Lazy W Marie

Carpeing all the diems in semi-rural Oklahoma...xoxo

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Happy Mice are Running Mice

May 22, 2014

I read the funniest article yesterday about an experiment performed on wild mice and other rodents, an experiment to answer the question about whether these creatures would exercise at will, given the alternative of freedom. (I did not realize this was a burning question in the scientific community, but what do I know?) You understand what I mean, right? Do mice traditionally run on treadmills just because they have to, given their laboratory setting, because they have nowhere else to go, like the proverbial hamster wheels? Or do they run for pleasure?

mice like to run too
I am trying so hard to stop eating tortilla chips at every meal of every day of my life. It’s gonna be a process. Salted cucumbers are a decent stand in. Light a candle for me.

I bet you see where this is going. Because had the test results pointed to LAZY MICE, I would not bother to share it with you.

Well, friends, the mice ran. They ran their little mouse hearts out! The treadmills were positioned in open fields, near well populated forests, and the undomesticated little sweeties had every opportunity in the world to do anything else they wanted to do. Like, forage for example. Or sleep. They could have had mouse-battles with sweet bowstaffs. They could do anything besides run, but over and over again they chose the tiny mouse treadmill. The scientific consensus was that the mice literally ran for pleasure.

Bam. There, it’s official. Running is fun!

Honestly I wish all my friends and loved ones could feel the deep and lasting high I am always talking about. After a while it’s like your bones are literally glowing. But running might not be for everyone. The thing is, is (hi Jon!) that you don’t absolutely hafta run to be happy or healthy. But to be happy and healthy you do have to find something physical to do on a regular basis. Find activities that get you gross-sweaty and also help you bliss out, then do them over and over again. See where that leads you.

As for the running-addicted mice, I just want to know how they figured out the myriad settings on the treadmill. Because WOW those machines are too complicated!

Be like mice and run happy.
XOXOXOXO

 

 

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Filed Under: daily life, running, thinky stuff

Race Recap #3: Timeline of Torture

May 5, 2014

Hahaha, just kidding! The torture only came in a few little bursts. Most of the race was truly incredible. A pleasure. Smooth sailing  that gave me glorious memories. Today I’ll do the super cliché thing and just outline those amazing miles the way so many runner-writers do, mostly for posterity. I hope you enjoy it too.

Oklahoma City Memorial Marathon
Oklahoma City Memorial Marathon

Before the Race: Handsome dropped M and me off around the Myriad Gardens, and we walked giddily toward the Memorial intersection. It was still very dark outside, and I was eating a banana and trying not to think of how tight my pants were (very). Cold, fat droplets of rain started pelting us, and lightning occasionally cracked open the sky. M and I stuck together until it was time for her to find her two sisters-in-law with whom she was running the 5-k.

Handsome, now driving to his nearby office to watch the festivity on the news and plot his city-wide drive plan to see me run, texted me a love note which I will remember for the rest of my life. And I was excited. Bouncy excited. I talked to anyone who would stop and talk to me. That would make a great book, by the way: Marathoners and their Motives: Why People Run. Everyone is different and so interesting! I met people who had competed in Boston, in New York City, at Disney, all around the world. This race in my own hometown, after all, is rated in the top twelve globally. 26,000 runners, 60% women, all Oklahoma Standard.

Anyway.

After spending four months preparing, it was unthinkable that the race might not happen. But within minutes of arriving downtown, we heard the announcement that due to severe weather heading our way, the 6:30 a.m. start time was being delayed until 7. Then 7:30. Then 8:15, etcetera. More than just rain, officials were concerned about dangerous lightning and large hail. Because, OKLAHOMA. It turned into a long morning of waiting out the cold and damp, tightly wound nerves, and quickly draining cell phone batteries. Because of the draining battery, I left my phone off for a long time, so no running music for several miles. I hope I never forget the masses of runners singing happy birthday to one woman and then the silence that fell over us when we heard the national anthem begin.

