Friday I decided to go hang with my turtle friends for a simple four miler. I texted my accountability partner with the plan. A simple,"two out, two back." Yeah, I had that. I set off on the trail feeling strong. I had my virtual running coach coming through my headphones reminding me of my form, my breathing, my cadence. I was in the zone, the sun was shining, and I even saw two friends I have dearly missed as I have not seen them since before the pandemic. Oh yes, strong mile one. Pretty soon the tide began to change. Yes, the sun was out, in fact it was beating down on me. It was 85 degrees and some obnoxiously high percentage of humidity. I pushed through mile two trying desperately to maintain focus, but the reality was I was hot. I was thirsty. I was being dive bombed by these Kamikaze deer flies that seem to have taken a liking to me. Not to mention the turtle nests that were normally so comforting, instead were reminding me that in a week it will be the three year anniversary of my mother's abrupt exit from this Earth.
By mile 2.2 I would find myself walking. I was no longer listening to the coach. Instead, I was attending to the wave of grief that hit me all at once. In fact, I found myself walking the remainder of the distance, looking at the baby turtles along the way. I was a bit relieved the deer flies were leaving me alone, as they are territorial and tend to attack when you are moving quickly. However, I was mostly wondering what life would be like if my mom was still here. At the end of it all, I came to realize my head space had completely interrupted what I set out to do and I had to report the epic fail to my accountability partner who would assure me it was alright to grieve.
Yesterday, I had to think long and hard about what it was my mom would have actually wanted from me in a time like this. She was a strong independent woman who didn't take shit from anyone. She would want me to pick my head up, take control and move ahead. It seemed like a tall order, but as I often dish out the,"fake it til you make it advice" I supposed I had to get to it. I was afraid I would let my accountability partner down again, so I didn't want to commit much there. However, with that notion, I found myself asking a new question. What if I made a promise to myself and followed through? Historically I have not been good at this sort of thing, but what if I did it? Seemed a bit on the terrifying side, but I was willing to try. Besides, nobody would know if I failed but me, a free pass loophole from my usual commitment to accountability.
I ended up ghosting my accountability partner, committed to six miles on the stepper and got to work. Point 4 mile intervals with heavy upper body weights in between. Off I went, with the first few miles strong, and the last ones stronger. Even the weights got heavier as I went. When I hit mile six, I tossed in another .2, because 6 miles was just so damn close to a 10k, why not finish the job and be better than I planned? I ended the workout with a PR, drenched, free of the grief that overtook me the day before and the air of a surprised satisfaction knowing I was much more capable of trusting myself than I ever thought.
I ended up doing some reading on that crazy upside down turtle. As it turns out, turtles do that to slow their metabolism down to barely existent, take on life giving oxygen from the surrounding water and simply recharge. You know, I'm beginning to think those four feet sticking out of a sea of mud were not ridiculous after all. Maybe that turtle had it right. In fact, it is entirely possible my run on Friday was not the epic fail I made it out to be. Maybe when life dive bombs you with the vengeance of a deer fly, the thing to do is slow down, stop the attack, lean into the hard stuff, trust your own abilities and don't forget to look for the turtles. In the end, my mom may have missed her own baby turtles but it would seem she has sent plenty for me to enjoy to serve as a not so subtle reminder that the best is yet to come.
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