Monday, February 26, 2018

A New Adventure!


Trimazing! is excited to announce that we've updated our website and the Trimazing! blog is now integrated into that site!

The post you're looking for is now located at: https://trimazing.com/a-new-adventure/

Please redirect to https://trimazing.com/trimazing-blog/ and go to the form to subscribe to the Trimazing! blog to get new posts delivered to your email.

And while you're at it, check out the new site. It has more information and even a free downloadable e-cookbook, What's for Breakfast? full of my favorite breakfast items.

Thank you for all of your support over the years and I look forward to seeing you at trimazing.com!

Friday, May 13, 2016

What the Heck Happened???


Its been a long, long time since I last posted, and if I do have any followers left, you're probably wondering what the heck happened to me!!

Well, a lot!

I got really sick after Ironman Tahoe, actually before, but I didn't realize it as I thought it was merely training fatigue. I was having severe abdominal pains, bloating, and fatigue, and was found to have two very large uterine fibroids (one the size of a grapefruit and another the size of an orange) and a large ovarian cyst a month after the race. During surgery for a hysterectomy, the doctors also discovered a netting of scar tissue connecting all of my abdominal organs, which they had to cut away with surgical scissors, presumably from undiagnosed endometriosis. It was all a shock to me and my physician, as I'd had a normal routine gynecological exam two months prior to my race and no family history of these conditions. This seemingly came out of the blue.

I figured after a normal recovery period, working closely with my physician, I'd be back to training and regaining my fitness. I was registered for Honu 70.3 that May (surgery was in January), so I contacted Ironman for a medical withdrawal and they actually just transferred my registration to 2014, which I thought was very, very nice of them (I'd not even requested that!). So that became my game plan, recover for a season and back to it.

But apparently my body didn't like that game plan!! I just couldn't kick the fatigue. I retired September 2014 and figured that would give me some time to rest and get back with the program. But life had other foci--I moved to Seattle, we remodeled our house, and I was still tired. I started back on my running plan and it took everything I had to do it, and it was just awful. I did do some races, the 9K Portland Shamrock Run (down from my regular 15K), a 12K Seahawks run, a 10K run for Autism, and then I just couldn't run anymore, I was too tired. I DNS'd the May 2015 Honu 70.3 and September 2015 Beat the Blerch half-marathon I registered for. I was exhausted, had gained weight despite my continued vegan diet, and felt my body was telling me to rest.

Finally, Fall 2015, after really trying to get my running plan going, I realized something was wrong with me. I simply could not run or do any sort of workout without being completely exhausted. That is, if I ran one day, even something as simple as 1.5 miles, or did a Zumba class I was shot for a week and a half!! And by shot I mean, couldn't get out of bed, certainly could not work out, and could barely function. And to make it worse, I couldn't sleep either.

Long story short of doctors visits, referrals, and frustration, I finally saw a naturopathetic physician who discovered I had hypothyroidism and adrenal fatigue. Turns out my bout with influenza 2012 probably taxed my adrenal glands and the added body stress from Ironman training and my firefighting job never allowed them to heal. In fact, they worsened to the point that I developed the uterine fibroids, polycystic ovaries, and endometriosis as a result. It turns out that your endocrine system uses your adrenal glands, reproductive organs, and thyroid gland to keep your hormones in balance. When one group is taxed, the other two pick up the slack to keep things steady and to allow the other part to rejuvenate. So when my adrenal glands were exhausted, my reproductive organs took over, leading to their dysfunction. Then, unbeknownst to me, I made it worse by having my hysterectomy, taking a large part of that system out, causing my thyroid gland to do all the heavy lifting for my defunct adrenals and lacking reproductive organs. It makes perfect sense now, after the fact, but it wasn't obvious at the time.

So I have been working with my naturopathic physician to restore balance back into my endocrine system, healing my adrenal and thyroid glands. And it's taking time. But, I am finally feeling better
Girls Weekend Shamrock Walk
and have slowly started to regain my fitness. I walked the 2015 Shamrock Run 5K and I'm now able to run a training plan and have done some shorter events (3-5 miles). I'm working on a 10K running plan and have registered for the 2016 Beat the Blerch 10K event in September.

The hardest part of this recovery is taking it slow. My ego wants to jump back in and start where I left off, but my brain has to tell me to be patient. I was hoping to get back into triathlon this season, but seeing that it's mid-May and all I've done is worked on my running, it's really just too much to ask my body to get my swimming and biking up to par so soon. So, my plan is to continue running and start to add some biking this summer. I'll introduce swimming again in the fall and be ready to go for the 2017 tri season. It's been very hard to make that decision, but I know I'll be all the better for it.

