Tuesday, April 23, 2024

Training log - Week ending 4/21/2024

This week was 30 miles of running and 33 "miles" of pool-running -- training log is here.

This was marathon week, plus recovery.  The first few days were very gentle pool-running (basically just moving my legs in the water) and junk food; I'm now transitioning back into training.

In my training and recovery, I'm always balancing neurologic concerns against orthopedic/endocrinologic concerns.  This makes my training a bit different from both a) those who are just trying to manage neurologic stuff via exercise and b) runners without neurological issues.   

Proper training for runners without neurological problems is basically train hard and make sure to recover well, repeat.  There's an up and down to it.  In contrast, neurologic stuff demands steady hard work every day.  The more hard exercise you do, the more the brain thrives.  So....steady and hard.  No time off.

As I've noted before, when I'm training for a race, striking this balance requires that I really not taper too much (I'll feel more rested, but that does me no good if I'm too uncoordinated to use my legs well on race day). 

However, this also means that when I've just run a marathon, I need to depart from the neurological "ideal" of training hard with no breaks.  Monday's race was very hard on my body, and so my body and mind needed a chance to heal, even if doing so was not ideal for my Parkinsons. 

As of the end of this week, I'm feeling stiff and awkward, but still far better for the relative rest.

Monday: ~1 mile shakeout jog and then a marathon in 3:41:17.

Tuesday: Off for travel.
 
Wednesday: 90 minutes pool-running and foam rolling

Thursday: 90 minutes pool-running in the morning; streaming pilates and foam rolling in the evening.

Friday: 90 minutes pool-running.  Foam rolling in evening.

Saturday: 1 hour pool-running + upper body weights/core and foam rolling.

Sunday:  3 miles very easy (10:05) and streaming yoga + foam rolling.

Sunday, April 21, 2024

Race report: Boston Marathon 2024, April 15, 2024

I ran the Boston Marathon on Monday, finishing in a time of 3:41.17, which was good enough to win the Women's Para 35-38 division at Boston.

My original plan for the spring was the Salisbury Marathon in Maryland the week before Boston.  Salisbury would have been the perfect set up for me to run a fast marathon - it's well managed, small, and flat.  However, in December I learned that Boston was offering a new para-athlete division in 2024 with substantial prize money to the winner. And my Parkinsons disease meant that I was eligible.

So, I wrote the BAA to see if there was a way I could get in.  I had missed the September deadline to apply for Boston in the open field, and though I was eligible to be a para-athlete, I was not currently classified as a para-athlete. Since I wasn't currently classified, I couldn't enter the para-athlete division.

However, "adaptive athletes" (those with certain health conditions, including Parkinsons) were allowed to enter the marathon late, as long as they had run a marathon in under 6 hours in the past year.  The BAA invited me to enter as an adaptive athlete, with the understanding that they would hold a slot open for me in the para-athlete field if I could get classified as a para-athlete before race day.

Wonderfully, the BAA then coordinated a classification opportunity for myself and about 10 other aspirational para-athletes.  In early April my classification appointment was confirmed and we were on.  Now I just had to get classified.

***

Sign: National Classification Check-In
My classification appointment was at 1 pm on Saturday in the Hynes Convention Center (where the Expo was). 

When I arrived at the convention center, the line to enter the expo extended down the sidewalk further than I could see.  I showed my confirmation email to a guard to see if I could skip the line, since I wasn't going to the expo.  Nope - everybody had to wait in line.  I was concerned, but fortunately the line moved quickly and soon I was navigating my way to Room 109, where a big sign confirmed I was in the right place.

There was a table with two chairs behind it, and another chair sitting separately against a wall.  The separate chair looked like the waiting chair, so I sat there with Fugazi's "Waiting Room" stuck in my head. 

I read my phone for about 20 minutes, and then a woman in a BAA jacket arrived. We chatted briefly to establish that I was the first classification appointment of the afternoon, not the scheduled volunteer.  Then she shifted to stacking and shuffling forms. After they were stacked and shuffled to satisfaction, she invited me over to fill one form out and review another.  

I declined her offer to help me rise from my chair (wondering if I had just failed a pop quiz) and walked over. The first form was stuff about sharing my medical information and agreeing to be honest and try my best at anything I was asked to do.  The second listed questions that I would be asked during the examination - what sport I competed in, what were my best performances, medications...  

I signed where asked and returned to the chair of Fugazi, debating whether this felt more like waiting for a doctor's appointment or waiting for a job interview.  The classification evaluation team rolled in a few minutes later, there was some more shuffling of papers and some opening and closing of doors, and then I was invited into a large hotel conference room with several chairs and a medical examining table off to one side.  The doors clanged shut behind me.

***

At this point, it's probably helpful to outline how para-athlete classification works. It's much more than a doctor's note.

