Friday, May 25, 2012

It's a Marathon, but Someone has to do it!


Everyone loves to joke about the distance of a full Marathon (26.2 miles).  If you say you are training to run a full Marathon, you will inevitably hear "ahh man, anyone could do the 26, but it is the .2 that gets you!".  Hardy-har-har.

The truth of the matter is, that .2 is a killer! You struggle through the ending miles of a Marathon with heavy legs, only to finally get to the 26 mile marker and have the .2 stretch out ahead of you like some sick joke. That .2 is torture. That .2 is hell. Or maybe that is just me...I have only run one full Marathon and I think it is when I saw the mirage of the finish line at the end of that deadly .2 that my lungs literally stuck together. Maybe it gets easier, but that isn't what I have heard from even those that have run many...like Jesse and Chris.

So will there be another Marathon in the near future?

The Taos Marathon is June 10th (www.TaosMarathon.weebly.com) and of course Chris and Jesse will be running it. Chris, in true Chris form (see previous post "A Family Affair") has jumped in and started his training with a 20 mile run. I know, he totally sucks. Jesse on the other hand is diligently continuing his training for the ULTRA Marathon this fall, so he is running 26 miles today. Yes you read that correctly, TWENTY SIX miles...for a training run! We would say he had completed yet another full marathon, but he isn't doing the .2 so it doesn't count. And yes I will be telling him this as I laugh and sip wine. You see I am not running today.

I am on the wine marathon. I am training very diligently, 100% focused. Every single day I make myself drink more wine. "How does she do it?" you may ask, but there is no way to explain it, some people have a gift. I have that gift.

Sauv Blanc, Riesling, Cab, a blend, a sparkling wine, then back to a Chard, oh yes I can go from white to red and back again! Recently at a blind tasting, or in the wine marathon arena, The Main Event, I managed to nail every single wine blindly including several vintage dates. I am very impressed with myself. You see, in the wine marathon, you don't need screaming supporters, you just need to think highly of yourself.

So I am taking a short break this week from training for running races and focusing on running circles around my glass. I hope you join me. It is so much more fun...and less sweaty.

 -Cheers from the Vivác Winery Family!
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Friday, May 18, 2012

Toe to Toe, I Feel Your Pain


No one can prepare you for loss. No one can tell you how you will handle it, how you will feel about it. Loss, big or small, is a process, one in which you have to get through in your own time, in your own way.

For me, I had no idea what was coming. Zero indication that I was about to be thrown feet first into it. In fact, the only glimmer of what was to come was a sensation, call it a "blister" about to rub. I was 100% focused on my first full Marathon and I blazed past all the warning signs.

The high of completing my first Marathon was crushed by the news of my loss. I was not flooded with pain the way I thought I would be. Instead it was like a steady pressure. An all consuming mental absorption. I couldn't think about anything else and I couldn't make the ever increasing pressure lift. Numb, I simply let the process unfold. It was as if it had to happen to me yet I was not a part of it. This was NOT what I expected at all. I expected to be writhing on the floor, screaming in pain. I pictured lots of tears.

I sat sipping wine, wine the color of my bruising. Wine that helped me feel numb. Wine that helped with the healing. I sipped my wine and stared at the inevitable before me, legs outstretched, swollen feet propped up. My future laid open and exposed to everyone.  I thought to myself, "How did this happen to me? Would I ever be the same?" I leaned on Jess who consoled me. He promised that I would get through it, but that it would take a long time.

As days turned into weeks. There was no bloody carnage, but rather a clear stream of relief, an utter sense of acceptance. But as with all loss, it comes in stages.

As the almost beautiful bruising was swept away in pieces off the floor. A new evolution of loss came to me. It was summer where barren soles play freely, but mine, I felt I had to hide. No one wants to see the deformity I had become. As time went on, I would actually forget about it only then to suddenly become aware of it again and wonder if anyone else had noticed. In a self conscious panic I would try to hide the glaringly obvious loss.

Now with more time having passed and as they say "time heals all wounds", I have been feeling on the mend! Only yesterday I was sucker punched with a new wave of this process. A pain I hadn't felt before, the first real pain I have been in touch with. A pain that dug in sharply. A new sense of life pushing its way into the old. This is not when I thought I would feel pain, yet that is exactly what I have.

"WHY?!" I screamed. Can't this just be over? I am tired of it being a thought, tired of it being a part of my daily existence. I want to wear sandals!!!

They say it is only a matter of time before you experience the loss all distance runners experience, the loss of a toe nail. But I didn't think it would happen to me. Now all I can do is go through the process. The long, tortuous process.

I hope someday to feel whole again. Someday to join the free soles of Summer. Someday, to wear sandals again.

At least my toe no longer matches the color of my wine.

