My 41st Birthday 41-Mile Run
My 41st Birthday 41-Mile Run
By
Martin Bodek
How did I come to run 41 miles with a
bunch of friends, through the night, and the cold, and the wind, and the
responses to calls of nature, for ten and a half hours, you might ask. You
might also ask this whilst thinking you’ve asked a complicated question. You
would be wrong, as the answer is exceedingly simple: I did this last year, for
my 40th birthday, with most of the same friends, through the night,
and the pot-smell, and vomit-puddles, and past the drunkards, and those nature
calls, and when I do a thing once – that I obviously enjoy, which you can judge
from the descriptions above – then obviously, it’s a chazaka (tradition), and
I’m in for life.
I kept all weekend-with-family and
race logistics nearly the exact same from last year to this, except that I had
to add a mile to the course. I did so by subtracting Sunset Park (don’t need to
do that giant hill twice anyway), and adding Crown Heights (burnin' up all
through till twilight!).
Our starting crew was twice the size
it was last year: me, Elik, Jamey, Adam, Kalman, Shmuly, Judy, Moishie, Esther
Leah, and Sheina. And…
Mile 0, 10:03 PM,
Midwood, East 27th/Ave. I: …we are on our way. Three minutes late.
Unlike me, which is why I’m forgiven on the spot. Immediately, the wind asserts
itself for the evening. I’m forced to remove my birthday hat, but manage to
stick it to my chest creatively (my Scott Jurek Ultimate Direction vest makes
this easy). The forecast: we’re just below freezing now, and the temperature is
going to steadily tank from 1-4 AM to just above 20º with the wind chill. Oh
boy. My last-minute decision to take sweatpants is going to save me.
Mile .3, ~10:06 PM,
Flatlands, New York Ave./Ave. I: Our first right-angle turn of what are going
to be many. How many? 51. That’s about average for a marathon course, so this
number is not as crazy as you think. Also, I’m not so crazy to count them. I’m
like that anyway.
Mile .7, ~10:11 PM,
New York Ave. bet. Ave. L/M: Mike was supposed to pop out of his house and give
us water, mostly as penance for his tree knocking my birthday hat off my head
last year. He’s nowhere to be found, though. His excuse? He hit “dismiss”
instead of “snooze” on his alarm clock. Next thing he knew, it was 10:20 PM. Nu
(oh well), next year.
Mile 1.06, ~10:15 PM,
New York Ave./Kings Hwy: We make our second right-angle turn onto Kings (no,
silly, I’m not going to number them all!) and pick up David and his son Yossi,
at the same spot they jumped on last year. Yossi also has a friend Leiby come
along. Welcome aboard!
Mile 1.13, ~10:17 PM,
East 32nd/Kings Hwy: David’s wife is here with the rest of the
family. They have approximately 23 children, if I’m not mistaken. They hold up
a sign and everything. It’s really sweet. Thanks for coming out again, guys! In
this cold, no less!
Mile 2.3, ~10:31 PM, Midwood,
East 14th/Kings Hwy: Yisroel jumps in. Loudly. Like he was trying to
scare me or something. It almost works, but my Spidey-Sense is in the on
position.
Mile 2.5, ~10:34 PM, Coney
Island Ave./Ave. R: Aaron is waiting at the corner. He snaps a pic as I
approach. I pull up to a stop to fish out and deliver the Virtual Jerusalem
Marathon & Half Marathon, Powered by JRunners race medal that I owe him
(how ‘bout *that* for a product placement!).
Mile 2.6, ~10:36 PM,
East 13th/Ave. R: Matt jumps in. He was confused about the route,
and actually bumped into my wife in her car (in the social sense). She rerouted
him, then he confirmed via the Location Sends that Yisroel was plastering all
over WhatsApp. All aboard the choo-choo train!
Mile 2.9, ~10:40 PM,
Ave. R bet. East 18/19th: Nachi was supposed to be here with water
and a camera (that thing you take a picture with from your smartphone)! Where’d
he go? I get the excuse later: a shiva call. Perfectly reasonable. Auf simchas
(for happy occasions)!