As background, para-athletes compete in different sport-specific classifications, each designated by a letter followed by two numbers.  The letter designates the sport - all track athletes (which includes marathoning) have the T prefix on their classification (it's F for field athletes - shot put, etc). 

The numbers designate the physical ability (or lack thereof), with the first number defining the nature of the impairment - for example, T1# athletes are visually impaired, T6# athletes use a lower limb prosthesis.  As a wannabe coordination impaired athlete, I was going for a T3# classification.  

The second number describes the severity of the impairment: more impairment means a lower #.

In order for an athlete to be classified, there are three questions that are considered in order:

1) does the athlete have an eligible impairment? If so, then...
2) does the athlete meet the minimum impairment criteria (MIC)?  If so, then...
3) into which class should the athlete be placed?

Taking each in turn:

Eligible Impairment 

Not every limitation is an eligible impairment - some health conditions can be significant obstacles to performance but are NOT eligible impairments (asthma, chronic fatigue, or chronic pain are good examples). There are ten eligible impairments for para-athletic sport (listed here), eight of which are physical.  Of the ten eligible impairments, I actually have three (hypertonia, ataxia, and athetosis) - all of which fall under the umbrella of coordination impairment.

If you have a coordination impairment, it must be caused by an underlying health condition in order to be an eligible impairment.  For example, you don't get to be a para-athlete simply because you have "hypertonia" (i.e., you are very stiff) because you blew up in a hot downhill marathon two days ago.  You have to have an underlying health condition that causes the hypertonia.

I met this hurdle by providing documents from my medical files documenting my rigidity and dystonia as assessed by my neurologist (that's the impairment) and showing my diagnosis of Parkinsons (the underlying health condition).  I had to provide these documents to the United States Olympic and Paralympic Committee in late March before I was scheduled for my classification evaluation.

Minimum Impairment Criteria (MIC)

Basically, is the athlete impaired to the point that it affects their athletic performance?  It's worth noting that this is a relative question, not an absolute question.  You can be an extremely fast runner and still meet the MIC (you would just be a lot faster without the impairment), or a very slow runner and NOT meet the MIC - the question is whether you are impaired, not how fast you are.  

This was what was being assessed during my classification evaluation.

Placement in a Class

If I was found to both a) have an eligible impairment and b) meet the MIC, then I'd be assigned to a class. Since I was going for a coordination impairment classification, I'd be assigned a classification of T31-38.  Of those, T31-34 are for athletes who compete in wheelchairs; T35-38 are for ambulatory athletes.  (If I didn't meet the MIC, I'd be classified as NE - noneligible).

***

Back to the conference room and the ominous just-closed doors.

I was invited over to sit in a chair by two gently smiling women.  They offered assistance and I declined (bombed another quiz).  They then explained how the hour would go - they'd ask me some questions, then examine me on the table.  Depending on how that went, they might ask me to do some stuff while they watched.

The questions mapped to the sheet I had been provided a few minutes earlier - what sports did I compete in, what were my best performances, how was I impaired, what made stuff worse (running downhill is a big one), what medications was I on.  I explained to them that I had pre- and post-Parkinsons marathon PRs (2:57:42 in 2018 versus 3:20:29 in 2023) and they seemed to find that very interesting. Then I removed my shoes and hopped on the examination table.

My job was to lay on my back and stay as relaxed as possible (like during a sports massage), so I closed my eyes and tried to zen.  One of the women grasped my right arm and raised it and began moving my wrist around.  She flexed it a couple of times at different speeds/directions, and then stated a number, which the other woman wrote down. Then onto the elbow and shoulder (each assessed a number), before shifting to my left side to do the same thing.  Then she moved onto my legs to do the same thing (more numbers).  

After we were done with the joint stuff, they stroked my feet a few times to see what happened (I know this one - this is the Babinski test) and tapped me in various places with a rubber hammer. More numbers.  

Then they asked me to take the heel of one foot, touch it to my shin right below my knee, and run my heel down my shin to the ankle.  I did this several times on each side and to my great annoyance could not seem to keep my heel touching my shin.  It was just like curling your tongue - seems simple if you can do it, but I just couldn't.  More numbers.  Apparently, I had passed this section of the examination (which I guess means I failed in one sense), because they asked me to get up and walk around the conference room.

This next phase felt like an intense physical therapy session.  They had me walk barefooted (sure).  Then they had me jog barefooted (didn't they know I had a marathon in 48 hours?).  Then they asked me to run as fast as I could (still barefoot) from one wall of the conference room to the other and back twice.

Um.....this was exactly the sort of thing I would normally refuse to do in my last week or two of taper.  But I needed my classification to run in the para-athlete division, which was the whole reason I was running Boston. And doing barefoot sprints was apparently part of classification.  So I sucked it up and sprinted as best I could.

