drunk any liquid during the race (my camelback was still nearly full when I finished and I hadn’t stopped at any aid stations). Â It was many bottles of powerade and cups of tea and apple juice before I could manage a pee after the race.
I was feeling a bit sore hanging around at the finish line.  Bethany had a great performance and fully deserved her course record.  But even though I’m relatively new to the sport of trail running, I knew that an unspoken etiquette of the trail had been broken today.  Maybe it just applies to a small subset of trail running purists that I happen to run with — the old guard of Sean, Keith, Aaron, etc.  But I know that if two guys are running together for hours, even if one is fresher at the end, they finish together, unless there’s a conversation and mutual consent.  I wouldn’t want to keep Bethany from getting her record because I was sick, I just wish there’d been communication.  I can also understand that the error of margin was so slim (Bethany only broke the record by 20 seconds) that taking extra time to talk to me might have been the difference between breaking the record and not.  But records will fall again some day.  Style lasts forever.
Holiday Lake kind of falls in some grey area between road running and trail running (I saw some dude toss his banana peel on the trail mid-race), and the code of the trail may be somewhat weaker in that setting.  Maybe the etiquette is becoming a thing of the past as trail running and road running worlds intersect more and mentalities spill over.  And it’s possible that the trail etiquette I’m familiar with is more of a Guy Code (in her defense, Bethany mentioned during our chatting that she trains mainly with other moms).  Woman may need more coaching in how to compete, and I think the WHM fills a much-needed role in promoting healthy competition among women — how to run the crap out of themselves on those brutal hills while still supporting each other 100%.  I love that Justine can give me a hell of a scare and then we can hug it out at the end.  I’m not a natural hugger, but if you’re ever going to hug, the WHM is the place to do it — even to women I don’t know.  The WHM is special to me, and I will miss competing there (although I expect volunteering will be rewarding but in a different way).  But there is sometimes a weird competitiveness between women that goes beyond friendly rivalry.  And from time to time I kind of get a little jolt of it.
Shaun Pope won the men’s race
To get a breather from the finish line scene and the swarm of Crozet Racing Team jackets (I’ll have to tell Keith that the WUSsies can’t race anymore until we have an official team of carefully selected members and spiffy jackets to advertise elite status), I took a long walk up the hill to greet other WUSsies coming in.  A loose dog ran up barking and snarling at my heels.  I had blisters on the bottoms of both feet.  But all the clouds lifted when dear Bootsies popped out of the woods having a grand ole time of it.  She’d had a rough HL last year in the snow, so I was delighted to see how great she was feeling.  Tom and Sara also came down the hill in great spirits.  Holiday Lake isn’t the most glorious course, but it’s fun to be a part of a big event with a lot of history where a lot of people are running an ultra for the first time.  It’s also a great mid-winter test of fitness with excellent volunteers, impeccable course markings, and with a wide diversity of runners who I wouldn’t typically race with – like Mark and Phillip.
I was in a much better mood hanging out with the WUSsies, getting some bbq to eat, and sitting for what must have been hours talking.  Because by the time we went back outside to leave, the place had entirely cleared out. We cheered on the last finisher, and then Boots and I made the drive back to DC.  Even though it would have been nice to have Aaron around to help me when I was feeling sick after the race and cheer me up after a rough day, I was glad to have time to just hang out with Boots and catch up on life.  All the stuff you don’t talk about when boys are around~
The second half of my Valentines Day present to Aaron was a promise to come home in a good mood.  He had seen online that Bethany had won the race, and was prepared for a less-than-happy marmot.  But I made good on my promise, and saw the silver lining.  Because even though my race had not gone as planned, I had my downhill running back, I had pep and strength in my legs even when my stomach was ailing, and on a day when I had faded out of a racing mentality, was totally dehydrated and depleted and just trying to keep the contents of my stomach in, I still had run a fast time on that course.  We ran a really solid second half, only 3 minutes slower than our first half, really a remarkably steady pace even as I ailed. I’ll be back to HL, hopefully next year, to give it another go.  And sometimes the final result is a poor indication of what was achieved.  For me, calm in the face of discomfort, holding course even after regurgitation, these are important things to have in my toolbox.  It may be a while before I have a clear stomach day at the races, but in the meantime I can learn ways to run through.
