San Jose Shamrock (2019)

San Jose Shamrock (2019)

Happy St. Patrick’s Day! 

Some lucky days deserve to last a little longer. While most people were getting ready to start their St. Paddy’s day, I was out running through downtown San Jose trying to break a personal record while trying not to make my cold worse. 

My third race of 2019 took me to the inaugural San Jose Shamrock 10K by Run Local.

Fighting a cold and running in the rain is not the business. That’s what I thought on the morning of the race. Days before, as soon as I felt the cold coming on, I stopped running and focused on my rest and recovery. I stretched and I slept. That’s it. I was even debating not running the race. Good thing some over-the-counter cold medicine did their job to help me shake it, so I actually felt good enough to run when I woke up.

Any normal person might have stayed home to rest, but I was determined to run the first Shamrock Run 10K in San Jose. I’m sure the fact that I already paid for the race was more of a reason to get up and go. After three days of listening to the rain, resting, and stretching, I was kind of itching to get out and run. 

The rain finally stopped, and I love the smell of fresh air after a good rain. Plus, the sun being out made for some great running conditions. 

When I arrived at the race, the party had already started with bagpipes screaming, an announcer getting the crowd juiced, and I had chills running through my body from the hum of the crowd and partially because my fever was starting to creep back. 

I found a nice spot next to a building and stretched a bit more just to release the tension. My girlfriend was worried about me and attempted to convince me to go home to rest. But I down played the chills and tried to act as macho as possible. I’m not very macho, by the way, so she saw right through me, but she also knew how much I wanted to run.

“We’ll get you some Pho soup after the race,” she said with a disapproving look before we parted ways at the starting line. 

The crowd slowly crept to the starting line with about five minutes to spare before the race began. Then I started sizing people up, thinking how I was going to get around them when we started running. Every second we got closer to the final countdown made me itch more to run. I missed the mental therapy of running, my alone time. 

Then the anxiety hit me, so I started shaking out my arms and legs to get them warm. 

There was a big arch at the starting line on San Pedro St. between the buildings in downtown San Jose. The sound of the crowd echoed off the buildings as they cheered with excitement when the race started.

I was farther back in the crowd and I found myself among the walkers, so I started with a light jog. We moved slowly down San Pedro St. and turned on San Fernando St., then down Almaden Blvd.

I cruised along for a little while before I got warmed up. And then it was bliss; the high I was looking for, the run. My joy was short lived before my competitive edge took over. I pushed forward with a slightly faster cadence than usual. Suddenly, I was in race mode, thinking of my pace and my rhythm as I maneuvered around the walkers. I began analyzing the slower crowds of people and imagining the running lines I could take to pass them. 

These moments might actually be when I’m one with the force because I can feel the distance between the people, their speeds, their cadence, their swerve directions as they run. It even feels like I can sense when someone’s about to start walking, and I’ll move over for the pass. I wonder if they can feel the pressure from me running closely behind them, pushing them with my energy like a tailgater in traffic, flashing you to get out of the way. 

Beep-beep-beep!! Move to the right people!!

From Almaden Blvd., we turned down Santa Clara St. and turned around at the train tracks bridge just past the SAP Pavilion. We ran between the SAP Pavilion and the Arena Green through Little Italy and then back through the buildings before I started the second loop of the 10K.

When I started the second loop, I took a few seconds to think if I should walk, but my body wouldn’t let me. It was a wonderful feeling because I wasn’t tired despite being sick the past few days. I kept moving and started the second loop in my usual cadence.

Now, there were no walkers and I was free to run in a straight line down the middle of the street. I usually run along the centerline or the broken line during races, and it was smooth sailing for about a mile. Then I started seeing walkers still in their first loop. It dawned on me that I was about to lap some of them, which was certainly a first for me.

I moved through Little Italy again and back between the buildings when I felt the same old pain arise on my outer, left knee. I wanted this to be my first 10K race I ran without stopping, but this wasn’t going to be the one. Before the pain could get any worse, I slowed my pace to walk. I counted 15 seconds and then started to power walk for another 15 seconds to see how it felt. The pain went away and I started jogging again before I got into my regular rhythm again.

It was the final stretch of the race with less than a mile left, and there were only a few more turns before the finish line was in sight. That’s when I turned it up. I picked up my speed and started passing runners and walkers. Then the finish line was in sight and I hit the boosters. 

A few guys who had passed me earlier in the race were now next to me trying to keep up, but they both fell behind as I kept a regular pace. I was about 100 feet from the finish line when I spotted a large group of people casually walking closer to the end. I picked up the pace to make it around them before I crossed the finish line. 