Miles 1-3: The starting corral was even more congested than I remember last year being, and there was no such thing as finding your pace group. I wrote this off eagerly. Then along with everyone else I started the race shuffling through the wet, silent downtown streets bedecked with Thunder playoff banners. GO THUNDER! We ran through Bricktown, up and over that ancient, steep, concrete bridge that is so much fun, and towards the interstate overpass. The warm up was slow. I was still rain-soaked and shivering by the time we reached Handsome at his Commish parking lot. He had made a sign that said, “Even hail can’t stop #R2R!” I love him so much.  My muscles were not yet convinced we were doing this, but I was so happy. As we ran north on Lincoln I smelled fire smoke but quickly realized it was from the group of firefighters jogging in full gear, holding a big, gleaming American flag. Chattering runners fell quiet when passing the firefighters. All the tension of being delayed melted away, and I remembered the reasons we were running. I thought of Harvey and Judy, of all the first responders who gave themselves fully to our City nineteen years ago. Barely three miles in, and I was already holding back tears.

 

r2r wet crowd near capitol

r2r capitol and oil rig behind crowd

 

After the State Capitol:  The weather was still pretty dark and humid. Still no music to listen to, just the thunderous footfall around me which was more mesmerizing than I had expected. Lots of emotions were still flooding me, too: Relief that the race wasn’t cancelled. A speck of anxiety about sustaining my energy level after waiting so long. And plain old trembling excitement. We ran near the Wonderbread factory, where they were clearly baking cinnamon-raisin bread that morning. Bastards. Even if you’re not very hungry, this is the most intoxicating and distracting aroma. It’s magical, especially on a rainy day. I watched everybody in their neon running headbands and polarized sunglasses swivel their heads towards the place in one motion, like zombies catching a whiff of human meat. You could almost hear the mass of runners murmur, “Mmmm, carbs…”
   Around this spot I also started smelling chicken Ramen noodles whenever I passed someone or someone passed me. Runners were wafting the weird, spicy odor, and it was not pleasant. I was embarrassed for them.

Gorilla Hill (mile 7?): By the time I reached this iconic neighborhood refreshment and entertainment stop, the rain had long since stopped falling but the streets were still plenty wet. As even costume gorillas are wont to do, I suppose, they had flung banana peels everywhere. And I mean everywhere you guys. Scads of them. Probably the runners had done so, too, like we do those paper Gatorade cups. Let me just say that the combination of overlapping banana peels with slick asphalt was not making me feel overly steady on my feet. But I was still having a lot of fun, running easily, amazed by the day.

Near McGuinness high school: Around northwest 50th and Western, just past the French Cowgirl shop that I love so much, the half-marathoners split off from the group and ran west. This is when it got real for me that I was running the full, and I felt a deep, powerful rush of pure thrill. Like cold, sweet well water springing up from my belly into my mouth. It is so weird how energy comes from different places in your body. I started thinking of chakras and mystical things. Then I switched my phone on to indulge in music. This is when I heard Eminem, and I got myself lost in the music. And it was roughly at the 8 Mile mark. And I laughed.
I had accidentally spotted my pace group by now and more or less stayed with them, and they too smelled like chicken Ramen noodles. Crazy!

Near Chesapeake campus (Mile 8.5): Here, I took my first pee break, mostly out of obligation.  (You’re welcome for that.) Handsome was waiting for me not far after this, just past a big, crowded relay stop. I was so happy here. My energy was high, I had zero pain, and my spirits were absolutely soaring. He texted that I had run past him, LOL, so I ran back and got some smooches. Then my spirits were even higher and I ran really fast for the next few miles.

 r2r me smiling near wilshire

North OKC, nearing El Chico (Mile 13): My left knee was beginning to ache a little, and I felt Pavlovian hunger when we passed El Chico there on Britton Road. I had the very hilarious idea of using my phone to start “checking in” at random places along the race route, knowing it would end up on Facebook. Things like “Marie is at El Chico for chips and queso” or “Marie is at a cool north side antique shop for treasure hunting” or maybe “Marie is at Home Depot buying hydrangeas and basil,” etcetera. Either fortunately or unfortunately, wifi was having none of it. So I stuck with music, grateful my phone was holding juice, and chuckled privately with myself at this great joke potential. It would have been really funny, you guys. Extra funny because I learned much later that all morning long both Chronotrack and Handsome had been posting really detailed race progress updates on Facebook. So the contradiction of where I really was, anyway…  They’ll never know which is true. I think it would have been hilarious.