So, stay tuned for some running reports and stories of me getting back into the (bike) saddle!

And heck...I'll even age-up in the process! WooHoo!




Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Boston


I couldn't post yesterday...

I was in the middle of my 60 minute training run and got a text from my mom about bombs at Boston Marathon. Generally, I turn the ringer off on my phone when I run so I don't get interrupted, but yesterday I didn't. And usually when I forget to turn my ringer off, I ignore texts that come in until I'm done, but yesterday I didn't. 

I was horrified! Horrified that someone would bomb a marathon, horrified that I knew people there running the race. Stuck in place on sidewalk, I started searching Facebook, trying to contact friends running there to make sure they were okay. And trying to remember who was there. Awful! 

Finally a report, one friend had just crossed finish and was hugging her family when explosion happened. They are not hurt and were together thankfully. Another friend was also fine. Relief.

Finally, I started to walk. I took one last look at Facebook and saw this picture of the fireball:


Immediately tears stream down my cheeks. Usually it's really great when your job and your hobby intersect--not today. I thought about heading home but then I got angry, remembering brother and sister firefighters who responded to September 11, 343 firefighters never went home. Now this. I posted on Facebook, "First you bombed my brother and sister firefighters, now my brother and sister runners. Fuck you!" and started to run and run and run, tears running down my face. I finished my intended route, a negative split, full of resolve.

We will not stop fighting fires, we will not stop climbing skyscrapers to save victims, we will not stop running, will we not stop living. Just watch us. 

Thursday, January 10, 2013

Race Calendar 2013


Hey! Guess what? I didn't fall off the face of the Earth...it just appeared that way! Life just got extremely busy and I took a little break, but I'mmmmmmmm Baaaaack!

So let's get right down to it...what's my 2013 Race Calendar? So far...

March
10     Scott Firefighter Stairclimb, Seattle, WA

17     Shamrock Run 15K, Portland, OR

April
6     To Hell with Cancer 5K, Kirkland, WA 


May
18     2013 US Masters Swimming 10k Open Water Swimming National Championships, Lake Mead, NV. Will be doing 5k event.
June
10     Blue Lake Olympic Tri, TriNW Club Championship Race, Fairview, OR     


16    Hagg Lake Open Water Swim Gaston, OR


23     Clackamas Cove Triathlon, Clackamas OR
29     Pac Crest Long Course Tri, TriNW Long Course Championship Race, Sunriver, OR

July
21     Portland Bridge Swim Relay, Portland OR 

Sept
22     Ironman Lake Tahoe, Lake Tahoe, CA



It's a lighter calendar than years past, but I think smarter as I work up to my first full Ironman, and a very aggressive one at that. It has a lot of variety too, which I think is fun. Of course, I may add a few other events here and there, depending on my schedule and how I'm feeling, and, well, honestly, what I get uber-excited about and talked into by the mere mention of a race other friends are doing! June looks pretty full, with a race every weekend, so I may end up adjusting that. I am for sure doing Pac Crest Long Course as it is at elevation and will be a good indicator of how my training is doing to prepare me for IM Tahoe.

The 2013 Race Team training plan comes out January 21st, and I'm ready to start.

Let's do this thing!!

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Vegan Wedding!


Trimazing! is excited to announce that we've updated our website and the Trimazing! blog is now integrated into that site!

The post you're looking for is now located at: https://trimazing.com/vegan-wedding

Please redirect to https://trimazing.com/trimazing-blog/ and go to the form to subscribe to the Trimazing! blog to get new posts delivered to your email.

And while you're at it, check out the new site. It has more information and even a free downloadable e-cookbook, What's for Breakfast? full of my favorite breakfast items.

Thank you for all of your support over the years and I look forward to seeing you at trimazing.com!

Sunday, September 16, 2012

Vegas Post-Race Recovery!



A little post-race recovery!
 
So I'm settling in to post-race season recovery better than I thought I would! I've been having a blast!

Knee Update
I've been to physical therapy twice now, and this seems to be helping a lot. The physical therapist seems to think that my knee issue is probably a flareup of my IT band due to systemic inflammation. She believes that my post-Vineman immune system just wasn't able to deal with the inflammation from my sinus infection and   strep throat and allowed my little "tweak" of an injury to my IT band to become inflamed during my convalescence. The knee is not unstable at all, but the area around the distal end of the IT band had fluid in it. She's been using ultrasound and Graston® (just like the treatment I had for my ulnar neuropathy last year, see post), and it's getting much better. I'm also using the foam roller and doing some exercises to work the IT band. The swelling is down, pain has decreased and sometimes disappeared, and I've not had the "squeaky rub" condition for several days now. I do have a referral to a sports-medicine orthopedist in October, and I'm going to keep that appointment to see what things I can do to prevent future injuries to this area as I start up my full Ironman training this fall.

