Monday, July 25, 2005

Rubberside Down...

SOoooo I DID IT!! WHOO HOO!! You can now refer to me as Madam Triathlete! I finished my first triathlon yesterday in a wonderful way. I didn’t win in anyone else’s eyes, score sheet or time clock, but I did in my own eyes. And in the eyes of my favoritist roommate Becky, Leonard, mom and youngest brother, Steven. When I was done with everything and my belongings were being carried by my Mini Fan Club ($199.95/annual membership fee plus shipping and handling…for what I don’t know) and we were all headed back to the car, I saw that Lucy Ann Foxworthy (my car) had been attacked by window paint which read, “TRIATHLETE” right across the front windshield and on all the door windows it said “ABBY ROCKS” and “GO 365”. The back windshield said, “I AM A TRIATHLETE and my friends love me”

It was awesome to see that! I couldn’t have asked for better support. Getting to the race destination the day before was more difficult than the training just because things weren’t lining up ‘just right’ but nevertheless, we all had fun and I didn’t bleed at all! Or break a nail! Ok, so you wanna hear about the race or what?! Alrighty then. Read on my friends.

My youngest bro Steven had been visiting with me for a few days before the race, so when we packed up to leave town, he came with to be handed off again to my mother, who joined us at the hotel in Richmond, Virginia. An hour after I wanted to leave my house we were still putting stuff into the car and I was going over my packing list one more time. I thought it would be nice to take the bike computer (the more technical name might confuse some people, so we’ll stick with that for now, it tells you how fast you are going and how far you’ve gone and another dozen helpful things) from my old bike to the new borrowed one for pacing. I hadn’t even done a ride with it, but I thought, if we can get it to work then I’ll use it. Leonard knows more about that kinda thing being the mechanic that he is, so he put it on and got it to work, but it was wound too tightly so when I turned the handle bars the wire pulled out of the screen and it was broken. Not going to be used today. Never mind about that, put it into the house and we’ll just go.

During the 2.4 hour ride to the packet pick up site, Leonard took off his seatbelt to look at the pictures in a magazine that Becky was reading from, and I wasn’t about to have that in my car! My mom taught me better! “Leonard, would you be embarrassed if I had to pull this car over because you don’t have your seatbelt on?”
[blank stare from Leonard]
Next scene [Abby’s Honda stopping on the shoulder of the highway until Leo decides to buckle up]
Next scene [Abby becoming more and more like her mother = ) ]

Well, because of all that, the powdered Gatorade canister hit the floor and busted upon, spilling on Steven and assorted other goods. WE HADN’T EVEN BEEN DRIVING FOR 30 MINUTES! AHHHHhhhhh! Hardees was close we took care of things there, but didn’t stop to eat because I had been eating the whole day preparing to break my body the next, so I didn’t even think about my passenger’s growing appetites. We found a gas station/DQ and that was another unnecessary experience that Abby didn’t need in her day.

This is what the DQ counter looked like: a group of lost 14-year-olds responsible for meeting the requirements of hungry customers and at the same time maintaining a restaurant that will satisfy their ‘C’ score. There were a ton a people in line and nothing was being done about it. The dipped cones that 3 young ones were working on (if at this point you think there were 3 cones….one for each worker…there weren’t…there was one that all of them were working on!) came out looking like nothing was even covering them and the people in front of us wanted their money back! I asked them if food was being served today and they said “Go somewhere else! Don’t even think about trying to get anything here! It just isn’t happening.” I made the executive decision to get our lunch from the gas station wing of this fine establishment on an exit where Nothing Else Was!

Steven and Becky and I had paid for our stuff and while I was waiting on Leonard to get thru the line I thought, to calm myself down, I would start eating some of the sunflower seeds I’d just purchased. I looked Becky straight in the face and said, “I am SO irritable.”

At that very second I’d succeeded in opening my bag of sunflower seeds…very well! The contents of that little bag flew EVERYWHERE! I just maintained eye contact with Becky and laughed! Those little seeds had seen some air because they went soaring. I looked over at Steven and he said “I think some went in my pocket.” They had! That changed my mood and the rest of our lunch was eaten on the ground on the side of this place right out of the pits of….