Success! I glanced at the clock when I crossed the finish line and noticed it displayed a little after 58 minutes. That means that my chip time was faster this time. 

It turns out that I set a new PR by running a 10K in 00:56:30. It felt like Michael Jordan’s Flu Game when he racked up 38 points to help the Bulls take Game 5 of the NBA Finals against the Utah Jazz. I wonder if I would have stopped had I not been sick or if my knee wouldn’t have started hurting. I guess I’ll have to find out in the next run.

408k Race to the Row (2019)

408k Race to the Row (2019)

My second run of 2019 took place at Run Local’s 408K Race to the Row. Running an 8K from San Jose to Santa Clara isn’t that far, but it was long enough for me to learn how different types of nutrition affect my body.

The morning of the race, I woke up to the sound of rain hitting my window. I’ve always found that sound soothing, but the thought of running in the rain isn’t really my ideal weather for an enjoyable run. It rained all week, so it wasn’t a surprise that it was raining the morning of the race. Plus, the cool air helped to keep my body temp down—but not at first.

Since the Resolution Run, I focused on strengthening my legs and stretching more and I was running every day. I even started attending a strength-training class a few times a week with a yoga class on my off days. It was easy for me to get used to the treadmill program runs. The thing about using treadmill programs is that I don’t run for very long but the machine does alter the elevation for me. My regular program choice is a high-intensity interval run that breaks each into 1-3 minutes at a time with low-intensity intervals between each set. This high-to-low-intensity set goes for about 30-32 minutes each time. I’m starting to suspect that this is causing a disruption in my cadence when I’m not running on the treadmill.

On race day, I got out of bed, did my morning stretches, and checked the weather. I would typically eat a Cliff bar after my stretches as a pre-run breakfast, but I had forgotten to go shopping that week and all I had was a package of Honey Stinger Energy Chews. 

I chewed through my gummy breakfast and checked the weather hoping the rain would subside long enough to let me run without getting wet like the Santa Run. According to Google, the rain was scheduled to stop from 7:00AM to 9:00AM, and for once the damn weather forecast was right. The rain may have let up, but the chill was still in the air, and then I thought it was a good idea to wear sweatpants on the run, which I wouldn’t normally do. I felt great about my apparel choice on my way to the race, but then I got into my corral and felt a little stuffy.

Walking up to races and finding my corral was still new to me that year, and I was still pretty far back in the field. I arrived at the race and started getting loose with arm shakes and leg stretches and body twists. It wasn’t long before the National Anthem quieted the crowd and the nerves really started. Then, the sounds of a jet above became noticeable between lines in the song. In epic timing, a silvery American Airlines jet was flying across the sky with the American Flag on its tailwinds. I just wish I had gotten a better picture of the plane, but some images in life can’t be captured with a phone, not yet at least.

The race began and I felt good. We started at the SAP Pavilion, ran down The Alameda, then past the beautiful homes in Shasta-Hanchett Park, Lincoln High School, the Municipal Rose Garden, and then we crossed Bascom before making our way around the Westfield Valley Fair mall for the Mariachi Mile. I’m sure here are plenty of ways to see the different neighborhoods of San Jose, but running through the city in the middle of the road certainly gives you a better appreciation.

Mariachi Mile had six mariachi bands playing music and cheering us on. As a Mexican American, I grew up listening to Mariachi music, so this was a special motivator. Once I heard the music, I slowed my stride, paused my music, and I flashed back to my childhood, visualizing my grandparents dancing with each other. I closed my eyes for a brief moment, and I could hear my grandpa singing again. For that moment, the first part of the final mile, I was happy and no longer tired. I smiled and even tried to dance a little, trying not to miss a step, but it was enough to throw out of rhythm.

Suddenly, with the finish line in sight, I got tired. My legs were wobbly. My stomach became upset, and I felt the energy gummies that I ate for breakfast start to make their way back up. I felt the warm surge through my body, so I slowed down, focused on my breathing, and I kept moving my legs and swinging my arms. I was almost at the finish line when I wanted to stop, but I kept going. That push was the hardest quarter-mile push I had done up to that point.

I was exhausted when I crossed the finish line. My fingers were tingling, my legs were jello, and I felt like vomiting when the finish-line camera man snapped a few shots of me. Then the sounds of the mariachi and seeing the Mexican dancers in all their beauty began to soothe my stomach. I collected my metal, grabbed a bottle of water from one of the nice volunteers, and I walked around to check out the sponsor tents. 

Despite my troubles during the race, I had a great time. I ran an 8K in 00:45:19 and I ran the Race to the Row for the first time. 

In the end, I learned some important lessons to work on before the San Jose Shamrock Run on St. Patrick’s Day.

