On May 4, 2024, I competed in a road race for the first time in nearly 7 years. Looking at it from a distance it was not a major accomplishment. Hell, I’d run dozens of races before. However, when you get up close and know the full details of the journey to get here it becomes the biggest race I’ve ever run. To understand why we have to go back nearly seven years.
On August 12, 2017, I competed in the Brewster Brew Run in the town of Brewster on Cape Cod in Massachusetts for those unfamiliar with my home area. It was, and still is, a 5.2-mile run sponsored by a local bar called The Woodshed. Ironically I had no plan to run that race, I was talked into it by a friend on eleven days' notice. The run itself was fine. The stats were: 39:47 overall, 7:39 pace per mile, good for 180th out of 1,294 people.
At the starting line of my last race in 2017
If I had known that was going to be the end of my running career for a long time I likely would have slowed a bit to appreciate it. Instead, I was glad it was over and was more interested in filming myself chugging the complementary beer you got for running.
After this race ended the coming months saw my life take several unexpected twists and turns that knocked running far from my mind and far from my body’s ability.
Over the ensuing months, nagging injuries in my legs slowed my running. At the time I had what I believed to be a left ankle/foot injury caused by intense speed training. I had a desire to finish Top-10 in a 5K(3.1 miles). My best at that time was 19:30, or 6:17 per mile. To finish Top-10 you usually needed to be under 18 minutes in your time. That’s about 5:48 per mile.
I’ll try to sum up the intricate running minutia for those who are starting to fall asleep reading. The gist was that I needed to increase my speed by about 30 seconds per mile. That’s not too hard if you’re running slower. When you’re already fast getting faster leaves little room for error. Only a few wrong steps in your running gait can equal some pretty rough injuries. This is what happened to me. I went too fast, well, too fast.
The left foot issues slowly eroded my speed and endurance. Sure I still could run races, but slower. Sure I could still run as exercise, but it became more necessary for me to slow down, or stop to let my foot calm down.
That Brew Run race had basically pulled me out of retirement in 2017. My foot issues sadly were too much to keep risking. I was working as a personal trainer and if I couldn’t walk it would spell doom for that job. So with running becoming less of my release and stress reliever, I started turning more to drinking.
Late in 2018, my Grampa began to deteriorate into Alzheimer’s. I had either been naive, or just blind to his condition for months. My mother had been telling me of things that he’d been doing and saying but I didn’t see it so it had to be exaggerations, right?
With my Grampa in 2010 |
He was my hero and role model so I think I didn’t want to believe that he was declining so rapidly. After a series of mishaps that made it more and more difficult for him to continue living at home with my Nina, Grampa was taken to a nursing/rehab facility. It was while he was there that the shocking truth became apparent to me.
By this point in time I was working at a retirement home and had become more aware of the signs of Alzheimer’s. Once I saw Grampa get stuck in a sort of loop where he did the same few things repeatedly nonstop I knew that everything my mother had said was true.
Because he was my hero I felt I owed it to him to be there as much as possible as his days counted down. Unfortunately, it was a trauma that I still haven’t gotten over. Watching Alzheimer’s cut my Grampa down was agonizing. With running not as big of a part of my life I kept on drinking to dull the pain.
When Grampa passed from Alzheimer’s in May 2019 I dove off the deep end with drinking. I made the excuse that I needed to cope with this loss by any means necessary. Whatever collateral damage happened I would deal with it later. Later meant much later. For many months I drank daily. It went from mourning Grampa to a vice I couldn’t break free from.
Then Covid happened. In March 2020 the world shut down. On one hand, I was lucky because working in a retirement home categorized me as an ‘essential worker.’ On the other hand, I was in a toxic work environment and when I wasn’t there the world was on lockdown. This once-in-a-century pandemic was another form of trauma. Much like with the deaths of Matt and my Grampa, I decided to deal with Covid however was needed to survive.
This meant more drinking. This also meant eating whatever I wanted. I needed some sort of good feelings in such a tough time. My life was dominated by McDonald’s, Domino’s, Wendy’s, and other fast food places.Despite not running as much I was still doing some, and also hitting the gym 5-6 days a week regardless. When the world shut down that all went away. I became far more sedentary. I gained roughly 25 pounds in just a little over four months. It went from ‘oh well I can’t run much but I’m still in great shape otherwise,’ to being out of shape, eating fast food, and drinking to numb trauma that wouldn’t heal.
The weight would fluctuate. I’d lose a little but then gain it back plus a little more. So my lows became less low and my highs got higher. I would have moments of clarity but not long enough to make changes.
