Moving and unpacking delayed my Mother's day post. Being sick to add to that, did not help either.
Mother's day weekend started well - my son with the help of his teacher made me a card and gave it to me on Friday evening. It was very touching - the teacher asked them "Why do you love your Mama?". Apparently he answered "Fire Engines, Dump Trucks" - I can see where that came from but his teacher did not. When we drive/ride around town together, we always look for fire engines, all different types of trucks, and many times actually stop and appreciate these creatures. After some more prodding, he told the teacher, "I love my mama because she makes me beans, and takes me to school". The card is beautiful and I will save it for a long time to come.
This year, Mother's day was not a big priority as we had just moved to a new house, and definitely unpacking was higher priority. However, like every year, I decided to run the Title 9, Mother's day 10k. I have been doing it since last year, and I use that race to reflect on the year that has gone by. I also want to take the time to do something I inherently love - of course running. Running is something I go to almost 3-4 times a week and it is one thing that helps me clear cobwebs in my head, let's me analyze things logically, and just the act of putting one foot ahead of another - gives a great metaphor to my life. One step at a time, and you can accomplish anything you want - but the key part is "one step at a time". Running keeps life simple.
My husband, and kid came with me to the start of the race. After a little race fuel (thanks to the race expo), we were off. I had tears in my eyes as I missed my mom. They just came, I wasn't actually thinking of my mom, but when they came I realized why they were there. I thought of her, and took control of myself. Did a high-five with my son, and took off.
I normally run a very steady pace - does not matter what the pace is - it is steady. There were a lot of moms that started out too fast, and then were walking within the first kilometer. As the group got thinner, I met a woman who was running happily - she definitely was a Boulder mom - very very fit. I asked her if we could run together as it looked like she ran at the same pace, and she said "Sure."
The race was not the same any more. From being a race, it became a run where we chatted, and looked around at the beautiful scenery, and birds, and ducks, and streams. It was just what I needed. Her perspective was beautiful "Its not the destination, its our journey that matters more" - so the mile markers along the way just became non-existent to me, and just running mattered. She showed me a "couple" and she said "look how happy they look". The couple she was referring to was to two ducks that were waddling through the reservoir. She said "They are happy there are no boats to disturb the waters". All this just took my mind off the race and it became so much more fun. She and I exchanged our backgrounds, and she had been to India and was sharing her perspectives to me. We pulled each other "Up and Over" the hills and we shared ways to get up the "little monsters" as she called the hills faster. It was two people sharing stories and views.
We got to the finish line together, hugged each other and thanked each other for the company. My son saw me finish the race and after I found out that I had a PR for a 10k - 54 minutes, and got a big kiss from my son, and he said "Happy Mother's day, Mama" - that just made my day.
Mother's day weekend started well - my son with the help of his teacher made me a card and gave it to me on Friday evening. It was very touching - the teacher asked them "Why do you love your Mama?". Apparently he answered "Fire Engines, Dump Trucks" - I can see where that came from but his teacher did not. When we drive/ride around town together, we always look for fire engines, all different types of trucks, and many times actually stop and appreciate these creatures. After some more prodding, he told the teacher, "I love my mama because she makes me beans, and takes me to school". The card is beautiful and I will save it for a long time to come.
This year, Mother's day was not a big priority as we had just moved to a new house, and definitely unpacking was higher priority. However, like every year, I decided to run the Title 9, Mother's day 10k. I have been doing it since last year, and I use that race to reflect on the year that has gone by. I also want to take the time to do something I inherently love - of course running. Running is something I go to almost 3-4 times a week and it is one thing that helps me clear cobwebs in my head, let's me analyze things logically, and just the act of putting one foot ahead of another - gives a great metaphor to my life. One step at a time, and you can accomplish anything you want - but the key part is "one step at a time". Running keeps life simple.
My husband, and kid came with me to the start of the race. After a little race fuel (thanks to the race expo), we were off. I had tears in my eyes as I missed my mom. They just came, I wasn't actually thinking of my mom, but when they came I realized why they were there. I thought of her, and took control of myself. Did a high-five with my son, and took off.
I normally run a very steady pace - does not matter what the pace is - it is steady. There were a lot of moms that started out too fast, and then were walking within the first kilometer. As the group got thinner, I met a woman who was running happily - she definitely was a Boulder mom - very very fit. I asked her if we could run together as it looked like she ran at the same pace, and she said "Sure."
The race was not the same any more. From being a race, it became a run where we chatted, and looked around at the beautiful scenery, and birds, and ducks, and streams. It was just what I needed. Her perspective was beautiful "Its not the destination, its our journey that matters more" - so the mile markers along the way just became non-existent to me, and just running mattered. She showed me a "couple" and she said "look how happy they look". The couple she was referring to was to two ducks that were waddling through the reservoir. She said "They are happy there are no boats to disturb the waters". All this just took my mind off the race and it became so much more fun. She and I exchanged our backgrounds, and she had been to India and was sharing her perspectives to me. We pulled each other "Up and Over" the hills and we shared ways to get up the "little monsters" as she called the hills faster. It was two people sharing stories and views.
We got to the finish line together, hugged each other and thanked each other for the company. My son saw me finish the race and after I found out that I had a PR for a 10k - 54 minutes, and got a big kiss from my son, and he said "Happy Mother's day, Mama" - that just made my day.








