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Not Too Late To Finish: Marathon in Midlife
Marathon, Running, Fitness, and Midlife
As has become a part of my ritual, here’s my race report/blog post about training and running my first marathon. I hope you find it entertaining, and you have my permission to snicker to your heart’s delight.
Training for a marathon in midlife is neither impossible nor easy. It is not something you can power through like you’re in your twenties. However, people in midlife can have a few tricks up their sleeves that have them finishing races when the rest of our cohort struggles to meet minimum health standards.
I’ve come to understand how much fun endurance racing events can be when you prepare well AND plan to encounter the best (and worst) in yourself. Not only is it often beautiful to play outdoors, but endurance fitness training can be a place of belonging, community, wellness, and psychological growth.
Pre-Marathon Dream: The Night Before
The night before the BMO Vancouver Marathon, my beloved Man-Geek listened to my plaintive, bleating thoughts about being afraid of the pain of running a marathon. He asked me why I wanted to run a marathon in the first place (a very good question coming from a Cognitive Psychology PhD, btw!), and I gave him a few plausible but ridiculously stupid answers (the real answer is at the end of this blog post), steeped in whimpering excuses and childhood psychological trauma. He calmly listened, snuggled me tight, and I fell into a deep, dream-filled sleep.
In one of my dreams, I was awake and saying, “Wow, I finished a marathon! That was great!” I watched myself walking away from the finish line, happy and relieved. Then the alarm went off, and I realized it was time to wake up, have breakfast, and get dressed for the race, for reals! Oops, I guess you have actually have to run a marathon to be a marathon finisher. Dammit.
If you are a marathoner, you know what I’m talking about! By the time you have finished training for a marathon, you have run the distance of several marathons combined. Your body has been trained, you have consumed a gazillion calories, electrolyte fluids, and post-workout snacks; you have pulled your wracked and tired body in and out of bed so many times, it feels like it has already “been there and done that.” No wonder my body was confused, even as it came off a sweet three-week taper full of restful sleep, nutritious, gluten-free foods, and a kind community of racing friends and supporters.
Pre-Race Prep: Predictions and Restrictions
Allen Lim, Sports Physiologist, with “Rice Cakes” for athletes
Because I am Celiac “suspected” (DNA confirmed, gluten-intolerance confirmed, biopsy waiting), I booked a hotel room with a kitchenette and cooked all my race food the night before. My race food is a combination of Honey Stingers taken in small “hits” from a gel flask for the first 13.1 miles/21km), and then only real food for the remaining half. After much experimentation between my triathlon races last season and my half marathon and marathon training, the food of choice for me is a rendition of the snack eaten by endurance cyclists. It’s a combination of white rice, seaweed, bacon bits, scrambled egg, and salt, and its highly digestible format makes it a great combination for this gluten-intolerant, hungry runner. I added pure maple syrup (tapped from tree, yes yes om nom nom!). Best of all, I get zero tummy issues with eating real food during races, versus the crap shoot (no pun intended) that happens when I rely solely on race gels. Gels often have maltodextrin (corn), wheat, whey (milk), soy, and/or nuts, most of which can leave me by the side of the road, vomiting or having anaphylaxis (severe peanut allergy). You can tell others have tummy trouble during races if/when you stop at a Honey Bucket (oh so much yuck on the bottom of your shoes from someone’s previous misfortune).
A much younger person with a faster time and no tummy issues won’t need to carry much food or fluids on well-organized marathons. The BMO Vancouver Marathon earned a position among the Top 10 Destination Marathons in Forbes Magazine for a reason: 21 water and food stations, med tents, 4000+ volunteers, beautiful scenery through 17 neighborhoods. Running in midlife usually means you’re going to be out on the course for at least four hours, and it’s not just the effort but the time it takes to exert that effort which requires the midlife runner to either carry food and gels or rely on the race to have the ones that work for them. One misstep can mean the race. It’s not untypical to see people of any age hurting on the side of the road, nauseated, vomiting, or lining up at the port-o-potties with GI distress. On ultramarathons, almost all racers bring their own fluids and food, and on very long distances, they have a support person bring food to them at scheduled stops. More times than not, it’s real food they are reaching for.
