To start off:

Loving the shamrock medal, very shiny, with the pot of gold in the top left corner and rainbow in the bottom right. The Conquer LA one (for doing the Santa Monica Classic 10K in September, the Rose Bowl Half in January, and the Marathon) is also very pretty, with a spinning center circle. Plus the bonus Double Play (for doing the LA Big 5K on Sat + the marathon). Definitely validates signing up for all the races just for the bling

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But to backtrack, last two week of training (taper) went well, so nice to have only 3 mile runs on the docket. Went for a PT session the Thursday before races, with mostly ankle mobility exercises but also her massaging out the knots (so painful, why?!?!) and also trying out cupping on the lower outer shin over the ankle, since I might have been overusing that muscle (the peroneal?). So the muscle was quite sore Friday (and Saturday), which was a little worrying, but, if it saves the ankle, that's a good thing, right?
LA Big 5K (Saturday)
Met J (whom I had somehow convinced to do all the LA races with me and for whom Sunday would be her first marathon) and R at Dodger Stadium bright and early at 6AM. She had been scared by all the traffic at the Rose Bowl half so they ended up being one of the 1st 10 ppl to arrive at 5:30. Thankfully they let me warm up in their car after we picked up our bibs (lots of people in line already even before they opened bib pickup). Self-seeded corrals, and she wanted to run it, so we lined up between the 9 and 10 minute/mi flags. Well, that did not happen. Lots of not smart self-seeding in the corrals and bottlenecking at the start meant the first couple yards were basically all walking. Walkers, people running with strollers, and kiddos racing ahead then stopping on a dime to turn around and find their parents meant it was a little dangerous almost the whole course

. Fine with me since I wasn't really racing it, but could have been really annoyed if trying to PR. But it was a fun atmosphere, hilly but pretty course starting and ending in the Dodger Stadium parking lots, and great medal shot hehe. 32:15 official finish time (10:22 pace). Not bad for a shakeout 5k before the marathon.
Then they let us enter the Expo for Sunday bib pickup early. Nicely set up, and since we were early, it was pretty empty and much more manageable than when we were leaving (and that was still just when it opened for general public). Picked up some extra marathon shirts (tradition now to buy matching sets for the family) and a nice green running hat with a shamrock. Got home around noon to prep for Sunday and get some rest. R dropped J off since I live very close to the finish so she and I could grab one of the complimentary shuttles from the finish to the start (Dodger Stadium) at 4AM the next morning.
LA Marathon (Sunday)--Birthday Race
3AM wakeup (not quite as early as rD, but close), got everything ready, and grabbed an Uber to Century City. I messed up and got us dropped off a looong block away from the shuttle pickup so we had a bit of a warmup walk uphill. Repurposed city bus left almost at 4 on the dot; they seemed to be doing rolling shuttles as they got filled up, and people were just starting to trickle in. Bit of a mishap when the shuttles couldn't figure out how to get to the right dropoff (but at least I wasn't driving so no anxiety on my part). Again, since we were on the early side, was easy to walk through the start area, grab some free pre-fuel noshes (to save for after the race) and sit down to wait in the gear check area as it was cold and I didn't have throwaway clothes. Ate an eggo waffle + Peanut Butter ~5:15A, and finally braved the cold to drop everything off at gear check ~5:45, followed by porta-potty stop (when lines were still short) and then standing just outside corrals. Crowds definitely starting to show up (shuttles seemed to still be dropping ppl off as corrals were closing, which I would have been super anxious if I were them), and though
@Marebear_runs and I tried to meet up, it didn't work out (0 for 2 for trying non rD meetups so far). Corrals were closing ~6:40 so J and I split up ~6:25, her to go to the open corrals, and me to the last POT corral (E). Hung around the back of the corral along the fences for some dynamic stretching (could see the front of the open corral behind me was very full and crowded with the estimated 7min/mi people) and was very glad to have it be pretty chill and loose around me; ate a Honey Stinger Waffle ~6:45; over the course of pre-race, drank ~15oz of water. Some interesting facts: this was the 39th LA Marathon (they never had to skip for COVID because timing worked out), and 95 people were running it for the 39th time

; 4 of those 95 have never finished in >4hrs


; they have a tradition of starting the pro women ahead of the pro men to see who breaks the tape first in real time; there's a program called
SRLA where local high-schoolers from underserved communities get training and mentoring over the school year both for running and beyond, and there were a ton of kids running the marathon

