Ccwerecommend This asearch This vsearchn Ccwerecommend c

osearche

t

e Ccwerecommend r This hsearch
This Top his Top Ccwerecommend Top This seasearchc
e Ccwerecommend Tsearchis This Tsearchissearchi This Th This ssearchesea Ccwerecommend c
Tsearchp This esearchTi
searchusearchear Top heersearchht Tsearchp Top e This Tsearchi Ccwerecommend l Ccwerecommend Cc This e This ecosearchmnd Top s

Th This s ap Ccwsearchrecomm Ccwerecommend n

C Ccwerecommend w This recommesearchd Ccwerecommend Thi Ccwerecommend
osearcha Top a This i

gl

Top nsearch searchlmsearchs This
n Ccwerecommend a This hm

blsearch searche This u This if Ccwerecommend l. Ccwerecommend P Ccwerecommend us Top search Top as This usearchn This n This Top i Ccwerecommend h Ccwerecommend m
re Ccwerecommend t Ccwerecommend ansearch2search,search0 Ccwerecommend w This msearchn

f Top om This 5 Top searcht Ccwerecommend te

searchn 25 Top o Top n Top rissearchwhsearch

asearchssearchd osearchesearchthsearchnsearch$4 Top m Top lsearchio Top
orsearchTe Top Leuke This i Top

am Ccwerecommend ;searchL Ccwerecommend mpsearcho This a This oc Ccwerecommend et Top . Top Ssearche?searchTa Ccwerecommend searchlo This e m Ccwerecommend ksearchs ysearchu searchel a searchittle
verklempt, right?
Despite the hills...and the near-crying...and the walking on hills twice...I took 2 minutes off my previous and only
half marathon time. It's awesome to see how this
full marathon training is really getting me
more fit with faster times. Sure, I got passed by about 3,000 people (seriously not exaggerating here), but I saved enough in my energy tank that, near the end, I passed at least 20 or so of those people with a final hard push. There's nothing better than sprinting to the finish line once you have it in sight.
Immediately after the race, my muscles were tight (heeelllooo warm bath), and the two days after the race I was SORE. My legs were heavy as to be expected, but my
traps were incredibly sore, even to the touch. I never get sore there after my long runs and I felt like I was pretty relaxed during the race, so I wondered what was up.
And then I realized the one thing I did differently
this race than any other time that I run: I texted. A lot. I had the "brilliant" idea to text my husband during the race,
so he could (graciously) upload my texts to
Twitter and
Facebook. (Ironically enough, Twitter was down during the entire time that I ran. Bastards.) It was a fun way for me to let my friends, family and readers know how I was doing, and, honestly, it gave me something fun to focus on.
Plus, it reminded me how much support I had out there. All warm and fuzzy stuff.
What's not warm and fuzzy is that apparently when I text while running, I clinch my shoulders up to my ears in order to keep my upper-body steady enough to text amidst the jostling of jogging. And my body isn't used to that. Hence the insane soreness. I even have the proof in the race photos, where the photographer got a photo of me texting. My loved ones got a kick out of that, and, truthfully, so did I. At least I look happy texting.
What did I learn, you ask? Three things. One, if I'm going to text during a race, I need to train for it. Two, "running like a girl," the official motto for this girl-power race, really means running like a bad-ass, and it results in jewelry from Tiffany. And three, I could really stand to add more hills to my training. —Jenn
Want to win a souvenir from the race? Leave a comment with what you do "like a girl" (laugh, kickbox, dance, etc.) by next Monday, and we'll select one lucky reader to win a cute Nike Women's Marathon vinyl mini backpack that is perfect for the gym!
Disclosure: Nike paid for the trip and race registration, but in no way is this post or our review of the event sponsored, influenced or paid for by Nike. We're honest, yo!