At the marathon expo, I purchased a gel flask holder and attached it to my race belt, a Fuel Belt with a medium-sized pocket for my real food in a baggie, a couple of electrolyte pills in case the weather decided to change, and two water flasks filled with water in one and electrolyte fluid in the other (again, for just in case). The gel flask was filled with more than enough Honey Stinger gels (gluten-free and mostly honey with no high fructose corn syrup) to get me past the half marathon mark before switching to real food. I had checked the race details, and the electrolyte drink on the course was Optima. Because of my food and drink restrictions, I knew not to use the race to experiment with anything new, and I had not trained with Optima so that was a no-go.
Two weeks prior, my left Achilles started aching badly enough to cause me to limp. I got to work on it immediately, and with the advice of my cousin Joe Huang (he has experience working with college athletes) and Coach Covey of Pro Sport Club, I was “on it” immediately doing calf stretches, icing and heating, treating the inflammation, and backing off the shorter taper runs by replacing the intensity with pool running and cycling. At the Expo, I found the RockTape kiok and had both of my Achilles taped up and a nice “X” of the tape placed on my left calf. RockTape is the bomb. It increases circulation and helps to stabilize muscles that have become strained or weakened from overuse. Fortunately, my Achilles was not torn; it was just achy. I had also weighed in: I was three pounds under my ideal race weight, so I used the taper weeks to do my best to gain back a little weight so I would have the wiggle room to take a loss during the race. A trip to Tucson helped me gain back one measly pound.
A week before race date May 4, 2014, the weather had been gorgeous in the PNW. I simply couldn’t help wishing that it would last into the weekend, but every weather forecast was showing a 70% chance of precipitation and temperatures twenty degrees cooler. Man-Geek pumped me up with some hopeful statements, such as, “Cooler, rainy weather means a PR!” I smiled weakly, recalling how I had managed to put the majority of my long runs on Seattle’s sunniest Spring weather days. Oh well.
While I did train from January through April and I’m used to running in the rain, race conditions of a 16,500 person marathon, half, and 8K add up to a lot of waiting outside without protective cover. Many people choose to bring old clothes as layers, which they shed along the first few miles of the race course. It ends up looking like the Rapture took people naked up to Heaven and left their clothes behind! Instead, I managed to grab a fairly thick clear plastic bag for insulation and rain protection, punched arm holes and a neck hole, and let my teeth chatter away. I was freezing.
As is my race ritual, I eat about 1/4 of the real food I packed about 25 minutes before the race start time. It delays my need to start taking gel hits and decreases my chances of getting cramps from starting out fast in the first few miles as runners in your finish time corral jockey for a space to run, spread out, and lock into their pace.
With all that said, with all the training behind me, and with a positive mind set, we trotted up to the start line, heard the roar of the crowd, and the next thing I knew, I was running. I had done the best prep that I could. The race is simply the time you put all the hard work together. Once the GPS watch is started, I find my pace, set a playlist of songs in my head, and let my inner musician run wild.
Don’t Change A Thing
One of the cool things about the community in which I train for triathlons is that it is balanced with both newbies like myself and seasoned athletes competing at almost every level and across each decade. Just by hanging out and listening, you learn a world of great advice that can save you heartache and body aches. The challenge: you actually have to listen to the advice!
I changed two things about this race that I wish I hadn’t:
1. I had trained with a Nathan hydration vest. Because of what happened at the Boston Marathon in 2013, many marathons have asked runners to not wear a backpack while running. I interpreted this rule to mean I would need to wear a water and food belt, and this was the sole reason why I purchased a gel flask holder at the Expo the day before the race. While I tested the gel flask in my hotel room to make sure it was in the right place on my belt, I did not have the ability to test how the gel flask would do bouncing along my hip for 26.2 miles. It turns out that quite a few runners in the slower corrals (four hours or more) used hydration running vests. It has a convenient pocket in the front to hold your gels and food.
That was a fail. Somewhere between the 13th and the 14th mile, I suddenly noticed that my gel flask was gone. While the course had three more stations that provided gels, the majority of them were going to be brands of gels I knew I could not consume without risking GI distress or illness. At that point, I realized I had just enough real food on me to likely take me to the finish line under reasonable conditions. When you read #2, you’ll understand why I despaired.
2. I should have bought a roll of RockTape and taped up my knees. At home, I had a roll of Kinesio tape to cover up both kittehs like little mummies as an art project! My knees had been doing well through the long training runs, and I had stopped taping them altogether. At the RockTape kiosk, they were selling extra rolls. The woman taping me said they didn’t have time to tape more than one area “hot spot on each runner (the line was growing long), so I had her tape the Achilles on both feet and left the kiosk.