I'm slowly adding workouts in. I did a 1.5 mile swim last week and my knee was great for the first half; it got a little achy, not painful, so I just pulled the last half. I did a five minute stationary bike warmup at PT this morning with no pain at all, which is the first cycling I've had pain-free for a month. Tomorrow I'll do a 2-3 mile treadmill run and see how that feels. I'm really looking forward to getting back into training.

Vegan Vegas!
I went to Vegas last week for the first time in years. Believe it or not, it was soooo relaxing! I've never gone anywhere and just vegged at the pool...but that's exactly what I did and turns out, exactly what I needed! We spent four days at the pool, lounging, swimming, relaxing, enjoying drinks with little umbrellas in them, of course...ahhhhhh!

We stayed at the Wynn, which was beautiful, and, turns out, has outstanding vegan food at all of their restaurants and room service! The Wynn brought in vegan chef, Tal Ronnen, to develop wonderful vegan fare, and he hit it out of the park! Check out their menus.

The first night we ate at La Cave outside on the patio overlooking the pools. It was a beautiful setting. La Cave is a wine bar/restaurant that serves small plates in tapas style, although it's not Spanish cuisine. There was a whole section of vegan selections...and we ordered them all! Our favorite, which we ordered a total of three plates worth, was the Creamy Mushroom Tortellini, made with cashew cream. OMG! So fantastic! I'm going to have to figure out how to recreate that dish!

Room and poolside service was terrific too. Over the four days, for breakfast, we had the fruit plate with vegan soy vanilla yogurt, granola and soy yogurt parfait, and tofu scramble. It was all excellent! At the pool we had salads and a terrific roasted red pepper and avocado hummus.

The second night we ventured to the Bellagio to Sensi. While not a vegan restaurant nor one with a vegan menu, I had read in the Vegas Vegan blog about the amazing food they had there, and as it was one of my friend's favorite restaurants in Vegas, we were very intrigued to see what they had along the vegan lines. We had the BEST waiter--he was English and so much fun! We asked about a vegan menu and he got all excited and said he was go talk to the chefs to see what they would come up with, because "they really do love to create new exciting things!" He came back with a list of wonderful menu items...and we ordered them all! We had a fantastic Veggie Sushi Platter with a Ponzu Yuzu dipping sauce and a wonderful risotto for appetizers, followed by Tofu Scallops with stir-fried vegetables that were outstanding and a dish of seasonal vegetables that included a variety of summer squashes, carrots, green beans, etc. And a bowl of fresh berries with the most amazing lemoncello sorbet I've ever had in my entire life!

The last night we went to the Mix Lounge at the top of The Hotel at Mandalay Bay. Stunning! We ended up having drinks and dinner outside on the veranda on the 64th floor; it was a beautiful night with an orange harvest moon. The lounge is dark, sleek, and sexy...the restaurant is etheral and light, making for an amazing evening. Note...if you ever go here, you HAVE to check out the bathoom! Sexiest bathrooms on earth!

Mix is not a vegan restaurant, but they were more than happy to come up with a list of items they would make for us. We'd had so much food the other nights that we simply kept ourselves to two entrees this night! We shared a Vegetable Hot Pot with Wild Mushrooms and Potato Gnocchi with Morels and Asparagus. We did enjoy fresh breads for starter, which included four varieties of bread accompanied by fresh chunky peanut butter they make on site--I thought this was very original!

For dessert, we had a variety of sorbets which were amazing, and a warm madeleine, all served up on a beautiful platter scripted with "Happy Birthday" in chocolate and a candle!










My next blog will cover the adventure that followed Vegas...a Vegan Wedding (no, not me!!)! Stay tuned!

Thursday, August 30, 2012

You Like to Think that you're Immune to the Stuff...

Me and Chrissie Wellington...WOW!

Oh yeah!

I was driving home this morning from work and Robert Palmer's "Addicted to Love" came on Pandora and it seems so fitting right now, in the context of triathlon for me.



And believe it or not, the line that caught my attention was "You like to think that you're immune to the stuff" not the addicted to love [tri]...

Let me explain...