Lake Hefner, aka “the Loop of Despair” (Miles 14-18): This is the only part of the run that was truly difficult. At other times I felt deeply moved emotionally; but here, just for about twenty minutes, I was not sure I could finish. It was just past  the halfway mark. My left knee was burning like molten lava. The headwind was about one million miles per hour. I felt lonely and sad and impossibly slow. And I was embarrassed to have fallen behind my pace group while wrestling with a stupid Gatorade chew wrapper. Also, Why does everyone smell like chicken Ramen noodles again? That is disgusting. It’s called deodorant, you guys. I have really judgy thoughts when I’m in a bad place with my run.

Just After the Lake: After finally rounding the lake, I saw a couple sitting on the curb with a very simple hand drawn sign that said, “168 reasons to keep going.” I felt ashamed and motivated all at once. Then I texted Handsome that my knee was really hurting. I just needed to make contact with him for a second. He encouraged me then said I had a surprise guest waiting at the finish line. Who could it be? Please god not the creepy-gross inflatable Cox Communications mascot. I will die. More running, happy to be back in the city-scape and away from the Hefner Loop of Despair.
Not long after, I saw a trio of smiling, very happy people waving at me. It was Handsome (for the fourth time that hectic morning!) along with M, who was long since done with her event, and Erin, an old friend of my husband’s and a new friend of mine. I was so completely surprised! I stuttered hellos and traded hugs, and they all three prevented me from stopping to chat. But I had so many things to tell them!  My energy was back with a vengeance. 168 reasons to keep going and the love and encouragement of friends. Who could stop after that?

Classen Circle: I felt yet another wave of energy here and was grateful for it. I continued enjoying the motivational signs held up by all kinds of spectators, and I was comforted by the fact that perfectly athletic looking men and women were still running at exactly my pace. I was finally okay with just finishing, no matter how slow. Next year, though, next year I will be fast. Red Coyote, a local running shop, was distributing beer instead of water or Gatorade and I realized I have so much to learn about the sport. I passed a girl wearing only tiny black shorts and a sports bra. I resisted all negative self talk and enjoyed the sun. Ramen again, wow!

Classen Stretch: This is near my childhood home, and my sweet Mama, little brother Phil (who almost refused to hug me because I was gross-sweaty), and my two toe-headed angel nieces were waiting in the grassy median to cheer me on. Chloe and Kenzie ran with me a block or two but wanted to run more. I totally see them doing races from now on!

Runing with Chloe & Kenzie, my sister's sweet babies. They gave me the tightest hugs you can imagine!
Running with Chloe & Kenzie, my sister’s sweet babies. They gave me the tightest hugs you can imagine!

Handsome and M were here too, holding more cool signs. I felt so LOVED. So I ran harder and happier.

"If you can tame a buffalo you can run 26.2!" Ha! Challenge accepted. xoxo
“If you can tame a buffalo you can run 26.2!” Ha! Challenge accepted. xoxo

Then down the road I saw even more friends, Bruce and Serena. They were in the grassy median further south on Classen, catching my attention with a sign they’d made with my name on it, plus happy screaming! I stopped for more hugs, which are better fuel than Gatorade gels.

Near the Gold Dome (Mile 22?): Further down Classen boulevard, where I spent so much of my youth and teen years, I approached the Gold Dome. Locals know this spot.  Seriously, what is that smell?  I was feeling really good, enjoying the shade, just running and listening to music. Then I saw them. MY BOOK CLUB.

Never underestimate the power of a support group.    Just seeing photos like this makes my throat sieze up with gratitude.
Never underestimate the power of a support group. Just seeing photos like this makes my throat seize up with gratitude.

 

You guys, my heart jumped out of my ribs! I threw my arms up and screamed and pretty much wanted to stop and hang out for a while. Handsome and M had coordinated with a handful of our bibliophile girls to meet on this picturesque sidewalk, armed with handmade signs and more heaping helpings of that love that is better than Gatorade. I hugged each of them tight, and we laughed and cheered.