  • First, I learned that the pre-race meal is really important. I’m definitely not doing the gummy breakfast again.
  • Second, I shouldn’t get too excited during the race because it will pull me out of rhythm. I have to stay focused.
  • And, third, I have to do longer runs on the treadmill with a consistent speed rather than just doing the treadmill programs with fluctuating speeds.

See you there!

The Resolution Run (2019)

The Resolution Run (2019)

Happy New Year!

Every January, like millions of other people, I think of what I could have done differently in the previous year and how I want to approach my personal growth in the year to come. Well, my 2019 resolution was to run a 10K every month and run a half marathon by the end of the year.  I finally found something that helped me in different ways, and I enjoy it, so I thought why not do it for the bling. 

2018 was a nice beginning to my running effort, but this kind of resolution only meant it was time for me to get serious about training. I actually made the commitment just before I registered for the Kiwanis Resolution Run 2019 about a week before the event on New Year’s day.

It was cold and windy that morning, but the Resolution Run was a beautiful course along the Bay Trail between Shoreline Lake and the south bay marshes in Mountain View, CA.

The trail was lined with marshland wilderness, small canals, and larger ponds that were filled with different types of birds. Hawks gliding above, searching the coastal fields for a New Year’s meal. Squirrels peeked from their hiding places long enough to watch the runners. A few of them dashed from one hole to the next just a few feet away from me. 

My body began to warm and the chill in the air faded as I admired the view from the south bay marsh. In the distance, I could see the Dumbarton Bridge spanning the water from the Peninsula to the east bay. The bay wind didn’t have the same smell as it does on the ocean side, but a light layer of salt still managed to build up on my lips. Then the wind speed picked up and I was met with a new challenge during a run—headwind. The great news about headwind is that if they last, they become a tailwind on the way back.

I cruised past the five-mile marker, and I thought, “I can’t stop. I have to finish without stopping.” But a slight incline in the last mile caused my left knee to hurt. The same thing happened to me during the SV Turkey Trot on Thanksgiving 2018. The pain slowed me down but I fought through the pain and tried to keep going, but I decided to walk for 30 seconds just to be safe. I was raised to finish strong, so in every race I run, I typically pick up the pace and try to sprint across the finish line. My 30 seconds was up and I knew the finish line was near, but I couldn’t see it yet. A group of runners flew past me almost pulling me along with the tailwind. I started running again, made a few turns on the trail, and then the trail changed from paved to rocks. Then the finish line was in sight and I had to run over a rocky surface. It didn’t matter, I turned it up anyway. The pain was gone and was now in a race to the finish, pacing the person in front of me who would eventually dust me in the final 400 meters.

I finished in 00:56:57 with a 9:10 minute per mile pace.

Next on the calendar is the San Jose 408K Race to the Row, which is one of three runs that make up the Valley Challenge by Run Local—the San Jose 408K, the San Jose Shamrock Run 10K, and the SV Half Marathon.

My goal for the next race: set a new PR and beat my minute per mile pace time.

The Beginning (2018)

The Beginning (2018)

“Let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so  easily entangles, and let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us.” (Hebrews 12:1)

The first time I heard that quote was in 2010 while I was still cleaning up the mess I had made of the previous 10 years. Life had taken its many pounds of flesh, nearly stripping me of my dignity, and I was still fortunate enough to take a few more lumps before any real change could actually take place. 

I’m stubborn. 

Lucky me. 

That’s probably why I never saw the gargantuan sign life kept throwing in my face with that quote. 

“Let us run with perseverance.”

Perseverance. The act of getting your ass back up after falling; the ability to keep going after you fail; to rise above all the nonsense and keeping your eye on the goal; the key ingredient to running; cousin of endurance. 

At the time, I had no idea how much the simple act of running was going to change my life. But like any great artist, running has been waiting for me the entire time.

I was in no shape to run anything greater than five kilometers. I wasn’t overweight, but I was a flabby 170ish. Then I went back to college in my early 30s and the love handles mysteriously found their way to my waist-side. I swear it felt like one day I woke up and I had boobies. I graduated from college with two degrees and a progressive 50 extra pounds strapped to my body. 

At 39 years old, a few years after I graduated from college, I was the heaviest I had ever been in life, weighing in at around 260 pounds, and I was sure as hell having some health problems. There were days when it would feel like my entire body was starting to give up. The obesity label set in, depression along with it, and I continued to suffer as I continuously thought about the athlete I used to be and the good shape I used to be in. 