I did the barefoot shuttle-run sprints a few times (they gave me a chance to catch my breath between rounds), and then some running drills (cariokes and side steps), some heel and toe walks and some single leg balance stuff (I'm very good at all of those), and some single leg hops.  Then they let me put my shoes back on and I repeated the shuttle-run sprint a final time.

Then I left the room for a few minutes so they could compare notes.  The conference doors opened, and I returned to the waiting chair which was occupied by the next appointment.  Someone offered me another chair so I didn't have to stand and I declined (that was three failed pop quizzes in just over an hour).

After about 5 minutes I was invited back in for the verdict.

***

As I noted above, there are four ambulatory T3# classifications.  The classifiers explained that T38 was a catch-all classification for those who met the MIC but didn't really have anything beyond that.  T37 was for those who were affected on one limb or one side of their body.  If your right leg is great and your left leg is neurologic, you are a T37.

As for me, I was a "classic T-36."  What they had noticed was that my muscles tended to respond jerkily and unevenly.  I was very "wiggly."  What made me "classic" was that I was great at doing one thing steadily (balancing on one foot, walking on my toes).  But when required to do sudden changes - things like accelerating, then hitting the brakes and pivoting to run the other way, everything got messy.  

This was consistent with my training and racing experiences - I can run well on flat smooth surfaces in uncrowded situations at a steady hard pace with a long warm-up.  But if you add uneven surfaces, or crowds, or sharp turns, or speeding/up slowing down (track interval workouts) everything gets much harder.

They explained that difficulty running downhill was also very normal for a T36 athlete.  Downhill running involves eccentric contractions to maintain your balance.  It's neurologically challenging - it requires instant and exact response from your muscles.  Uphill running has a lot more room for neurological error - you don't need as much control, just power.

So there we were - I was a T36.  Well, tentatively.  The final requirement was that they would be observing all the newly classified athletes during the marathon.  If what they saw during the race didn't match what they had seen in the conference room, they could revoke my classification (which would also DQ me from the para competition).  It was extremely rare for this to happen, but it did occasionally.

Thus, I had to describe what I planned to wear on Monday so they could pick me out from the crowds.  I did, and then I was free to pick up my number.  Now I just had to run a marathon.  A downhill, crowded marathon with plenty of uneven surfaces.

***

Relieved and on a bit of a high, I made my way over to room 201 (separate from normal bib pick-up) to grab my bib.  Getting there involved displaying emails on my phone to several very serious looking people so that I could duck under various ropes and around various lines.  

Upon arriving in room 201, I was asked if I was a support runner and responded that I was a para-athlete (this would be a common theme for the rest of the weekend).  I showed my confirmation email and explained that I had just been classified.  I waited a few minutes while my purple wave 1 bib was swapped out for a yellow bib - P156 - and then I was good to go.  

I flashed my phone+emails a few more times to duck under a few more ropes so I could buy a stuffed unicorn at the expo (black shirt this year - a good sign?) before wending my way back to my hotel in the hinterlands of Lechmere (an area of Cambridge about 30 minutes by green line T from the finish line).

***

That was Saturday. Sunday was a shake out jog and Chipotle and stretching and emails and watching Cevin Key's Sunday live chat until it was hilariously shut down by Youtube for a copyright violation (Cevin was playing one of his band's own videos....).

My instructions were to be in the lobby of a downtown Boston hotel by 5:30 am sharp on Monday to board the buses to the start. This was non-negotiable - if I missed these buses, I'd have to take the later buses used by the open field and would not be allowed to start with the para division.

This was going to be tight, as the first green line train from Lechmere was leaving at 4:56 in the morning and would get me to the hotel at 5:25.  Doable, but close.  Since I wasn't comfortable with that, I reserved a cab for 4:30 am. Admittedly super-early, but if my cab didn't show, I would still have time to walk to the Lechmere T station and take my chances with the train.

***

Race morning dawned at 3:55 am (the first of three alarms I had set).  I did my early morning routine and double checked my plastic race-issued-tote to confirm it had my racing shoes, breakfast, and anything (or everything) else I might possibly want.  My cab showed up at 4:40 which was both nerve-wracking and still got me to the hotel lobby early.  So overall fine.

I was unsurprisingly the first athlete to show up in the lobby. A nice woman in a BAA jacket approached and asked if I was a support runner. I explained I was a para-athlete and showed my bib and she pointed me towards what would be the para-athlete area.  

She also apologized several times for the hotel bathrooms being upstairs and less chairs being available than in previous years.  I assured her that everything was great, and it was.  The last time I did this race I was trudging through mud past portajohns in Boston Common to get on a school bus - everything about this morning so far (save the absence of my 2018 training partners Chris, Juan, and Larry) was a massive upgrade.