Back at home, Coach Covey had reminded me that injuries have a way of working their way up or down the body. With left-sided injury, it’s absolutely conceivable that my right side had made tiny adjustments to avoid pain on the left. By mile 7, I started feeling a tweak, in the right knee; by mile 10, I knew I was in trouble.
Limping up through mile 14 and crawling at a 14:00min/mi pace (significantly slower than my usual 9:30), I heard my mind say, “That’s it, Kitten. You’re cooked.” That’s when I bumped into Rennie. Rennie was a chipper, grey-haired woman who was also limping up that same 14 mile mark stretch. She was badly injured, unable to weight-bear on her ankle. “Do you know where the next med tent is?” she asked.
“I don’t know, but they never seem to be near enough when you’re hurt,” I replied. We both laughed.
She looked at me, limping along, and asked if I was planning on finishing. That’s when I heard myself saying to her, “There is no way I will finish in the time I had hoped, but now I think I will see if I can just finish. ” My mind had replied to her before it could ask the body!
And off I limped to the next ridge, drenched to the bone, cold and shivering, with my tiny belief that I would finish in under six hours. Or at all.
Brains Are Sexy
When I was last at Burning Man, I encountered a group of people with backpacks full of signs with multiple copies of the entire alphabet. They would ask onlookers, “Give us a word to spell!” and as soon as you shouted a word, they would quickly arrange themselves in order to spell your word. I gave them the word, “Acidophilus”. They got really excited!
Do you remember what those old GPS navigating devices sound like? When you drive off the expected route, it chimes, “Recalculating” in a flat, uninspired voice. That’s what my brain started to do. It started recalculating. It started rearranging the letters and the numbers into an intelligent thought. I had three-quarters of real food left in my pouch, which was enough to make it to the end of the course — that is, if I could run between a 10 and 10:30 pace (five hours). My calculations had me running a 12 min/mi and running out of gas in the tank in the last 3-4 km., simply because it would take more time than I had planned, and there was no gel flask to fall back on (five and a half hours). I would have to find something to eat or risk bonking badly within the last couple of kilometers.
I heard myself saying, “C’mon, Kitten! You did not come all this way to give up so easily. So you’re going to run to the next ridge, and when you get there, you are not going to stop because it hurts more to stop and get going again than to just keep going. And you’re going to run a 12 min/mi and it’s going to be just fine because that’s an easy run. Because I said so.” And I started imaging my version of a silly nightmare, a combination of Clown Zombies chasing after me. Man-Geek later suggested I should have included arachnids, but believe me: Clown Zombies tooting plastic horns was enough to make me laugh and keep me moving.
The pain in my right knee went from throbbing to blinding. At one point, I thought I was going to throw up, which is my typical response to sustained pain levels. I rolled down my compression sock on my left calf, took a piece of RockTape from the “X”, and rubbed it onto the outside right section of my right knee. At mile 17, I began getting my pace up to 11:30, and by mile 20, I had entered Stanley Park and the road home.
Brains are sexy. One of the best things about our brains is that we can use our own thoughts, also known as Emotional Intelligence, to help change our own responses to many kinds of stimuli. There have been significant research studies which, while difficult to replicate, appear to indicate that our own thoughts can even change our body’s response to injury and illness. By mile 18, I was already telling my body that the pain was “fiddly dee dee, nothing to never-no-mind about”(to borrow the words of Scarlet O’hara in “Gone With The Wind”), and I used that thought, combined with a few others, to will myself to mile 25. I figured, by mile 25, I would be all sorts of stupid to even think of walking by then.
I recalled at the start of the course, a thin, smiling Asian man standing on a corner, waving to the last corrals of runners who had just passed the first half mile. He said, “This is really important! Forget everything your coach told you. Run the pace that you want to run. This is the pace that is best for you. You know what that is.” I heard his words and took them to heart with me for the rest of the race, not as disrespect for the hard work that our coaches do for each one of us, but as a deep respect for individual intuition, compassion, and the knowing of the Self. At the end of the race, you are the one who runs across the finish line.