It was hard for me to accept that my body and mental health were lacking strength. It was even harder to accept that I did it to myself after 25 years of an unhealthy diet, smoking cigarettes, drinking beer like it was water in the desert, and occasional exercise. Reality finally hit me in 2018 when I tried to run a mile and nearly puked all over myself. I fell over on someone’s front yard gasping for air after releasing the beers I had just drunk back into the wild. I fought the tears back as I walked back down the street to my house.

It was time for a serious change. I finally let go and let God take the reins, and the first thing the big guy showed me was that damn quote, “Let us run with perseverance the race marked for us.” That’s when I finally got the idea to start running, but the idea of running a marathon wasn’t conceivable. That was the day my life changed.

I got up the next day in a glorious hangover, and I went online to search for gyms close to my house. None of them were remotely close to being in my budget. Discouragement was quickly setting in, so I decided to go the frugal route and do my own exercises at home. A quick search online showed me some good running routes near my house. So I started planning. Recover from the hangover today and start running tomorrow. 

My room quickly turned into a radio in search of the best running music I could find. I set my alarm for 5:00AM and called it an early night at 10PM because that was early to me in those days. Now, I’d like to say that I got up as enthusiastically as I went to bed, but I didn’t. I rolled around in bed for another hour and then I finally crawled out and started stretching. And guess what, I was tired after stretching. Yup, I busted a sweat trying to touch my toes that early. I finally got out of the house around 6:30AM in the best pair of running shoes I owned, basketball shorts, an old t-shirt, a hoodie, and my iPod strategically routed under my shirt. I really thought I was cool. *heavy eye roll*

My over-imaginative mind tried to convince me that my first run could be on a local trail and that I could run it from beginning to end, but my body gave that thought the finger. I jogged lightly down the street for as far as I could go and then I walked back home. That was my first run in years. Later that day, my legs were jello from the half-mile run and being sore while editing at work was a little distracting. It hurt but it also felt good, and I wanted more.

During my running research in the middle of the week, I came across a sponsored post on Facebook for the Wharf to Wharf 10K race from Santa Cruz to Capitola, a classic northern California run. If I was going to get wet, I might as well go swimming. The limited signups were that day, so I signed up even though I had never ran a 10K in my life. I made the commitment, spent the money, and there was no backing out now mainly because there are typically no refunds in races.

With two months before the race, I had enough time to prepare myself for the unexpected. I started by running down the street and back to my house without stopping. Then it was around the block without stopping. Then it was two blocks. Then three. In a month’s time, it was three miles. I ran four miles a week before the race, which was as ready as I was going to be at that time.

On July 22nd, I ran my first real race at the Wharf to Wharf 10K in 1:09:47. That time may not seem very fast to you, but it was certainly enough to make me feel accomplished after the race.

During the race, I was tired after three miles without stopping. I started timing my runs—run for five minutes, walk for one. I pushed along with people running next to me, but I hated them. They all had smiles on their faces as if it was supposed to be fun. But it wasn’t long before I was smiling as well. The spirit of the race made it fun and the people were all having a great time. Many of them encouraged me to keep running when I stopped to walk. 

“You got this! We’re almost there! You can do it!”

In the final quarter mile, I crossed the photo area and I tossed up the Spartan Up hand gesture. We ran along the cliff-side road that descends into Capitola, so I picked up the pace, feeling the salty ocean breeze caress my face. My dad and my girlfriend were there to meet me at the finish line, cheering me on as I made the final sprint. I used to go with my parents to this race when I was a kid, so it seemed customary for me to have some family there with me.

When I got home that day, I was drained more than usual, but it was worth it. I had begun a new journey, one that would lead me to better health and (hopefully) a slimmer body.

The next day, I weighed myself to see if I had made any progress, and I weighed 200 pounds, down 60 pounds in three months. I wanted to keep running, but sore muscles and an aging body kept me from pushing any further. I had absolutely no concept of rest days and recovery runs at that point. 

I got back online and searched for a 10K to run in August. I found the Race Thru the Redwoods 10K in Fenton, CA and  signed up without noticing that it was a trail run with several inclines through the Santa Cruz mountains. That was a really hard run, and I walked a lot of it, but I still had an amazing time, beating my previous time with 1:07:21.

In September, a friend asked me to sign up for a charity race called One Mile for One Child organized by the San Jose Vietnamese Running Club (SJVRC). My girlfriend, Minh, ran the 5K and I did the 10K. Sharing this event with her was a great experience, and I learned that exercising as a couple made the event more engaging, and we both go to contribute to a great cause. I finished that race in 1:02:20. Getting faster.

Then October rolled around a week after the SJVRC race, and I was a bit skeptical about how my body would hold up for another 10K. Fortunately, I was more prepared physically than I was mentally, so I signed up for the 10K in the Rock ‘n’ Roll Half Marathon Series.

