ANYWAY, I slept in again today : ). Woke at, oh I don't recall now, and my phone is nowhere near to look, but I believe it was 6:15 when I rose to that annoying alarm. I sat on the couch, checked my e-mail, logged onto Facebook, drank 2 cups of coffee and then it dawned on me. Open the blinds! Take a look outside! And wouldn't you know it -- I saw blue. BLUE, BLUE, BLUE. Lovely blue.
It has been quite eerie running these past weeks in the dripping fog. Blue skies definately got me off that couch this morning. I arrived at Aliso/Wood Canyons Wilderness Park about 7:15 AM. It was crowded with mountain bikers, a few runners.
I ran an out-and-back, 7 miles each way. The first mile and a half in was on Aliso Creek Trail (total 1.5 miles, half of it aslphalt) and then I took Wood Canyon Trail to its end. I purposely stayed in the moment, refusing to think about the run up to the ridge. I was amazed how much that helped (why should I be amazed? I know this). Oddly surprisingly, I found running up Cholla Trail today much easier than usual. Totally stress free. Besides the fact that I'm not a super athelete, what really gets me on the hard runs is the stress, the anxiety I feel knowing hard climbs approach. So, that's one of the things I focus on: not focusing on the climbs. (Funny, one of the things I thought about was what a prospective student said to me yesterday. She said, "God made us weak," and I thought at the moment, "Bizarre, that is so true." But at the same time, I reminded myself as I climbed Cholla thinking about this, God made us STRONG. We are BOTH weak and strong. Isn't that always the way things are? -- it's always BOTH).
Suprised to take Cholla Trail so "easily", I ran Westridge to Top of the World where I did a full set of stretches (what I mean by "full set" is the same stretches I do at the end of my run -- hamstrings, hips, quads, calves). On the way back, I worked on my downhill speed. That is afterall, my strong point. Surprisingly, many trail runners have problems with downhills -- quad problems, knee problems. So far, I haven't. But since my half dozen or so falls, I've slowed my downhill running a bit. With Bulldog approaching however, I need anything I can get, so I sped it up some today, focusing, focusing on the terrain to avoid a fall. (No falls!).
Base of Cholla Trail
For the 1st time in a long time, I could see the Pacific from Top of the World!
And then I turned around and ran the whole thing back. Toward the end on Aliso Creek Trail, a cyclist whizzed by me so fast, that I actually screamed and nearly fell. All I heard was his spokes, and I thought it sounded a little like a rattler (as if screaming would help me against a rattler!). He, the cylist, not the make-believe rattler, didn't call out or say a single word. He simply raced by me on that single track. Fortunately, I'm one of those runners that stays to one side. I don't switch without looking behind me. But still . . . he didn't know that : )
This cyclist startled me so badly that my ipod flung off my water pack. The lady he was riding with stopped and helped me look for it. We found it on the dirt trail some ways back. She was kind. And I was apologetic for some reason. REALLY, he should had let me know he was passing me at such a high speed. Most cyclists do -- they usually ring their bells, or say something like "on your left!" Most are courteous. But once in a while . . .
No harm, no foul.
Miles logged this morning: 14