-Cheers from the Vivác Winery Family!
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Tuesday, May 8, 2012

A Family Affair

Our journey is no longer ours alone.

Jesse decided he wanted to run, I am guessing, during one of his long bottling days with his brother Chris. I assume this because these are the days when, side by side, the two brothers come up with wild ideas. These are the days I usually refer to Chris as Jess' "other wife".  Chris becomes the "other wife" due to the sense of commitment Jess has to the idea they thought up together and there is nothing I can say or do to dissuade him, he has married his idea with his brother. The days where Jess and his "other wife" band together to talk the women in their lives into some hair brained idea come all too often. Running has always seemed a hair brained idea to me and seemed to be the next big adventure these two were ready to take on. Anyway, Jess came to me with the idea of running a marathon and after a couple bottles of wine, I was being talked... no bribed, into running a half marathon. I swore I would NEVER run a full Marathon. Jess took what he could get that day and then slowly wore me down over the years. I ran my first full Marathon in March of this year.

*Tip to those trying to bribe (and things to watch for by those about to be bribed), LOTS of wine and a substantial gift seem to work wonders.

Before I knew it we were off and running, pun intended.

You might be asking, why Jess and his "other wife" didn't just do the running by themselves, why do the ladies need to be involved? I think for Jesse, I was a stepping stone to get to the level he could then join his brother on. I said yes because I wanted the bribe gift...and there was wine involved... lots of wine.

The "other wife" takes my place as the extreme running partner. Chris has always had a natural gift for running, an ability to randomly select a day to run 10 miles and do it at a pace I will probably never be able to train for ...and he'll do it hung over. Absolutely unfair.

Jess ran with me until he was able to build up enough speed to run with Chris. They have managed to race Marathon after Marathon, encouraging each other to add another race to the calendar. The races get faster for Chris and Jess, having found that endurance is his gift, get longer! Chris hopes to shave enough speed off his Marathon time to qualify for Boston, Jess is training for a 50 miler.

Needless to say, it is hard to not feel the stirring in your gut to get involved, usually for me that is because I ate greasy food the night before...but that is a different blog all together. Seeing people push themselves, commit to a goal, follow through and finally cross the finish line at a race is beyond moving. I have cried at all of Jesse and Chris' races.

Chris' wife (his actual wife, not his "other wife" Jesse) Liliana, has been working out at home while raising her 2 kids, perhaps secretly planing to step in and race one of these days. I have no doubt she could kick some butt and do it without sweating. I seriously don't think she sweats! Due to a second pregnancy, Liliana has not yet taken up running. Lucky girl.

Now, Jess' son Denim (about to be 6 this summer) and Chris' son Maddox (turning 5 this week) have taken to running. Yes I know all children run, but they want to race!

Enter race opportunity #1:"Run for the Zoo". This is a race held in Albuquerque offering a 1/2 marathon, 10K, 5K and 1 mile fun run. The kids signed up for the 1 mile. Maddox unfortunately came down with a cold and could not participate. Denim, along with Dixon Elementary (the 3rd most entries of all Northern NM schools) joined the thousands to run Sunday morning.

A few days prior to the race, the elementary kids got their race packets. Denim excitedly asked to put on his new zoo shirt and have me pin his bib on just as he had seen Jess and myself do for our races. He proudly posed for photos and packed his "gear" for the race. Each day he thought about what foods to eat that would make him run better. He talked about being a little nervous and he tried to get more sleep. The dedication of this 5 year old to a race was more than adorable, it was touching. We felt a sense of pride watching him ready himself for his first race. In a time where kids watch more TV than play, it is exciting to see kids participate in sports. Especially when it is your child. Especially when your child would rather read college text books on dinosaurs than go outside.

The day of the race, nerves were on edge, the pressure and crowds were setting Denim off. We found a group from the school and huddled together, moving with the sea of people through the start gates and down the race course. The mass moved us blocks down the road...and past the turn off for the 1 mile loop. Yes, we were now moving with the last of the 5K group NOT the kids 1 mile "fun run".

How did this happen you ask? Well, we would like to know as well. It seemed odd that the race had started early, but then again, when you have thousands of people crammed into an area, confusion seems to be the norm. Disoriented, we started with the mob we were in.

Denim ran the 1st mile well, at a quick clip even. Then as he began to tire, he walked. The path ahead seemed never ending. Like a mirage, we thought each bend in the road up ahead was the finish line. We encouraged him to press on, take breaks when he needed and run 'his race'. Jess and I looked at each other nervously as we continued with the crowd far past what should have been the 1 mile stopping point. As we wound our way into neighborhoods we knew, this was a 5K. Denim managed to run 2.1 miles. A true Marathon for a 5 year old. He had stayed in excellent spirits and even literally stopped to smell the roses. However, shortly after the 2 mile point, he was unable to continue. I picked him up and carried him in my arms. My very tired this-is-too-far-to-carry-50lbs arms. So much for the "fun run".