Many miles later, I realized it was the first time since 2012 I had run this kind of distance at a much slower pace. They felt harder to me than the faster ones of my last half marathon, because the faster ones were filled with energy and enthusiasm, and the slower ones were wracked with pain and a mixture of despair. It is what we believe it is; it was going to be whatever I made it to be. And that belief is powerful.
We’re Up All Night To Get Lucky
At the last food station, a young volunteer called out, “Vanilla gels, no caffeine!” I called back, “Are they gluten-free?” He checked the ingredients: soy lecithin and maltodextrin, but gluten free. “I’ll take it!” I said, and tucked the packet in my pouch. I was hoping I wouldn’t have to use it, even though my sexy-brain recalculations suggested I would need something in the last 30 minutes. I had sucked the last grain of rice from my food baggie, and the last traces of maple syrup had been replaced by another flavor: the flavor of my mouth when I start to feel hypoglycemic. It started hitting a bit earlier, likely because I was using a lot of energy to keep my body warm in the pouring rain.
My 4:40 race corral was long gone. The remaining runners really did look like straggler marathoners taking selfies with their phones as long as they finished in the eight hour cutoff time. Many were older, walking, limping, or what I call “lifers” — people who travel to do marathons all over the world at whatever pace, just for the fun of it. Some of them have completed more than 400 marathons, so don’t even think of laughing. There were volunteers strewn along the last six miles, yelling, “You got this one! Keep moving! Every step is one step closer to the finish line!” I ran most of this fairly alone, occasionally passing another injured runner with a gentle word, “You can do it!” I told my knee pain to shut up and f@ck off, and probably in combination with the beginning of the bonk at mile 23, I believe I experienced what runner’s call a “runners high”. The pain stopped mattering, and getting to the finish line was the only thing left. I replayed an Eagle’s song in my head, “Fly Like An Eagle.” My trot became a romp. I picked up my pace.
With less than two miles remaining, I took a hit off that Vanilla gel I had picked up from the volunteer and tossed the rest, drank my remaining water, looked at my watch for the last time, and made my way towards the stone bridge that takes the runners around the last curve towards the edge of Stanley Park and the way “home.” Within minutes, I saw the last sign: 1 km.
I got lucky. The gel didn’t make me sick, and it gave me enough energy to overcome the heaviness in my legs and my foggy brain. It didn’t, however, keep me from almost being run over my a bicyclist who was not watching where he was going. In order to avoid being run over by him, I quickly maneuvered to my right, forcing me to turn on my knee which shot a pain straight up in my glutes. I cried out in pain and just kept going, shivering, teeth chattering, hands clenched into little fists, focusing on making the most of each stride. If there wasn’t going to be much speed, there was at least going to be some careful technique! Because looking good is feeling good. Or something that sounds like the kind of b.s. that makes me laugh.
With the exception of about three miles of the entire race, the skies puked drizzle or downpours in alternating succession. The last kilometer was a full-on downpour, and most of the crowds from earlier in the morning had all but dispersed. There was little fanfare, but that wasn’t why I had decided to run a marathon, so the thinned crowd was just fine. Fewer witnesses to an embarrassingly slow performance, I thought. The mostly-empty sidewalk and road of the home stretch with the finish line in sight helped me smile a cheesy grin for the last photographer. Finish time 5:33. That’s nearly one hour later than my projected finish time.
As I crossed the finish line, I saw my man, who waved to me and shouted, “Congratulations!” A man from the med tent inside the finish chute quickly inspected my knee, of which he agreed with my conclusion, “Overuse and stiff, but not torn,” and he waddled towards the next injured finisher. My gear check bag held my warm clothes, and a quick change in a tent stopped my teeth from chattering; an old mylar blanket from a previous race was reconfigured into a rain coat for our dash to a taxi.
The Real Stuff
At the beginning of this post, I had told Man-Geek some ridiculous reasons why I wanted to run a marathon. I concealed the real ones. Here they are:
1. The last few years have been filled with more easily achievable goals. Training and running a marathon was something I had always wanted to do because I wasn’t sure I could actually do it. This race forced me to encounter the possibility of failure, and the opportunity to learn what I would do with that encounter. Apparently, I fought back!
2. I wanted to know what my mind could do when my body wanted to quit because of physical limits. Now I know: my mind can want to quit, but it also has the ability to reason, soothe, and to coach its way to another outcome. Woot!
