Friday 28 December 2018

Goodbye, 2018. Thanks for HOTH the memories!

’Ey-up. ’Ow dos? Had a good Christmas and all that?

Right – so…
…back in August, I made a start on a new blog post. A decent start, in terms of length: 1,686 words. If only I’d actually got round to finishing it. But, you know what…
…the first seven months of my running year didn’t need 1,686 words. You certainly don’t. So, let’s start again, and see if I can keep an overview of my 2018 short – if only by my standards…


The are upsides to not being able to race.
Devouring a mammoth ice cream on raceday
eve in Barcelona being one such example.
Had been in PB shape all winter. Left leg began hurting with two weeks to go. Still travelled and had a great time with Mike, Sarah, Frankie, Tina and other Caistor R.C. folk, as well as Lorna, Ben and his wife, but decided beforehand to not be an idiot and pull out after 10k. Which I did. At least I got to see Mike cross the line for his 50th race of marathon distance or longer, and to do so within a whisker of his PB… an awesome weekend, just not for the reasons I’d hoped.



Four weeks later came Manchester Marathon. Another disappointment: by then I’d long lost the peak marathon form I’d hit too early, around December, but I still had a good shot at a PB. Nothing can excuse the rookie error which led to my hopes being dashed by my bowels. And I’m not going further. Other than to congratulate Portishead R.C.’s Mark Williams, with whom I used to run before he took things to another level, for joining the sub-3 club in 2:57’22”.

Fling -
A relatively rare tutu'd up outing.
Flew up with Jane from Portishead R.C. hoping for sub-10hr on my third Fling, and first since my Triple Crown year of 2015. I didn’t get the time I wanted: but, after an evening with Mike, Sarah, Rob, Kath and other friends of theirs, I had a time I could only have dreamt of. Ran the first forty miles without checking my Garmin once, ultimately reaching Tyndrum in 10:17’32” to set a 49’ PB. Sub-10 can wait. We had an absolute blast.



Back to the scene of Mike’s 2017 Stag Do – and with similar intent, i.e. to have fun.
I rocked and rolled with fellow runnerblades, not least on the Saturday night (once we’d got over the communal disappointment of a so-called Italian restaurant –“Jamie’s Italian”- not serving pizza… This hit Phil’s brother Jay particularly badly: and understandably so, given he’d only landed earlier that day from New Zealand, the following day’s Half Marathon set to be his longest run ever… which he duly completed in under 1:40’, as you do…
…on the Sunday, having hoped to pace Alan to a PB, he dispensed of my services after ten miles. I was able to catch up with his brother Andy and keep him going to the end and to a PB of his own, so still a productive day at the office. Just not an office to which I’ll be returning next year: something has to give and I’m happy for it to be Liverpool. If only because of the logistics.

Marathon Team #runnerblades about to rock Liverpool:
Mick, Al, Luke, Some Idiot (in another rare tutu'd up outing) and Andrew


Returned to Winchester feeling sub-20 was possible and sub-21 on the cards, as much as anything is ever on the cards in an Ultra. I reached Eastbourne bitterly disappointed, recording a time of 24:28’13”. I suffered a couple of setbacks early on which I really should have dealt with, but the biggest obstacle came in the shape of one of my three anti-epilepsy drugs, namely the Phenobarbital which I’m told to take “last thing before going to bed”. Given I’d not be going to bed that night, I was hoping that a 20-hr race would allow me to take it around 2am: however, once that target time had long sailed towards the Solent, I decided to take it mid-race. It wasn’t long after that I found myself unable to run straight, my feet landing uneasily in random places. Andy Dunn, whom I’d never previously met and whose full name I only discovered via Facebook post-race, pulled alongside me to point this out. I was genuinely aware of the problem, just as I was unable to do anything about it. We ran together for a while (for which I’m even more grateful with hindsight than I was back then) until I finally convinced him to leave me at the Alfriston CP and go and grab his maiden sub-24, which he duly did. I carried on and finished, which I later discovered surprised some of the awesome marshals who’d expressed their concern about me and who didn’t expect me to finish. The drug’s effect slowly but surely wore off as I slowly but surely approached Eastbourne, my long death march giving me thinking time aplenty, during which I decided I’d let the SDW100 ghost lie and look at other events. So, sure enough, a fortnight later I made the Centurion Running 100-milers Grand Slam (Thames Path 100, South Downs Way 100, North Downs Way 100 and Autumn 100) my key 2019 target. But that was June…