The vast lobby of the hotel was allocated between the elites, the wheelchair racers, the hand cycle racers, the duo racers, and the para/adaptive athletes. This structure made sense, as each group had different tasks to focus on before getting on the buses to the start.  Specifically, the wheelchair, hand cycle, and duo racers each had mandatory equipment checks.  

As for the para-athletes?  We just hung out, stretched, drank free coffee and water, and chatted.  Which was great, as it gave me a chance to learn more about some of the other para-athlete divisions.

Thanks to Sara Whittingham for the picture!
I had some imposter syndrome as I chatted with amputees and visually impaired runners - I was the one who looked like she didn't belong.  But they rapidly put me at ease and welcomed me.

I also was able to finally meet some of the other Parkinsons runners who were running Boston in person as para- or adaptive athletes - Craig, Joe, Renee, Rhonda, and Sara.  It was great to meet after so much online discussion in the weeks leading up to the race.

Then, at around 6:30, we exited the lobby and boarded the buses to the start.

***

One of my never-achieved running goals was to run Boston as a masters elite. A decade ago, the elite masters standard for women at Boston was sub-3. But by the time I broke three hours for the marathon, the standard had tightened. I chased faster times but was first delayed and then blocked by the triple whammy of getting hit by a truck + the covid pandemic + Parkinsons, while the standard continued to drop (it's now 2:48). So I had moved on.

But now, via weird backdoor, I was living the experience I thought out of reach.  Our chartered bus (a Mercedes - no school buses for us) rumbled towards Hopkinton while state police halted traffic for us.  

Pile of Maurten gels
Piles of gels!
Once in Hopkinton, we were treated to a heated tent that featured not just chairs, coffee, and water, but also yoga mats for anyone who wanted to stretch and mounds of free Maurten gels.  I've been fortunate enough to be included in the elite or sub-elite programs at several races over the years - I think this may be the best elite treatment I've ever personally experienced.

[it took some restraint, but I managed to NOT shovel a large # of the Maurten gels into my gear bag for later use when nobody was looking.]

[some of this restraint may have stemmed from the fact that there was never a time when nobody was looking.]

Arriving in Hopkinton at 7:30 for a 9:50 start meant plenty of time to kill, so I hung out, chatted with others, stretched, took some pictures, and ate my pre-race breakfast (rice plus Maurten+Ucan gels).  Around 9 am I headed out for a 10 minute shakeout jog.  Then one final bathroom break, a double-check that I had everything I needed and nothing I didn't, and a watch-buzz reminder to take my Rytary (Parkinsons med that helps my muscles work right - I get about 4-4.5 hours out of it, so I like to take it about 20-30 minutes before the start of a marathon).  After all of that I joined the para-athlete group to follow the elite fields to the starting line. It was already a warm and brightly sunny morning, so no need for last-minute throwaways.  Just t-shirts, singlets, and sports bras.

The experience felt somewhat like a row of airlines waiting for take-off.  First in line were the men's elite field, then the women's elite field, and then us.  Each with our own ground crew signaling where and when to go.  The men lined up, were introduced, and then took off.  The women proceeded to the line for introductions and then the gun.  I've seen (and even occasionally participated in) elite race starts before, but there was something about watching the Boston women's elite start from this close that sent a chill down my neck.

Thanks to Joe Drake for the video!

Then it was our turn.  Just like the other two groups, we marched to the front.  A few luminaries of the para field - past winners and course record holders - were introduced by name to applause.  Then we were given the 20 second warning, followed by the gun.

***

I had some pretty specific goals in running Boston as a para-athlete, and they were not time-based.  Part of this is that I was fairly certain that I would struggle to run to my fitness on this downhill rolling course even in perfect weather.  As a "classic T36" I find it much harder to run fast downhill than on the flat, and obviously I can't make the time up running uphill.  It's also challenging for me to run fast from a standstill, especially when I've been standing for a few minutes or longer.  So a marathon where the first 6 miles were mostly downhill after standing around for a while was always going to be rough.

I also suspected that the weather would be a real factor today.  However, I was confident of my ability to close a marathon hard even in rough weather.  Thus, my game plan was go out very slowly the first 6 miles or the race (at easy pace or close to it), then build into a moderate effort (easier than marathon effort) which I would hold through mile 16. The Newton hills began at mile 16 - at that point I'd hopefully be in striking distance of whomever was leading my division, and I'd chase them down and hammer to the finish to snag the win.  Hopefully.

Given this strategy, I was expecting not to lead the para field when the gun fired.  I was NOT expecting to be dropped by the entire field.  But that was exactly what happened, and within about 2 minutes I was dead last.  Sara - another T36, an all around great person, and my closest competition for the win in our division - had exploded off the line and was smoothly striding into the distance.  (Did I mention that she completed Kona last year and clearly knew something about hot weather racing?)