An older gentleman running by saw the fun. He said, “Maybe I should have gotten in that line!”
To which I replied, “That’s my book club and my husband! They will totally hug you if you need it!” I am so weird.
To which he replied by asking and glancing at my BIB, “Is this your first full?”
And I said, “Yes! I am having so much fun! How many have you run?” He was clearly a seasoned athlete. He had a strap of several three-ounce yellow drinks fastened around his back like Rambo. He was lean and tanned and clipping along evenly, looking perfectly happy just running.
You guys. His answer was, and I will never forget this, “In about two and a half miles it will be marathon number forty-four.” I didn’t even answer him, except for my facial expression. He registered what I meant, and we just exploded together in laughter and kept running. I nearly passed out from the adrenaline rush. We ran and ran. My first and his forty-fourth. My mind was teeming with ideas for the future, and my heart was brimming with love from Handsome and my friends.

 

This man was running his fort-fourth full marathon. My intelligent response was unbridled laughter.
This man in the green shirt was running his forty-fourth full marathon. My very intelligent response was unbridled laughter.

 

St. Anthony’s Roundabout (Final Two and also the Longest Miles): Okay. By this time I had the idea that we were done. I mean, like, really done. Mister Forty Four way back there had convinced me we were only a couple of miles away from the finish, remember? Well, he was a bit off but I didn’t know it yet. I thought could estimate how many minutes stood between me and the finish line, and I got really excited. I mean, like really excited. I was so tired.

Then out of nowhere we all turned north, QUITE AWAY from the finish line!! I was like, “What the WHAT!!” I was fairly upset. But I kept running. Thankfully this is an old neighborhood filled with ancient, shade-providing trees and homeowners only too happy to spray us down with garden hoses. I stopped for one friendly resident and scooped the water into my hands for a drink. It tasted like warm Caribbean shallows because my hands and my face were so crusted with dried sweat, but actually this salty gulp was refreshing. So for the next mile all I could think about was whether I was going mad, like a castaway who thinks the saltwater is wine. I wisely avoided eye contact with all stray volley balls.

Good grief, chicken Ramen again!

I was running smoothly but long since separated from my pace group and in fact running alone for small stretches. Then it hits me  out of nowhere.

Oh my god, it’s me! I am the one who smells like chicken Ramen noodles! Suddenly I couldn’t wait to take a shower and was fantasizing about massive bars of Ivory soap. This became my new reason for finishing the race.

Final Stretch: Also around this vicinity I saw a tall vinyl mile-marker flag, the sort that had dotted the race route all day, this time announcing “40 km” and I freaked. The heck. Out. My brain was much fuzzier than normal (shut it M) and I interpreted this as 40 miles. I was like, “I didn’t sign up for this!! What the holy granola?!? I wanna go home!!” I very nearly stopped and called Handsome to come and get me. He would understand. He thought 26.2 miles was crazy; surely he would write a terse email to someone over tricking us into 40. But I kept running and eventually forgot about the whole thing. Oh well, I actually thought Let’s just do it.
Then I went a few more blocks, and a guy wearing wire rimmed sunglasses and an overly starched pink button up was yelling encouragements at the runners. He said, “Keep going! Just one more turn! This is the closest you’ve been to the finish line all day!”
And so I replied weakly, “Yes, that’s true,” (because it was true) and everyone laughed and I turned right and saw the finish line. Just a few more blocks running south on Broadway (where was my posse?) and it would be done.

Finish Line: I’ll tell you where my posse was. They were at the finish line, waiting with open arms and gifts and a loving welcome I can barely relay to you. They were also on my phone, texting me encouragements and love that make a person feel invincible. (Thank you Marci!) Crossing that barrier was a happier feeling than the last day of school combined with your sixteenth birthday combined with the first hours of vacation and Christmas morning, all of it. I almost didn’t believe it was over, and I started giggling. Then I cried. Then I giggled some more. Then I couldn’t stop talking. I had so many things to tell my people! I desperately wanted everyone to feel what I was feeling in those moments. I wanted everyone to promise me they would run the marathon with me next year. And you know what? A few people have done exactly that.

 

r2r margi watchful finish line

 

r2r crying finish line

Serena ran her first marathon in rain and hail, after training herself. She was such a strong inspiration and encouragement for me. She is just as strong in other areas of life, too, and can run any race set before her.
Serena ran her first marathon in rain and hail, after training herself. She was such a strong inspiration and encouragement for me. She is just as strong in other areas of life, too, and can run any race set before her.