Horton’s finish line hug was only the 1st half of my Valentines Day present
What was my Valentines Day present, you might ask?  Besides that pretty white Patagonia backpack presented to me as my Special Horton Valentine?  My Valentine was getting to come home to someone who can 100% relate to all the strange emotions and sensations that had occurred that day.  Who fully understood why I had confused emotions about the last stretch of the race — happiness that I’d helped Bethany rock a new course record, but stung by the way it all went down in the last stretch.  The last miles were weird — when you get that depleted and dehydrated and dizzy and sick, your brain just sets onto autopilot, and I just couldn’t snap into race mode.  You stop making decisions, you just have instincts left.  But if I were 14, this is the very predictable conversation that I would have had with my dad after a race like that, with him pacing back and forth in the living room, waving his hands wildly as if they helped spur his thought process.  I would sit on the couch petting Champagne our very fat cat, chin tucked:
winning races usually meant there would be less post-mortem – but not always
‘So why didn’t you stick with her up that final hill?’
‘I don’t know.’
‘But you must have seen that she was picking up the pace. Â Why didn’t you stay on her?’
‘I don’t know. Â Maybe I thought I’d catch her on the downhill.’
‘Well then you just entirely misestimated. Â You let her get way too far ahead.’
‘Dad, I wasn’t even racing. Â I thought we were running together.’
‘Well, you must have realized she was starting to race.’
‘God, this is just like the stupid third lap thing….’  I rubbed my forehead hard.  My father was convinced that I should run all my mile splits evenly.
‘You’re exactly right.’ Â He stopped pacing momentarily and rubbed his beard. Â His theories came from his professional experience as an economist, not from any experience on the track. Â ‘Why can’t you fix that?’
‘You don’t know what it’s like. Â In the moment it honestly feels like I’m running as hard as I can.’
‘Look, you have to trick yourself. Â Pretend the 3rd lap is the 4th and final lap. Â If you fade, that’s okay.’
I would get quiet, stroking the cat as I listened silently for another ten minutes or so.
My 2015 Valentines Day present was never having to have that conversation.  Even better than that, it was sitting down with Aaron and having the anti- version of that conversation.  It’s a fight to the death between Aaron of Reason and Knowledge and the 14-year old on the couch whose every decision was wrong and weak, who would wallow in the failure for days.  What will prevail, actual personal experience and the scientific literature (e.g., the Central Governor Hypothesis that tries to explain why even the most elite runners have slow third laps — and likely why I walked stretches of the last hill, despite the fact that Bethany was clearly slipping away), or the Voice of Bob?  Aaron gradually, methodically spins my mind in back towards reality and sanity.  He’s spent a lot of time with Bob; he knows exactly what he’s up against.
Just as Aaron thinks he’s finally killed the Beast, Horton send a taunting little email about how I should have followed Bethany up the hill, sending Aaron back into the ring to make a final slay.  Monday night I’ll see my father and Aaron could be presented with another head of the serpent to battle.  But for the time being I’m in the clear.  I’m haunted, I wake up at 5am replaying the hill over and over again.  Why didn’t I realize that the tenor of the race was changing, that it was time to race?  But I know which side is reality and which side is evil, and fight it off.  Best Valentines Day present ever.
Over 14″ of snow had fallen in the last week and it was a winter wonderland.
Happy times!
The towering conifers in Stone Coal flats were a definite highlight.
Tunnel of Love
The thermometer read 6 degrees in the morning, bringing out the Mad Bomber hat.  But bright sun, not a cloud in the sky, and it got pretty roasty toasty on the climb up to Bald Knob.
Mad bomber hat had to come off from time to timeTraditional top o’ Baldy photo opThe Apple Orchard stampedeThe Apple Orchard stampede, + 10 seconds
‘Okay, so we’re going to climb for 4 miles, but there will be a nice view at the top, I promise.’
Poor Cecily and Ben had traveled from DC to snowshoe and cross country ski with us in Canaan, but the weather gods had not delivered. Â There was only one other way to bring in the new year: Smoking Bench.
Cecily and Ben agree that this would be a nice place to smoke, were one to smoke.
Well, to be specific we visited Smoking Bench II. Smoking Bench I is by the WIS hill in Cleveland Park.  Smoking Bench II is atop Cabin Mountain in the Sodds. These benches have earned the title because, well, if I ever smoked, these are the select benches from which I would exercise my habit.  I’ve never myself smoked, but I’ve always been a bit envious of smokers for the way that they have this beautiful permanent excuse to step out from a loud crowded party and sit outside alone in peace for a defined ten-minute interval.