3. That part about my former podiatrist who told me I would never run again back in 2006? All true (I told the story in another post), and you know what? I don’t hold it against him. In fact, he was only sharing what his limited medical profession offered — risk reduction over an anticipated long lifespan. I get it. So actually, #3 was one of those ridiculous excuses for wanting to run a marathon. I wasn’t proving this doctor wrong; I was actually proving my intuitions about myself right. Which is really the point of most psychotherapy. It’s not the addition of personal growth you’re trying to obtain, but the “shrinking” of all the accumulated crap of life that you remove to get to the authentic self. And that self seemed to know that this was possible long before I proved that it was. So there.
Btw, I ran by a group of ladies who were talking about how running was cheaper than therapy. As I trotted by, I told them, “You are correct, running is cheaper than therapy. I should know. I’m a psychotherapist!” And we all had a good laugh.
4. Out of empathy for my partner in life, I wanted to be a marathoner. Not only could I empathize with his goals as an ultra runner and Ironman, I would feel more worthy of his admiration and respect. In other words, I would always know that BOTH of us could say, “You are badass!” Yet I felt that if I told him this answer the night before, he would have taken away a part of my zeal by possibly denying the veracity of my reason to run: to feel a sense of belonging, not only with him, but with others in my community.
One of the strange epidemics of our times is the advent of loneliness in the age of Social Media. With as many tools as we have to connect us to others, the art of connecting seems to be losing ground. I had noticed I have been working hard to build a sense of connection and community with others, and running had become a part of that connection, even with my life partner.
Just a few hours later, as I sat on my couch sipping a hot tea, I experienced this strange feeling that it was another part of me that just ran and finished that marathon, much like that dream I had had the night before. Maybe it was all that meditation along the way, which often gives one a sense of momentary separation from the physicality of this life. Maybe it was low blood sugar! Still, I think it helped to experience some momentary distance to enjoy what connection had brought to back to me. What I do know is that I was already evaluating the lessons learned on this marathon training and running adventure, and I’m almost ready to plan out my races for the season. I don’t feel like I’m running alone.
There are many tales and allegories about how running a marathon is like living life. I’m sure I’ll be thinking them over during my recovery time. All I’m doing now is paying attention and taking notes to my body’s responses, like how I want to “eat all the things” in the kitchen, but I can’t, and how going upstairs is significantly easier than moving my hip down the stairs. And how soft sheets feel against your skin when you’re tired. And how the love and support of friends brings tears to my eyes as I write this post.
I’m looking forward to seeing how the strength gain during recovery makes me an even more fit dancer. The power of box jumps, squats, and weight training cannot be underestimated. My next gig in May buys me a bit of time of turning my running efforts into some power shimmies to die for. And one thing’s for sure: this marathon in the pouring rain and cold wind is going to make any other 10K at the end of a triathlon feel like a piece of gluten-free cake this summer. Bring it.
Pictures from the BMO Vancouver Marathon will be added in a couple of weeks. I don’t run with a phone or camera, preferring to treasure a sacred sense of space when I run. And not take selfies.
15 Things You Need To Know Before You Move to Seattle
[This post, originally published in 2010, has been updated on July 19, 2013. Enjoy!]
Whether you are relocating for the first time to Seattle, or you are moving into the more urban parts of Seattle from a suburb of the Seattle metro area, I am about to give you a Seattle single girl’s guide* of fifteen things you need know before you move to Seattle.
Although I was born and raised primarily in Seattle, I have travelled and lived in its suburbs, in other countries, and in other states. I have a pretty good idea of the considerations the typical person needs to know to make the adjustments to become a happy urban Seattle dweller. It is no secret that I am partial to creature comforts that women like. If you are a man reading this, but there’s a special woman in your life, this short list can be still be helpful.
Fifteen Things You Need To Know Before You Move To Seattle
Parking is expensive in Seattle. Consider living near a bus line or light rail, and purchase covered parking to store a car during the week. You will save more money by taking public transit after purchasing a bus pass than parking your car downtown. [Yes, this is still true even after the price increase of a transit fare. I can now commute from one end of Seattle to Redmond on the same fare as going down the street from the originating bus stop].
When you use GPS and online maps, make sure you enter the correct directions, such as NE, S, SW, N, W. One time, the police came to my home and insisted there was a domestic violence call they received for my address. When I asked them to repeat the address, it was for the exact same number and street name, but not the correct neighborhood because of the directional designations. [BTW, I just inadvertently conducted a test on both Google maps and Apple Maps turn-for-turn GPS, and for a little while, both were entirely wrong in getting me to a destination. Argh. Never drive on a low tank of gas].
