Tuesday, June 18, 2013

2013 Wrap Up

A couple of years ago, our firm made us take some kind of personality quiz and analyze what the results meant for our teams.  Its been a long-standing joke since then that both my boss and I were determined to be extraordinarily weak in the "finishing projects" department.  Ill let that be my excuse for taking over 2 months to update y'all on the 10k.

It could also be the fact that burn out drove me straight from moving 100 miles per hour for months on end directly into the arms of an Adirondack chair to do nothing but tan and drink beer for the last two months. 

But given that planning for 2014 already started (no - that isnt a joke), I think the time has come to wrap this story up.

So here is your long overdue breakdown of what happened that week in April.

Ten Lessons From 2013:

10. Wearing cowboy boots for 12 hours in the Arthur Ashe Center may not kill you, but it will make your feet sore for weeks. Literally.


9. No matter how carefully you plan, inevitably something will happen that never, ever, crossed your mind.  (Ask me about the trolley-balloon arch situation sometime).


8. Never underestimate the power of coffee at 5:30am.

7. I am pretty sure I will one day be punished for the number of small children I gave cowbells to despite the fact that I knew they would be used to drive the parents of those children insane.


6. My baby brother is the bees knees.


5. There will come a point when you think people have heard everything you have to say.  Then someone will show you that you havent said everything just yet.

4. Everyone should get to do the thing they love best with the people they love best.


3. There is no such thing as a flattering action shot of me running.  (So lets look at Tyler instead.) 


 2. It takes a lot longer to spread yard signs down a mile of road than one would care to believe.


1. “Never underestimate the power of a small group of committed people to change the world. In fact, it is the only thing that ever has.” ~ Margaret Mead


Our Grand Total: 

Y'all helped me raise over $20,000 this year - which is amazing in its own right.  So while Im still slowing cranking out 200+ thank you notes, let me say it here - the generosity and love shown by so many each year baffles the mind.  Together we've now raised over $45,000 in seven years.  And that, my friends, is bananas.

But the real amazing figure?  Its the total for the 2013 Challenge overall.  We kicked past records squarely in the ass and currently stand at $564,737.46 raised in 2013.  Im pretty sure Lauren and I are finally done looking for an accounting error that made the figure so high and are just going with the conclusion that RVA is awesome.  And that everyone is pretty sick and tired of cancer.      


Whats Next:

Im happy to report that Ill be making an encore performance as Chair of the Massey Challenge in 2014.  It'll be my retirement year as I put a bow on whats been an amazing experience with the Challenge for what seems like forever.  I'm even more excited that my powers of persuasion were successful at finagling Worth to sign on as my co-chair.  Dude is one of my very favorites, and Im crazy-happy that Im turning over the reigns to someone with a huge heart, tremendous spirit, and willingness to dance in public.  Important things, people.


And Im leaving you with a song.  'Cause thats what I do.

 

So, in summary, and on behalf of all the physicians, researchers, patients, and families that your support will touch in the years to come - THANK YOU.  Y'all are allowing research to continue, progress to be made, and hope to flourish.  Our own little miracle right here in RVA.

Until 2014, my friends,

Kaity

Saturday, April 20, 2013

Where Have I Been?

I've discovered lots of things in the last seven days.  One of them is that is is really.fing.hard. to write about how the most important day of your year feels.  I mean, how do I describe to you what it means, four miles in, when I really want to puke, a random stranger grasps my shoulder, runs up to look into my eyes and says "10 years - you are amazing".  Or how it feels to watch my little brother ask person after person if they would like to sign the Banner of Hope.  Or to have Lauren wish me Happy 10 Year Anniversary from the stage.   Or to have Brianna and her dad - who just 6 months ago I had never met - be there celebrating with me post-race.

I cant.  And that is hard.  Because you've been reading this blog for a long time. 

I've been waiting all week to find the right words - and they havent come yet.