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Everything started off pretty on time, and I was surprised there were no waves for the 5 POT corrals, we just all got to go, and everybody was quite polite with no pushing (maybe because I was in the back?). A goal was 4:45 and B goal was 5:00, so just started out easy. First 6ish miles were a lot of turns and circling around the downtown area (Chinatown, City Hall, Disney Hall, Echo Park etc), a big down hill right at the start out of Dodger Stadium, and the steepest hill around mile 5, and I was surprised that watch kept saying ~10min/mi throughout even when trying to dial it back a little. Even the big hill wasn't all that bad as I jogged up it.
As planned, took water at almost all water stations (they were very well placed, almost every 1.5 miles and there were a lot of volunteers, mostly looking like local high-schoolers) and mostly just stopped for a couple seconds at the last table to drink (though some of them were a slow walk-through instead). Most cups were ~3/4 full so quite enough. Definitely a better strategy than carrying my own on a waist-pack at NYC and Chicago. Ankle a little dicey at the beginning, and got a little worried when feet started getting tired and a blister felt like it was forming ~mi12, but then it all went away. Also, realized that I definitely do better with some up and downhills (as here and in NYC) than when it's mostly flat (as in Chicago), as it breaks up the monotony and helps my legs not get too tired with repetition.

There was cheering almost the entire course, though definitely portions where it was more sparse versus super crowded and amped up (fun either way). Along the way there were people handing out orange slices, red vines, extra water/gatorade, beer, shots at one point, and many many kids and dogs (including one cutie who tried to run after their racer confused as to why they were getting left behind haha). Many racers and cheerers definitely dialed into the St Patrick's Day theme. I had taped "Birthday Girl" on my shirt so got a good number of "Happy Birthdays" along the way

. As we passed by the El Capitan theater, they even had a very Disney appropriate marquee that I had to snap for the forum. My sister and cousin were going to be out cheering ~mile 16, which meant that mile was one of the fastest as I anticipated seeing them, and it was a great pick-me-up. Plus knowing that from there on out, I'd run the course multiple times, things felt pretty good. I was still averaging ~10 min paces and pleasantly surprised. Definitely feeling the miles, but not super tired. The weather had also been amazing, which helped a TON. The course used to go all the way out to the beach at Santa Monica, but SM became too expensive, so a couple of years ago it switched to where you passed the finish at ~mile 18 then looped back ~mile 22. Had been a little worried about the out (especially since around there was where I had to walk for both NYC and Chicago), but also got a boost since a coworker was planning to be at the turnaround point. Stopped at ~mile 20.5 to eat a Maurten (had also stopped at ~mile 6.5 for a Maurten and ~14.5 for a Honey Stinger Strawberry Kiwi gel), which ended up being the longest split. After the turnaround, it was just willpower the rest of the way. A nice distraction was trying to spot J coming out in the opposite direction but never caught her. Around then is also when I realized 4:30 was a wild possibility if I really put in the effort. The last mile or so I really had no idea what was going on around me, just tucking my head in and running as fast as I could (the last ~0.4 miles are uphill, rude). Didn't quite make it, but super super jazzed: 4:31:49 official finish time (10:22 pace, exactly the same as the previous day's 5k haha). Not a PR, but given A goal was 4:45, I'll definitely take it!

Had planned to try to watch J finish her first marathon, but the finish was a cluster. Too many ppl all trying to find each other meant cell reception was non-existent, and the tracker app was pretty much useless. Ended up hobbling through the finish chute, well stocked with finish water/electrolit/chocolate milk/bananas/chips/pocky!/mango gummies, getting the 3 medals

, a finisher pic, and very happily switching to flipflops and pulling back on the jacket and long pants. Given all the reception issues, it took forever, but somehow my sister was able to find me in the finish festival madness after much sitting on various benches and sidewalks on my end. We headed towards the CC Mall where reception got a little better and were able reconnect with J and R (who tried to come out and cheer for both of us but couldn't due to the tracker fail, R had even tried using air tags on J, but that didn't work either). Again didn't partake of the free beer, but took some pictures with our medals and slowly made our way home.
Surprisingly okay today, stiff every time I get up, but after a couple steps, things loosen up. Planning on no running for the next week or two, then thinking about ~3 easy runs a week plus signing up for a beginner ballet class next quarter and maybe getting back to some swimming before starting up training for Berlin in June. Sorry this ended up being so long, props if you got this far

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