Finally, in September 2020 I used all of my strength and willpower to quit alcohol. It was not easy. Stop me if you’ve heard this one, but when quitting alcohol I said I’d deal with it by any means necessary. This meant filling the alcohol void with more food. This sadly became a vice without me even noticing. Despite the world starting to open back up I was in far worse shape physically and mentally so picking up the pieces would have to wait.Unfortunately, when my Grampa died I knew that it was only a matter of time until my Nina followed him. They were married over 70 years so I knew when one went the other would not be far behind.
I had been working in the retirement home where my Nina had been sent. This meant I could see her and support her every day I worked. I wanted badly to do more as a personal trainer though. I moved on to another retirement home that offered fewer hours so I could start adding in-home training clients to my schedule. Then Covid happened.
Not only was I stuck in a different retirement home, but my training clients were a no-go. This also meant that my Nina was now locked down without the ability to see her family. If I had only waited a little longer to leave that first retirement home I would have at least been on the inside with her.
Obviously, nobody could foresee the Covid lockdown happening. That being said, the amount of guilt I had, and still have, for essentially abandoning my Nina is something I haven’t been able to get over. I had stopped drinking, and I was now far too out of shape to run anywhere near what I used to. That meant I would eat whatever my heart desired to deal with the guilt, sadness, whatever I was feeling.In March 2021 my Nina left this earth. We as family did get to see her on the inside a few times before the end. It was not the end of life any of us had envisioned. I didn’t see myself sitting in a lobby of a retirement home basically in a hazmat suit sitting next to my Nina with a pan of plexiglass between us and her also wrapped up like a mummy. I remember apologizing for leaving that retirement home and Nina jokingly saying that I should be sorry because I couldn't bring her bacon and raisin toast anymore like I had been doing.
In the end, I had to cope with another loss by eating my feelings. I was unhappy but knew I’d be unhappier if I didn’t have the bad foods. My brain began to clear from alcohol and I realized how toxic the second retirement home job was. It was so bad that I ended up quitting in the middle of Covid with no backup plan. I just knew being in that environment was not good for my mental health.
A few months later I was lucky to find a far better job, one suited to my skills as a personal trainer. It was as a trainer at a chiropractic and wellness clinic. Here is where my running injury was finally properly diagnosed. During my first-ever chiropractic adjustment, my boss Dr. Mike was able to show me that it was not my left ankle/foot that was the issue. No, that issue was in fact caused by an injury to my right hip. This was further made clear when I was put on bilateral scales.Bilateral scales are two scales next to each other. You step one foot onto each. In theory, if you’re in proper alignment the weights on either scale should be identical, or at least virtually so. My numbers were off a good 15 pounds. I was running crooked which only compounded my issues. When you factor in the added weight I was carrying it was no wonder why running had become more uncomfortable than even when I was marathon training.
So I worked on trying to correct the hip imbalance. It wasn’t enough to get back to any real running though. Months passed and it was time for another loss in my life. When I had left my Nina at that first retirement home she wasn’t the only family I had left.
Brenda might not have been family in the blood sense, but she had been a part of my life since the day I was born, before then. She was at nearly every family event as long as I could remember. I referred to her as my aunt either way.
She was also a resident at the retirement home. There had been a few cardiac issues that had forced her there at a relatively young age. I loved getting to spend all sorts of time with her during my workdays. She had many friends in the complex, but I was the only family.
Being that she didn’t have any blood family on Cape Cod it was tough when she ended up in the ER. Her health issues came to a head and she was not long for the world. The people closest to Brenda from my family were my Uncle Eric and Aunt Emma. At the time of Brenda’s decline, they couldn’t make it to the Cape from Las Vegas. They were happy that I was able to get in and see her though.
She was unresponsive but I still spoke to her. She was the fourth important person in my life in just over four years to die. I hate to say I was becoming numb to it but it felt that way. Maybe it was a bit of self-preservation. I felt awful that Brenda passed with few, if any, visitors. She deserved better than that but I could only control the fact that I had been there.
Several people from my high school class have remained good friends. Although some have moved far away, and even more have gotten married and/or had children, there is a collection of names that always makes me smile. One such person was Pete Machon. He was a gentle soul, good-looking surfer-type guy, that’s the best way I can describe him.
Through the years after high school, I saw him less and less but through the magic of social media I could stay connected with him to a degree. I learned of Pete’s death after the fact in the late summer of 2022. Losing people your own age when you’re supposed to have a good half of your life left is a strange sadness. People get the short end of the straw all the time and fall to illness or accidents. Still, you don’t ever expect it. It was a shocking gut punch. I had our lineage of social media interaction and I found myself scrolling through and wishing each conversation had been longer.The only silver lining of mourning the loss of Pete was that a lot of us from high school got together to celebrate his life. It’s something I wish happened more often and not surrounding death or high school reunions. Part of that is my own doing. The string of deaths in my life, coupled with my alcohol issues, and the circumstances of Covid has changed me deep inside.
