Sunday, November 9, 2008
Day 4...Marathon Day!!!
Marathon runners:
Anna Phelps:(2nd marathon)
This was probably one of the best experiences ever, running the original marathon route and into the Olympic Stadium was AWESOME! Running into the place where the most amazing athletes have run! Not every one will get this opportunity!
Jill Haspert: (first timer)
Something I enjoyed was seeing the whole Bolder crowd saying my name and cheering me in along with my husband at the Olympic Stadium. What got me through the last few miles were the motivational songs on my iPod.
Marie J. Harvat: (6th marathon)
I was very impressed by the International crowd of runners, feeling the global community of runners. Especially in the last 5k when an a man my dad's age ran up to me and began saying in Greek. I told him I was American and he said to me, “Together!” and we played tag running to the end. He finished just before me and went up to him in the finishers corral, I poked him and said, “Bravo!” and he turned to give me a big hug.
Janelle Pentz: (5th marathon)
I have to say I was so struck by the overwhelming amount of body odor in the starting corral! I was so worried there was going to be 26 miles of it! Luckily when we got spread out, it was not nearly as bad.
Jill Goldstein: (12th marathon)
Today was one of the best days of my life...first of all to share this experience with one of my best friends, Chris, was a dream come true. Every mile each of us dedicated to someone that has inspired us and we shared the story of that person to each other. We also asked each other life questions and we laughed and cried together the entire way. At kilometer 28, seeing the Bolder Options cheerers, along with my parents was this amazing rush. We met the nicest people on the course from all over the world. And then coming into the Stadium, seeing the Bolder Options banner and everyone cheering was as good as it gets. Crossing the finish line, sharing it with Chris was fabulous. I heard a man say early on in the marathon, “I didn't come all this way to just run a marathon, I came to experience it.” I took this as my mantra, and I feel I did just that.
Chris Hawkey: (4th marathon)
Ditto what Jill said. By far my favorite marathon, ever. As hard as “the hill” was we made it less ridiculous by telling each other the same old stories and talking to people we never saw before, and never will see again. Favorite moments: seeing the ocean, meeting the three cutest puppies ever and high-fiving about a million local children. Crossing the finish line in the Stadium was something I'll never forget, with my friend Jill to my left and tears in my eyes.
Nick Schumm: (First place Bolder Options, made his goal of 3:30!!!)(3rd marathon)
My inspiration was Dan Pfarr and the guy on the bike with the yellow balloon (3:30 pacer) kept me moving...there were times he slipped away from me, but I caught him.
Kyle Buchmeier:(first timer)
I ran. I finished. I hurt. But I ran good...I BEAT SHELLEY NELSON! (3:33)
Shelley Nelson: (9th marathon)
I personally took it upon myself to train Kyle and paced him the entire way...then I let him beat me. (3:34:10). This was my best marathon experience, I loved the kilometer vs. mile markers and felt great the whole time! I am considering marathon retirement....
Bridget Worell: (4th marathon)
It was really a pleasure to run the whole way with Janelle (and also with Marie), the hills were really hard for me and it was great to have someone to climb with. It was easy for me to get negative, “Oh my gosh, how many more hills are there!!!” But it was great to have others there, I had never run a marathon with some one before.
Ryan Foss: (7th marathon)
At mile 20, it was starting to hurt a bit and I slowed. I saw an older man who was watching the marathon in a suit. He was watching me and walked into the middle of the course, I ran towards him and as I met him, he reached out and shook my hand. He said, “You are doing great, keep on going!”
Graham Hartley: (8th marathon)
After I let Doobie go fast and down shifted myself at kilometer 20. I grabbed me some Poweraid and 2 Gu packets. I ate one and put the other one in my waste band. After awhile, I felt the GU packet slowly slide down and into my shorts liner and giggling against my buttocks. I let it stay there for awhile as I made the decision of whether or not I needed it...I decided I did not and wiggled it out through the side and let it fall to the ground.
