
This morning I ran my second, dusk marathon. My first time was in the Standard Chartered International Marathon in Bangkok, in 2007 where I set my first sub-4 hour personal record.
The Sundown Marathon, on 30 April featured two races: the 84km ultra-marathon (at 7pm) and the marathon (at midnight). I saw several of my triathlon buddies do the 84km: Grace, Victor, and Freddy – they were amazing! Personally, I think the ultra-marathon (more than 42km) is highly challenging to the body and I would rather take on an Ironman triathlon than a pure running race. I respect those who attempted it, as it requires strong resolve, determination, mental resilience, and a positive mental attitude to complete the distance. Last year, I completed 52.5km of cross-country terrain for the MR25 Ultra-marathon – because I wanted the exclusive t-shirt badly – and it was worth it!
I crossed the finish line just before 4am, an urgent limbo-rock executed beneath the 4-hour bar. Although it was not my best time, I was relatively pleased with my performance considering I did not walk and it was 5 weeks after Ironman China. I paced with Francis Tan, a twenty-something, and regular podium finisher/age-grouper in the Olympic distance triathlon. We hit the 21km mark happily around 1:52, and that was when we were challenged by our enthusiasm and humidity. Francis slowed down, and I kept going using the runners in front as my motivation. The Sundown Marathon route was interesting, covering much of the eastern part of Singapore; with enough slopes and bridges to keep you fully engaged. Francis completed his first marathon in 4:25. Good job, mate!
Congratulations go out to market-researchers, Reeves and Wee Ching for completing it according to their quantitative expectations (okay, timings). I would encourage you to consider doing this annual race, which attracted 6,000 runners this year. The orange T-shirt is a keeper.
Lessons Learnt: Marketing guru Seth Godin wrote in his 80-page book ‘The Dip’ (2007) about moments when our motivations flag. He called this the Dip. He wrote that, sometimes, quitting could be useful – before you hit a dead-end. Although Vince Lombardi wrote: ‘Winners never quit. Quitters never win!’ quitting can be a means of preparing for bigger things ahead. My friend, Matthew (an Ironman triathlon finisher) decided to call it a day near the halfway mark, and sensibly so. There is no sense in doing irreparable damage to your body when it communicates to you on a physical and intuitive level; there is always another race. He is determined to go below the 5-hour mark at his next assault at the distance, and I believe he will. There are benefits for knowing when to quit and when to stick to your guns.
Photo of medal by Maurice Lee
Thanks bro for being understanding.
ReplyDeleteBtw, how did you connect with Maurice Lee?