There is no really good Chinese food in Seattle. Plan on using your passport and going to Vancouver, BC to get your Chinese food fixe. Still, brush up on using chopsticks, because sushi rules this city even more than pho cafes. [And there are plenty of "bad" sushi places, so do a little research before you head out. One of my current favs is Japonessa Sushi Cocina on 1st and Union].
Purchase three mini umbrellas to prepare for the weather. Place one in your car, your messenger bag, and your office from Fall to Spring (October through July. Really). The rainy season ends typically after the first week of July. Don’t freak out. From mid-July until the first weeks of October, you will likely experience the most beautiful weather without major humidity or the skin-searing factor. Everyone and their grandmother will eat outside in little sidewalk cafes, walk their dogs on the Waterfront, and purchase one bajillion pairs of sunglasses that were lost the previous season.
Count on walking. A lot. If you like wearing boots, consider one with low heels, or a pair of Uggs in the winter. While stilettos are still hot in NYC and LA, it won’t make it up or down one of Seattle’s many brick-and-mortar streets. Someone in an REI jacket will likely laugh at you if you trip. [I was just gifted with a fine pair of durable Keane snow and rain boots. While I sacrifice a bit of fashion chic, I can stomp away through snow, ice, and rain puddles and keep my feet dry on the way to the office, where a nice pair of dress shoes await].
Find out where all the the green spots are within walking distance of your concrete jungle. Looking at green makes people feel more relaxed. If you have the room for it, purchase flowering plants and greenery for your home. [My neighbor just installed a mini greenhouse in his home. It is cooler than cool. If I had one, there would be catnip in it for the kittehs.] Seattle’s Pike Place Market has introduced neighborhood “express” farmer’s markets in Pioneer Square this summer, which includes a stall of fresh cut flowers. Love!
Live near a grocery store and a farmer’s market, if at all possible. If you don’t, you’ll either spend ginormous amounts of money on parking, or you’ll pollute the environment to get your organic greens. [You might want to scope out where the nearest Whole Foods, PCC Market, and Trader Joe's are to get your fruits and veggies during the winter months when some farmer's markets are closed].
If you go to the Eastside, you will run into people who do not know where the major neighborhoods of Ballard, Fremont, Queen Anne, Maple Leaf, or Wallingford are in relationship to each other or downtown Seattle. You might as well tell them these are in France. Some people will never get to know Seattle like you do. [This is still true. If you plan a party and invite co-workers, be aware that some of them will not attend simply because you live across one of Seattle's bridges, even if the distance is less than 30 minutes by car].
There can be traffic at all times of the day, for no reason, or for a sporting event in SODO. The two bridges linking Seattle to the Eastside can become floating parking lots. Carry a copy of the Mariner’s and Seahawks season games, and plan accordingly. Do your best not to whine publicly about the fan mania, because people defend these sports teams like they love their dogs.[Go Sounders! Woot!]
There are more registered dogs per Seattle household than there are children. For some reason, there doesn’t seem to be enough pet services to express the glands of those dogs when you need one. Book ahead.[We're also the home of the ICanHasCheezburger lol cats people, and the Oatmeal, with a book on cats that will leave you crying with laughter. So start liking cats, ok?]
I have spent more time standing on my feet on a bus ride than in any other city in America. On only a couple of occasions have men offered me their seat. More likely, they will look up from their mobile phone after checking in on Foursquare for “Metro bus”, and then ignore you. [I recently wore a spandex unitard under my clothing for New Year's Eve. Turned out this was a very good choice, as some random hand kept trying to make its way up my skirt while riding home on a crowded bus. The hand got nothing but synthetic fiber.]
For all the talk about Seattle being one of the best city’s for online dating, it’s still a small city. Attend a few Social Media events or mixers, and eventually you’ll see all the same people. Break free by joining other groups with eclectic interests outside your normal crowd. [I have since discovered OK Cupid to be a single girl's friend in this city. It is greatly responsible for why I am not single. I am currently engaged. :)].
If you’re prone to the blues because of the rainy weather, plan your winter getaway early. Purchase a light box, or try short sessions at a tanning salon that has higher UVB settings. Talk to your doctor about Vitamin D deficiency. [Phillips has designed a blue light box that contains no UV, and some people are finding that it gives them a nice little "bling" at the beginning of the day].