Mile 3.0, ~10:41 PM,
East 21st/Ave. R: I fall back a drop, and Esther Leah and Sheina
pull ahead. Then, for some odd reason, because she must have been distracted by
something or other – though I have no idea what, Esther Leah goes splat
directly into a fence. Just like that. One second she’s running. The next
second: bonk. She bounces off though, and rejoins Sheina. She’s okay, but that
was…noteworthy.
Mile 3.1, ~10:42 PM,
East 23rd/Ave. R: I’ve now fallen back to the back of the pack, with
a certain other person who mooned me last year as a birthday gift. Well, with
the girls way ahead and out of ungentlemanly view of the proceedings, he
strikes, because hey, this is a chazaka now too. Aaaaaand there we go. Happy
birthday to me!
Mile 3.55, ~10:48 PM,
Ave. R/Haring St.: I turn half the crowd left, whilst (I use that word a lot.
If Bane can use it and sound cool, so can I) the other half keeps going and
makes a left on Gerritsen. No biggie. They’ll add .05 to their trip, but if I
do that, I’m on my way to being way off, along with those going the full
distance. This course was done with precision, and I intend to finish it
without having to tack on extra yardage, as I had to last year – or finish
short, and have to walk to breakfast anyway.
Mile 3.6, ~10:49 PM,
Marine Park, Ave. R bet. Gerritsen Ave./Stuart St.: After some big turns, crossing
Flatbush, and a reshuffling of runners, I find myself solo on the sidewalk with
the rest of the group on the Avenue. I take the occasion to count the runners
with me: 17, and also to count my blessings. These folks are happy to join me
for this outing, and I feel grateful for their company and enthusiasm. It is
cold, let me remind you.
Mile 3.8, ~10:51 PM,
Marine Pkwy/Ave. R: We make a right-angle turn (#7, but who’s counting?) onto
Marine Parkway in the Marine Park area and head towards Marine Park (follow all
that?). I see an orange plastic fence ahead, covering the spot we’re supposed
to take into the park. Uh oh, we’re gonna hafta reroute. I hate reroutes. Matt
tells me he’s got this, though (he wins races here weekly – no exaggeration –
and he knows every inch of the terrain). In Matt I trust.
Mile 4.0, ~10:53 PM,
Fillmore Ave./Playground 278: We enter Marine Park, having added .04 to our
trip. These things add up, especially over 41 miles. We go clockwise, though in
the outside lane, when I meant to go inside. This adds .0001. You can see I get
obsessive. Now what is it about parks that make people urinate? The trees? The
water fountains? Plenty in the pack take advantage, and play catch-up to the
rest of the peloton (I’m officially stealing that word from cyclists and using
it for runners).
Mile 4.4, ~10:57 PM,
Parking Lot on Marine Park oval: Last year, at this spot, we saw several
teenage MOTs smoking cigarettes. Not a soul is here this evening, nor has there
been all along the way. Why not? The cold? Likely. More on this hypothesis as
the run progresses.
Mile 4.6, ~10:59 PM,
Stuart St./Avenue U.: Daddy David, son Yossi, and friend Leiby bow out here,
having clocked 5.5 miles with us. Thanks for hanging!
Mile 4.9, ~11:02 PM, Sheepshead
Bay, Gerritsen Ave bet. Avenue U/Avenue U South Fork (look at a map): Yisroel
starts taking photos and vids of me, taking advantage of some good light at a
gas station. He then plasters it all over WhatsApp. He’s all over that, but not
Facebook. Mah nishtana ha-social media hazeh?
Mile 5.45, ~11:08 PM,
Knapp St./Ave. Y: We smell the same exact putrid smell that we smelled at exactly
the same point as last year. Oh em gee, it’s rank. Just the Coney Island
Wastewater Treatment Plant, though. Can you faint from a bad odor? I just
googled it. It’s complicated, but it’s possible. I don’t think they ever tested
this on Mythbusters.
Mile 5.9, ~11:13 PM,
Knapp St./Harkness Ave.: The UA! Many stories of hooky are shared.
Mile 6.0, ~11:14 PM,
Knapp St./Shore Pkwy: Yisroel starts flirting with the locals.
Mile 6.05, ~11:15 PM,
Knapp St./Emmons Ave.: We hit the water. The Russian crowd has spilled out of
La Vue Restaurant & Lounge and is trying to get into each other’s pants. We
take the road to give them room to do that. The corner restaurant has hotels on
both sides of it, and an ATM out front. Coincidence? Ahahahaha, no.