Ran from the North side of The Humber Bridge to the South side.
In Barton, ran around a cone and headed back to Hessle.
In Hessle, ran around another cone, announced myself to the marshalling team and headed back to Barton.
Repeated thirty-three times. With three toilet stops and refilling soft flasks on average once every two loops. Clocked 132 miles to win by 28 miles. Won a bobble hat and a free entry into next year’s race. Which I wasn’t going to do, having set my sights on the Centurion Grand Slam. But it would be rude to turn down a freebie, right? Especially from a fellow Yorkshireman… Plus I’ll still get to see the fab Centurion community at the first two events, whereas I’d be missing my fellow HOTHers… because, as well as a hoodie, a t-shirt, a polo shirt, a medal, a bobble hat and a framed card I also came home with new friends
And no, I didn’t sleep. Byron, who kindly gave me a lift from Tewkesbury and back, also very kindly granted me use of part of his tent: but I never did make use of the sleeping bag Mike lent me. I ran on a combination of Tailwind, water, Clif Bars and ShotBloks and SIS Gels, with TrueStart coffee and Nescafe during short breaks. Indeed, the coffee may have ensured that the Phenobarbitone didn't knock me out SDW100-style
oh, and a pizza around 1am on the second night. Which I probably should not have eaten in one, quick go.

One bridge. Three Totley AC tops. One leap - with Fran!


Saturday (after Ashton Court parkrun): 5k and Half Marathon. Sunday: 10k and 6.1k (to round up the total to full marathon distance for those who’d run the other three events).
It was never about racing. It was about having Mike and Sarah spend a weekend with us, and, to some extent, about exorcising the demons of 2017, when I only entered the Half Marathon and set off to win my age category. A stupid mindset which resulted in an epileptic seizure three miles in. It was good to complete all four events upright and with my bro, as we managed to clock the exact same aggregate time, and to only find myself lying on the floor for the open-air showing of “The Greatest Showman” with Karen and The Boys alongside us, perfectly conscious if somewhat high on endorphins and the joy of running. A cracking weekend! If somewhat dreich on the Sunday morning…

 With Mike and Sarah on the first day of the 401 Festival Of Running - a day that ended with a glorious
sunset over the Severn ahead of an open-air showing of "The Greatest Showman". Which, it turns out, isn't about Mike...
...oh, and just by that lighthouse? That's where I proposed to my wife, that is...
...12/02/05. Still running. Not in the sense of this blog, though.
(Oh: and the tutu made another rare outing that weekend. Well, five: one parkrun and 4 x 401 races. Guess it's come out to play more than I thought this year...)


