Updates from May, 2010 Toggle Comment Threads | Keyboard Shortcuts

  • Brian Sawyer 2:07 pm on May 18, 2010 Permalink | Reply  

    The Ragnar Relay Show 

    This weekend, I’ll be part of a Ragnar Relay team, running from New Haven to Boston (with a generous margin of error for location on either end). I know I’ll be missed while I’m away and that everyone will be very jealous of my running a total of 20 miles across three legs within 24 hours (or so) without sleeping, bathing, or leaving a van of five similarly sleep-deprived and sweaty teammates to do anything but run. To ease the envy of those who won’t be participating, I want to capture and broadcast this experience as well as I can for anyone who won’t be able to make it, and I’ve decided to do so in real time. You’re welcome in advance.

    For tools, I’ll be using only my Android phone and free apps that are readily available in the Android Market (all of which are also covered in my forthcoming book).

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    • Andre Parker 11:39 am on May 20, 2010 Permalink | Reply

      This is cool!

  • Brian Sawyer 11:33 am on October 2, 2009 Permalink | Reply  

    Running Boston Marathon for Cancer Research 

    UPDATE: My Dana-Farber Marathon Challenge fundraising page is ready to accept donations. Thanks in advance for your support!

    Exactly two weeks ago today, I started a new training videoblog. Beyond moving all running-specific chatter away from my main personal site here, I had another specific purpose in mind, which I didn’t reveal at the time because my plan required acceptance of an application I’d filed on that same day. I received that acceptance today, and I’m excited to share the news with my followers here, in the hopes that you’ll also follow and support me over there.

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  • Brian Sawyer 6:39 am on August 27, 2009 Permalink | Reply  

    San Francisco Marathon Race Report 

    I finally got around to writing up my race report for the marathon I ran a month ago, and for the past week I’ve been blogging it in several guest posts over at Marathon Mama.

    Now that the whole thing is up, here’s a roundup of all the pieces:

    Thanks again to everyone who supported me throughout my training, followed me during the race, and left such thoughtful comments for me on Twitter, Facebook, email, etc. I really appreciated it and know that all many of you wanted in return was to actually hear how it went. So, these posts are for you (you know who you are).

     
    • TJ Thomasson 10:43 am on August 27, 2009 Permalink | Reply

      Hi,

      How was the SF Marathon? I am doing the Nike Marathon in October in SF… Any tips? lol

      It will be my first marathon.

      Also, I will be in Nashville this weekend. Any cool groups to run with? Any nice places to run? It’s my first time to Nashville, so I know nothing about the area.

      I have 16 miles to do either Sat or Sun morning.

      Thanks,

      tj

  • Brian Sawyer 8:33 pm on April 30, 2009 Permalink | Reply  

    Marathon Training with Google’s “My Tracks” on G1 Android Phone 

    Okay, first off, my memory isn’t so short that I don’t remember what I wrote in January about the intrinsic rewards of running my own race and the corresponding implication that I would likely never desire to run another marathon ever again. As it turns out, a few months later, though I still believe the first part, the second part has gradually evolved into an actual need to run another marathon.

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  • Brian Sawyer 2:52 pm on April 3, 2009 Permalink | Reply  

    Plagiarized Through a Translator? 

    Here’s something interesting: “Running My Own Race,” by LiveJournal user alexbutlervc* (not his own race, as it turns out):

    Stolen Blog Post

    If it looks familiar, that’s because it’s awfully similar to a post I wrote in January. Yes, that’s me in the picture, and even the links are mine (to my Twitter stream and my MapMyRun.com profile).

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  • Brian Sawyer 10:05 pm on January 5, 2009 Permalink | Reply  

    Running My Own Race 

    Chelmsford Police 5K Road RaceAnyone who follows my Twitter stream will have noticed (and been reminded … and reminded … and reminded …) that sometime around the last week of November 2008 I decided to make a real effort to get back in shape. As if my obsessive running-themed status updates weren’t enough there, I even decided to duplicate them in a new Exercise portion in the sidebar of this blog, displaying the most recent runs posted to my training log at MapMyRun.com. More than just a way to allow people a peek into the tedium of my daily routine, making my regimen public helps motivate me. As pathetic as it may sound, the shame of too many days without an exercise update keeps me going when my own intrinsic impulses fail me.

    Breaking AwaySpeaking of motivation, like (I assume) most people who fall off the exercise wagon and want to jump back on, I felt I needed this little push to get over the initial hump, where even a couple miles on the road or treadmill felt a little demoralizing. I also held a bit of my motivation in reserve (that is, I didn’t make it public), something I’d counted on before–namely, training for a race. More specifically, I decided I’d prepare myself to run the Hyannis Half Marathon in February, which I ran last year as one leg of a two-person full-Nmarathon relay. When I started in November, this was the prize on which I set my eyes, the thing I told myself I’d better be ready for to keep myself moving.