Denim wasn't the only one ill prepared for a 5K! I was wearing a skirt and converse, not the attire that would support 3.1 miles. We neared the end and Denim had a resurgence of energy, running across the finish line with pride. I was more like a drowned rat. My skirt was dirty from his shoes rubbing on it and it was twisted off to the side. My shirt was soaked with sweat and I had blisters on my toes. Lovely.

After a bag of cotton candy and a tour of the zoo, we walked a mile back to the car. The poor kid did about 4 miles of walking that day. On the drive home Denim reminisced about the fine points of the race concluding "If I can do 2 miles at age 5, I think I will run a half marathon at 14 years old and a full Marathon by the time I am 20 years old." I am relieved that this experience didn't deter him, but inspired him to continue. I have to say if I thought I was heading out for a half marathon and found I was on a full Marathon course, I would not be such a good sport. The cotton candy at the end of that race would have to be made out of Oxycontin with a side of wine.

And so, with one race down, and a future of races in front of him, we see that this journey of running is not just ours, but inspiring future generations. Maybe Denim and Maddox will inspire their kids to be runners too. If only talking them into taking over the winery were as easy.

-Cheers from the Vivác Winery Family!
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Thursday, April 26, 2012

Running out


Running out of time?
Running out of excuses?
Running out of food at home?
Running out of money?

Usually running helps me deal with all the other "running" I seem to do, but lately it is building up. The frustration, the impatience... the thirst. It is too much. Then I came across a wonderful article that talked about vacations from running. Yes as a runner you can stop running!

Once the competitive drive ratchets up, it seems to be a never ending process of what-comes-next syndrome. The constant training, the scheduled runs, the panic of missing one, the details of getting around an injury. It starts to feel like another job! But it doesn't occur to you that you can and should take a break! This doesn't mean stop running and sit on the sofa eating ice cream...however that is exactly what I did after my first full Marathon. After my first half marathon (and yes I purposely capitalized Marathon when referring to a full and not when referring to a half, it deserves a little more respect in my mind) I had complete gall bladder failure and was also strapped to the sofa eating ice cream, but that time it was laying down. Anyway, back to my point...

Start enjoying running again! Run as long as you feel like running rather than the prescribed mileage for that day. Skip a run to do something completely different, ski, bike, raft, swim, yoga...sleep? Not training suddenly frees up so much time!

Ironically... I am in training for the Taos half marathon. But I am taking the advice to take a vacation and stop all the "running" in more ways than one. We start Happy Hour Season this weekend and it is important to enjoy seeing our friends and neighbors again, often the only time anyone gets to see the 4 of us is at these Happy Hours. So I say skip a run, stop "running" around and come running to our Happy Hour!

Kicking off Saturday April 28th with "The Pathetics" from 4-7, you can relax, forget the stresses of the week, enjoy a wine flight with savory plate pairing or sample some of our gourmet picnic items. Enjoy half priced wines and free live entertainment! Need an excuse to have fun? Now you have one! (this advertisement has been brought to you by Vivác Winery)

Sometimes you have to know when to stop running and smell the roses...or the wine.

-Cheers from the Vivác Winery Family!
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Monday, April 16, 2012

5 Race Must Haves


Wanting to run your first race?

Here are the TOP 5 things you will need post race no matter what the distance.

#5 Salonpas, they are absolutely amazing, they kill pain AND have menthol so they make your aches go away immediately! I had my body completely covered with them and then read the warning to wear one at a time. oops. Oh and not to drink while using them, I ignored that part too.

#4 compression socks, the blood pools in your legs and that is part of what causes the swelling and painful recovery. OK so I don't know the exact details, I was only half listening when Jesse told me about them. I heard "less painful recovery" and rushed out to get some! I think he may have still been reading when the car squealed out of the parking lot. I have been wearing them ever since.

#3 flip flops, you want those shoes off ASAP. Unless you are wearing the compression socks...obviously.

#2 make-up remover wipes or baby wipes, YES for both women & men. You sweat like crazy at a race and the salt on your face looks gross, feels gross and needs to be removed. These make you feel MUCH better. Also great for your hands which become sticky for some reason...I'm guessing the sweat you wipe off your head? The gatorade you slop all over? The self loathing you grip onto as you wonder why the hell you are doing this to yourself?

#1 WINE! Hello, what did you think I would recommend as #1, chocolate milk? Chocolate milk is actually my favorite post race treat, but it is mandatory you have something stronger for accomplishments. A great bottle of celebratory wine and a great big pat on your own back. To finish your first race no matter the distance deserves a celebration, each race that is longer, harder, a PR (Personal Record) or anything else you can think of is cause for a celebratory bottle of wine!