I'd like to stay that I stuck to my racing plan out of discipline and confidence.  The truth is that I was really struggling with the steep downhill of the first mile, and a shuffling pace was the best I could do.

Being dead last and struggling with my balance that first mile was mortifying.  I had told my family and friends I might be on TV, and now I was really hoping I wasn't.  The one positive was that perhaps the classifiers WERE watching.  Oh, and at least I wasn't starting too fast.

***

Those early miles were eerie.  Once again I was running the first miles of a marathon major completely solo, sandwiched in between the elites and the waves of open runners about to be released.  The one thing that made this a bit better than Chicago 2022 was that I felt a bit more justified in my pace and position.

The Boston course turns and winds a bit through Hopkinton, and so it's actually pretty easy to lose sight of those ahead of you if they aren't within 100m or so.  Soon I was alone - shuffling down the hill and reminding myself to stay patient and relaxed until things started working.

I would round a turn at my trying-not-to-trip-downhill pace, and I'd hear an enormous roar from the crowds on each side.  I knew it couldn't be the first wave runners (they hadn't been released yet) but there weren't any runners near me or ahead of me.  I was honestly confused as to what was going on.  Finally, I cranked my head around to look behind me and saw nothing but empty road.

It took another 10 seconds or so for me to realize that everyone on both sides was cheering for me.

It's been nearly a week now, and I'm still not sure how to map those feelings to words.

***

I shuffled and shuffled, and then my gait started to improve a bit and I could pick up speed.  After another mile my gait was better and I could start subbing in racing discipline for physical limitation.  The next few miles were about sticking to the plan, staying on top of my drinking and nutrition, and staying to the left to let the faster wave 1 runners by (the para-athletes had been instructed to stay left).

For the most part, being passed by the wave 1 runners at Boston was not as rough as it had been at Chicago in 2022.  I suspect part of this is because Boston is a far smaller race.  The only place where things were tough was the water stations. With cups on both sides of the road, staying to the left meant that wave 1 runners were constantly ducking in front of me to grab water, which disrupted my balance.  I suspect that since I didn't look like a para-athlete many of them were treating me like a competitor who had started ahead of her fitness.

***

After mile 6 things leveled off, and I relaxed into moderate effort.  I didn't feel great - I was already a bit warm with the sun blazing overhead and my breathing was tight (the pollen was very high), but things were still under control.  I took a puff of my asthma inhaler to loosen things up slightly and reminded myself that there was a lot of race ahead of me - stay in control and keep making good decisions.

The mile markers and 5K markers clicked by (a bit slower than I would have liked).  As we approached mile 10 I was surprised to see Sara up ahead.  I had hoped to catch her at or right before the Newton hills.  It became clear to me that the heat and sunshine were already claiming casualties among smart and accomplished runners.  At that point I adjusted my plan - I'd stick to moderate effort unless I saw that I needed to do something different to try to win.

So I held steady as we went down and up.  The downhills got better but still were never comfortable, and I could tell that I was shredding my quads despite my care - when you have to fight for your stability running downhill, your legs pay a price regardless of pace.

By 19 I was starting to feel rough, and "hammering" was no longer an option.  Each mile after that got a bit harder, and by mile 22 I started to notice the warning signs of heat illness - that combination of vision narrowing and heaviness, plus some weaving.  The right side of my back was also cramping and my right calf felt like it wanted to ball up.

I really wanted to win this division.  And I also knew that passing out from overheating in the final miles was an easy way to lose. So, I put pride aside and shifted to a run/walk strategy to keep my heart rate somewhat under control (when I'm overheating, walking will cool me back down, but very slow running accomplishes nothing).  

I was run-walking scared, worried that I was about to be passed behind (or perhaps already had been), so I kept my run phases pretty hard.  

Finally, I saw the turns onto Hereford and then Boylston.  I committed to running this last section of the race and managed to do so, though it felt awful.  As I rounded the turns, I noted several people on stretchers without comprehending (until I had finished) that they were runners who had passed out.

Thanks to Jessenia Delgado for the video!


With about 50 meters to go, I noticed a display scrolling information above the race clocks.  It flashed "Congratulations - Cristina Burbach - division winner women's T35-38."   And a small part of me finally enjoyed the last 50 meters of the Boston Marathon, while the rest of me remembered that nothing counted until I was across the mats.