We got to the package pick-up site and saw that I’d been placed—due to the swim time I’d entered—365 out of 408 participants. Wasn’t looking good. Didn’t matter. I’d only been training for less than two months and was going to go thru this to learn about it and find out if I wanna make it a hobby of mine. Which means dropping a lot of money on gear and a lot of time on training. Found the hotel, NICE hotel, checked in, took the bike into the room so nobody could cut my tires/chain/brake lines, then waited for mom then headed for The Last Supper. Chinese! Lovely place. Mom graciously footed the bill for us all so we ate well! THANKS MOM! Dinner was relaxing and full of laughter. Lots of dog and cat jokes. Jokes about our full-blooded Chinese waiter having a nametag on that reads JACK. = )

I didn’t have a way to get my race number on my jersey so we bought a sewing kit from a neighboring grocery store then headed back to the hotel for a nice light swim. While Becky perfectly sewed my number on, Steven, Leonard, mom and I swam in a little indoor pool with 30 cannon ball happy children. ALL THE SAME AGE! Young! It kept things light though. Bedtime came early, sleep came later…that could have been better but can’t change that now. I did what I could to shut off my world without loosing my salvation and that’s all I could do. The best night of sleep is the night before the night before the race and I did well with that.

Becky took me to the race site by 6 AM so family and friends could sleep a little more. Before Becky left I got on my bike to put it into the gear I wanted to start in but wasn’t wearing my helmet and an official stopped me. “Are you aware that at any point today if you are seen riding your bike today without a helmet on you could be disqualified?” “No Sir, I wasn’t.” “Well, now you are.” Then he walked away. I looked at Becky and asked, “I am aware or disqualified??!?!? AHHHhhhh. I didn’t even get to race! I can’t be out! Wait come back! But since he didn’t ask my name or number (not in the dating kinda way… =) we figured that he was just letting me know. Whew. Got the helmet, mounted the bike only to find out that I only could get one gear to work! That wasn’t good. I asked a dude parked next to me to tell me what he could about it but he didn’t want to help at all. I told Becky it would either get fixed or I would peddle the heck out of it regardless, so she should head on back to rally the Mini Fan Club.

An official was walking by so I stopped him and he said he could tell me as much as I needed to know, and whatever he could tell me, but he wouldn’t be allowed to touch it. He touched it anyways and we figured it out. Another WHEW! I got my body numbered and my racing timepiece strapped to my left ankle to time all of my sections. Then waited. Listened to the little pow-wow everyone had to go to about rules and times and awards and penalties then waited. Read strategy from my book then waited some more. How I wished I had brought my cell phone to call someone to take my brain off of pre-race jitters.

After the first swimmers got thru with that leg of the race, I was watching them transition and chose to rethink my plans for transitioning between events. Some people were even getting back from their bike ride after swimming and starting their run before I even got into the pool. From watching them I made a few more modifications to my transitioning post bike ride. I finally saw my Mini Fan Club and invited them to watch me swim from the Wall-O-Window inside the YMCA then got in line.

I didn’t even know what to think about when I started my swim. Absolutely nothing was in my head. You might think that’s astonishing, but it is so true my friends. Well, I did think one thing I guess: “Don’t swallow any of this water.” That’s about it. Once I got going and my heart was beating faster I did remember that “This is the easiest part of the race. Nothing will be easier than this moment, so it isn’t that hard.”

Just keep swimming Just keep swimming Just keep swimming Just keep swimming

All during my swim I could hear my mom from behind the glass “GO ABBY! ATTA GIRL!” I stopped to wag my tounge and give heavy metal hands (hold hand in a tight fist in front of you and stick your first and pinky fingers out…now you can rock ‘n roll!) That was fun! It costs seconds, but it’s ok! I knew where I stood in the race at that point, wanted to do my very best, working my hardest, but still be able to acknowledge my Mini Fan Club and thank them for being there.

When I got done swimming I thought I would be more dizzy than I was, but I could still run after gosling my inner-ear fluid all around. I booked it out the back door and around the backside of the YMCA in bare feet—on rocks—only to round the last building corner to see EVERYONE that had come with me cheering me on! That was great! Becky was taking pictures and running along with me. We were yelling at each other and it was fun! I took my goggles off and swung them around my head in jubilation (that’s right, I was jubilant!) and said “You’re doing this next baby! It’s you and me Bex!) I don’t know what happened after that!

Just kidding. I ran thru a kiddy pool of water to clean my feet off before I suited up for the bike ride. Bike shorts are hard to put on while wet, and so are sock, but I knew it was going to be and had prepared for it. From hundreds of yards away I could hear my mother again: WAY TO GO ABBY! YOU CAN DO IT! This is when I learned a very important lesson. God had made my mother loud for that very moment, and I was glad! I used to think, “OMG, not another life story for the check-out clerk” and now it had all changed! LOL it was funny.

With a strapped helmet and a gel pouch for later consumption under my short leg against my thigh, I ran the bike out of T1 and off we went. When I got to a place where I though I was supposed to go strait, the volunteers were pointing me to turn so I did. But that was wrong. Seeing a T in the road in a residential area with no markers of where to turn was indication to me that I was in the wrong place so I turned around and headed back. “Thanks a lot guys!” “We tried to yell for you to come back!” I thought, POINT BETTER NEXT TIME FELLAS!