Becky Pilarzyk: (first timer)
As I was getting to the end, I was so sad that I did not plan to have Chris run me in the last 5k...but when I got to the last 3k, there he was! And he ran in with me, cheering me on and ringing his bell the whole time! It meant so much, especially after his own 5k earlier in the morning!
Joey Hall: (12th marathon)
When it started getting hard, Jack reminded me to run for Destiny, my mentee, we also would run for others we know, like our baby nephew. It really motivated me to keep on going, even when it got hard...running for those who need it!
Jack Hall: (2nd marathon)
I really appreciated the spectators along the course. Especially the Greek, they were saying things I could not understand, but it meant so much to have them cheering, it kept me going.
Doobie Kurus: (first timer)
The inspiring moment was when I passed Ryan, the second time. For motivation, I kept the thank you card that Anthony, one of the Bolder Options mentees wrote to me in my back pocket the whole time. My only regret: I did not catch the “ultra-marathon man” in the last 10 miles. Mental note: don't eat just anything they hand out at a marathon :)
Ann Virnig: (first timer)
First and my last...I am so glad I finished. And while I was running, some Greek Interior Designer asked me to marry him, in Greek. This helped me get my groove back and keep running...sprinting the rest of the race! Thanks to everyone praying for me at home, especially my mommy.
Valerie Boller: (13th marathon)
What kept me going was knowing that this morning I got to stand in the of Marathon and end my race in the Olympic Stadium. That was all I needed! I kept thinking of my mom and sister at home. Rock on B-Squad.
Glen DeSouza: (13th marathon)
Definitely my hardest marathon yet. While I felt strong all through, I hurt a bunch with all the running over the year. I just thought about all the people I had to be strong for – my mentees, Ahmet and Demitrius and the rest of the the Bolder Options crew – and most importantly my wife Laura. If there was a honeymoon gift I wanted to give her – this was it – to make sure she got to the finish line. So through the hills and the pain – we got through and finished together.
Laura DeSouza: (6th marathon)
I am so thankful my husband decided he would hold back and run with me for this entire marathon...I MAY have quit if it weren't for him. This was the most challenging marathon I have run...but definitely the most memorable. Everything from hanging in Marathon before the start of the race with my amazing Bolder Options friends, the painful hills, reminding my husband I run slower than he can, the fabulous cheering from our Bolder Options friends, the amazing mountains and ocean views, the people Glen and I dedicated each kilometer to, the other Bolder Options runners we saw on the course or knew were out there somewhere, the locals who cheered “Bravo” to us as we passed, and the tears I shed cause I felt like I couldn't, but new I could. The most meaningful: sharing the entire accomplishment with my husband and finishing in that great stadium running to our Bolder Options family.
Richard Edlich: (first timer...and last)
To me it was about the journey...a 6 month training process. What I found about that is that it was extremely hard and it tests your character. It is certainly easier to quit, than to go on. And doing it for a charity adds a dimension of social responsibility...and the team has such camaraderie. But when you got out on the course...it is all about you, you are the only one to get you there. And the support of the cheerers and loved ones, was so significant. Having my wife cheer me on at the top of one of the huge hills was so meaningful. And Ryan, we started out together and then I zipped ahead, but by the end we finished together...such an amazing experience. It is about the run you do, but the support of the team and loved ones means so much, especially coming into the Olympic Stadium! An experience you cannot understand until you do it.
Walkers:
Mary Page:
It was very inspiring when Jill and Chris passed me. They shared that they were dedicating each mile to someone and Chris told me that mile 14 was mine...it meant a lot.
Stephanie Thompson: (first and last timer)
Mantra: “one and done.” Two favorite parts: running with Jen, siter-in-law and friend, laughing the whole way and the local people coming out and cheering “Bravo” to all of the runners was so inspiring!