The Rock ’n Roll Half Marathon Series gave me the opportunity to run a 10K and raise money for a local nonprofit hospital, St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. I raised a little over $500 for the hospital, and I even got my registration covered. Apparently, my efforts allowed me to be knighted as a St. Jude Hero. Their awesome gear certainly made me look the part a lot better than I did when I went out for my first run.

The more I looked into St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, the more I became enthusiastic about fundraising. The money I raised went towards children recovering from cancer, so they didn’t have to worry about paying for their medical treatment.

The Rock ‘n’ Roll made me think a lot about the kids fighting cancer and all the pain they had to go through during treatment and recovery. Then my thoughts quickly moved to the pain my Godmother went through during her battle with cancer and how she continued to fight all the way to the end. I fought the tears back thinking of her, but her strength lived in my thoughts. Coincidentally, the song changed on my iPod and her strength moved into my legs and I kept running. I fought through the temptation to slow down and walk. I fought through the pain when I passed my three-mile marker, and I fought even harder when I passed the four-mile marker. I finished that emotional race in 1:00:42.

In November, I skipped my usual plans of traveling to Washington for Thanksgiving and decided to participate in the Silicon Valley Turkey Trot 10K, which took place on Thanksgiving. This run was a bit easier for me because running had become a regular practice by then. The only obstacle was avoiding people who started before me and walked. I was a little bummed because I didn’t get a picture of myself during the race, but it didn’t hinder performance. I finished that race faster than the others at 0:59:00

2018 came to an end in a magical way when I ran the Silicon Valley Santa Run 5K through downtown San Jose. I dressed up in a Santa suit and chased the Grinch through the course. I didn’t catch him, but it was a fun process. It actually started raining during that run, which really helped my body temperature and my breathing.

The Santa Run was the first race I did without music because I forgot my iPod. It was a new challenge that forced me to put more attention on my breathing while pairing it with my strides. That was a great training tool that I will likely use on later runs. In the end, I wasn’t tired or sore days after the race. I reached a new 5K PR with 0:28:09.

It was my first official year of running a race every month, and I made significant progress in my life, which may not have been possible had I not stopped drinking alcohol and smoking cigarettes and starting running. At this point, my weight would fluctuate between 190 and 200, but I was able to run four miles without stopping, and I felt the strength returning to my body—physically and mentally.

I hadn’t given up on playing basketball just yet, but I was starting to accept the fact that I’m not going to be the top-pick anymore and that it was only a matter of time before I couldn’t play anymore. And, you know what? I was okay with it. My ambitions changed, and my focus moved to self-improvement.

Running 10Ks became a regular part of my life. In fact, before the year ended, I registered for a running event every month for the first five months of 2019—from January to May. Each of these events has a goal, and each goal will contribute to the grand resolution of 2019: running the greatest distance of my life, a half marathon in October. Maybe one day I can run the Boston Marathon, but that’s just a dream for now.

Here’s to making the marathon a reality!

Shaq: A Rim-Breaking, Backboard-Shattering Flashback

Shaq: A Rim-Breaking, Backboard-Shattering Flashback

Since it’s Shaq Week on NBA TV this week, I figured this little flashback would fit right in.

In the 90s, when I was an early teenager who thought he was Michael Jordan, I used to love going to the closest elementary school to have a dunk contest with my friends. In my case, that was Linda Vista in San Jose, CA. I had an adjustable rim in my backyard, and I would practice my dunks every day after school. When the weekend rolled around, we would go there because the rims were only eight feet high and we could dunk, or we would go to St. John’s down the street to hoop. Those rims were a little over nine feet high, so the games there would get pretty high-flying by older guys. That was the time of And1, Hoop It Up, and betting on 2-on-2 games like in White Men Can’t Jump. It was all about the soft-touch, reverse layup, the tongue-sticking-out type of hang time, and it was all about breaking backboards. Trust me when I say that, in the 90s, it was all about the dunk.

In fact, it was so much about the dunk that the term “posterized” was developed in the 90s because of this era of hoop. If you’re unfamiliar with that term, here’s some quick game for you. A person gets posterized when a player dunks the ball over them, someone takes a picture of it, and blows it up to be a poster for the player who did the dunking. When it came to posterizing other guys in style, it really all began with Julius “Dr. J” Erving and evolved into dunkers like Shawn Kemp, Clyde “The Glide” Drexler, Dominique Wilkins, and his Airness, Michael “Air” Jordan. Power dunks, on the other hand, were something completely different; they hurt people and broke stuff.

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