My head has cleared (a bit) and my emotions have calmed down
(slightly) - enough anyway, I think, to start to tell of how the greatest weekend of my
life unfolded.
I feel ready to tell how wonderful things happened even as I stood at the start, music pumping, adrenaline
rising, atmosphere building. Amid the thousands of runners lining up with me, I
felt a tap on my shoulder and a fellow runner introduced himself. He had seen
my story on the marathon website and had recognised me by my Running With Diane/Breast
Cancer Care vest.
We shared our stories and two people who clearly would never
have met each other had it not been for running and not been for Rotterdam
joined hands across an ocean. It was a pleasure to meet Luis Tapia Soto, my
new-found friend from Mexico who has his own cancer charity initiative back
home and is doing fantastic work around the world, running and raising the
profile of his cause, Kilometros y Sonrisas (Miles for Smiles). Learn more at www.facebook.com/kilometrosySonrisas?fref=ts
Then, we were off. The mission had begun. And ahead of me
lay a defining 42K. The first few steps were full of nerves, but soon everyone
settled into their rhythm and as the giant Erasmusbrug came into view at the
end of the first kilometre, we were all just glad to be on our way at last.
There was something in the back of my mind even then,
though. Something which had been bugging me for 12 months. I knew, somewhere up
ahead, was a stretch of the route which ran through a particularly vocal,
raucous and ultra-supportive section of the crowd, a stretch on which I was
first told last year that I would not finish the race in time and that I should
withdraw.
The crowd here are amazing, no question about that. It’s
hardly surprising. The stretch is home to some of the city’s most popular bars
and the guys started “cheering” runners a good few hours before I approached.
It’s one of the best sections of the route – but sadly for
me it was as far as I got in 2014. That part of the route had been playing on
mind the whole week. I could see it in my mind’s eye, I could hear the marshal’s
car approaching and easing up alongside me and I could still hear the marshal’s
voice explaining that I should stop.
Only one thing would banish that awful memory and that
terrible feeling, that moment when my heart sank – it was to make sure I gave them no opportunity
to do the same thing again.
So when I hit it over 30 minutes sooner than last year, I
allowed myself a relieved smile. I squeezed between the cheering hordes who had
now narrowed the space available to run through to a single file. High fives,
slaps on the back and mine and other runners’ names chanted in encouragement –
an incredible feeling when everything is going right.
And at that stage, everything was going right. I had taken
it easy (as instructed!) early on, sticking to a metronomic pace for the first
third of the race. I knew my legs were stronger but I hadn’t expected to go
quite this smoothly. I had underperformed at Trimpell three weeks earlier by
going off too quickly and blowing up after 17 miles, struggling to complete the
last three. Now I had passed 17 at Rotterdam with plenty left in the tank. Just
by taking it smoothly and gently.
I knew there would come a point where the wheels would start
to creak and wobble and look as if they were about to come off but it wasn’t
happening yet. I was over 20 minutes inside my Trimpell time when I hit 20
miles in Rotterdam.
At 21, I started to feel it, then worse at 22 and 23 before
I steadied the ship. I thought at one stage (20 miles) that I would finish well
within the time limit. At 23, I wasn’t so sure and at 24 and 25, it looked
increasingly unlikely. I know I had the consolation that I had already ensured that I would be allowed to finish. However long it now took me to reach that line, I knew I would receive a medal and official time - even if I was over the
cut-off mark. But that would have been settling for less - after all, I had set my heart on coming in under five-and-a-half hours and I was desperate to do it..
Then Diane stepped in. She must have decided I needed a lift
for the last mile because suddenly, seemingly from nowhere, two members of the
volunteer support crew, a young woman and a man, ran out and greeted me, asking
me if I’d let them run with me to the finish.
Miraculously the pace stepped up –
as shown in the pace chart analysis of the whole race. Steady for 30K,
gradually slower for the next 10K and then up again for the last 2K.
These two wonderful young people – it is now my mission to
put names to these faces and get back in touch to thank them both properly –
were my saviours. Sent, I have no doubt, by Diane to get me home inside the
closing time.
My legs felt lighter for them being there and it was a joy
to have them running alongside.
They shared with me the mile of the race I had lived over and
over again in my head for nigh on 18 months. A slow right turn onto a main
strip called Blaak and then the famous sharp right onto the legendary
Coolsingel for the last 600 metres to the finish in front of the Stadhuis (City Hall).
I had dreamt this moment a thousand times and now here I
was. With Diane filling every thought and matching every step, I ran through
the banks of crowds still there at the finish - still cheering every runner after over five hours. It was the most exhilarating experience of my life.
When someone asks you why Rotterdam, just tell them about
the buzz, the atmosphere, the crowds. The entire city comes out to celebrate you running and to give you
support every step of the way. Nothing else happens in Rotterdam for those magical hours. Every single person in the city joins in. Even the last few runners home are treated to a
hero’s welcome from them, nearly three and a half hours since they cheered the winner
over the same line.
When someone asks me why Rotterdam, I only need to mention
one name. My inspiration, my guide, the love of my life, my driving force. My Diane.
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