Sadly, race season 2012 is done for me...and I'm having a really hard time about it! Mostly because I wasn't mentally ready to be done, but my body has different plans. I'm actually registered for a long course tri at Black Diamond in Enumclaw, Washington, the Portland Olympic Tri, and the Portland Marathon, and been registered for them for months, but I'm not going to be able to compete.

First it's been a full frontal attack by strep... The day after the Wahine relay I did as part of "The Afters" team I developed a sinus infection. Miserable. I really didn't think it was going to be a big deal, figured it was a little swamp water effect from Blue Lake, but it really knocked me on my butt. I couldn't sleep, worked my firefighter shifts and I know my crew made voodoo dolls in my likeness and tore them to pieces for keeping THEM up all night tossing and turning and coughing. But I took one shift off, got back on my feet and figured I was fine. Then...full on strep throat. The nurse told me, "No one gets strep in summer, after this test comes back negative I'll tell you how to deal with a sore throat." Well, I proved her wrong! I was in bed for a whole week, penicillin and the works. This was all four weeks post-Vineman.

Finally, when strep was clearing up, my left knee decided it really didn't like what I did during Vineman, riding on a flat for all that distance. Now I have developed pain in that knee with walking and especially up and down stairs or when carrying heavy objects. It comes and goes, sometimes feels so sharp that the knee feels unstable. I can feel a rub through the skin when holding my hand over the lateral knee and out of curiosity, auscultated it with a stethoscope and I have a pleuritic-like rub sound when I articulate that knee. It's like I'm the Tin Man from the Wizard of Oz and I need an oil port in my knee.

I saw my primary care who was certain I had a lateral epicondyle stress fracture, but this did not show up on x-ray. He gave me a knee sleeve to wear, but that increases the pain significantly, more than without a brace, so I’m not wearing it. I have a PT appointment tomorrow. He does not think it is from my IT band, does not think it’s meniscal, but doesn’t know what it is. So now I'm in an email debate with him over whether or not he will refer me to an orthopedic physician who specializes in endurance athletes.

I'm pretty devastated about having to quit my season. I realized it when I got the strep throat diagnosis. And I started GRIEVING! Seriously, that day was awful. I felt miserable, I got into a hot bubble bath and cried my eyes out. Friends and family helped a lot, but I'm still sad about it, although I've accepted it now. But, as I told a tri friend the other night at a reception for Chrissie Wellington, it's taking a lot to keep my spirits up at the moment, especially with this fight with my health provider over my knee. And really, I just want to be ready to start training for Ironman Tahoe. I know it's over a year away, but my mind is ready to start.

The thing is, even though I'd heard about athletes getting really sick after long endurance races, I really "felt immune to the stuff" and that it wouldn't happen to me. And that's really ridiculous as pretty much all of my triathlon friends who have done half and full Ironman races have gotten strep, bronchitis, and other infections the weeks following their events--and we've talked about it at length. Here is an article I found about this: http://triathlete-europe.competitor.com/2011/10/06/the-physiological-impact-of-an-ironman-on-the-human-body/

Why do I have to learn so much the hard way? My friend, Wyatt, said, "I think it doesn't stick otherwise." And then I also forget I'm new at this. This is only my second season, and I don't know what to expect. So I'm taking the rest of my season off, resting, healing, recuperating, enjoying time with friends and family and doing some traveling, things I wouldn't have time for otherwise. In my lowest of lows when I lamented to one friend, "I don't have any races to look forward to now.." he reminded me that we have an upcoming trip to Vegas..."You have THAT to look forward to now."


And, somehow, people come into your life at the right time to help you through rough patches. Chrissie Wellington came to Portland this week and I had the great opportunity to see her at Athlete's Lounge. She showed up in a walking cast on her left leg due to stress fractures. She's not racing Kona this year. And she's not sure what she'll do for next season, not sure she's racing even. What is she doing? She's spending time with family and friends, traveling. I think she was sent just when I needed her.






So in tribute to my Addiction to Tri...a little celebration of where I've come in these two seasons! Sing along!

Addicted to Tri

Your lights are on, but you're not home


Your mind is not your own


Your heart sweats, your body shakes


Another kiss is what it takes


You can't sleep, you can't eat


There's no doubt, you're in deep


Your throat is tight, you can't breathe


Another kiss is all you need


Whoa, you like to think that you're immune to the stuff, oh yeah


It's closer to the truth to say you can't get enough


You know you're gonna have to face it, you're addicted to tri...


You see the signs, but you can't read


You're runnin' at a different speed


Your heart beats in double time


Another kiss and you'll be mine, a one track mind


You can't be saved


Oblivion is all you crave


If there's some left for you



You don't mind if you do


Might as well face it you're addicted to tri!