Martha’s trail
The weather gods had at least produced a sunny, clear day up on the ridge, ideal for a trot along Martha’s trail (for some reason, despite criss-crossing the Sodds for many years, this ridge trail had not previously been part of Aaron’s repertoire).
being adorable
To my great delight, Cecily and her boyfriend Ben moved to Woodley Park this summer. Â The second half of 2014 has really been a social windfall, with both Cecily and Sarah W., two of my oldest friends from childhood who know my quirks inside and out, moving back to DC. Â Definitely makes me less enthusiastic about leaving DC for a new job. Â So here’s a brief summary of my history with Cecily:
We were in ballet class together at 5.
We were ‘Mean Mints’ together on our 4th-grade soccer team (which had mint green shirts), and later Potomac Red Devils when we went Select.
Sorry, kind of fuzzy
We were basketball teammates in 5th grade (we once lost a game 3-2).
My 6th grade birthday party at SuperStarsStudios in Bethesda. Oh I have the video for this. But not even Aaron has seen it.  Cecily and Rosie did a killer duet to ‘Black and White’.
We were in the Chevy Chase Elementary School chorus.
Cecily, Rosie, and I didn’t last long as choirgirls. Â I’m the girl behind the girl in the white headband. Cecily is NW from me. Â Rosie is next to her.
For three summers we lived a month together in a tiny cabin in northeastern Pennsylvania at Campus Netimus, braving the slimy freezing lake and the dramas of teenage girls living in too close quarters.
Sleepaway camp= girl drama
Later in high school, Cecily paved the way for my running career by being the top cross country runner at Richard Montgomery high school as a freshman (I had started out my freshman year at B-CC playing field hockey and basketball and switched to cross country as a sophomore to win the state championship).
Me and Cecily at Hereford, the brutally hilly MD state championship course.
Our families also went on ski trips together in high school to Colorado, where Cecily learned the particular Bob Nelson style of skiing without turning or stopping.
Cecily once again inspired me to compete in running in college, when Cecily was a freshman standout at Dartmouth and I was bumbling around Stanford not doing much of anything.  After visiting Cecily at Dartmouth freshman year I came within a whisker of transferring there to run with her on the team, but in the end transferred to Amherst, which was an even more extreme polar opposite of Stanford, with a total student population of ~1600.
I also have to give Cecily due credit for her indirect role in launching my career in science.  Cecily was living in London when I happened to visit the city for RAND work.  Naturally, I spent a couple days with Cecily after the meeting.  After a day or so wandering around London I decided to take the train to Oxford.  I was generally interested in seeing Oxford, and I was specifically interested in talking to a professor in the Zoology department named Edward Holmes.  At the time one of my main projects at RAND was to evaluate the Federal Pandemic Influenza Preparedness and Response Plan.  This had entailed weeks of interviews with head people at NIH, CDC, FDA, and throughout the Federal government.  I was just a lowly research assistant, but my main observation in the plan was that it was very heavy on vaccine development, but very thin on other aspects of preparedness, and had a lot of assumptions about how a pandemic virus would evolve in the first place.  As an undergraduate who had majored in biology, with a focus on evolution of disease, I had dived into the literature and come across what I thought were fascinating papers by an Oxford guy named Edward Holmes.  The uninhibited mindset of a 23 year-old is so foreign to the mindset of a 33 year-old that I really can’t explain the bizarre series of events that unfolded during the six-month interval between that fated train ride to Oxford and the beginning of a PhD with Edward Holmes, who was not actually at Oxford when I had visited because he had just moved to Penn State University a couple weeks prior to my visit but whom I had tracked down nonetheless.
It might be man-made, but running down the ski slope was the closest we could come to the Winter Experience
Our New Years expedition continued with a journey to the source of the mighty Potomac River.
Mission accomplishedThe source of the Potomac wasn’t so mighty.
On Day 2 of our New Years celebration we opted for the calmer Spruce Island Lake loop.
Cecily, unzippedOur beaver hunt yielded no critters, but we did find the dam.