It cost me about 4 minutes, nothing that would have counted in the end, but frustrating. I passed a lot of people, did really well, pushing myself the whole way. There were people all along the route cheering for us and telling us where to go as they stopped traffic. There was a girl in my age group that passed me and that made me go even harder. It was amazing to me that I could catch up to her on hills, where she was weaker, but she spanked me anyways. I pushed myself to keep her in sight, but the windy road didn’t allow for that.

Getting dressed for the run took half the time as dressing for biking because I could run and get dressed and drink water and kiss my brother. Multi tasking. I felt like I was driving! Some triathletes tell you that after a bike ride running is very difficult because you are using a whole new set of muscles. I didn’t feel that, but probably because I only rode for 13 miles. I ran smoothly and steadily for the first mile or so then walked then ran then walked and ran. It was hot out side at this point and I could feel how hot my body was because I wasn’t breaking wind with it like I was on the bike. That sucked. And because of my ever-weakening knees, I knew that running was going to be the hardest for me. I spent a lot of time doing it, and in the mean time I saw that same girl that passed me on the bike running back to finish just as I was getting starting. DAG YO!

When I got nearer to the finish line and could hear people cheering, I picked up the pace and pounded the pavement into the Y parking lot, YES!!! I had finished! The announcer was saying my name, where I was from and that I was the ONLY person there representing Liberty University! I didn’t even think as to how they knew that…all I wanted was a shower! Come to find out, my mother told her after she had been announcing other students of colleges in the area! I was greeted by my peeps with more picture taking (they will be up soon, along with the other 3,287 ones that I’ve previously promised!) and cold PowerAid.

T’was a day I shant soon forget. Especially with all the reliving I just did to share this life changing experience with you!

Tuesday, July 19, 2005

Finding a groove...

Now that college is done, my triathlon is next Sunday and my house is back in order, things are starting to settle down. I am trying to find out what life feels like if lived at 65 MPH and not 110 MPH. Ever since I moved to VA 2 years ago to finish school I have been going going going, and now I don't have to anymore. Actually, I've lived my life like that for years and years. 6 maybe. Terrified to slow down and enjoy the life that was all around me...that's changing now.

As 'middle age' comes at me ever so slowly I know what it feels like to want children and not be able to b/c your life isn't set up for them. It's a place in life, rather. Something natural, but real, nonetheless. I used to think it was really scary to wake up one day and the only thing you really have to do is go to work. Ew! I still don't like saying it, but it's a nice place to be. I'm ready for it. Something stable, something to trust, something you can make a healthy budget off of. I start salary living in August and things will be good. I'll sleep in a bed, one without piles of a randomly lived life all over it. I'll be able to eat a lunch sitting down. I'll keep my car free from 'transportable evidence of a busy life' and have it in a way that I won't have to rearrange my stuff to make room for another body. I think I'll wax my car tomorrow.

Keeping in touch with friends who've moved away is important to me. Hanging out with friends that still live here is near the top of my list. Maintaining peace within the walls in which I dwell is a constant prayer, not b.c it is that difficult, 'cause it's not. It's wonderful. It's b/c it's that important. For women, what goes on in other parts of our lives effects the rest of our lives. If home is good, them work is great. If playtime is healthy, then home time is wonderful. It matters.

Staying in constant communication with my family is high on my list of things that will fill my time. A brother in Iraq, the first person to get married is Anna and that's going down in October. I still have 2 young brothers at home that need to know that 'older siblings' care and want to get to know them as they age. Grandmothers living it up as they keep their lives busy with people and tasks. Cousins that I am not nearly as close to with only 8 of them on BOTH sides of my family as people are with 72 on just their mother's side! Leonard!

This week as my first tri nears, I will be asking my body to remember what I want it to do gently, nothing to pushy. Not going to be training too hard. Eating well, as I have been for 3 months since I can afford fresh food again! It's nice to be able to eat oranges and green beans.

Since it's late, I'll go to bed and think about why in the world I'm still up. I need my rest! One more thing though, WEDNESDAY IS GOING TO ROCK! Several really good reasons, to name a few...Anna is turning 25, I am picking up Steven (the youngest in our family) to hang with me till the race, and one other thing that's a surprise. Even I don't know what it's going to be yet, but I'll let you know when I do. Maybe.

Thursday, July 07, 2005

My 4th of July...

The original plan was to play some Frisbee Golf at Peaks View Park, but Play-It-Again sports closed and each Frisbee was $10 and 7 were needed. I couldn't spot $$$ for that so when I got home from a long, strenuous day at the office, the plans were still not made. I get tried—sometimes—of being the program director for misfit college students stranded in a small country town in the summer. =)

Finally, after 1 HOUR of waiting, roommate Becky is close enough to being ready so she slams her wet hair into a ponytail holder, and everyone hurries out the cars.
Into the cars we go,
down the road fo sho,
to play Putt-Putt we might,
if it’s not too late at night.