I feel at times as if I have forgotten how to interact with people thanks to retreating into a shell to cope with all of the bad of the last several years. I know there have been times when friends want to do things and I find excuses not to. So they go and do things without me. The loss of Pete, another good friend taken suddenly, left me speechless and a bit empty.
During these times I was still hitting the gym as best I could but it wasn’t the same as a few years prior. Back then I had direction, I had a purpose. I was a runner and a pretty good one, so my workouts were geared toward the next race. With running becoming less and less a part of my life I felt directionless. I felt as if I was just going through the motions. Hitting the gym because it was what I was supposed to be doing.
Despite working in fitness and helping people toward their own goals I was having trouble finding motivation and inspiration for my own. I could always hang my hat on the fact that I had conquered my alcohol dependence though. That got tested though as another massive loss came my way.There might be few things worse than having things to say and never getting to say them. I was not prepared to get a text from my sister Kate asking me how our Uncle Eric died in January 2023. I had not even known he was sick, let alone that he had passed literally the day before. It was the gut punch to end all gut punches.
I had looked up to my Uncle Eric as a father figure. He was someone who set an example of what it was like to be a good man and a good father. I had told him on a few occasions that I wished he’d been my father, so he knew how I felt. However, to be so wrapped up in my own bubble to not know he was sick, or to not reach out just because, it was too much to bear.
I sat in the parking lot of a shopping plaza, staring at a liquor store I used to frequent so much that the employees knew when I would switch up my usual order. I thought about Uncle Eric and how he meant so much to me but I never got a final chance to tell him. I debated long and hard about just caving and going in and grabbing something, anything, and just coping with the loss in the way I had done before. Ultimately I thought I’d be disrespecting my uncle by doing that. He would not like to be used as an excuse for me to fall off the wagon. So I started my car and went home. I’d deal with his loss with more bad foods.
My cathartic moment when dealing with Uncle Eric’s death came during his celebration of life. It was there that my guilt over not being in touch more when he was declining came spilling out. I sobbed and apologized to my Aunt Emma and cousin Patrick. The sadness was overwhelming but I had kept that bottled up and didn’t dull it with alcohol so I had to set it free. I am still not over the loss of my uncle to this day.
Six deaths of important people in my life in barely more than five years. They came so quickly that I barely processed one and another followed. I fell hard into bad food and slowed my own exercise programs after Uncle Eric died. I ended up in the worst shape I’d ever been in, weighing the most I ever had in my life. I had gained back all of the weight I’d lost running and then some. I was embarrassed and ashamed.
2024 was a turning point. That’s what I told myself in the days leading up to New Year’s. I felt as though 2017 was the last year of my life when I felt like myself. To restore that feeling I couldn’t keep waiting for the timing to be better, or to have a more perfect situation. I needed to take the first steps and adapt as I moved forward.
The changes began as more symbolic and mental. For instance, I hadn’t woken up early on New Year’s Day to go shoot the sunrise since 2017. My buddy Steve had to convince me a little. Once I was standing at the beach in Chatham watching a somewhat muted sunrise it was all worth it. That would hopefully set the tone for the year.
The muted New Year's sunrise in Chatham.
While I was feeling refreshed in the early days of the new year I decided to run my first race since 2017. I found a manageable distance(5K), a nearby location(Dennis, MA), and a date far enough away that I could theoretically get into fair enough shape that I wouldn’t embarrass myself(May 4th).
I dove headlong into training. At my job, we have a revolutionary health and performance program known as Superhuman Protocol. It’s not found in many places and none within an hour of where I work. The basics are that three therapies are set up in a certain order so that each enhances the next. It is meant to, among other things, improve your overall fitness level. Here is a link to the website if you want to know more about it: Superhuman Protocol
I was looking for something to push me through the inevitable crash that would come when my memories of my running life before bumped into the reality of what my body could give at this point. One of the therapies in the Superhuman Protocol is EWOT(Exercise with Oxygen Therapy). You do some sort of moderate cardio while breathing in 93% pure oxygen through a specially designed mask. Pure oxygen essentially tricks your brain into believing it is not working as hard. The benefit is that you can go harder than you thought you could with whatever cardio you’re doing.
There is a downside to this though. If you are prone to going all-in with your cardio, as I did all while running, the oxygen is going to have an adverse effect. Oh don’t get me wrong, the Superhuman worked incredibly well and I highly recommend it to anyone who has access. For me though it worked too well. I was getting up to speed running that I hadn’t done in 5 years. Not exactly ‘moderate’ cardio. That being done on a body that wasn’t the same as 5 years ago led to way more aches and pain than expected. Feet and ankles, knees, hips, they all would hurt later in the day after finishing the Superhuman.I stopped doing the Superhuman because I couldn't be counted on to stick to the directions. This led to me majorly backing off on my race training, to the point that I was hardly running at all. In my mind, this return race was to be a re-entry. It would be me proving to myself that I could still run a race without the added pressure of time goals.