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So, what’s ahead for 2015? Â We’ve got a lot on the first half of the calendar:
January: Peru, Colorado Ski Trip with the Schwartzbards & Andrishes, SnowShoeFest
February: Holiday Lake 50k
March: Belgium, Netherlands, Germany
April: Bull Run 50, Boston, Run for the Birds & Lobsterfest
May: Iowa
June: Laurel Highlands 70
July: MuscleMan 1/2 ironman, Escarpment
August: Luray Tri
2015 could be a Big Year.  It could be the year that Aaron has his breakthrough race that assures him he’s back to normal post-Lyme.  It could be the year that I put an end to my great cycle of injury and strengthen up.  It could be the year that my stomach settles down and I see what I can do in an ultra if I don’t vomit midway.  It could be the year that I finally sort out a position at the NIH so that I can kiss off those draining cycles of faculty interviews.  Or, short of that, 2015 could be the year that I just throw in the towel and decide to be a hippie contractor until some indefinite point when the gig is up.  Here are my predictions for 2015.
(1)Â I have at least one ultra where things go well and I don’t barf. Â And I don’t injure. Â And that’s good enough for me.
(2) I make more Sundays in the Park. Â Even though they start at 8am. Â Because they’re fun. Â And I drag Cecily and Ben there too.
(3) I don’t see much of Sean. Â Except when the stars mysteriously align and we both find ourselves independently at Snowmass on separate family ski trips, our hotels a stone’s throw away.
(4) I swallow considerably less lake during my summer triathlon.
(5) I have every intention of making it back to the Escarpment, but for the 8th year in a row am thwarted by circumstances.
(6) I kind of freak out about turning 34. Â Not because 34 is a bad number. Â I actually like the number 34. Â Just because the numbers 35-40 are terrifying.
(7) I volunteer at the Women’s Half.  At the aid station with the tequila shots.  Because I’ll be taking those.  As I watch someone else win the race.  Hopefully someone who covers their bum.  But I’ll still cheer if they don’t.  Probably too loud because I’ve had too much tequila.  Which is anything more than half a shot.
(8) I don’t get to run the Run For It 5k in Davis.  A race I’ve desperately wanted to run ever since meeting Aaron in 2011. Last year I couldn’t run it because I was in Indonesia.  The year before was Megatransect.  Two years before we were both injured.  The calendar gods will not take pity in 2015.
(9) I travel less. Â Intentionally. Â I get a little more scheduled in 2015. Â I use my Garmin. Â And Strava. Â Even though Aaron promised me the data was private and Robin still gets email notifications. Â I never look at the watch. Â But I accept more structure in my life. Â The food routine at least is good for me, and I get my weight up into the 120s.
(10) My NIH building is repaired.  Even still I go to work with Aaron on ‘Tuesday is take your girlfriend to work’ day.  Because Aaron’s boss got a new work kitty.  And I start riding horses again at Potomac Horse Center.  I stress out a bit about how much money I’m bleeding.  Especially when I’ve taken the hippie contractor career path that could end in measly income.  I cry because spending money like that goes against all my minimalist instincts.  Whether I stick it out or not depends entirely on whether I like my instructor and my ride.  But I put down the money to give it a whirl.  Because 2014 was stressful — too many interviews, injuries, obligations.  And in 2015 I’d like to give myself a loopier rein.
MGM is my favorite VHTRC running event of the year.  This year I was extra-stoked because (a) I would finally get to sport the pair of MaxiMOOSE boxers I had found with such jubilation in a sock store in Breckenridge last May, and (b) I couldn’t wait to at long last meet Seangela!
Team Macomb Street!
The weather cooperated beautifully with my shorts plan, warm enough to go with shorts but not so hot that cotton boxers would be uncomfortable, and the MaxiMOOSIES were greeted with the raves they deserved.  Mr Andrish on the other hand wasn’t so cooperative.  Something about ‘work’.  There was a good bit of grumbling on my part about another major Sean Bail, but Ragan and Joey were pretty tolerant. In fact, trotting along with Ragan and Joey made the miles tick by, and in no time I found myself doing the whole 50k.  The last time I ran over 30 miles without pain in my injuries at the end was…..was…..well not Montana…..not Highland Sky……well it must have been Bull Run!
Nice weather brought out a big-ole group this year.  But no Seangela.
As much as MGM is a social event for me, I didn’t mind it that I ended up running most of the section that overlaps with the Women’s Half Marathon course alone.  My heart thumps a little differently along those stretches.