Mile 7.03, ~11:25 PM,
East 19th/Emmons Ave.: Problem. The pretty blue Ocean Ave Pedestrian
Bridge is open! Last year, I plotted the course through it, but it was closed,
and had to reroute. This year, I plotted the course around it, but it’s open,
and I can’t reroute! No fair! I want to run it, but I’m not recalculating again.
I’ll stick to the route. Next year, I’ll plan for both options.
Mile 7.48, ~11:30 PM,
Manhattan Beach, Shore Blvd/Amherst St.: We spot a couple in their car at 1st
base. Nothing we haven’t seen before.
Mile 7.58, ~11:32 PM,
Shore Blvd/Dover St.: We spot a couple in their car at 3rd base! Cue
Phil Rizzuto! Aside from that interesting find, we notice an insanely ornate
house across the street. You have to see it to believe it. Check out this
(rather insulting and kind of racist) article: http://observer.com/2014/11/nazdarovye-tomb-like-manhattan-beach-mansion-sells-for-7-75-m/. See those columns? Matt, who had a part in
its construction explains that the Mrs. of the place wanted them converted into
fishtanks, and had to be talked out of it by people who understand science.
Sounds like a Queen of Versailles if you ask me (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Queen_of_Versailles).
Mile 7.9, ~11:37 PM,
Shore Blvd/Kensington St.: We turn right (I’m not counting turns anymore. I’ll
leave it to you if you want to) on Kensington, in Manhattan Beach, towards
Manhattan Beach, in Brooklyn (confused yet?), and head towards the Atlantic.
Mile 8, ~11:38 PM,
Oriental Blvd/Kensington St.: We hit the water again and turn right. I force us
across the street, because I need the bathroom. Maybe Manhattan Beach Park can
help. They have facilities I used to use back in the day.
Mile 8.2, ~11:39 PM,
Oriental Blvd, bet. Jaffray St./Irwin St.: Manhattan Beach Park cannot help.
Mile 8.65, ~11:43 PM,
Oriental Blvd/Coleridge Ave.: Things are moving along swimmingly (is runningly
a word?) in the cold, cold night, but we get a scare for just a few moments.
Most of the pack is on the road at this point, when we hear a yelp to our left.
We see Esther Leah face down on the sidewalk, with Sheina checking on her. I
call a stop to the run, and we all rush over to help. She looks okay, but we
ask her to stay down for another beat to assess her injuries, if any. It
appears that she tripped. The lip that clipped her is two full sidewalk squares
away from where she landed! Quite the aerial trip she took! Sheina helps her
up. She looks to be steady. I have basic first aid in my backpack but it
doesn’t look like she has any scrapes or road rash. Lucky gal, but also quite
the trooper. She’s ready to walk it off, and we do so, all together, slowly. A
block later, she gives us the all clear, and we’re running again. She’ll be
alright (and will PR a half-marathon a week later!). Pshew!
Mile 9.15, ~11:48 PM,
Coney Island Ave./Boardwalk: We hit the (2.51-mile-long Riegelmann) Boardwalk,
after taking a right turn from Coney. The wind is now whipping up, and the
temperature is dropping. Hooboy, it’s about to get tough. When the running get
tough, the tough get running (how about *that* for an office motivational
poster?!).
Mile 9.15-10.65, ~11:48
PM-12:03 AM, Coney Island, The Boardwalk: As we parade along 60% of the
boardwalk’s expanse (I googled to find out what the total mileage of U.S.
boardwalks is, and was surprised to find how small the actual boardwalk list is
and where they’re concentrated!: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_boardwalks_in_the_United_States. Interesting road trip idea, no?), I have
some observations and adventures:
1) No water fountains are
functional. I took full advantage last year, but it’s too cold for the city to
have turned them on yet. Perhaps this won’t be such a problem in the future: http://patch.com/new-york/prospectheights/its-final-lake-ness-monster-freeze-proof-water-fountains-coming-prospect-park
2) No bathrooms are open. Arrrgh.
