On the other hand, I learned that I was completely unprepared to cheer my husband properly. My mom came down to meet me and we drove to 6 different spots along the race to cheer him. I brought our camera and I also had cliff bars and poweraid chews and the like to give him along the route. I did all the prep work the days ahead to make sure that I knew what time we needed to leave and what to bring and where to go, filled out his race bib, stayed with him until the race started and all that. I thought I was being very supportive. However, I didn't have the professionally printed shirts saying Run Mike Run. I didn't even have a homemade one. I also didn't bring a poster or banner and I didn't have the blowup sticks that you bang together to make noise or the cowbells. So now I'm trying to convince Mike to run another marathon so that I can properly cheer him on. At the moment I'm not having much luck (something about his legs feelings like they've been beat a thousand times with a baseball bat).
I also didn't think about bringing Apollo with us for the day. We left him cooped up at home and our neighbor came to play with him for a little while about midway through the day. I saw a lot of people with their dogs though and I think I would bring Apollo if we did this again. He would enjoy it, although I don't think he'll understand why he can't run with Mike.
Finally I learned that I was much more nervous, anxious, and worked up over this race than Mike was. I was about ready to cry by the time he crossed the finish line for some reason. I realized while Mom and I were waiting about mile 22 that Mike and I do almost everything together. If he's playing on a sports rec league or I'm doing something we go support each other. And for flag football or basketball I can watch him run up and down the field and see him the whole time. With the marathon though I couldn't see him the whole time and it was really hard on me for him to go through something so difficult, painful, and momentous without me being able to be there for the whole thing.
Other things we learned:
- To be grateful for sore legs that hurt. We saw two people, including a 7 year old boy, without legs who ran the race with prosthesis
- To be grateful for safe finishes. An experienced runner died towards the end of the race on Sunday.
- That before we have kids we need to get a real video camera rather than just using the recording function off my camera
- That it's really cool to have F-18s do a fly-by the kick start the marathon.
- That when people say that finishing is winning a marathon, regardless of place, it's really true. In the case of 26.2 miles, just finishing really is winning.
1 comment:
congrats to you both on making it through the marathon!
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