Seattle has plenty of arts and entertainment to choose from, with small and large theaters, film festivals, concerts, and dancing. If you’re under 40, check out tickets with the Bravo Club of the Seattle Opera. Go online for websites advertising day and evening events, such as Seattle Night Out. We’re home to SubPop for a reason. Oh, and if you have sensitive ears, invest in a pair of custom-fitted musician’s ear plugs, which allow you to hear the music without destroying your ear drums. You can thank me later.
Seattle is a city close to water and mountains. Not an outdoorsy type? I suggest you join a club to become one. There are stores with gently used gear so you can try your hand at it without breaking the bank. Always wanted to try snowboarding? Local ski and boarding resorts have winter deals to fit your budget, including lift ticket and rentals. If you buy your own equipment, you can also purchase wall mounts to show off your equipment like works of art in your home. [Always wanted to try running, biking, or swimming? Seattle boasts all three through triathlete clubs for amateurs to professionals at all distances. I ran my first half marathon in Feb 2013, thanks great trails, running partners, and really supportive people on Social Media who are doing the same. I'll be racing in my first Sprint Triathlon in August 2013].
Got your own suggestions? Send in your comments, and tell us about your Seattle relocation experience.
[BTW, if anyone is interested in a student edition of the above, i.e. you're moving to Seattle to attend one of our universities, community colleges, or advanced degree programs, please email me offline about creating a post just for you. Edited Jan 11, 2013]
*I wrote this post when I was single. That is no longer true. I have grown by one cat (Loomi) and one Man-Geek.
Why I Am Done With OK Cupid and Online Dating
I am done with OK Cupid.
Yep, I’m done! Finished. Fine.
I am also done with online dating. Hasta la vista, baby.
At the end of a dating experience that left me disappointed and thinking about what it is I wanted out of a relationship (besides sex the night before and breakfast the next day, lol!), I thought a lot about my choices as a professional, a woman, and the resources available to make dating more positive and meaningful. After experimenting with online dating through OK Cupid for about three months, I can now say I’ve done my best, and now I’m done with it. Plain and simple, I’m out.
To explain to you the reasons why I am done involve back tracking through my experiment in using technology to find people with whom I might have similar interests and enough in common to warrant an IRL (in real life) meeting with someone. While offline dialogue can be fraught with misunderstandings, it was time to use my own training on relationships to seek one for myself, and to do this using the one method I had once felt adverse to try: online dating.
What I discovered might surprise you.
1. Prepare for the waterfall. And what a wonderful, cascading waterfall of men is it. OK, sure – there are a few men who need to work on their approach and profile, but there were so many others who were thoughtful, poetic, and intelligent. Within several hours of putting up a profile on OK Cupid, I received over 200 inquiries; within a week, I had more responders than I knew what to do with. Who knew? Apparently, not me!
Lesson learned: as a woman, you get more inquiries if you 1) ask for what you want, 2) have an attractive picture of yourself. Yes, you run the risk of being judged by your appearance. But let’s be honest here. We women are judging the men right back. Wearing baggy basketball shorts and a wife beater T-shirt in your 40′s? Next!
2. Take time to consider security and privacy. I was shocked how many people used their real name within their profiles, stating that honesty and transparency were the reasons why they are including their name and phone number in a message. Having been advised by others to do so, I decided not to give out my name or number to anyone unless after a first date, I had interviewed the person and felt moved to do so.
Lesson learned: it is fine to use a pseudonym. Any man who overreacts to your desire to remain anonymous does not understand the preciousness of the life you wish to protect. I would also advise men to do the same, as I have heard stories of women who terrorized their date after a sour encounter with a flood of angry emails, texts, phone calls, and even unannounced visits. Just say “no” to stalking behavior.
For those of us who have a stronger online presence, there are a few more steps you should consider in regards to privacy. I highly recommend you talk to someone who can advise you about safety without instilling inordinate amounts of paranoia in your head. It’s worth doing.