3) It’s too cold for couples to make
out outdoors. They’re holding hands and hanging out, but little else. It really
is that cold. Perhaps they’re scared they’ll get stuck together, and emergency
welders aren’t immediately available at this time of night to blowtorch people
apart.
4) There is no pervasive pot smell
like there was last year. Sensible people are keeping indoors. Present company
excluded.
5) The girls pull ahead again, and
I fall back again, so guess what? It’s another full moon!
Mile 10.9 ~12:04 AM,
West 15th/Surf Ave.: After making a right turn onto 15th
and a right turn onto Surf (have we made any left turns yet?), I spot a porta-potty!
Woohoo! Wanna know exactly how I feel? I mean, exactly? Observe 0:52-1:22 of
this clip: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HjNQLXXwYfw. That’s how I feel. Apply all metaphors.
Also, I don’t drop my phone into the abyss. The more I don’t do that, the more
I think – and hope, and pray – that that event was a once in a lifetime
experience.
Mile 11, ~12:07 AM,
Stillwell Ave./Surf Ave.: I exit to find the group chilling (literally) in
front of Nathan’s Famous. Kalman is stretching, as he’s closing in on the farthest
he’s ever run. Sheina and Esther Leah take leave. Mike jumps in, having stalked
us for a while using Yisroel’s WhatsApp Location toy. After downing some
refreshments, we’re running again. Compliments from the pack about having the wind
at our back stop here. Guess we took one right turn too many.
Mile 11-13.9, ~12:07
AM-12:43 AM, Gravesend, Ocean Pkwy: We go wee wee wee all the way down OP to
Avenue R and make a right. Along the 3-mile way, we get blasted by the wind.
Blasted! Jack also joins us here.
Mile 14.2, ~12:46 AM,
Midwood, Ave. P/East 15th: Kalman hits the high point of his running
career so far, but he’s in for more. Awesome.
Mile 15.5, ~1:00 AM,
Marine Park, East 34th bet. Ave R/Quentin Rd.: We arrive at Yoni’s
house, Elik, Jamey, and I. The rest have run ahead to scare the bejabbers out
of Yoni by waking him from his couch-slumber. We all refresh ourselves, grab
some cake, refill our water bottles, make use of the facilities, heed Yoni’s
repeated warnings to keep our voices down, and after a 12-minute break, we’re
back on the road.
Mile 15.5-17.4, ~1:12
AM-1:40 AM, Midwood, Ave. P: We hemorrhage people all along this stretch
(Shmuly, Judy, Moishie, Matt, Yisroel, Mike, Jack). Some because they’ve hit
their physical limit, others because they’re frozen popsicle sticks and they desperately
need shelter, while one special case has to moon me just one more time. This
time, I see a bit too much. I’m surprised those things didn’t draw further up
into his body once they hit the cold. I also hit the Subsational head
(0:06-0:09: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VSE5YulUeEA) on Coney Island Ave. We are now me, Elik,
Jamey, Adam, Kalman, and Yoni.
Mile 17.9, ~1:45 AM,
Ocean Pkwy, bet. Ave. N/Ave. O: And Joe!, who comes running in like a freight
train, rip-snorting with energy. He’s like another running-friend of ours named
Joel, only Joe is about 100 lbs. yuger.
Mile 17.9-20.5, ~1:45 AM-2:30
AM, Parkville/Kensington, Ocean Pkwy: Just when we meet Joe and all his energy,
we kind of lose ours, pretty collectively. I don’t think anybody’s fatigued,
but we have been whipped around seriously by the cold, which has dropped to
just above 20 with the wind chill, as predicted. Nevertheless, we hit the
halfway point at about 4:30:00. Plenty of time to spare, and on a good pace to
be perfectly on schedule for our french toast stop, followed by our morning
breakfast. Joe starts to threaten to take his clothes off if we sustain a long
stretch of running.
Mile 21.4, ~2:45 AM, Flatbush,
Ocean Ave./Parkside Ave.: At this corner of Prospect Park, we hit the start and
first exchange of the world famous Jrunners Relay Race. I figured, if I’m
cutting out of the course the one piece of the New York City Marathon, then I
gotta toss in something else that’s of interest. Badabing. Ms. Rassy Hott and
Mr. Effie Shaw will be getting married in the park today. Mazel tov, you guys!