    The Couple That Runs TogetherBut somewhere along the way–and it didn’t take all that long, really–I actually started to enjoy running again for its own sake again. This isn’t to say that the goal was no longer important (to tell the truth, I started to get more impatient about getting to that distance), but I became less dependent on the ideal of participating in the official event. So, after running my longest distance (8.3 miles on December 21) since last February and feeling really good about it, I decided to push myself a week later to see what I was capable of.

    The result? Half-marathon distance, on December 28, on my own, in 1:49:55, about five minutes faster than my time last February in the relay. Though proud of me, my running (and life) partner, Kristina, was probably right to call this jump in distance “stupid,” but I didn’t injure myself and felt great after, so I’m glad I did it. I feel like I’ve already accomplished what I set out to do, and now I’m ready to maintain my health and enjoy what I’m doing, without calling it “training.”

    But I don’t want anyone to misunderstand my perspective on formal races, least of all Kristina, who does train and does run races, all of which makes me more than a little awestruck. I still think races are great events and very important for reaching major goals, and, to be honest, I’m probably rationalizing not running Hyannis a little more than making a big statement, largely because it’s a financial expense I feel I can (and should) avoid. But there is a nugget of truth in there, at least for me. For the distances I intend to run and for my own goals, I don’t think I need a race to get me there.

    Marathon ManNow, if I were to run a marathon, that would be a different story, something I don’t think I could ever accomplish on my own. I actually ran a marathon with Kristina once (well, most of the way, before I allowed her to leave me behind a few miles from the finish) and it nearly made me physically unable to run ever again (my knees! my knees!). And as you can see in the photo on the left, I did not feel great at the finish. As it turns out, thankfully, it didn’t end up killing my ability to run permanently, but it just may have killed my desire to run 26.2 miles in one stretch ever again. I’ll leave that to Kristina (her next marathon is less than two weeks away) and support her every step of the way (though not literally, of course).

    Anyway, I’ve been running as much as I can since late November and clocked over 75 miles in December, which I’m hoping will keep anyone from calling this a “New Year’s resolution.” I’ve already run 21 miles in the first five days of 2009, which is just over the modest 20-mile goal I’ve set myself as my minimum weekly distance (there, I’ve said it out loud, so I suppose I’ll need to follow through), and I continue to feel great. I don’t get the crowds, but I get a finish line every day, and every day, I get to break the tape.

     
  • Brian Sawyer 3:19 pm on February 29, 2008 Permalink | Reply  

    Hyannis Marathon Team Relay 

    Feeling Strong (at ~8 miles, I think)Last weekend, Team Henry took to the Cape to run the Hyannis Marathon Team Relay. Though most teams relied upon different people to run each of the four legs of the relay, our team did it with just two, each of us completing a full half marathon. I ran the second half (which means I missed the thrill of the start but was allowed the glory of the finish line), while my better half, well, ran the better half (in terms of time). As a team, we finished in 3:42, which includes a first leg of 1:46, a second leg of 1:54, and a couple minutes to pass the baton and transfer the timing chip from shoe to shoe. Not too shabby, eh?

    The Marathon MamaIf you’re interested, my running partner has a more complete (and more interesting) report of the event here. I ran my leg in large part as a way to help support her training for the Boston Marathon. Her leg was just another step in something much larger, running twice as far and raising money to support Dana-Farber cancer research. If you’d like to help support her, you don’t need to run 13.1 miles. A donation would be appreciated even more.

    As a humorous aside for all of the editors, word wonks, and other sticklers in the audience (actually, you don’t need to fall into any of those categories to appreciate this), Kristina also pointed out a pretty significant typo (I was too tired to catch the obvious, which should tell you something about endurance level) in the four medals our team of two received: 

    Narathon

    How far is a “narathon” anyway?

     
    • Your Better Half 3:26 pm on February 29, 2008 Permalink | Reply

      1:45:40, but who’s counting? Also, Jill caught the typo, so I’ll give credit to her, though I definitely love having a medal with a glaring error. Maybe we actually ran further than 13.1 each, since N is beyond M in the alphabet.

    • Joseph F. Cavanaugh III 12:18 am on March 3, 2008 Permalink | Reply

      Hi Brian,
      I took a lot of photographs of the Hyannis Marathon, Half-Marathon, 10K, and Relays. The photos can be found posted on http://www.CapeHomepage.com on the Cape Photo tab. Check em out, and feel free to email requests for .jpg images to capehomepage@yahoo.com.
      Joe

  • Brian Sawyer 3:32 pm on December 8, 2007 Permalink | Reply  

    Marathon Relay Training: 8 on the 8th 

    Marathon ManIn the fall of 2002, I ran a marathon. It was one of the hardest things I’ve ever done, and the training alone resulted in a pair of knees that would never really work the same. Battered by a rough 30K a few weeks before the big event, my knees hurt every step of the way, and by the last 8 miles or so, it felt like someone was taking a hammer to each kneecap every time my sole hit the pavement. I present exhibit A at right: a photo of my agonizing 5:01 finish.