After an event like the 10k, I find that I fall into something of a depression.  All we worked toward, all we planned for, all we wanted - it came and went in a blink.   I cant tell you what Monroe Park looks like at 5:30am on race day.  I cant tell you what Tim and I talk about during miles 4 and 5.  Or how much the sun.really.sucked and killed my race time.  I cant tell you how much $20,000 means to me or to other patients at Massey.  Or what it feels like to know that we set a record this year.  Or how much I already miss the Challenge Committee after just one week away from them. 

The last week has been a really hard one.  But a really happy one too.  And I do have lots to share.  So bear with me as I work through it all.  Because the stories waiting for you are good ones. 

Friday, April 12, 2013

2013 Expo - By the Numbers

Another expo is about to come to a close.  (Yeah - I never work until the end of Saturday night at the expo, preferring instead to spend the night before mentally preparing for the day ahead and relaxing with out of towners - I call it a perk of being a volunteer and not staff rather than simply calling it lazy.) 
Tyler and I are cooking dinner while waiting for Tim (okay - Tyler is cooking dinner) and I just laid out all of our race day necessities in a way that is way too similar to how I used to line up my gifts on Christmas morning.
Today would usually be a Friday Five kind of day, but in light of the significance of this weekend, let me break down the 2013 Expo for you by the numbers:

10 - Hours it took me to realize there was a restroom 5 feet away from our booth and that I didnt have to walk clear across the Arthur Ashe Center to find one.

9 - Number of people who remembered me from their YMCA and followed up their hellos with hugs.

8 - Years I will have run the Ukrops Monument Avenue 10k after tomorrow.

7 -Average number of hours I spent whining about how much my feet hurt after making a poor footwear decision yesterday morning.

6 - Thousands of dollars I am away from $25,151 - Not bad!

5 - Number of bagel halves I consumed today #carbloading.

4 - Number of shirts Tyler scored at the Expo.

3 - Combined pairs of compression socks Tyler and I now own.

2 - Number of people that have promised to harass me until I sign up for the Pink Nation Marathon Training Team.

1 - Nights left until the 2013 Ukrops Monument Avenue 10k.
Best of luck to all the runners and walkers out there!  Dont forget that its still not too late to donate to the Massey Challenge!  And remember to join us at the Massey Mile between 8 and noon and then at Center of the Universe Brewery from 3-9 - all in support of Team Massey.

Because as you all know - Massey cant run without you!

Thursday, April 11, 2013

Remembering

With opening of the expo looming, Tyler is stuck in Chicago, and I'm left with one less distraction from the emotional aspect of the days ahead.  Sometimes its a good thing that the events surrounding the 10k are so crazy because, like with the Masquerade for Massey, the 10k can bring with it lots of mixed emotions if I start to think about it for too long.

While today I am ecstatic to have raised nearly $19,000 toward my goal, and excited to close out a months-long celebration of 10 years in remission with some amazing people by my side, I also find myself thinking about those who we've lost.  One lady in particular.

Yesterday was my oldest friend's birthday.  Cara was born almost 6 months to the day after me, and we have literally been friends ever since.  Even though we haven't lived in the same place since high school, and although we've definitely had our friendship ups and downs (I mean - we've been friends for almost 34 years - so how couldnt we?), Cara knows me better than nearly anyone in the world.  She knows when something is wrong without even speaking to me.  She understands parts of my childhood no one else really can.  She is one of a handful of people who I know - regardless of when I saw her last - I could call and she would do anything for me.

Cara and I met because our dads worked together, and our moms quickly became best friends:
Thats my mom and Carla working the concession stand at one of Tyler's little league games.

Cara was basically the fourth kid in our family, since we spent nearly every.single.day together.  I am seriously hard pressed to think of a summer vacation day that Carla and Cara werent with us.
We spent a lot of those days with our moms visiting my Nana in Rhode Island
 Cara and me - Probably at my first communion 

Carla was one of those people you couldn't not have a good time with.  If she had her way, she would have rescued every dog on the planet.  She and my mom started a water fight in our kitchen once.  She would drive just about anywhere on 5 minutes notice - just to see what you'd find wherever you were going.