Mile 21.4-24.1, ~2:45
AM-3.25 AM, Crown Heights: we loop through half of the neighborhood. Lots of
things happen along the way:
1)
We cover the first 2.7
miles of Relay Leg 2 (we’ll be back in August!).
2)
Kalman does lots of
stretching, having gone well – well! - past his lifetime best.
3)
The unbelievably
dulcet aroma of a bakery draws us towards it, but the door is closed. I yell into
the crack that it isn’t fair to be such a tease. This is kind of a tikun olam
(repair of the world) for the Coney Island stench. The neighborhood is apropos
for that.
4)
We pass 770. Yechi!
5)
We say hi to the
friendly cops.
6)
We piss Joe off with
our abundant walking (doesn’t he know rule #4?: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/men/active/10956220/10-things-no-one-tells-you-before-you-run-an-ultra-marathon.html), and he threatens to disrobe again. He
considers it a reward for a sustained run that’s long enough to make him happy.
Mile 24.1-25.1, ~3:25
AM-3:40 AM, Bedford Ave.: We turn left, instead of right towards Williamsburg
(next year?). During a misstep, I slam my right forefoot into the ground. I
pull over for an examination. I’m alright. On this stretch, Elik, Jamey, Kalman
and I pull ahead, while Adam and Yoni fall behind. Lucky for them two, because
they hurry to rejoin us to tell us that they just witnessed a hair-pulling
girlfight in front of a club. I have to say, that would have been interesting
to see. Oh well. Shortly after, Kalman takes off towards his car. He’ll finish
with 27.2 miles, nearly doubling his high. Fantastic. We turn right onto
Parkside. Combined with Fort Hamilton (no longer in danger of being renamed
Tubman; har har) Parkway, this is a 5.4-mile dead-shot as-the-crow-flies
ram-rod stretch. No turns; no hollering instructions; just straight on to New
York Harbor. It’s more than one-eighth of the course. It’s on purpose. Here we
go.
Mile 25.1-30.5, ~3:40
AM-4:50 AM, Flatbush/Windsor Terrace/Borough Park/Dyker Heights/Fort Hamilton, Parkside
Ave./Fort Hamilton Pkwy: Many events worth noting, and several hilarious and/or
interesting things happen along this way, which I present in the order of their
occurrence:
1)
I get mooned again.
That’s four moons from two guys.
2)
We take Parkside to
Fort Hamilton via on overpass. I’d never traversed this on foot, so I didn’t
know if it was possible, but I checked Google Maps and sent forth scouts (thanks
Aba and Mommy!) when I was doing the planning. Everything worked out perfectly.
I couldn’t find a proper name for it, but upon the earth, it’s 40.649742,
-73.975485.
3)
We hit the marathon
point as we step off the bridge: 5:50:00.
4)
Joe continues to threaten
to disrobe. He now begins bargaining. He’ll take his clothes off if we run for
a full sustained mile. No? What about a half mile? No?...
5)
Eventually, we start a
program where we run a half mile, then walk a quarter mile. This makes Joe
happier.
6)
At 44th, we
meet a homeless runner (no seriously: bedecked in rags, but striding like he’s
been doing this for a half-century), who’s amazed to see us, and starts
stalking us, and asks a million questions. It feels, to us, like he’s never
seen a group of runners before. We wish him well as he takes his turnoff.
7)
I start needing the bathroom
again at around mile 28. I won’t expound on the urgency, but I’ll explain it
thus: I learn the phrase “Prairie Doggin’.” I’m going to leave it at that.
8)
Adam announces that we
have only a half marathon to go. He does that a lot.
9)
Elik reminisces about
last year’s events along this stretch. There’s little human interaction this
year because of the cold. No choppers overhead or police accidents or hollering
drunks or vomit puddles. Adam does mention that he saw one of the latter.
10)
John J. Carty Park
won’t open its bathroom to me again.
11)
After 2.5 miles of
finding nothing, we arrive at John Paul Jones Park – the terminus of Fort Hamilton
Parkway - and I answer the call of nature in a most undignified fashion. I have
no choice. Gosh it’s cold. I should mention that my mates were most tolerant
and accommodating. Anyway, let’s carry on.