***

Splits ended up being:

Miles 1-2: 18:20
Mile 3: 8:07
Mile 4: 8:32
Mile 5: 8:24
Mile 6: 8:16
Mile 7: 8:06
Mile 8: 8:11
Miles 9-10: 15:56
Mile 11: 8:01
Mile 12: 8:02
Mile 13: 8:04
Mile 14: 8:03
Mile 15: 8:22
Mile 16: 8:07
Mile 17: 8:28
Mile 18: 8:38
Mile 19: 8:24
Mile 20: 8:30
Mile 21: 8:52
Mile 22: 8:25
Mile 23: 8:55
Mile 24: 8:48
Mile 25: 9:24
Mile 26: 8:54
last .21 - 1:33


Post race was busy.  I saw several of my teammates in the finishing area - we'd all struggled in the heat, with sunburn war wounds to show for it.  I regrouped for a bit and then headed back to Lechmere for a shower.

A bit later, I received an email confirming that I'd won my division (there was a period where protests could be lodged, and I suspect the classifiers also had to sign off that I was indeed impaired).  So back to downtown Boston where I flashed my winner's email to five different hotel staffers to get admitted to the awards room.  

Myself and trophy

I assumed that once there, I'd just be given my trophy in a box.  I was shocked when they offered to make a presentation, complete with a wreath of olive leaves that I was allowed to keep as well.  Just one more thing that made a special day even more special.

Other notes:

  • As noted above, I did NOT shovel the mounds of free Maurten gels into my bag when given the opportunity.   Sadly, later that afternoon, when I packed my box to ship it home, I forgot to ship the Maurten gels I had brought with me (but hadn't used). Since I didn't have room in my carryon, those gels ended up left in my hotel room.  The gel gods giveth and the gel gods taketh.

  • I wore my Nike Vaporfly 3s for this race.  They have always felt great at marathon pace; however, due to both weather and strategy, I never actually hit my marathon pace in this race.  And the Vaporfly 3 is NOT a comfortable shoe at slower paces.  I think I also would have been more stable downhill in another shoe.  Noted for next time.

  • One thing I really struggled with was sleep the last two nights before the marathon.  While some of this may have been nerves, I think most of it was that I didn't taper back my Parkinsons meds the way I would normally prefer to do.  The amount of medication I need depends on how much activity I'm doing - when I'm backing off of the exercise, maintaining the same level of medication gives me insomnia.  At the same time, I didn't want to go to my classification appointment and tell them that I had taken less medication than I would on race day - I was afraid it would look like I was trying to game the system.  Hopefully I won't have to deal with that again.

  • I FedExed the trophy home - taking the padded box the trophy came in and packing that in MORE bubble wrap and an additional box.  As for the wreath?  I carried that home on the plane in a Chipotle paper bag, nervous the whole time that if I wasn't touching it some well meaning stranger would toss it in the trash.

  • In 2018, I heat-trained all winter, and we got the coldest most miserable Boston ever.  This year I made a point to do workouts in cold heavy rain and wind, and we got bright sunshine and heat illness.  I'm now taking suggestions on what sort of weather to train in next winter.

  • It was really great to meet all the other runners with Parkinsons.  I like to think that at this point I know a fair bit about running and racing.  But I still have a ton to learn about how to do either with Parkinsons.  I'm really fortunate to have the runners I met at Boston, plus my friend and teammate Ethan at the Michael J. Fox foundation, as resources and trailblazers from whom I can learn.

  • I am struggling to express just how much I appreciate the BAA and Bank of America offering the T35-38 para division.  And while the VIP treatment we received was awesome, what I am most grateful for is the opportunity they provided me to compete against my peers. 

    When you get diagnosed with one of these neurodegenerative conditions, everyone assumes that you should be happy just to be able to run and to finish a race, especially a marathon.  The implication is that one is no longer (and should no longer be) a competitive athlete.  For me, this was the hardest part of being diagnosed.  It was also something I chose to ignore, since high amounts of intense aerobic exercise are the best way to slow Parkinsons, and racing motivates me far more than slowing disease progression does.  I might be slower, but I still wanted to compete.  I wanted to continue to be me.

    By offering this division, the BAA and Bank of America sent a clear message: they saw me as a competitor, not an inspirational story. I never had the sense that anyone felt sorry for me the whole weekend, just that they respected me. It was huge - both for me, and for many other people with Parkinsons who may have abandoned competitive sports out of well-meant but misguided societal peer pressure to live a softer, gentler life. I hope those people will see the respect offered by the Boston Marathon and realize that, though they do face obstacles they didn't before, their competitive life is not a relic of the past.

Sunday, April 14, 2024

Training log - Week ending 4/14/2024

This week was 36 miles of running -- training log is here.

Just the last week of training before a Monday marathon (which always makes for an awkward training log).  The one thing of real interest is that I got classified as a T36 para-athlete on Saturday, based on my Parkinsons disease.

(Yup, I know I haven't yet explicitly stated it here, though I did mention it on Instagram - my runner's dystonia that I've been battling for years ended up being Parkinsons disease - I was diagnosed in early 2023.  Which is not cool in a lot of ways but does make me eligible to be a para-athlete.  Back to the story.)