 

Handsome showered me with gifts at the finish line! A dozen red roses, potted hot pink petunias, chocolate, strawberry Twizzlers, protein bars, a brand new hardback journal containing an epic love letter, a stability ball, and more. I am spoiled rotten and I know it. xoxo
Handsome showered me with gifts at the finish line! A dozen red roses, potted hot pink petunias, chocolate, strawberry Twizzlers, protein bars, a brand new hardback journal containing an epic love letter, a stability ball, and more. I am spoiled rotten and I know it. xoxo

 

After the Race, the Life Metaphor: I am incredibly grateful to my husband for putting up with me this spring while training. He is not a runner, so his constant river of enthusiasm took a lot of selflessness. I am also thankful that my good friend M came to town for the race, bringing at least three other participants into the enthusiastic fold with her. Having the support of friends and family leading up to the race and especially warming the sidelines made the experience a fun, loving one.

That’s the metaphor, really. Running this or any race is a one-person job. It’s all in your own head and it’s all depending on your own body. Except that it isn’t. So often, what kept me going was caring what my loved ones would think if I gave up or how they might feel inspired if I didn’t. And so often, when I was depleted in some way, I fed off of the positive energy around me, and just like that I was running fast again. Floating on Love, no joke. It’s incredibly powerful stuff.

I sincerely hope that if you are even lightly considering a distance race of any kind that you just dive in and start training. Start first thing tomorrow. Start tonight! The preparation is as enriching as the event itself, and then the event is something you will never forget. I am already wondering what will be next. This was such an excellent start.

Just Run.
xoxoxoxo

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Filed Under: memories, Oklahoma City Memorial, running

Marathon Monday: Race Recap #1

April 28, 2014

Describing my experience of running the OKC Memorial Marathon could easily take me days. Weeks. Months. Till next year’s marathon. There’s so much to tell! It was truly spectacular, and I am absolutely doing again.

 

The health Expo ahead of the race was lots of fun too! So happy my friend M came to town to join!
The health Expo ahead of the race was lots of fun too! So happy my friend M came to town to join!

 

That sums it up, really. This was my first full, not a one-time shot like I’d been saying lately. Yesterday was hopefully the first of many, and though on the slow side, I met my goal of finishing it at forty years old. Oh, and this is part of my basic sum-up too: If any little tiny part of you is even vaguely curious about tackling a distance run, PLEASE DO IT.

  • Find a few things to inspire you, whether reading motivational books or collecting photos or making social connections or whatever.
  • Nibble at your training in fun ways, setting incrementally longer distance goals.
  • Think positively and imagine amazing things. Dragons, for instance. You could imagine dragons.
  • Then gradually luxuriate in the four million benefits of running (yes I counted them). Watch your life bloom in ways you have not yet considered.

Okay. So. How could this story go?

I could tell you the funny stuff that happened yesterday. There was a lot of funny stuff… I laughed so much. And according to sly photos taken by Handsome when I didn’t even know he was around, I smiled for most of the five and a half hours. I mean, when I wasn’t crying. I did cry a few times. I cried hot tears from deep, sudden pangs of sadness, oddly, not physical pain. But mostly I laughed. Fun wins over sadness by a landslide.

 

Running is the best!! Big thanks to my friend Steph for this fun photo.
Running is the best!! Big thanks to my friend Steph for this fun photo. I may not have great form, but I do have great fun.

 

Or I could stress the 90 minute race delay and paint you a lush portrait of the tense weather predictions leading up to Sunday morning, helping those of you outside of our Great State understand the volatility and un-trustworthiness of our springtime patterns. If I took that route (see what I did there?) I’d also describe in detail the rapid weather changes on Sunday morning between 6 and 8:30 a.m. then tell you about the start time delays and all the precipitating (did it again) effects this had on the race. The morning’s communal feeling of suspense will not soon be forgotten. Remember my dream a few nights ago, about standing beneath the Devon tower during a black-sky thunderstorm, wondering why the race hadn’t started yet? I knooooowwwww. Creepy.

 

The Devon tower in downtown OKC, surrounded thickly by black, churning clouds.   Friends, this is exactly how my dream looked, minus one broad band of lightning.
The Devon tower in downtown OKC, at 7:30 Sunday morning, surrounded by thick, black, churning clouds. Friends, this is exactly how my dream looked, minus one broad band of lightning.