    Since then, I haven’t been much of a runner, first because I was physically incapable and then because life and habit crept in and a touch of laziness conspired to keep me fairly sedentary. Kristina, on the other hand, after a hiatus, took her first marathon (she ran with me, most of the way, before pulling ahead for the last few miles) as a challenge to do more. Her efforts, both raising money for charity and for her own self-discipline and single-minded devotion to accomplishing something important within in her and around her have truly inspired me.

    Recently, though, I decided to stop simply being jealous of her drive, fitness, and accomplishments, and allowed her to rope me into being the second half of her marathon relay team in February. I’ve only been running in earnest for a few weeks, and only legitimately “in training” for the last week or so, but already I feel worlds better for being a part of something like this again. Running is something the two of us can share again, even if we rarely get a chance to actually run together, and getting in shape has done a lot for me, both physically and emotionally. Best of all, my knees have actually let me do it. I’m crossing my fingers that they continue to hold out.

    Today, I’d planned to run 6 miles, which isn’t too shabby and would tie (I ran it last weekend too) my longest single run since the marathon in 2002. But she once again inspired me to push myself, by bringing to my attention a fellow running blogger’s challenge to run “8 on the 8th.” Today, I did my 8 miles (in 1:06), and it felt great. Here’s hoping everything continues to go smoothly as I step up the mileage leading up to the February race. Who knows? Perhaps these old knees will let me go another 26.2 some day.

     
    • Nancy 3:54 pm on December 8, 2007 Permalink | Reply

      Holy crap, if I could run it in 1:06 I would never ever stop again. :D Awesome job. I am so glad you are coming back and that my little brainstorm of a way to keep myself running has done the same for others. And YEAH Kristina for your dedication and for getting him back out there!

      Thanks for joining us! Look for results late Sunday or early Monday — I want everyone to have a chance to post.

      Happy 8 mile marker!!

    • Topher 5:19 pm on December 8, 2007 Permalink | Reply

      I second Nancy’s comments; incredible finish for just deciding to lace up and give it a try. I’ve had to bust my hump for over a year to get where I am. Congratulations!

      By the way, I think this is the most unique male runner’s blog around! Very cool that you can knit. I can tie my shoes all by myself, but that’s about all. I look forward to reading more.

    • Ovens to Betsy 7:52 pm on December 8, 2007 Permalink | Reply

      Way to go! Definitely an impressive finish.

  • Brian Sawyer 6:55 am on April 16, 2007 Permalink | Reply  

    Race Day 

    Today’s The Marathon Mama‘s big day. I just drove her to catch her ride into Boston, and I’ll follow with family in a few hours myself. If you’re watching the field, here’s what to look for:

    The Marathon Mama What to Look for Tomorrow

    This is the last time I’ll make this request, but there’s still time to make a donation to support her efforts for the Dana-Farber Marathon Challenge. Isn’t it worth a little more to run on an injured knee in a Nor’easter?

    UPDATE: I’m toying with the idea of live blogging the marathon via my cell phone. If you’re interested in updates, follow me on Twitter.

     
  • Brian Sawyer 9:41 am on November 6, 2006 Permalink | Reply  

    Handcrafted Cards from The Marathon Mama 

    Not too long ago, I posted a request for support of Kristina’s running of the Boston Marathon as part of Dana-Farber Marathon Challenge. In the short time she’s been fundraising, she’s been grateful for the tremendous show of support she’s already received, but she still has a way to go before she reaches her goal.

    So, she’s resorting to craft to help shake the tree:

    I’ve finally found a way to merge my sedentary and physical pursuits: crafts and running. To boost my fundraising and nudge up the reading on my DFMC thermometer (see my Dana Farber online donation page), I am now selling handcrafted notecards.

    Shirley's Garden Notecards (by Brian Sawyer) Shirley's Garden Notecards (by Brian Sawyer)
    Check out her post
    for more details about the cards and how to order them, and stick around to browse her archives. She’s been an incredibly diligent blogger, with informative and humorous posts almost daily. Whether you want to learn what the hell a fartlek is, some important breast cancer facts, what’s on her iPod’s running playlist, or even why she runs at all, you’ll find a lot to pore over there already.

    And, if she stays as regimented in her blogging as she is in her training, you should see much more to come between now and April.

     
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