Approached the race with far less maratraining in the legs. ‘Miles’, yes: and numerous ones, even by my standards. But slow ones, in preparation for HOTH.
So I came up to Chester with no great expectations or pressure. Equally, having recorded sub-3 marathons in 2016 and 2017, I was keen to rectify the Spring’s failings of Barcelona and Manchester and extend #annualsub3streak to three – and had managed some training geared towards that.
Maybe the company of better runners than I rubbed off, as I travelled up to Chester with John C. and Kelly, the former fresh (relatively…) from conquering The Cotswold Way 100 and on this weekend on supporting duties for his girlfriend as she set out to join the sub-3 club – to which John belongs courtesy of a 2:58’05”, and which Kelly will join soon enough after her 3:00’50” this time round. I stayed in the Wrexham North Premier Inn, as is now tradition, dining with Mike and fellow Castorians on race eve. We were joined by John Rooney, a fellow exiled Northerner fresh from watching his beloved Tranmere Rovers win 4-3 at Morecambe) and who shared both a room with me and a few handy tips. Although I’ve yet to get round to trying the beetroot juice…
My race plan was simple: start behind the sub-3 pacers, overtake them relatively early on and finish ahead of them. Only checking my watch for mile splits, I ran by feel, and by latching onto other runners. The latter’s always dangerous, as you’ve no idea what their goal is: but, if kept in check with a glance every 6’52” or thereabouts…
Result: 2:58’05”. Sub-3 and, indeed, PB, by 54 seconds. And an opportunity for a laugh with John C. on the drive back South… He was probably thinking he should be going sub-2:50’. As he should. Having said he wouldn’t target a marathon in 2019, he appears to be wavering… hopefully, when he realises his potential over 26.2, I can claim some teeny weeny credit.

 "Flying in Chester". Well, happy, anyway - knowing sub-3 was truly on...
...but had no idea I'd PB! Least of all by 54"!

. . .

So: that’s my 2018. In what, by my standards, is a nutshell. Just the one ‘traditional’ PB, but it was the one that matters, over 26.2. A sub-18’ parkrun, to lay the ghost of my 18’01” PB to rest, proved elusive, not least because, disappointingly, I’ve only managed 13 parkruns this year, not least because of the amount of Saturdays that featured ultra-training long runs. But I have managed to keep my runstreak alive, even though for a week or so some advised against it: come December 31, obviously barring disasters over the coming three days, it will stand at 2,272 days, with 4,213 miles added in the first 362 days of the year. Now, as for 2019, here’s what it’s set to feature:





February 17: Maratón de Sevilla
My ‘A’ race for the year. Having got my three sub-3s in France, the Netherlands and the UK, it would be nice to add Spain to the list, not least after March’s fiasco. Quite possibly my last shot at sub-2:55’. Because if I get it I’ll be satisfied and if I don’t I might well give up on the idea. Unless…

…well, if I narrowly miss out in mid-Feb – I might give it one last go in April… whereas, if Sevilla doesn’t turn out to be a repeat of Barcelona, by early Spring I could well have switched to Ultratraining mode, and potentially even not travel to Manchester). But I’ll definitely be traveling to…

…my hometown the following week. I last ran the Half Marathon there in 2013, the last time it ended at Don Valley Stadium. Following its annulment in 2014 due to Watergate, this is effectively a different event, with different organisers and a different route. Last time I PB’d; this time my goal is to run it with my cousin Sam and to enjoy it! Because I’ve retired from racing Half Marathons. I got a PB I’m happy with at Bristol 2017 (1:24’18”): but that took weeks of dedicated HM training, whereas now I seem to find myself alternating between maratraining and ultratraining. If a job’s worth doing, it’s worth doing properly: and I’m getting too old to trouble my 13.1 time…

May 4th: Thames Path 100
I signed up when eyeing up the Centurion Grand Slam. Not unhappy I did: I quite fancy running along a canal for a hundred miles. After years of reading debates as to which 100-miler is faster, this or South Downs Way, it’ll be nice to test out the differing theories first hand. Before…

…returning to Winchester for the third time. Hopefully this time round the stars will align and I’ll break 21 hours, maybe even 20. The prevailing, counterintuitive theory, backed up by a fair few spreadsheets, is that most runners fare better along the South Down’s trails than on the cement of the Thames Path, and this will be my third crack at this route… Still, not going to stress over it. Just as I’m certainly not going to stress over…