 

Oooooorrrrr I could tell you about all the amazing runners in my life who have inspired me over and over again, for months. Years. And how Handsome and M and my family and a dozen of our dearest friends came to OKC to support me and fuel me with hugs, cheers, posters, applause, and LOVE right when I needed it most. They popped up all along the course, and it was amazing! I love each of you for it, thank you! Four times as many friends and loved ones stayed tuned to the race via social media and have drenched me with loving words ever since. So, basically, I run for the hugs. Not ashamed of that.

I could whine a bit about my slight but worrisome knee pain around mile 14 or the one blister I suffered (which is already healed as I write this Monday morning) or how quickly I inhaled chicken enchiladas after the race. Or how divine watermelon tasted around 6 pm yesterday.

Do you really want to know how difficult it is to walk downstairs right now,but how much I love that strange ache?

Would you rather know the details of how uncannily my music playlist synced with my emotions and experiences during the race? It was cool as beans how the shuffle setting worked for me. You guys, the perfect motivational or hilarious songs played at the most perfect moments, it was crazy!

My Grandpa called me around mile 9. He had no idea I was running the marathon, just needed a mailing address he thought I would remember. So I gave it to him then we chatted about our gardens and how much we loved each other and promised to see each other soon. I did not mention the race, because it would totally have spoiled the sweet phone call. Plus it was really refreshing to talk about something completely different for a few minutes. We have kind of been on “marathon saturation mode” for a while, you know?

Do you want to hear about my friends who might now be training for their own firsts? This is like butter cream icing on a perfect vanilla cake, you guys. To have received inspiration from so many people and now to be sharing that inspiration with people near me is a pretty phenomenal feeling. It’s all energy that moves and trembles and generates life. It is contagious and powerful, and I love it.

 

Handsome showered me with gifts at the finish line! A dozen red roses, potted hot pink petunias, chocolate, strawberry Twizzlers, protein bars, a brand new hardback journal containing an epic love letter, a stability ball, and more. I am spoiled rotten and I know it. xoxo
Handsome showered me with gifts at the finish line! A dozen red roses, potted hot pink petunias, chocolate, strawberry Twizzlers, protein bars, a brand new hardback journal containing an epic love letter, a stability ball, and more. I am spoiled rotten and I know it. xoxo

 

I have no clue what you guys want to read about! So for the next few days, just to get the memories recorded, I will be rambling a lot about this spectacular experience. If it’s not interesting to you, I totally get it. Please feel free to tune in again sometime next weekend. If you do want to know something, send me a note!

Love, Me
Officially in Training for 2015
XOXOXOXO

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Filed Under: Oklahoma City Memorial, Oklahoma weather, running

silly things that happened at the track

April 16, 2014

I drove to Midwest City today and went for my final “long” run before the marathon. WHICH IS IN ELEVEN DAYS. It was a beautiful afternoon… Warm, dazzlingly bright sunshine combed through with soft, cool breezes. Sleepy ducks and geese everywhere. Very few people on the track and only non-obnoxious golfers at the golf course. Beautiful day. Drop dead gorgeous. A handful of noteworthy things happened.

I got a sunburn on my mouth. All the way around but mostly on the top edge of my upper lip. It smarts, and it is making my nightly cup of piping hot chamomile tea a bit tricky. I blame last night’s Blood Moon. What’s up with that, Blood Moon??

A super adorable boxer puppy semi-attacked me. He was on a leash (a really long, too long leash) held not tightly by his human who could not have outweighed him by more than like a pound. She was dealing with her cell phone and beanie cap, giving nonchalant attention to her boxer’s energy. I literally jumped sideways like Russell Westbrook in order to avoid him. I was also trying to speak nicely to him to make friends, but because of my ear buds on max volume my voice was on max volume and I ended up sort of screaming at the dog. This scared the petite woman to death, and she gave me a look that really hurt my feelings. An older gentleman watching from a distance shook his head in disapproval, and because of the not-at-all-safe-for-radio lyrics playing in my ears I couldn’t tell if he disapproved of her inattention or the dog’s aggressiveness or my filthy running songs. Not that I was singing those lyrics; I wasn’t. I was screaming WELL HELLO THERE CUTIE!! But it all made me feel suddenly very self-conscious. I sulked away like I had been scolded for something instead of semi-attacked by a cute boxer, and when I realized the injustice (THE INJUSTICE!!) I sprinted. I ran like the wind for half a mile.