Mile 30.5-33.25,
~4:50-5:35 AM, Dyker Heights/Bath Beach, Shore Pkwy: Some notable events as we
run along Gravesend Bay:
1)
We take a selfie
beneath the “Welcome to Brooklyn” sign, even though we’ve been in Brooklyn all
this time. We have a Millennial with us, so this behavior is, apparently, standard.
2)
Joe finally disrobes.
This makes him happy.
3)
Elik and I are running
together, with our heads down, as we were blinded by the sight. When we raise
them, we see Adam seated on the ground. Something wrong? As we approach, we
note Adam’s seriously bloodied knee. Perhaps he was blinded as well, and took
one for the team. We admire his sacrifice. He refuses aid (what’s with us
runners?). He’ll be alright, though the mess isn’t pretty.
4)
I get mooned again.
Guess who?
5)
The weather is finally
tolerable here and rather pleasant. It has warmed all the way up to just below
freezing.
6)
More makeout couples
in cars along this stretch. Something about the water? We notice steam on
several windshields and swear the rocking of one car can be measured at 1.2 on
the Richter Scale.
7)
Elik finds another
TGNY100 arrow. Vehamayvin Yavin (tough to translate, but: and the knowers will
know).
8)
Joe robes. This makes
us happy.
Mile 33.25, ~5:35 AM,
Shore Pkwy/Bay Pkwy: Five miles too late, we finally find a porta-potty, the
same one we found last year at the end of this stretch along the bay, still in
the same place. I’m not gonna bother checking if it’s open, because if it’s
closed, I’d have to chuck it in the ocean.
Mile 33.25-36,
~5:35-6:35 AM, Bensonhurst: We go down Bay Parkway (and make a pit-stop for
some liquid refreshments), make a left on 65th, a right on 20th,
a left on 52nd, and go all the way to momma’s house.
Mile 36, 6:35 AM, Boro
Park, Momma’s House: The french toast stop (I learn the Hebrew word for it from
Elik: armarita [sp?]) everyone’s been waiting for, to the delight of my mom as
well, who can’t get enough of the compliments being slung at her. While the
crew wolfs down one slice after another, I make another bathroom trip, refill
my supplies, and do lots of recalculating. See, this is mile 36, but according
to the course I plotted, this was supposed to be mile 35. What did I say about
things adding up? Our wandering and meandering added an entire mile! With five
miles to go, I have to figure out how to shave an entire mile off, so that I
don’t over- or undershoot the finish. I finally get the calculations set, grab
my french toast, give my mom a kiss, and after a twenty-minute stop, we’re back
on the road. I get a g’morning text from my wife a few minutes after I exit the
house.
Mile 37.3, ~7:10 AM,
Sunset Park, 52nd St./9th Ave.: We kiss the edge of Sunset
Park, but we’re not doing that hill again. We make a right turn…
Mile 37.5, ~7:12 AM,
48th St./9th Ave.: …and another right turn onto 48th,
for a memory lane run.
Mile 37.5-38.4,
~7:12-7:25 AM, 48th St.: This is it for me. This mile-long stretch
is the one I grew up on. Nearly every valuable memory of my youth is from here
and its tributaries. Movies from the 80s trigger recollections along this way.
This is my Thunder Road. We start at the top:
1)
At 10th
Ave. is Maimonides Hospital, where I - and lots of friends and family - was
born. Also, I realize, it’s where many friends and family have passed on.
Something to think about.
2)
At 11th is
the synagogue I ran around in as a child: Ziditchoiv. I have no idea how to
write that out in English.
3)
At New Utrecht is G &
Sons, where I got all my G.I. Joes (I still have a box with 70 of them
somewhere in my house. When I dig it up, I can probably name all of them). G
& Sons is actually gone, though. Now it’s Albert & Sons.
4)
Between 12th
and 13th is my old house. It’s still there. Almost everything else:
not so much.
5)
14th is the
first corner I crossed by myself.
6)
At 15th Elik
points out the Beth-El “mosque,” which – I inform him – is actually Young
Israel of Beth El. Did you know it was once the tallest building in Brooklyn,
before zoning laws changed drastically? You did? Impressive. Bet you can’t name
the current tallest! Did you say The Brooklyner? You’d have been right if this
was 2013, but four more taller buildings have risen since then. I can’t keep
track anymore.