I always said August was going to be a one-off. That I was running the 36-hr event in 2018 because my two late maternal grandparents were born in 1918, one on either side of the bridge, and 18+18 equals… At the start of the race, with things going alreyt, I felt no great desire to return. But, as the race went on, and faces I crossed along the bridge became more familiar, and the hi-fives more frequent, I felt it might be fun to head back up after all. Then I won a free entry into the 2019 event, so… well, let’s just say the Centurion Grand Slam will have to wait.
And no, this isn’t about me “defending my crown”, as some have asked. I know plenty of runners who could smash my 132-mi record*, should they wish. But I only race against myself. Which is one reason I kept going till the 36 hours were up: had I been preoccupied with positions, I’d not have put myself through the final lap, enjoyable as it turned out to be… So I’d be happier clocking 34 laps next August without bringing home a framed postcard than I would be clocking 32 to win another bobble hat. And that’s not just because I don’t feel the cold as much as most.

* there’s something to be said about running inaugural events – especially those which display course records on race gear! So if nowt else I have to go back for a hoodie with my name on it…)

Probably won’t sign up when entries open. Will see who else fancies it, in particular if we can make a weekend of it by hosting friends from afar and if I can run with them along paths I’ve covered hundreds of times, typically alone. I won’t be in any fit state to race that weekend anyway, post-HOTH; and besides, I’ve retired from racing sub-26.2 distances, bar trying to shave two seconds off my 18’01” 5k PB… that remains a goal, albeit one fast fading into the distance… faster than I can run after it…
…but we had a lot of fun four months ago, and it would be a shame to miss out on that. If nowt else, I’ll go down to meet at least some of the wonderful runners that flock to Ben’s annual running party (before he disappears to the US on a bike, anyway…) – hopefully without getting drenched as did supporters and marshals on the Sunday this year!

October 13th: Chester Marathon
My season-closer. A race that this year was meant to be fun but somehow turned into a PB race. Hopefully I’ll reap the rewards of my maratraining in the Spring and be able to return to Chester Racecourse for the fun of it, looking to twirl and or/pace. Fingers crossed.

One item missing from that calendar is The West Highland Way Race. Still my favourite race, having run it in 2015 (I even wrote a book about that, dontchaknow…). I may throw my hat into the ring again at some point in the 2020s, who knows. For now, at least I can look forward to heading back to it in 2019, crewing for Mike. Not before time… it’s taken a while for the random number generator to let him in, but it finally has…

. . .

There you have it: my 2018 races and my 2019 plans. Turns out I wrote more than 1,686 words (this being the 2,684th), but at least I covered the whole of my 2018 (which also featured hundreds of lovely training runs, not least when I got to run my Standard 10-miler for my hundredth time with my cousin Natalie) and offered you a glimpse into my 2019. How’s yours looking?

Oh, and just two more things…

Firstly, for the avoidance of doubt: as an every day runner who’ll run owt from 5k to 36 hours, I establish no relationship between distance and toughness. A sub-18’ 5k would represent a greater achievement for me than covering 132 miles in 36 hours, because of the kind of runner I am. But, given that  the pre- and post-race faffing is also not proportionate to distance, and that short, fast races have proved to enjoy an unhealthy relationship with my deranged (and epileptic) brain… I’ll stick to middle-distance (marathon) and above from now on, not least because there aren’t enough weeks in a year to target a good pace over short distances whilst maratraining or ultratraining. So I’ll stick to what I enjoy the most, and where I’ve been achieving the best results. But it’s primarily about the enjoyment: not just come race day, but during the training window, too. I mean – who doesn’t enjoy running over a motorway bridge all alone in the dark of night?
😉