Me trying to make friends with the dog.
Me trying to make friends with the dog.

 

I saw a ghost. I’m not kidding. Approaching this particular concrete bridge which make my feet feel so weird when they strike, I saw a tiny, slight little elderly woman focused like a diamond-tipped laser beam (is that a thing?) on pushing her walker. She was smaller than a third grader and bundled up in a coat, scarf, boots, gloves, a hat, and ear muffs. Her bluish white hair exploded in ringlets from beneath the binding of her hat. Her eyes were clear but she never made eye contact with me. She was just. So. Focused. We passed each other, and about ten paces later I stopped to look around and see if she had a caretaker nearby. I had not seen where she came from or anything! Do you know who I saw when I looked around? No one. Not even her. She had vanished you guys, and there were no hiding places. Ghost.

I nearly choked from disgusting thick nastiness right there on the track. Handsome had bought me a handful of energy gel choices for experimenting with before the race, and I did so today. Results: I really like Gatorade chews and maybe those little sports beans Carrie shared with me a while back. The most famous of the three, though? “GU?” Oh sweet granola, that was disgusting. Remember the movie Matrix? It was like slurping the thick, sticky, cloudy stuff Keanu Reeves swims in while trapped in that pod. You cannot swallow the stuff properly; you can only hope it slides stubbornly down your throat before you stop breathing. And it tasted like pretend raspberries. Or some kind of pretend berries. Unpleasant. I gagged and cried tears, it was so bad.

So that was my afternoon! Eighteen miles and these four interesting events later, I didn’t even curl up into a fetal position like last time. Afterwards I hobbled through Walmart for cat food and grocery essentials and didn’t even care that I was mostly leaning forward on the buggy like some kind of lazy teenager.

Do hard things, but don’t yell at strange dogs.
XOXOXOXO

 

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Filed Under: daily life, running

Marathon Monday: Harvey’s Story, part 2

April 15, 2014

Several days ago I posted the first in a series of three posts honoring my father in law
and his work as a first responder to the OKC Murrah Building Bombing in April, 1995.
I want to thank all of you for your kind responses, for sharing your own stories,
and for helping to observe this anniversary with the right spirit.
Following is part two. It is a bit more graphic and intense,
so please keep that in mind before you read.
I know for many Oklahomans this is still a fresh wound.
Much love to everyone.

THE MORGUE TEAM

  The morgue team was led by Dr. Jordan, a prominent and beloved member of the medical community. He insisted on a show of the utmost respect for every victim of the bombing, and in turn he won the respect of his team every step of the way.
Of the sixty people assembled plus another twenty military personnel manning the phones, Harvey and Judy were already friends with half a dozen. Many of the rest would become permanent connections for them, indelible marks on their life stories.
The morgue team’s initial task was to frame lists of people known to be in the Murrah building that morning, as well as lists of people who might have been there. Since the building hosted agencies like the Social Security Administration, the possibilities of different visitors were endless.

  Then the bodies started arriving. The team’s primary job quickly became positive identification of every victim. Dr. Jordan had set high standards, and every team member was vigilant. They identified people through detailed physical descriptions, fingerprints, dental records, and, when necessary, DNA.

  No one had ever before seen a disaster of this magnitude, and the pressure was immense. Eventually they saw a total of 168 dead. It is estimated that 20% of Oklahoma City was grieving the loss of at least one person. One in five people attended funeral services for loved ones killed in the bombing. Many people attended multiple services, and sometimes there were so many funerals overlapping that mourners had to make the impossible choice of which one to attend.
Harvey and Judy knew eight of the deceased personally, but they continued their gruesome and heartbreaking work. In the course of his duties, Harvey himself identified two of those eight lost loved ones.

  None of the work was easy, but everyone on the morgue team agreed that handling the lost babies was hardest. Dozens of infants and toddlers were seriously injured by the blast, and 19 were killed. The morgue team had the unfathomable burden of identifying each of these smallest Oklahomans.
  By about the seventh day, police officers began visiting homes of missing children to collect hair samples from tiny hairbrushes and fingerprints from sippy cups. Of course, the parents were unbelievably grieved.
Mourning families waited daily for news, but they were kept far away from the morgue and well out of view of the refrigerator trucks where the bodies were kept safe prior to identification. For years after that, Judy would grieve freshly every time she glimpsed such a refrigerator truck out in public.