I think what I remember most about growing up with my mom and Carla was all the laughing.  Whenever Carla was around, the room was full of love and happiness.  Im not just saying that.  Its true.     
Cara with Carla and Bill
 
So its no surprise that when my mom was diagnosed with cancer, Carla stepped right up to help out.  In fact, I'm pretty sure that 99% of why I remember so few details of my mom being "sick" is because Carla helped to make sure my brother, sister, and I were impacted as little as possible.  Carla always took care of us - she was our second mom.

What was a surprise was Carla's own cancer diagnosis just few years later.  And the fact that her battle was so different from my moms.  Where looking at my mom's treatment and recovery, I would have thought science had cancer licked, watching the slow and terrible way that the disease ravaged Carla told another story.  And when she passed away from the disease, it made all to real to me the fact that cancer steals away from us those we need and love far too soon.
Every year during the 10k, I think about Carla.  I hold her in my heart as I run and her memory feeds my anger at cancer.  Because those aren't the only times I think of Carla.  There are so many questions that I have and that I know only she would have the answers to.  There are reality checks I know she would have given me that I had to figure out on my own - and in a much slower way - without her around.  Whenever I get to spend time with her grandsons, I think of how unfair it is that she isnt here to be with them - because that lady loved kids like no other.

I often wonder what her story would be if it were told today.  Would our new treatments and detection methods have allowed her to still be with us? 

Im grateful for Saturday's run not only for the chance to celebrate all the advances being made, or the folks who have survived, but also for the chance to celebrate the lives of those who went before us. 

I love and miss you, Carla.  I know you'll be with Ty and I on Saturday.

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

The Night Before

Its here.  The night before what has become one of the most meaningful three days of my year.  The out-of-office reply is set at the office, Tim and Tyler have beds waiting for them, and I picked up this year's running skirt from Lululemon today. 

This time tomorrow we'll be wrapping up our first night at the Monument Avenue 10k expo.  The Banner of Hope will already be crowded with love notes and encouragement and faith.  We will have put faces to many of the names we have seen sending in donations - we will know their stories more intimately and understand more fully why they joined the fight.
This time Friday we will have run out of "in honor of" and "in memory of" and "survivor" bibs - a bittersweet reality of the expo each year.  The supplies for the Massey Mile will be packed up and ready for their early morning delivery.  We will be settling in to count change and dollars for two hours - watching the thermometer move closer to the half-million dollar mark.

This time Saturday, we will have chalked and unchalked the Massey Mile.  We will have met other survivors along the 6.2 mile course.  We will have danced alongside other supporters to the Killing Daylights - fighting through the happy exhaustion of the weekend.
This time Sunday, Tim will be back in DC.  I suspect Tyler and I will be watching a movie, rehashing the sights of the Massey Mile.  Looking through pictures of the days we just lived.  Holding hearts fuller than they are just in this moment. 

But as much as I know each of these things to be true, I also know each year brings the unexpected.  I am excited to see what these days ahead have in store.

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Running Streak Rehash - Week Twenty-One

The last week is here!  How did this happen? 

In really good news, the suspected stress fracture turned out to be tendonitis, so I can keep running and keep this streak going.  Big sighs of relief all around.  But I was ordered to keep it to a minimum until the 10k, so this is all we have this week:

Week Twenty-One

Day 141 Wednesday April 3, 2013 - 1.00 miles
Day 142 Thursday April 4, 2013 - 1.00 miles
Day 143 Friday April 5, 2013 - 1.00 miles
Day 144 Saturday April 6, 2013 - 2.90 miles
Day 145 Sunday April 7, 2013 - 1.00 miles
Day 146 Monday April 8, 2013 - 1.00 miles
Day 147 Tuesday April 9, 2013 - 1.00 miles

Week Total -  8.90
Even though the miles were minimal this week, its hard to complain when many of them were spent along views like this:
So now its on to the home stretch.  Just 4 more runs and this adventure is over.  Seems kind of weird, doesn't it? 