And, last but definitely not least:
THANKS TO ALL OF YOU WHO’VE MADE RUNNING SO MUCH FUN THIS YEAR. It’s always hard to single people out, but how can I fail to overlook the trouble to which some of you went to pay me a visit by The Humber Bridge?
Thanks to the 22 Caistor R.C. runners who got their parkrun fix at Humber Bridge parkrun (ten of them making their first visit there) before running along the bridge (and, in Fran’s case, leaping!) with me; to Steven and Lucy Taylor, who also parkran at Humber Bridge before chatting with me as I refuelled on Tailwind; and, of course, to Caistorians Mike and Sarah Wells for making multiple trips to Hessle, Mike running with me a few times, before heading down to Portishead the following weekend. Oh, and thanks to Auntie Dawn, Uncle Richard and Shaun for spending a few hours on the bridge at the start of the race, cheering me on! Dawn’s reaction when I told her I’d be returning in 2019 was “Why are you going back?”, quizzing me about whether I was thinking about “everyone who was worried about” me. But then six years ago she questioned why I’d want to run the Sheffield TenTenTen, my first ever race – so…

(Briefly: if I thought I were endangering myself, I wouldn’t do it. Not HOTH, not anything. I’m brave, but I’m not stupid. Honest.)

Have a good’un. On roads, trails and when not laced up: because its not just about the running. It never is. Oh, and me, I’m off to look up beetroot juice options. ¡Hasta febrero!

Monday 5 March 2018

Talking about / out of my @®$€



Right then – where were we?

I last posted on February 9, talking a load of BMI as I aimed to get mine under 20. The following day, I ran an 18’17” parkrun (although official results will tell you otherwise, due to technical glitches); and, on the Sunday, I ran 23.2mi in 2:36’05”, at 6’43”/mi. Given my marathon PB is 2:58’59”, had I run another three miles in under 22’53”, so at 7’38”, I could have claimed to have beaten it. I might have added an extra .2mi just to be on the safe side, which would have required 7’09”/miling: still doable. I knew that then, I know that now. But I’d promised myself I’d stop at 23.2 and, more importantly, I’d promised Karen I’d be home in time for a croissant family breakfast. So I behaved and stuck to the plan. Besides, training PBs aren’t real PBs: the job has to be done in a race, on measured courses. Whilst not on the GPS front, I’ve had enough challenges with my Fenix 3 of late to be all too aware of that…

So that was Sunday, February 11: a neat four weeks ahead of Sunday’s Barcelona Marathon, my ‘A’ race for 2018. I ran twenty decent miles the following Sunday, and twenty slower ones the Sunday after that (or “last Sunday”, if you prefer). The plan was then to keep up the pace whilst reducing mileage: standard taper strategy. Last week was to be a mixture of 10mis and 10ks, with Tuesday’s 42’17” 10k somewhat tougher than I’d have liked but still, at 6’48”/mi, not far from the 6’40” I need for my sub-2:55’ goal. As I sit here now, a cricket ball under my left glute, it’s hard to think that was less than a week ago. The following day was the first to feature a coating of snow here, and I headed out for what turned out to be a slower than planned nine. Since then, my daily mileage has been:

3.2
1.2
2.0
1.2
1.4

So: have I finally got the hang of this taper? Did the weather make running nigh-on impossible in North Somerset last week? Or is the game up?

Well, if I have got the hang of tapering it’s not through choice. Not my mind’s or my heart’s, anyway. Nor the weather’s: we had snow, yes, but not enough to prevent running. No: if anybody deserves credit for me taking tapering to what for me is a new level it’s…

…my body. Not entirely sure which part: that much I hope to find out tonight. Based on things I’ve heard other runners say over the year, my uneducated instinct is to point to the piriformis: but I make no claim to know what I’m talking about when it comes to injuries. Indeed, I’ve often been asked about recovering from specific injuries, but have always had to respond that I’ve been fortunate enough in my running days to not really suffer from any and to thus not have much advice to dispense. Whereas, whatever *this* is, I reckon I’ll be able to offer an opinion. In due course.

For not only have I run a mere 5.8 miles over the past four days: they have been slow and, for the most part, painful. Crawling up the stairs after today’s might just have been the low point. Then again, there have been so many, over so few miles, it’s hard to put them in any meaningful order.