7)
Between 15th
and 16th is Bobov, where I played off-the-wall (nobody knows what
this game is), tap-tap-trio (more blank stares), endure-the-beating (this one
people seem to know), and received a kindergarten-level education for seven
straight years. I’m shocked to find a parking lot next to the yeshiva where at
least five houses used to be. The cost!
Mile 38.4, ~7:25 AM,
48th St./17th Ave.: We turn off Memory Lane onto Old New
Utrecht. We’ve lost sight of Adam, somewhere ahead of us. We spot his skinny
legs in the distance. We’ve been doing that all night.
Mile 39, ~7:35 AM,
Momma’s House: We’re back. We ponder stopping again, but no, we gotta roll to
the finish.
Mile 39.6, ~7:50 AM,
Dahill Rd/Ave J: We arrive at the beginning of Avenue J. From here to where
we’re going, it’s 1.6 miles, dead ahead, no turns (I’ve already used up my
perfectly-straight metaphors in an earlier paragraph, if you recall).
Mile 39.6-41.2, ~7:50
AM-8:24 AM, Midwood, Ave. J.: Adam and Yoni move ahead. They want their
breakfast already. I finish with Elik and Jamey. My recalculations are almost
perfect. We did it again! I joke to Adam that we have to do another half mile.
He doesn’t buy it. I observe that everyone is in much better finishing shape
than they were last year. Let’s eat.
Breakfast was
excellent, and filling, and it was a treat for me to treat my friends. Many joined
in, and there was lots of rotation. Some dropped by just to say happy birthday
before continuing with their day (dad, Mordechai, Yaakov, Steven). The fellas
surprised me again with birthday cake. I closed up breakfast, and was left to
absorb and reflect upon my happiness.
I ambled over to my
dad’s house and conked out on his couch for two hours. My wife then fetched me
and brought me back to my mom’s house, where we had pizza. Then we went back to
my dad’s house for more pizza and birthday cake for our son. He got a drone!
Three appendices, for
your amusement:
Miscellaneous Interesting and Curious
Observations:
§
The pic of my 10:23:29
run got 49 likes on Facebook.
§
I’m eligible for 25
donuts according to The Chart (http://www.hungryrunnergirl.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/IMG_1034.jpg).
§
I’m partaking in a “2,016
miles in 2016” contest with some friends. I posted this to the Facebook page: “We Are Groot was, again, a little behind everyone else in the
standings, so I ran as many miles as the age I'm turning, Yoni Meiri did a marathon, and we
caught up a little bit. Our combined mileage covered 3.3% of the annual
obligation. We ran a marathon together in February, and we'll just keep doing
it till we catch all the way up. There's a method to our madness.”
§
As mentioned above,
those who went all the way were in very good physical shape at the end. We
weren’t wind-sheared or –beaten. We were properly nourished, hydrated, and
layered. I’m very proud to have run with a group of professionals who took the
elements seriously. Our reward was not feeling like ground-up dirt at the
finish line.
§
This was my 34th
run of marathon distance or longer. The numbers are starting to get a little
crazy.
§
The actual furthest
I’ve ever run is 41.5 miles. I had a faint thought about running .31 more to
eclipse that, but I dispelled that quickly. I’ll have another crack at it soon.
§
After joining me for
this year and last, Elik said he’s done, as he doesn’t like to repeat races. I
must convince him otherwise.
Breakfast:
Coffee
Milkshake
Water
Veggie soup
Eggs
Three slices of toast
Big-ass cookie
Israeli salad
Birthday cake
And I was starving at
the end of it.
Total Mileage of Run Participants:
Martin 41.2
Elik 41.2
Jamey 41.2
Adam 41.2
Kalman 27.2
Yoni 26.2
Joe 20.5
Shmuly 19.2
Judy 19.2
Moishie 17.8
Matt 17
Yisroel 15.5
Esther Leah 11
Sheina 11
Michael 10
David 5.5
Yossi 5.5
Leiby 5.5
Jack 4.1
Thank you all for
joining me!
I’ve heard that some of my friends and family
don’t actually own at least one of my books. This is an oversight that must be
remedied: http://www.lulu.com/spotlight/mbodekatgmaildotcom,
http://tinyurl.com/BodekKindleBooks
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