"Aging is an Endurance Sport... I'm just trying to keep up!"

"Aging is an Endurance Sport... I'm just trying to keep up!"
I am training for my first Olympic-distance triathlon: 1 mile swim; 25 mile bike; 6 mile run. This crazy adventure is a fundraiser to honor the endurance and courage of the seniors I work with at the Sno-Valley Senior Center.

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

What is a triathlon anyways?

A triathlon is simply three sports done one after the next, with no break in between. In most triathlons, first you swim, most often in open water; then bicycle; then run. You are timed for the whole thing, so learning how to move quickly from one sport to the next is part of the challenge. Not so easy, I discovered in my first triathlon, as my head spun and ears rang after emerging from the FRIGID Lake Sammamish swim. Pulling off my sticky wetsuit and gathering my wits and balance to hop on my bike took some focus.

There are several distances of triathlons, kinda like with running you've got your 5k, your 10k, your half marathon, and then the full marathon...and then for the crazies, the ultramarathon.

In triathlon, it usually goes:
Sprint Distance: .5 mile swim, 13 mile bike, 3 mile run
Olympic Distance: 1 mile swim, 26 mile bike, 6 mile run
Long Distance or Half Iron: 1.5 mile swim, 56 mile bike, 13 mile run
IronMan: 2.4 mile swim, 112 mile bike, 26 mile run (yes, you read that right: you polish off a day of racing with a marathon.

You can see the distances essentially double each time you get to the longer races.

They take a while to complete. My first triathlon, which was the Issaquah Triathlon in June 2010, I completed in 1: 32. And I was smack in the middle of the pack. Other women my age completed the race in anywhere from an hour to 2:30 hours. The Ironman closes the course after 17 hours, but the elite pros finish in amazing times of 8-9 hours. Simply amazing.

What does a triathlon have to do with seniors?

Okay, I admit it. It's not a completely logical jump from racing in a triathlon to honoring seniors. It's not like, say, climbing Mt. Rainier to support lung health. But, racing in my first tri , I got to thinking about the seniors I work with (an hour and a half gives you a long time to think). How day after day they get up, and, staring down the face of their various aches and ailments, they get on with their days. They mow their grass. They take notes at our board meeting. They bake pies for us. They get the job done. And it moved me to move a little faster! If they can do that, I thought, I can do this.

And, in the crazy race-afterglow of my first sprint triathlon, I thought...if I could do THAT...I can do an OLYMPIC DISTANCE! And raise money for my seniors! In their honor! Yes, in the afterglow you do actually talk to yourself in all caps and all exclamation points.

So, I told a few people I was considering it...and then I told a few more...and then I wrote it down in a newsletter that 500 people read...so now I guess I'd better get to training!

Because if they can do that...I can do this.