I’d been feeling a pain in my left side, towards the point where the leg turns into the arse, since around mid-January: but I was only truly aware of it whilst walking, and, even then, not all the time. Running was fine. Until, that is, my last long run, on February 25. Having set off on a group run, I found I couldn’t keep up with the rest of the group: as they became smaller and smaller dots in the distance, I turned on myself and ran back solo. At a push I could have caught up with them and caught up with them, yes: but I didn’t want to push. On my final pre-taper run, I wanted around 7’45”-8’00”, whereas their training for VLM meant they ended up running faster. As I’d set off from home to meet them, I was also aware that running with them might have meant running further than planned: so I hit twenty, jogged to the nearest bus stop and caught the first bus up the hill. Walked in and got a strange look from Karen, who noticed I was hobbling. Not unusual after a long’un, I thought. What has been unusual, however, is the amount of hobbling I’ve done since.

Two days later I had that decent 10k, if still more draining than previous, comparable runs. Yesterday, after a mile at 9’00”, my pace dropped to 10’38”; so I stopped ‘running’ a quarter of a mile from home and ‘walked’ home. What a difference less than a week makes.

As I type this, my ‘A’ race is six sleeps away. So: where does this leave me? Other than unable to run a mile slowly before finding running a real pain in the arse – and most of the leg beneath it?

It leaves me with all options for the weekend ahead. Well, most of them, anyway…

. . .

On February 14 an e-mail kindly alerted to a special offer on the hotel I’d booked months ago. Booking again on a pre-paid basis and cancelling my flexible booking would save me £40. It won’t surprise you that I did so; it may or may not surprise you that I now regret that. With the cost of the flights totalling £117, I would much rather have the option of cancelling my hotel and staying put, saving myself around £50 in taxis to and fro the airport; but, having prepaid around twice as much for my hotel room, I might as well travel regardless. Even if I clock a DNS (“Did Not Start”).

At the same time, I’ve not totally ruled out heading out for sub-2:55’. It’s looking extremely unlikely, but hopefully that will change over the next few hours. Hopefully the physio I’m seeing shortly will work a miracle: or, more realistically, hopefully he’ll find The Spot that’s causing me all this pain and restore it to its rightful condition. Hopefully.

Is it too much to ask? Quite possibly. But last year he sorted out the calf tear that had hampered my build-up to Rotterdam. He did so the day after I’d set my PB, as the pain gradually subsided closer to race day; whilst it came back during the final ten miles, I was able to keep going. So, whilst I may be dreaming, it’s a dream worth contemplating.

From a shot at sub-2:55’ to DNSing, all options are on the table. For now, I’m treating this as I would any other MaraPB attempt week: little carbs for the next few days, lots of protein instead… the “Oats So Simple” pots have been purchased, one cinnamon and one maple syrup… and, as for low mileage, I’m excelling! As for whether I’ll indulge in a little crema catalana out there… well, no need to make that call just yet. Time aplenty for plans to change. And change. And change again.
Indeed, even if I do start (and I’m not expressing a likelihood till I’ve heard from the expert), and even if I do so at 6’40”/mi (unlikely), it’ll be with an open mind and an accepting heart. As Rotterdam taught me, setting off pain-free offers no guarantee that the pain won’t return, be it one mile in, with a mile to go or at any point in between. But then we’re talking about a marathon here. And marathons don’t offer guarantees. Of any type. Ever.

One thing I have learnt over the past few days is that my biggest maranoia concern is more misplaced than I thought when analysing rationally outside of racing season. Not only have I not put on weight during these days of virtually no running: I’ve actually shed some. And that without my calorie intake changing. So, going back to my sub-20 BMI goal, upon which I’d given up around a fortnight ago, I’ve actually now reached 19.6. Which makes little sense… and, unless tonight’s session delivers beyond expectations, means nothing. Other than…

…well, I do have a back-up race for a sub-2:55’ attempt, four weeks after Sunday: Manchester. If I don’t start on Sunday, or whether I get round near the 4-hr mark, at least I’d be starting from a decent place in terms of shape to get myself back into 6’40”ing form before April 8. I’d still have no idea as to whether my body would recover in time, let alone whether it could keep itself together for the full 26.2mi distance: but, given right now I cannot contemplate running 2.6mi, it would represent a leap forward beyond my wildest dreams.