Monday, April 8, 2013

Mantra Monday

10k week is here.  The crazy surrounding this week has been nothing short of amazing, as I find things turning on their head once again.  Why does life do that every so often? 

Probably because we need it to.

Friday, April 5, 2013

Friday Five

Its hard to believe that in just one week's time we will be at the 10k expo.  Where did the time go?  Let me give you some idea:
The promise of good BBQ can get anyone through 6.2 miles of hills
A good place to spend an afternoon

Every girl should be so lucky as to have amazing colleagues who support her cause

Apparently my MO is blonde highlights when things get tough

 A little Christmas cheer

Thursday, April 4, 2013

Running Streak Rehash - Week 20

With the 10k just 9 days away (yes - you read that right), I've been running out of time for lots of things.  Including daily blogging.  So please accept my apologies.  Ill try to catch you all up this weekend.

But I did want to drop off the results of the 20th week of my streak:

Week Twenty
Day 134 Wednesday March 27, 2013 - 1.00 miles
Day 135 Thursday March 28, 2013 - 1.00 miles
Day 136 Friday March 29, 2013 - 2.80 miles
Day 137 Saturday March 30, 2013 - 6.20 miles
Day 138 Sunday March 31, 2013 - 1.00 miles
Day 139 Monday April 1, 2013 - 1.00 miles
Day 140 Tuesday April 2, 2013 - 1.00 miles

Week Total - 14.00

Which I am very sad to report that a suspected stress fracture may be about to end.  I see Dr. Woodward tomorrow morning, so thoughts and prayers that the crazy pain in my ankle isnt that would be much appreciated.  Surely the universe wont force both my ankle and my streak to break just 9 days before the 10k!

Monday, April 1, 2013

Mantra Monday

There are less than 14 days until the 2013 Ukrops Monument Avenue 10k.  Thats really hard to believe, especially when I think back on when things like my running streak started, or when Tim and I started planning the Masquerade for Massey.  Even thought we've only been fundraising for 5 months, plans have been kicking around for a lot longer than that.  Which makes 13 days seem like such a small number.
Source

Friday, March 29, 2013

Friday Five

This has been one of the longest weeks I can remember in awhile, with it feeling like the 10k is headed toward us a thousand miles a minute.  But after Sunday's snow, spring really arrived, making everything seem just a little bit calmer.
Downton Abbey marathon = much needed relaxation.
I've loved watching this guy bloom all week
I ran that!
Gorgeous view for an early morning meeting
A new wreath for my door from my crafty mama

Thursday, March 28, 2013

I Get [Through 6.2 Miles] With A Little Help From My Friends

I'm sorry I just did that to you.  Here - listen to the song and it will be out of your head.  Promise.


Sidenote: I really can't stand the Beatles.  My dad had a ton of positive influence on my musical tastes and knowledge, but growing up he used to make us watch Help and A Hard Days Night and I think it just killed them for me.  Don't ask me what he did to my opinion of Elvis.

As the 10k creeps up - we're only 16 days away! - I am counting down not only to my favorite event in RVA, but to the arrival of two of my favorite people.

My sidekick Tim is coming back for what I think is his 6th 10k.  Tim keeps me sane and organized each year, never failing to roll into town with bananas and gatorade for the early morning to come.  And hes a master at squeezing every last bit of fun out of 10k day - which will be an even crazier day this year with the run, the Massey Mile, and the COTU after party (which I hope to see all of you at!).
It seems like each year Tim and I are accompanied by someone new.  And this year is no exception, as two weeks from today my little bro will be landing in RVA for the 10k - all the way from Portland, Oregon!
To say I am excited would be an understatement.