I realize these may be the items on a race must have list, but they seem to also double as items for a...
Hard day at work
Hard day with the kids
Hard day with your spouse
Hard day trying to be creative
Hard day with a friend
Hard day with your dog?

Best of luck to all of you who are about to do something new! We know it is scary, but do it anyway. When you finish and pop that cork, make sure to cheers yourself and know we are there with you...uh...well, if you are drinking Vivác wines that is, if you are not... we will just be feeling sorry for you.

-Cheers from the Vivác Winery Family!
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Saturday, April 7, 2012

Deadman Trail running


Training is underway for Mr. Jesse Padberg. Is he doing another marathon? Perhaps a more challenging course? No, that would be too easy! Mr. Jesse Padberg seems to be on a mission to kill himself. Am I really that hard to live with?

On October 20th, 2012, Jess will attempt the "Deadman Peaks Trail Run", a 50+ mile ultramarathon on the Continental Divide Trail south of Cuba, NM. This is the description of the race from their site:

While the course does not have any huge climbs or extreme elevation ...

(LIARS! It takes place between 6,350 and 7,400 ft and has about 6,300 total feet of climb) 

 ...  it is not an easy course...
(LOL!)

 ... Take a look at the 61% finishing rate from 2010! It is very remote...
(oh great, just what you want when running extreme distances...by yourself...in the wilderness.)

...This portion of the CDT is rarely used.  The trail is extremely rocky.  There are several miles of slick rock...
(my favorite!)

...The climb and descent of Mesa Portales includes scrambling.  Much of the existing trail is very faint... 
(that translates to: 'easy to get lost')

...Runners need to be ready for a long day in the wilderness.   The weather in October is usually very cool and dry(high of 60F, low of 30F), but be prepared.  There is no shade on the course. It could also snow or rain.
(perfect! Just the place to run 50+ miles!)

One word to describe what I think of this race? HELL!

Having just come off my first marathon, I am shocked at anyone that would want to run MORE than 26.2 miles much less almost double that. I also find it interesting that when you start talking about ULTRAmarathons, they no longer feel it is important to tell you how many miles the course really is. This one I believe is about 53 miles (IF you don't get lost on their "faint trails"). Evidently they think 'hey crazy, if you are out here even thinking of running 50 miles, just run until we tell you to stop! It could be 50, it could be 53, it could be 59! HA HA HA!'

I believe this is how the Devil has fun.

Among marathon runners, the Elite group of Ultramarathoners, is small, exclusive and for many elusive. It is taking the unimaginable and adding awe, wonder and a little magic to the equation. How does someone push their body past the extreme of a marathon into the realm of an ultra? I have no idea, but I will keep you posted!

-Cheers from the Vivác Winery Family!
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Friday, March 30, 2012

Over Fueling when you are Fueled by Vivác


As we head into the weekend, it seems appropriate to have a very important discussion.

Hang over cures.

Since we take our slogan "Fueled by Vivác" very seriously, we often have to deal with the hang over the next day...often before a run too.

Now that we are all (Jesse, myself & Chris) back on the training path, running in the heat of Spring and Summer, it is even more important to cure the "fuel" over loading. Liliana (Chris' wife) hasn't caught the running bug yet, but then she has 2 kids (age 4 and age 1) keeping her 'running' a lot more then the rest of us!

Back to the cure...we have tried various strategies over the years, here are a few of them.

*More sleep: OBVIOUSLY a great one but not an option most of the time.

*Lemon water: awesome. Ya, that is all I have to say. All water should always be lemon water.

*Ibuprofen: (duh) but now that there is so much evidence that it is very unhealthy to take a lot of Ibuprofen, we can't take it daily...and we "fuel" every night.

*Coffee: a classic, but let's face it, if you are already dehydrated, caffeine isn't the best, especially prior to a run. Unless you only plan on running to the bathroom.

*'Hair of the dog' : a little more wine in the morning does sound tempting, especially to a group of people that live and breath wine, BUT running intoxicated is very dangerous. People drive like crazy maniacs around here and stumbling into the road is just asking for it.

*Vitamin Water Zero: my personal favorite. Has electrolytes, but no calories. Often these drinks rival my thirst for wine which is obviously a HUGE endorsement.

But honestly the BEST hang over cure is going for a run! I know, the one thing you are ready to cross off your list, is being recommended as the cure. Running kicks butt, forcing the sweat and toxins out of your pours, I mean pores.

So when you wake up with pillow creases on your face, a thumping in your head and a 'I'm gonna throw up' mantra, strap on your shoes, down a Vitamin water and head out. I promise, you will feel so great that you will want to celebrate...and start refueling. Cheers to your weekend fuel!

-Cheers from the Vivác Winery Family!
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