I'm pleased to say that I'm fully installed in Kansas (and have been, for the last few months) and enjoying my job and this wonderful state.
I took a nice hiatus from running this fall, and am getting back into it just now. While overseas I was putting in some solid hot and sunny mileage, and a nice FOF half marathon, and some great hill training, but I came home burnt out and with hamstring-itis - right where the muscle starts, at the ischial tuberosity - and quite literally a pain in the rear! I still don't trust myself enough to prevent re-injury, so I've only raced a few times since returning from overseas - a 5K Turkey Trot, a 7.2 miler Christmas race, and most recently the Groundhog 10K last weekend. My goal? Shorter distances but faster times this year. Broken record, much?
I don't think I'll do any marathons, but maybe a mid-summer half if I can take the time away from work. My current schedule prevents high mileage weeks, but I accept the break willingly! Oh, and I happen to love my job.
What a pleasure it is to live here - I've got miles and miles of rolling hills and low-traffic roads on which to re-learn some lessons, and a great community of runners to keep motivation high. There are great parks and trails nearby. And it's nice to be re-united with D and Nugget. Chickens will follow soon!
Let me tell you about the Groundhog 10K! L and V, our old friends, happen to live here too now, so we carpooled to the world's largest underground warehouse for a unique sub-terranean race! D and I registered last minute, and really hadn't trained - what are good friends for, if not talking you into untrained 10Ks :) It was a cold, drippy rainy morning as we parked and shuttled to the start, but once we got to the cave entrance, we entered a 65F balmy, humid, runner's high-scented underground lair! Perfect weather indoors, and perfectly miserable outside (good thing!). And no Morlocks anywhere.
Groundhuggin' |
Blessings run deep here, but I am old enough to know that the good times are not an entitlement or ever permanent. Here's to appreciating the good with the bad and the ability to know the difference. May you all be so wonderfully blessed and, if not, know that it won't be forever.
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