Does 2:55’ hold any special meaning? How badly do I want it?

Truth be told, “no” and “not that badly”. The main reason I set myself that stretch goal was to motivate me in training. What mattered to me was joining the sub-3 club, and I secured lifetime membership fifteen months ago. Which is why I’ll keep on runstreaking…

…running a mile every day for life would by far eclipse any PB ‘tweaking’ for me. I’ve surpassed any time dreams I had when I took up running. Could I improve on 18’01”, 38’54”, 1:24’18”, 2:58’59” and 22:16’23”? Most likely. Could I ever have dreamt of those times when I began running under six years ago? Not at all. So, whilst I hope to get under 18’ for 5k, under 2:55’ for the Marathon and nearer 21 hours over 100 miles, I’d happily take my current PBs to the grave with me. Especially if, on that day, I’d managed to get in a run first. And anyway, there’s always “next year” or “the next race” for a shot at a PB; whereas, when your runstreak’s reached 1,971 days, resetting the clock isn’t quite as easy…

…besides: knowing me, I’d not restart it. Within a month, I’d stop running. As I pointed out recently in this interview.

. . .

As I sign off, I feel I owe you all an apology.

Commenting on Thursday’s ‘run’ on Strava, Bob wrote:
So sorry to read this and the previous day's posts Gia. You always appear to be invincible (and also appear to believe that you are invincible) but there comes a time... Anyway, fingers and toes crossed that this is 'just a niggle' and hopefully a few one mile days won't hurt your preparation too much.”

I met Bob thanks to the now defunct Little Stoke parkrun. We’ve kept in touch via social media; he provided invaluable feedback on my book; he’s a really, really good and nice guy. Which is why I value his views.
I wanted to make this clear because I’ve never felt invincible. It amazes me that my body’s managed to run at least 200 miles for the past sixty-two months: March 2018 would be the sixty-third, we’ll have to see… Rather than ‘invincible’, I’ve always considered myself ‘lucky’ when it comes to injuries. But for Bob to say that I must have, at least at times, projected a different opinion: and I apologise for that. I already knew I wasn’t invincible: this week has offered a stark reminder, but not a blinding revelation. So sorry if I’ve got carried away and stumbled into projecting arrogance; and thanks Bob for the frankness in raising this. It might not have been easy, I dont know: but its what good people do.

. . .

Not long now to physio o’clock. However I feel tonight will mean relatively little: there’ll still be time aplenty for things to worsen or improve. I just hope that, if I do head over to Barcelona with a view to not running the event, I don’t put too much of a dampener on the spirits of friends I’m set to meet there who are all set to do well. If the previous apology was long overdue, this one’s an advance one: Mike, Ben, Lorna, Frankie… I may keep myself to myself a bit more than even I would like. Yes, to not be the mardy one and spoil things for you; but also because even sightseeing’s not quite as fun when walking hurts… so just as well I’ve already been to Barcelona several times! 

Anyroad, guys: even if come Sunday I don’t don my race vest, I’ll still be on those avenidas and ramblas to support you - if I can keep up with Sarah!

Right: I’ve a physio appointment to get to… it might only be just over a mile away, but I’d best allow plenty of time, as I can’t sprint there… Laters!


Oh, and as for the Bath Half: I didn’t run it. Nor was I going to before it got cancelled due to the weather. Nor was I going to before becoming unable to run 3.1 miles, let alone 13.1. No: this year, I never was. See, I thought I’d entered, I really did. But