Just when you thought
that the blog was abandoned and you could sleep easy, here I am,
wreaking havoc in your holiday planning with a long post about my
2013. For those of you who are already stressed out after Christmas,
returning the sweater Aunt Ginger bought you (two sizes too large, is
she trying to tell you something?) and spending hours on the
StepMaster trying to burn those stubborn praline calories off your
butt, the summary is this: it was a really good year. Now you can
stop reading and go back to your post-holiday exhaustion.
For those of you gifted
with extraordinary stamina and/or nagging curiosity, here follows a
long account of what the fuss is all about. I can't promise you it
will be worth your while, but then again, you can't find out unless
you read it. If you start reading now, you might even be finished before the year is out!
I like challenges. I find
it refreshing to throw in a little challenge in my life and try
something new once in a while. I don't always succeed (I'm looking at
you, Japanese lessons of 2005) but it's mostly good fun and I learn a lot in the process. I don't do it for anyone else's benefit
than my own and for no nobler reason than because I feel like it. It
gives me something to stress about on the weekends.
One challenge I embarked
upon this year was the half Cannonball read. Read 26 books within a
year and review them. It was the second year in a row I participated
in the CR, but this year I completed the challenge as early as
August, and went on to read several more books after that, albeit
without reviewing them. Most of the books I read were crap, but there
were some real gems in there.
Challenge number two was
to write a novel in November. NaNoWriMo takes place once a year. Its
basic premise is that you have to write 50.000 words within one
month. They don't have to be good. They are just meant to get your
creative juices flowing. I completed the challenge. The immense exhilaration I felt upon completion took me by surprise. I wanted
to shout it from the rooftops. I was so proud. Then people started
asking me if they could read the book, and I realised that this book would
never be read by anyone else but me. In its present, unedited form it
is shite, and I have no intention of going back to edit it,
mainly because I'm a lazy muppet but also because I don't think it can ever be good enough. I am still proud of it, but it's not the story I
wanted to tell, just a story I had to write.
This experience has been great. It showed me that, if I ever decide
to put my mind to it, I could write a proper book, one that I will
share with anyone who's interested. I would really love to do that.
And now, for the moment
you have all been waiting for, since this is a training blog and all:
How was 2013 training wise?
It started off amazingly
well. I had Lapland Ultra in my sights. I had a training schedule I
followed for several weeks without a hitch, and I dared to hope that
maybe this time my body would be on my side. Unfortunately, it
wasn't, and I suffered my first injury early on in the year: a
strange, intense pain on the back of my right
knee. I could hardly walk, let alone run. I let my dream of Lapland
Ultra go. It felt okay to do so.
When I got back on track,
I watched instead how my times in different distances got better and
better. My training with AIK had done wonders. In May, I got to stand on
the podium to receive a medal after LuleƄ half marathon. In August, I got first place in a local track race. The rest of the races I ran
saw me climbing to positions I had never before thought possible.
In July, J and I spent a
week in Hemavan. I was sorely untrained for the demanding terrain
but still managed to log a very respectable total of 120 km running
and hiking. The only downside to it all was an injured foot: I had
managed to twist it during a trail run earlier that summer and it
wouldn't heal for months. In fact, I am not sure it is healed even
now. As long as I stay away from trails, it's fine. Hemavan was, of
course, nothing but trails. My foot was a constant reminder of how easily
things could go wrong.
And speaking of trails,
one of the best experiences of 2013, hell, of my life, was Salomon trail Ultra in UmeĆ„ last September. The promised 48 km was ”only”
45,6, but the finish line was a sight for sore eyes. I had gotten
myself a runner's knee somewhere around the 20th kilometre
but still stubbornly refused to drop out of the race and get my first
DNF. It took me almost 6 hours, but I got to that finish line.
Achy knees have been my constant companion since then. Thankfully, I haven't had to
take a complete break from running, but my long runs have suffered
cutbacks. That is to say, I haven't run any long runs since
the race. Maybe because of this, or maybe because of the terrible,
grey, icy, snow-free winter we've been having up here, my motivation
to get out and run has been non-existent (as evidenced by the extra
couple of kilos that magically appeared on my thighs). Maybe I am
just winding down for this year, basking in the good feeling of
everything I have achieved.
And next year? The older
I get, and the more experience from running I gather, the humbler I get and the more
realistic my goals are. I become better and better aware of what my
body can and cannot do. I become better at being patient. My focus
next year will be to put down the foundations I will build upon in
2015. I will strive for continuity in my training, rather than
progression towards a goal. I will strive for strength and variation.
I hope that this strategy will keep me injury-free. It's about time I
had an injury-free year, don't you think?