Ok…so it wasn’t too late and we played…lets just say it was a very Happy Gilmore kinda night.

After Putt-Putt Becky and I proceeded to gorge ourselves silly on a meticulously blueprinted, diagramed, label and mapped out banana split transcribed via pen and napkin that was constructed by 2 patient and accommodating Mountain Frost Creamery scoopers. Everyone else just had ice cream. Once our brain-freezes had subsided and all hands were clean we piled back into the cars and headed up the mountain to Eagle Eyre.

From the rocky roof of the aged cafeteria, Leonard, Steve, Keith and I could view 6 firework displays going on simultaneously over the Greater Lynchburg area, while Austin Lee, Billy and Becky view one, very small and distant show from the parking lot below. Tragically inspired by the firework displays I rocket-launched myself off of the rocky roof and bolted to the swing set followed by 6 overly eager young adults.

Once we realized how much fun it was to revisit those sweet childhood memories we all became unstoppably giddy to the point of nearly vomiting rainbow sprinkles and maraschino cherries. Even though none of us threw-up...it definitely wore us out, causing our swinging to come to an embarrassing height that could have been easily topped by a 5 year old. Although the heights achieved by most of the group at this time were still topping Keith’s inability to swing at all (poor giant all 6 foot 7 inches of him).

Keith, the kindhearted giant, found his match in a slide that was OBVIOUSLY built for him. A slide that would, no doubt, fill the reports of many OSHCA field agents (it might even have lead paint on it!). Blue jeans against aluminum were not giving Keith the slide speed desired to mimic the Jamaica Bobsled team, so something else had to be done. Determined, he grabbed the wool blanket Steve had pulled from his trunk and wrapped it around his bottom half (several times), and found the speed he was looking for. Inspired, Steve strapped his headlamp to his forehead, caped the wool blanket around his neck and began his accent to the top of the slide. Enter New Sport: Wooluminum Sliding!!!

(Due to the fact that many mothers may read this, I will not go into detail about the additional creative things young adults influenced by large amounts of sugar can do with a wool blanket on a 60 degree angled 20 foot long slide.)

After we were done exploring the forbidden camp grounds we decided to head back to my house for a nightcap.....of Icy Pops!

What you have experienced is the tale of 7 “legal” adults enjoying the celebration of the 4th of July without the consumption of alcohol.

Friday, July 01, 2005

Overflow of the heart...

The youth group I helped out with during VBS last week is like a drug to my heart! I love those kids. They are one GREAT group of young people in need of some TLC and they don't have a choice but to get it from me! They all are beautifully different and each have something special to add to the group. They are just amazing, but you'd have to visit to know. I look forward to continuing my influence via Holy Spirit and God's strength throughout the summer then....who knows?!?!

I am leaving today for Philly with a buddy of mine from seminary to visit another friend of ours who is an LU seminarian working up there for the summer for a historic weekend in celebration of our independence to religious freedom. Live Aid (or Live 8!) will be doing their outdoor free concert and 1-2 MILLION people will come. There is only one in the United States and the rest are all around the world. All day concert of MUSIC and live feed from other cities around the globe. The Philadelphia LIVE 8 Concert will be held in conjunction with other concerts at London’s Hyde Park as well as near the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin, the Eiffel Tower in Paris and the Circus Maximus in Rome:
• 12:04 -- Paul McCartney & U2 Live from London
• 12:14 -- Black Eyed Peas
• 12:33 -- Bon Jovi
• 12:54 -- Madonna Live from London
• 1:00 -- Destiny's Child
• 1:16 -- Kanye West
• 1:30 -- Will Smith
• 1:50 -- Coldplay Live from London
• 1:56 -- Toby Keith
• 2:13 -- Dave Matthews Band
• 2:40 -- Alicia Keys
• 2:52 -- Def Leppard
• 3:10 -- Linkin Park and Jay-Z
• 3:50 -- Tim McGraw Live from Rome
• 3:56 -- Sarah McLachlan
• 4:11 -- Maroon 5
• 4:28 -- Green Day Live from Berlin
• 4:34 -- Keith Urban
• 4:48 -- Jars of Clay
• 4:56 -- Pink Floyd Live from London
• 5:00 -- Rob Thomas
• 5:21 -- Stevie Wonder

AND ITS ALL FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE!!!!! YEA!
We'll be coming back late Sunday night, but it'll be soooo much fun. I'm glad I'm in a place in life where I can enjoy this kinda stuff without too much headache or other responsibility holding me back. No family or babies yet, but one day. I'm ready when God is! That truly is the overflow of my heart.