Thursday, January 22, 2015

High Hopes


Give me help, give me strength
Give a soul a night of fearless sleep

Give me love, give me peace
Don't you know these days you pay for everything
Got high hopes - Bruce Springsteen

God willing, this year will cap off 14 years of running nearly 90 marathons culminating in running a marathon in every state and Washington DC. Its been a long journey through some turbulent times in life. Quite frankly, running has kept me sane and marathons have kept me engaged in the insanity of being sane. With sanity comes high hopes. If you look at Bruce's words above, he appears to be asking God for these things. 

Mathew 21: 21 Jesus replied, “Truly I tell you, ... 22 If you believe, you will receive whatever you ask for in prayer.” 

Today, as I got up to finish this post, the verse of the day delivered to my mailbox was this:

Ask, Seek, Knock

Mathew 7:7 “Ask and it will be given to you; seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to you. 8 For everyone who asks receives; the one who seeks finds; and to the one who knocks, the door will be opened.

In the realm of life, with the struggles and challenges people face, I know that running is a trivial pursuit. However, there are countless stories of how running has changed people's lives giving them hope for a different life, an enriched life. Some Christian purists see the bible as doctrinal, which it certainly is, but without applying it to our daily lives, not finding anything in it that can help with our day would be a sin in itself. With the internet it is easier than ever to search the Bible for keywords, verses, people and put ourselves into the context of what we find.  The Mathew 21 verses above comes from Jesus cursing a fig tree. Yes, the doctrine and context is pure and important but how does cursing a fig tree play into our lives?  Maybe Bruce believes and is asking Jesus for help,strength, fearless sleep, love and peace.

In many ways running a marathon requires these things but in order to receive we must believe, we must ask and we must pay the price.  The price we must pay is in the daily grind of running and training, getting out the door, putting one foot in front of the other, running in the rain, snow and heat, enduring, persevering year in and year out, injuries, aches and pains, sacrifice of time.  The Bible is really the training guide of life and I find comfort in knowing that but I also find comfort in being able to apply it to running.  The Word uses analogies related to running, challenges, endurance, perseverance maybe not in the context of marathons specifically but certainly to the point of application. Again, I am sure that some purists will say that running a marathon and the Bible have nothing to do with one another and should not be put into the same context.  I disagree.  The Bible has everything to do with life particularly the gospel, the teachings of Christ and the good news.  How we apply it to our lives, whatever our pursuits, in the light of its teachings is most meaningful.  I love doctrine as well as application is is why Alistair Begg and Andy Stanley are two of my favorite pastors.

So, you would not know it with this post but this blog isn't about Christianity.  It's about running.  My high hopes this year in running is simple.  Complete a 14 year quest to run a marathon in every U.S. state and DC.  In March I will run the Rock n Roll DC marathon. Although I am not a fan of Competitor who stages the Rock n Roll events, this is one marathon run entirely in DC.  My 49th state will be in Montana, Missoula specifically.  This looks like it will be a great event.  Finally, I will finish in September in Kauai, Hawaii.  I set my sights finishing in Hawaii when I first started.  Although there are many other marathons in Hawaii, most easier, Kauai seems special and it is moderately difficult on a small, beautiful island.  I want to finish on a course that is a challenge (of course, all marathon courses are now a challenge for me). The challenge will represent the 14 years of challenge laid out before me after the 2001 Baltimore marathon.  Kauai will be at least my 86th marathon.  Besides these 3 marathons, I have already made plans for Cincinnati Flying Pig and Baltimore (my 15th consecutive).

Yes, there are other high hopes for my life in 2015 but as far as running goes, this is it.  I will kiss the finish line in Kauai like they do at the Brickyard and then kiss and hug my crew chief, Cynthia Anne who has relentlessly supported me through this endeavor.

Give me help, give me strength
Give a soul a night of fearless sleep

Give me love, give me peace
Don't you know these days you pay for everything
Got high hopes 

What are your high hopes?

Saturday, January 10, 2015

2014 - A Year To Remember

Quite certainly, 2014 was a year to remember and one where I felt like I was finally back on my feet in life. No year is without its challenges but part of life is finding the enjoyment and happiness we all seek and let these things counteract or surpass those challenges.
"For I know the plans I have for you," declares the Lord, "plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future." Jeremiah 29:11
This post is going to be a bit about life and about running which has been such a big part of my life. However, without God and the teachings of Jesus, I would not be where I am today.
"Be confident of this, that he who began a good work in you will carry it on to completion until the day of Christ Jesus." Philippians 1:6
 It will be filled with stats and references to other posts on this blog (click on anything orange) along with some commentary.  Frankly, it is more for me than you, whomever you are, but with our social voyeur tendencies these days, we all like a little insight into the lives of others.  This is also not just my life but Cindy's as she has been part of it every step of the way. OK, let's get started.

