Ironstar Half Ironman
October 24, 2004
I was worried about the swim. I was worried I would have to wear my too-tight wetsuit. I surely hoped I would not have to. I didn’t. The swim took us down the boat canal, then out into the open lake. There were some serious prayers before this swim.
That was when I started
talking to myself. Peace be still! The
verse of scripture came back to me. My
stroke lengthened as a firm calm settled in. I passed buoys on my right one
after another. I was on course. A fisherman in a small aluminum boat puttered
by without seeing me. Now the strokes
were feeling powerful, and after a couple more buoy passes, I overtook some
swimmers. Pulling through my group of
swimmers, I began to catch some of the slower ones from the previous wave. This was one great swim. Getting out, though, was a deep landing in a
very muddy area. Thank God I had help.
I was pumped from the great swim and had a fast transition besides. Out on the bike right away, I started passing folks, but I could only get one gear. The shifters on my bike were not working. The next few miles consisted of passing people and then stopping to try to fix my shifter. I could not shift from the small to the big front chainring. Finally, I gave up and decided to just do the bike course in one gear, the big gear, my favorite. So, let’s go. I was really into it; taking the hills, passing everyone I came to, I was on fire. Soon, I had passed everyone I could see and found myself all alone on the course. After a couple more miles, I still had not seen another rider. Did I pass everybody? I doubted it. Am I lost? Maybe. Did I take a wrong turn? Did I miss a turn? Where am I? Then I fought my way up some hard hills, which I didn’t think were supposed to be on this part of the course. My legs and my body were starting to feel the effects of “too much too soon.” I was getting tired.
I climbed one last bad hill,
then the road dead-ended into a major highway. Definitely, this was not on the
course map. I was done. Down on the right, I
could see a convenience store. These
were the days before the ubiquitous cell phones, so I would need to go to the
convenience store, borrow a phone, and call my Pat.