To explain very quickly - para-athletes are divided into different categories, based on the nature and extent to which their performance is limited.  For track athletes (including marathons), all classification categories start with a T (for track).  Then the number afterward describes the nature/extent of the impairment.  Categories 31-38 are for the coordination-impaired, with categories 31-34 being wheelchair and 35-38 being standing (or running) athletes.  Since I have coordination challenges that are not limited to one side of my body or one limb, and that are significant, I was classified as a T36. 

The whole classification process was really interesting - it took about an hour and involved paperwork, a short interview, an orthopedic/neurological examination (lots of tapping on stuff and bending joints and "touch this body part to this body part"), followed by me doing some calisthenic and PT type exercises while they watched and graded me.  I'll likely touch on it more in either my race report or a separate blog post.

In the meantime, I'm now in the para-athlete field for tomorrow.  This will be an adventure.

Monday: 8 miles very easy (9:17).  Foam rolling in evening.

Tuesday: 8 miles with a track workout of 6x800 in 3:32, 3:30, 3:24, 3:21, 3:22, 3:20 (recoveries of 2:3x-2:5x in between).
 
Wednesday: 6 miles (9:21) plus drills and two strides, followed by upper body weights/core. Foam rolling in evening.

Thursday: 6 miles easy (9:07) plus drills and two strides; sports massage and streaming Pilates in afternoon.

Friday: Off for travel

Saturday: 4 miles very easy (9:40) in morning; para-athlete classification in afternoon. 

Sunday:  4 miles very easy (9:30) plus two relaxed strides in morning, yoga in afternoon.  Foam rolling in evening.

Wednesday, April 10, 2024

Training log - Week ending 4/7/2024

This week was 45 miles of running, 9 "miles" of pool-running and 1000 yards of swimming -- training log is here.

The week started with a hiccup, when I showed up for the team track workout but had an awful morning gait-wise.  My legs were just too stiff to move fast, so I ended up pulling the plug.  A sports massage that night helped stuff calm down a lot, and a second try on Wednesday morning went much better despite having been run in a gale.

Because I ran the Tuesday track workout on Wednesday, I pushed the Friday tempo workout back to Saturday, which ended up being a ridiculously windy day.  My tempo was a slightly slower than I would have liked, but I'm fairly certain that the wind was costing me at least a second or two each lap.

I'm now in my last week of taper before Boston.  I've learned over my last three marathons that I do better when I do a bit more running (and definitely longer workouts) pre-race than I used to do.  When I do too little, I show up at the start line very fresh but unable to manage my legs enough to run to their potential.  Coming in with a slight bit of fatigue and some recent fast running seems to hit the right balance of rest versus neurological coordination for my best race.  So hitting that balance is the theme for the upcoming week.

Monday: 9 "miles" pool-running and streaming yoga.  Foam rolling in evening.

Tuesday: 10 miles with some random strides.  Sports massage in evening. 
 
Wednesday: 10 miles, including a track workout of 2K, 3x1200, 2x200 in 9:24, 5:23, 5:18, 5:16, 52, and 52 (2:2x-2:3x recovery between each). Foam rolling in evening.

Thursday: 6.5 miles very easy (10:10) on trails plus some leg strengthwork; streaming Pilates and foam rolling in evening.

Friday: Upper body weights/core and 9 miles very easy (9:15) plus drills and strides.  Foam rolling in evening.

Saturday: 9.5 miles including a 6400m track tempo in 28:20 (7:16/7:07/7:04/6:54) followed by leg strengthwork. Foam rolling in evening.

Sunday:  1000 yards swimming.  Foam rolling in evening.

Sunday, March 31, 2024

Training log - Week ending 3/31/2024

This week was 63 miles of running and 1500 yards of swimming -- training log is here.

My plan was to race a 10K as a tune-up, but that plan got more challenging when only 10 people showed up for the 10K with none of them near me pace-wise.  As soon as I realized that I was finishing second overall (first woman) no matter how slowly or quickly I ran, I lost my race fire and turned it into a "let's practice running at marathon pace or faster while navigating a crowded trail (the earlier 5K had a lot of walkers still on the trail) and some inclines/declines."

I did get some good practice in, so that was good.  I also realized that I need to wear an older (less bouncy) pair of Vaporflies in Boston since bouncier shoes make declines even more challenging.  I also need to make sure to stay warm pre-race - I got chilled before the start of this race, which made the first miles very stiff.

Monday: 8 miles very easy (9:13) and streaming yoga.  Foam rolling in evening.

Tuesday: 10 miles, including a track workout of 800, 1200, 1600, 1200, 800, 400 in 3:39, 5:23, 6:58, 5:07, 3:21, 1:40 (recoveries in 2:3x-2:4x, except for 5:14 recovery after the 1600.  Followed with leg strengthwork.  
 