First and foremost, the highlight of 2014 was the year Cindy and I were married, April 25, 2014 at Triple Falls, DuPont State Forest near Asheville, NC standing literally at the base of the falls.  We spent a long weekend in a premier B&B, 1900 Inn on Montford in Asheville.  It was a special day and God parted the clouds for us to have sunshine to start our married life together.  The blog entry can be found here.

Another highlight was running the Diaper Dash in Cincinnati with Bree, my step-granddaughter.  It is ironic that after the hundreds of races I have run, the thousands of miles I have run and with the 91 marathons and ultras I have run, I found a complete and pure joy in those 25 yards running with Bree seeing the excitement and joy in her face when pinning on the racing bib, getting her first medal and then doing another 100 yards out of the pure joy of running.  That blog entry can be found here.

A third highlight was giving meaning to running.  I adopted the Durham Rescue Mission as my charity of choice.  I committed in January that I would give the cost of a meal $2.05 for each mile run during the year committing to at least 1,500 miles.  As you will see in the stats below, I surpassed that commitment and provided 1,668 meals to the homeless, addicted, and those in programs to resurrect their lives.  I am humbled that I have been given the health and means to be able to do this.  That blog entry can be found here and the Durham stats page can be found here.

As for running, 2014 was filled with marathons and travel to places that may be once-in-a-lifetime destinations.  In my quest to run a marathon in all 50 states, I added three premier destinations in 2014 giving me 48 states,  Alaska, Wyoming and New Mexico.  All were unique both in the marathon itself and the destination.  Although I could continue to write about these, I already have so the blog entries can be found by linking to the posts: New Mexico (Bataan Memorial Death March), Alaska (Cordova Salmon Runs) and Wyoming (Jackson Hole Marathon).  Other posts related to these events:

I tend to write long posts which I'm sure people don't read and not even sure I would but it is a good chronicle and remembrance of the year.  Pictures and words of life experiences capture the essence of the moment.  I just wish I had started it earlier in life.  What? there was no internet back then?  Oh yes, that's right, there was (and still is) paper and pen! So here are some other highlights and then I will provide stats for the year.
OK, here are some stats for the year.  I love stats and I am in the process of organizing my lifetime racing and running stats.  I believe that I have every bib and time for every organized event that I have run.  Here is how 2014 panned out.
  • Ran 309 of 365 days
  • Ran 1,668 miles
  • Avg. per running day: 5.3 miles
  • Avg. over 365 days: 4.5 miles
  • Number of marathons: 8
  • Avg. marathon finish time: 4:24:39 (Cincinnati best 4:12:37 and Darlington worst 5:13:32)
  • Avg. age-graded time: 4:08:25 (3:43:13 best)
  • Number of states: 8
  • Number of new states: 3
  • Total number of states: 48
  • Total marathons: 82
  • Total marathons/ultras: 91
  • Number of races at other distances: 1 (half-marathon 1:54:47 age-graded 1:40:00)
  • Number of blog entries: 134
  • Number of meals donated to Durham Rescue Mission: 1,668
  • Ran over 100 miles in every month in 2014 102-172 miles
  • Avg. 139 miles per month
  • Avg. 32 miles per week (6-45 miles)
So there you have it, 2014 in a  nutshell.  Of course there are many more things that we did during the year with family like Thanksgiving with Cindy's family, Shelli's April party, Shilling family reunion and Christmas dinner, , shows at DPAC, 2 trips to England (for work), changed role at work, trips to Asheville, camping with Sandy and Paul, Hammer visit, Maniac cheer zone, etc.  It was a packed year and I am thankful to God for it.

The next post here will be called High Hopes and will layout running plans for 2015 when I will finish the 50 states and DC.  I have already had a good start to the year in running so Godspeed the year will progress at His will.

Married at Triple Falls
The Diaper Dash - Bree
Our Backyard
 
Casey Puppy Boy at Jordon Lake


Casey Boy grown up
 

Favorite all-time picture of Casey and me
 
3 Generations

Grandkids at Thanksgiving

Sisters Family Reunion

Bree and her uncle Calvin

Hammer time
Me and my Bro

New Year's Eve at Becky's

Cindy and me after a climb in Alaska

My favorite race finish this year - Bataan Memorial Death March

Showing Casey where I proposed and we got married