I cant wait to spend one of my favorite days with my three favorite guys (yup - Greg will be running too!).  Now hurry up and get to town, Tim and Ty!

*   *   *

Psst - we crossed the $13K mark last week!  Still need to make your contribution?  Click above - time's awastin!

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Running Streak Rehash - Week Nineteen

I'm not going to belabor the point, but lets all take a moment to recognize the asinine fact that I am still running in snow during week 19.
Fortunately, at this moment I was just enjoying watching it during my weekly post-Mass dinner date with Mike
I will admit that while most of RVA was complaining about this late-season snow, I was quite delighted outside of the fact that I really didn't need another frozen run.  This Yankee misses New England winters now and again, and I was pleased as punch to get myself an evening of fat, fluffy flakes like I grew up with.

Notice anything in this run down that might have also had me happy as a clam?

Week Nineteen

Day 127 Wednesday March 20, 2013 - 1.00 miles
Day 128 Thursday March 21, 2013 - 1.00 miles
Day 129 Friday March 22, 2013 - 3.00 miles
Day 130 Saturday March 23, 2013 - 7.70 miles
Day 131 Sunday March 24, 2013 - 1.00 miles
Day 132 Monday March 25, 2013 - 1.00 miles
Day 133 Tuesday March 26, 2013  - 2.3 miles

Week Total - 17.00

Yes, my friends, I ran 7.7 miles on Saturday.  And there were hills.  Some big, long, hills.  I was totally elated as I realized that the intermediate coach at the Chicahominy YMCA who told me I could do it was right.  What a great way to break in this baby:   

Monday, March 25, 2013

Mantra Monday

This week's mantra comes from my dear friend Stacey, who never fails to make me feel like I am taking life by storm even when I feel more like a wet puddle than a bolt of lightening.  She randomly posted this on my Facebook wall Saturday night - making reference to an event that occurred a little over seven years ago:

You're the only girl I've ever met who let a hibachi guy
try to fling the shrimp into your mouth.
And you caught that mf-er.
 
I'm planning to treat this week like its one of those flying shrimp. 

Friday, March 22, 2013

Friday Five

As things speed along toward April 13, 2013, I'm appreciating more and more the chances to stop and smell the roses.  This week brought some great pauses among some ridiculously stressful times.  Check it:
Selba's Tiffany lamps are just another reason to love the place.
Loved joining Davenport & Co. for Massey Day!
Gotta love St. Patrick's Day
Best thing about my hearing in Cville?  Checking out Stacey's new digs.
I want an invite to the next meeting.

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

On The Road

Yesterday marked eighteen weeks of running down.  At least one mile per day for more than 125 days.  That is utterly insane to me for lots of reasons.  But from the conversations I have had during that time, it seems that it is utterly insane to lots of other people for one specific reason:

Only two of the miles logged have been on a treadmill.
Thats right.  From gorgeous late-fall days to sloppy Connecticut snow to Arizona mountains, my running streak has been nearly entirely completed in our great outdoors. 
I used to be a gym rat.  630pm rolled around and you could bet you'd find me on an elliptical with my nose in a book, or reading the captions on a Jersey Shore repeat, grumbling about the meatheads dropping weights in the corner.
But when I took but Muay Thai, I found that leaving the machines behind opened lots of other doors.  So I gave up the typical gym membership in favor of runs through the Fan, and yoga classes, and kickboxing. 
And while the lack of a treadmill posed some interesting challenges for this running streak - like that crazy one mile run through my house - I haven't missed the human-hamster-wheel at all.
This running streak has definitely been a new creature for me - finding a way to run each and everyday regardless of whether the trees were painted the gleaming golden yellow of fall:
Or my hometown was blanketed in new-fallen snow:
Or Bellevue was beginning to bloom:
And I'm a little sad to see it reaching its close.

Or is it?  I'll be just 32 days short of half a year . . . . stay tuned!