Jen Thompson:(first timer)
Oh, my God! What an amazing experience and I am so honored to have been able to participate in an event like this in my lifetime. The relationships, the smiles and the inspiration from other runners, Team Bolder fans and local supporters made the marathon something to remember. When we thought it was over and our quads, hams and feet could endure no longer... the 4 young ladies my sister-in-law (Stef) and I had befriended and ran with ¾ of the way, supported each other and pulled the others along. The small gifts you give someone can make such a difference. A memory I will cherish.
April Riordan: (run/walker, 2nd marathon)
I thought about Evan, my mentee, especially when I was running alone. And then it was a highlight to run with other Bolder Options runners...Jen, Dierdre, Marie and Ryan especially!
Dierdre Worell:(run/walker, first timer)
Last night I was so terrified about this marathon...I woke up and looked at my watch and thought it was 6:30 am! Oh no, we needed to meet in the lobby at 5am! And I woke up Bridgette and was so worried, I called the front desk and found out it was only 12:30 am, I had my watch upside down (there are no numbers). And then the bus ride out to the start...what a long ride!!!
5k runner:
Chris Morken: (4th 5k)
I only trained for this 5k for 3 weeks and I loaned my running gear to my wife for the marathon who planned for 50 degree weather the morning of the run. I did it and it rocked. And then I had a lot of fun cheering for the marathoners!
10k runner:
Nicole Terlouw:(?)
I like running with the boys...the Greek men :) And then I was able to cheer on the marathoners...and that was a crazy experience because I was told I was ringing the cow bell too much and had to move :)
That tells it all...we got together at the rooftop again to share our stories and celebrate our success...it was a lovely time of socializing and relaxing. Cheers to the Bolder!
Saturday, November 8, 2008
Day 3
Friday, November 7, 2008
Day 2
Thursday, November 6, 2008
Day 1
Sunday, October 26, 2008
Boo Run: The Monster Dash Long Run
The team got together for its first long run after the longer twenty miler on Oct 25. We were fortunate to get free entries to the Monster Dash half marathon from Ameriprise Financial. So bright and not so early (thankfully the race only started at 8:45 AM) – Shelley, Kyle, Doobie, Anna, Janelle, Richard and Glen were joined by Becky, Jack and Joey at the start line. Becky, Jack and Joey were faithful to coach Shelley’s training program and had got another three miles under their belts before they ran the half marathon. The weather was really nice for running and there were a lot of runners in costume. We even had a Bolder Marathon Helsinki Alumni – Kate Diehn – run the 10 miler as Vice presidential Nominee Sarah Palin. Hopefully we will be ready for the big hills in
Thursday, October 23, 2008
Taste of Greece – Efharisto .. Parakala (that’s Thank You and Please)
The entire team came together for our last meeting before our trip. To get us in the spirit of things – we stuffed ourselves with lovely Greek food from a local Greek restaurant (no ouzo yet – we will have to wait till we get to
Sunday, October 19, 2008
20 Miler: Just a long run around town
Athens Training: We have had scheduled team runs led by Ryan Becky and Coach Shelly and this was it – the culmination of our training schedule – the run everyone feared – longer than we had run up till now – the twenty miler. The scheduled runs usually had a good turnout but today was exceptional in terms of attendance - Ryan, Glen. Laura, Doobie, Jack, Joey Bridget, Graham and Ann met up at the Harriet Lake bandshell and were introduced to the route – along the Grand Rounds and all the way back to the bandshell. We were very happy and thankful to see two of the Bolder Options interns Stephanie and Sarah who would support us on the run. We started running – most of us together making our way along the parkway and towards the river. 5 miles in we had our first water stop. While it was tough the company made it just that little bit easier. We ran up the river listening to Ryans stories made it a little more bearable. We had a few people hurting but no one was ready to quit. We kept looking forward to the citrus powerbars and the GU shots that we got at each or our rest stops. We headed thru downtown and up the huge Kenwood parkway hill – led by Jack who attacked the hills like he was running downhill. Getting back to the chain of lakes and it was getting a bit tougher, even then we kept true to the mapped route and were soon on the home stretch around