3. Create a strategy for finding the love that you want. My plan: 15 dates in 30 days, with the resolve to not accept second-round and elimination-round dates, if necessary, until after the first 30 days. I became an inquisitive speed shopper. During and after the date, I would take time to ask my key questions, write down observations, and record my “gut” instinct about whether or not I would want to see the person again for a second date. It’s all in an Evernote, for quick reference! I needed notes because frankly, the men were so good looking and dreamy, sweet and kind. But going on dates with different men can make it difficult to keep all the details separate, even though I have professional training to do so with hundreds of clients for my work. Keeping a few observations in writing felt like the most respectful thing to do to hold their stories straight and give myself a chance to consider each person carefully, as well as recover from the “swoon” affect of having so many bright and wonderful men engage me in a short period of time.
Lesson learned: not accepting second-round dates within the thirty days was actually harder than it sounds. I did not always honor my own plan, but I did try to stick to it the best I could. A professor once advised me to know the rules, love the rules, and therefore know where to break the rules. And so, I did. I broke my own rules. I have no regrets on that account. Still, a certain amount of restraint is in order. Dating can be exhausting.
Rather than put the decision of a second date on the shoulders of the man, I placed that decision on my own shoulders. I think it’s a often a default for many women to let the man do all the shopping, when the reality is this: women are the gate keepers. Men aren’t going to go anywhere with you if you don’t let them. If you say no, it ain’t happening.
4. Consider your feelings about dating several people at once. In my case, I chose to be transparent with all those with whom I accepted a date. Each was informed about my plan, and each man was given the option to “opt out” if he wasn’t comfortable with my man shopping plan.
I’ll be the first to tell you a few of men who inquired after me weren’t too pleased with my plan, though some of them were doing the same thing by soliciting dates from several women at once. Several told me my plan was bold. A few said they really respected my thoughtful process.
I can imagine that for a few, the thought of ending a fun date and imagining me having a date with someone else the next night could be anxiety-provoking. All of us like the idea of being chosen, even if only for the option of saying “no thank you”. The best I could do was to be fully present on each date, and give 100% of my attention to the man in front of me, enjoying him for all he is and all that his story holds, and being positive and encouraging. This aspect alone was perhaps the sweetest aspect of online dating, but I know that it isn’t for everyone. It takes a tremendous amount of presence and energy to care with that much intensity, and then to let go.
There is a certain joy I have in playing music that is unexplainable. My piano teacher, Mrs. Eleanor Hahn, used to tell me to play my notes on the piano as if I would never get to play them again, and to enjoy their resonance as each note sailed off into the universe, endlessly playing to the stars. Similarly, by singing each note of my life next to the note of the person sitting across from me, I have enjoyed the presence of these men, and I feel a some bitter-sweet sadness that it has come to an end.
5. Have an exit strategy. You should know how to graciously say “no thank you” after a date. You should also know when and how to end your online experience. These are not profiles you are dealing with – these are people who took as much risk as you do to say something about themselves. There is a certain amount of vulnerability I experienced when I clicked the “save” button, and posted my profile. The moments sending that profile “out there” were heavy, and though I’m not one prone to thumb biting, I suppose that might have been an appropriate action at the time!
You should have a sense of why you might take your profile down, change it, or update it. Having that same sensitivity towards those you interacted with says a lot about your respect towards yourself and others.
And so, here I am, done with online dating. I’m done, not just because the experiment is over, or I had a bad experience, or that no one is contacting me. I am done because I met someone special enough that I am taking my quivering heart, and my excitement mixed with a certain amount of fear that involves falling, and sliding my hand into his as my other hand is poised over the delete button. My profile has been disabled, after taking the time to wrap up some interactions with others gracefully and respectfully, and commenting on my experience with those who have drawn close enough to warrant it.
Thank you, online dating. Thank you, OK Cupid. You lost one more satisfied customer.
There were a number of you who responded both online and offline about my first foray into online dating. Please come back and leave your comments again. And for those reading this for the first time, I’d love to hear how your online dating experiences have been. I may be inclined to post an additional article about the best and worst of online dating, as many of my dates were amenable to sharing their best (and anonymous) stories of online dating happiness and horrors.
And for the rest of you who just found my blog because it is an “art blog”, I hope you’re not still scratching your head about why I’m talking about online dating here. But just in case you are, I highly recommend you re-watch the music medley of Nicole Kidman and Ewan McGregor in Moulin Rouge (starting out with “All You Need Is Love”), ending with Kidman’s whisper, “You’re going to be bad for business” (scroll up to see the Youtube clip from the movie).
I only wish she had also said how good he would be for art!
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