As race day drew closer I began seeing the event as more than just a return to running. It felt far more symbolic. Since my last race in August 2017 so much had happened, so much had changed in my life. This race was akin to me finding a piece of myself that had been lost for years.
Another change in my life in 2024 was getting more into personal development and self-help books and podcasts. In dealing with the deaths of friends and family, battling alcohol, the insanity of the Covid pandemic, and the overall scope of becoming middle-aged, I had felt upside down in life. These thought-provoking and introspective books and podcasts started helping me deal with all of that.
I lowered my expectations for the race and started looking at it as the beginning of a new chapter. I also kept thinking of those I’d lost. I decided to carry them all with me during the race. I did this by creating a t-shirt with their names on it with the announcement that I was running for them. Above all else, that was my ‘big why’ for competing in this race.
Another interesting side note when the race was approaching came when I got back on the bilateral scales for the first time in a few years. To the shock of my coworker Heather, and even more so to myself, the two scales had exactly the same numbers. This meant that the work I had done on correcting my original hip injury had paid off. It was a wonderful moment.
It was wonderful however until I added the two scales weights together and realized I was at the heaviest I’d been in my life. It was a cold slap in the face to realize that the main reason I’d had so much pain and soreness in my legs from running wasn’t because of my misaligned hips, no it was from carrying too much weight.
Within moments I had downloaded the My Fitness Pal app on my phone and vowed to get back to my proper running weight. I mean after all, if my hip was not the issue anymore then what is really holding me back from a return to race form?
Race day arrived. May the Fourth be with you. It was sunny but chilly at Mayflower Beach in Dennis. I spent a little extra time sitting in my car. It was almost like I was trying to find that old mindset from my racing days even though I had no specific goals to try for. Once I was ready and had put on the white t-shirt adorned with the names of those I’d lost since my last race I was ready to wander the grounds and soak it all in.
The starting line of the race.
I had made a special playlist for this race. 10 songs that would take 40 minutes to play. Granted I would have the Map My Run app going on my phone but the music would be another indicator of how I was doing.
I positioned myself about ¾ of the way back of the group. One because it would stop me from taking off too fast with the adrenaline rush of the starting whistle. Two because I knew I’d be faster than at least a few in front of me so I’d have the joy of passing them.
A big key to running any sort of race is pacing yourself. For 5K races, I set my running app to call out my times every ¼ mile. This gives me plenty of feedback and allows me to switch my pace to suit what I am looking to do. After the first 1 ½ miles my pace was far exceeding what I’d expected. This didn’t make me change up any goals, it gave me more leeway to pull back a little. I figured I could save my legs a bit and still record a respectable time.To prove to myself that I was really just trying to finish this race I even stopped to walk a couple of times when my feet and tibialis anterior muscles (the small muscle that runs along your shin) began burning. I hadn’t gone all out in ages so I was gassed but pressed on.
I realized that unless I broke something I was going to finish the 5K in under 30 minutes which would be a huge achievement for me knowing where I was physically. I even had enough left in the tank to sprint to the finish line and over the little pad that tracked our times through a chip in our bibs. My official time was 29:27, or 9:30 per mile. More than 10 minutes slower than my best 5K ever, but much faster than I had thought my body would allow.
I walked down to the beach and sat with my back against the fence. My shins were on fire and I knew I’d be sore the next day (surprise, I was). However, the first thing that popped into my mind was excitement. If I could run such a time after having not run competitively in almost 7 years, being 7 years older, and being 30 lbs above my ideal running weight, imagine what I could do with more training and a more controlled diet.
Maybe I’ll never be as fast as I once was. Maybe I’ll never be able to do distances like I used to. That doesn’t matter. When I look at the time between my last race to the one I just ran. When I look at all of the losses, all of the obstacles, all of the changes I went through, the fact that I have the ability physically and the wherewithal mentally to run races is a huge victory. I’ve already got the next race lined up so it’s officially a new chapter in my life.
If you stuck with this all the way through, thank you. I wrote this the day after the race when everything was still fresh. It went longer than I expected as there was so much that I needed to include to emphasize how big of a deal this moment was. Plus I am a writer so stringing together thousands of words in a stream of consciousness is not all that difficult.
You might not be a runner. That’s not the overarching point of this story. The main takeaway is dealing with adversity, sometimes soul-crushing loss, and somehow finding your way back to the starting line. My story is not unique, so many people fight battles and win in the end. We all have our own adversity to overcome, nobody gets through life without scars. The key is to keep moving forward at your own pace. The only way you don’t cross the finish line is if you stop doing that.
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