  For the adults who would have had dental records available for comparison, Dr. Glass from the OU School of Dentistry orchestrated a team of first-year students to help with the work. Judy drove that same Hallpark patrol car all over the metro area collecting records and bringing them back to the team. Again, unprepared for such a task, a large percentage of these students ultimately chose not to pursue dentistry as a profession. They were not alone in their trauma: The regional American Red Cross lost 80% of its volunteer base following the shock of this tragedy.

  But that was all much later. While there was work still to be done, everyone stayed. In fact, during those awful weeks, Oklahoma received more volunteers ready to work than there was work to be done.

  Harvey would later recall one Oklahoma City dentist desperate to find ways he could help the recovery efforts. He ended up donating more than enough toothbrushes, toothpaste, mouthwash, and other oral hygiene supplies so the morgue workers could have some semblance of self care while they spent all their energy caring for others.

  This particular contribution would eventually lead to the only moment of levity Harvey and Judy would experience during these weeks. One bright afternoon, Judy was driving up to the site, nearing 8th and Lincoln, swishing her mouth with pure, undiluted Listerine donated by this dentist. It was so sharp and powerful that it choked her, and she swerved the patrol car severely, pulling off and stopping at the side of the road. Military personnel guarding the area recognized her and thought she was in distress, possibly shot. Instantly two humvees filled with armed guards sped over the curb and flanked the Hallpark patrol car. By now Judy had opened her driver side door and was coughing out the strong mouthwash, laughing hard. They all three surrendered to brief and bittersweet laughter.

SECURITY AND RESPECT

harvey's badges

  As head of Security, Harvey made several decisions. One of his first was to block all roads leading into the morgue area, which they accomplished with the help of military presence. Harvey also acquired X-ray machines to ensure that the many incoming packages were safe. Bomb scares were still on the forefront of everyone’s minds. Additionally, to control foot traffic in and out of the makeshift morgue, he implemented neck chains with photo ID badges and a strict sign-in/sign-out policy. Only approved team members were allowed past a certain point, and everyone answered to Dr. Jordan. Even other uniformed police officers and well meaning volunteers were turned away in order to preserve the security and integrity of the team’s sensitive work. Again, Oklahoma had more than enough generous volunteers. Love had saturated every single effort.

  Sensationalism and fanfare were foreign concepts here. The gravity of the situation was felt constantly by all team members. The morgue was a fiercely protected “No Camera Zone,” and on at least two separate occasions people trying to infiltrate the area to snap tabloid photos lost either their equipment or their jobs or both. Respect for those lost was paramount and violations were not tolerated. Fortunately, the vast majority of people agreed and cooperated with this sentiment. Whether native Oklahomans or volunteers from around the world, first responders were people finding needs to fill and putting Love into action.

  It was so much more than work for Harvey and Judy and their colleagues. With every positive identification, following the rigorous standards set forth by Dr. Jordan, the place quieted. Every time a victim was released to a funeral home, he or she left the morgue with perfect solemnity and affection. Reverence was shown at every turn, and the team members all stopped their work to stand and say goodbye. For fallen military or law enforcement personnel, strong, tender salutes were given. But everyone was important. Everyone was a fallen American.

  Several days into the grueling assignment, as victims started leaving the morgue for their final resting places, it was widely known that what our beautiful city had suffered was an act of terrorism.

Thank you for reading, friends. More of the story will come probably next week.
Please feel free to continue adding your own memories

or any words from your heart. And thank you so much for sharing this, Harvey.
xoxoxoxo

3 Comments
Filed Under: OKC Memorial Marathon, running

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Hi! I'm Marie. Welcome to the Lazy W. xoxo

Hi! I’m Marie. This is the Lazy W.

A hobby farming, book reading, coffee drinking, romance having, miles running girl in Oklahoma. Soaking up the particular beauty of every day. Blogging on the side. Welcome to the Lazy W!

I Believe Strongly in the Power of Gratitude & Joy Seeking

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