Wednesday: 7 miles very easy on trails (9:45) and 750 yards swimming. Foam rolling in evening.

Thursday: 8 miles very easy (9:24) plus drills and strides; streaming Pilates and foam rolling in evening.

Friday: 4 miles (9:29) and 2 miles (9:29).  Foam rolling in evening.

Saturday: 10 miles, including a ~10K tempo/race thing in 46:44 (7:49/7:46/7:37/7:22/7:16/7:04/1:50 for last .27).  Followed with streaming pilates.  750 yards swimming and foam rolling in afternoon.

Sunday:  14 miles easy to moderate (most averaging 8:47, last 2 miles picked it up to 7:42 pace), followed by upper body weights/core.  Foam rolling in evening.

Sunday, March 24, 2024

Training log - Week ending 3/24/2024

This week was 58 miles of running, 1000 yards of swimming, and 15 "miles" of pool-running -- training log is here.

Just two workouts this week - long intervals on Wednesday and a marathon effort workout on Saturday.  The long intervals went decently, confirming that I'm pretty much where I wanted to be fitness-wise at the end of this cycle. 

Saturday's long run was in pretty tough weather conditions - steady to heavy rain and 45 degrees, with a brisk wind. But...it could be like that on race day, so I sucked it up and ran.

Unfortunately, I figured out about 20 minutes into it that my raincoat was no longer waterproof.  And of course, once I was soaked, I just got colder and colder (marathon effort is not enough to keep one warm) and the run suffered.  The paces were not what I had hoped for during this last workout.  On the other hand, I run this workout at marathon effort - and I'm pretty sure that I'd be happy with the paces I held during that workout if I was racing a full marathon in that type of weather.

Despite the above, I'm still happy I did the workout on Saturday instead of waiting until Sunday. There are multiple reasons to run marathon pace/effort workouts, including both fitness and practicing the skills needed to run a good marathon.  And managing bad (but safely runnable) weather is a very important skill to have and to reinforce via practice from time to time.

I'm now two weeks out from Boston (some would call it three, but I tend to round down - I guess I should say "two weeks from race week").  Next week I'll race a 10K as a tune-up, and then we're into the final taper.  Which will not be much of a taper.  For me these days, a longer taper that really doesn't cut back that much seems to work better.  That's actually one reason I did my only 20+ miler last week instead of this week - since I'm not going to cut back much during taper, I wanted more time between my peak week and the race.  This way, the extra week or two between the two can counter-balance the minimal reduction in volume.

Dailies:

Monday:  6 "miles" pool-running.   Foam rolling at night.  

Tuesday: 8 miles very easy (9:30) plus upper body weights/core; foam rolling in evening.
 
Wednesday: 12 miles, with a track workout of 3x3200 in 14:14 (7:12/7:02), 13:57 (7:02/6:55), and 13:44 (6:56/6:48).  Recoveries of 4:42 and 4:50.  Followed with leg strengthwork. Foam rolling in evening.

Thursday: 9 miles very easy on trails (10:05) in the morning; streaming pilates and foam rolling in evening.

Friday: 12 miles very easy (9:24) plus drills and strides, followed by upper body weights/core. Foam rolling at night.

Saturday: 17 miles, including a marathon effort workout of 2x5 miles at marathon effort with one mile float between. Splits were 38:39 (7:44 pace) and 39:19 (7:52 pace) with a mile in 8:23 between the two.  Followed with leg strengthwork.  Foam rolling in evening.

Sunday: 9 "miles" pool-running and 1000 yards swimming.  Foam rolling at night.




Sunday, March 17, 2024

Training log - Week ending 3/17/2024

This week was 72 miles of running and 9 "miles" of pool-running -- training log is here.

This was my peak week of training for Boston, including my only 20+ mile run (I find I don't need very many of these, and one "secret" to training and racing well as you get older is not doing any more workouts than you need).

As seems consistent for me, the interval workout was rough, while the tempo and long runs went better.  Daylight savings means that the official team track workouts are starting in the dark again, and I struggle to move my legs until it gets light.  I think the splits on the 800s show when the sun rose.

I shortened the recovery intervals for Tuesday by tucking behind a faster group.  As background - the team trains in groups, meaning that you start each interval when others start (keeping life easy for the coach timing the workouts).  However, a lot of the recoveries end up being pretty long - about the same as the interval duration or longer.  Since I struggle to move my legs fast enough to get my heart rate up, I need to keep the recoveries short, or else my heart rate drops too low during recovery and I never get my heart rate up to where it should be during the workout.  

So...on Tuesday I deliberately tucked behind a group that was running faster than me.  By finishing about 20-30 seconds behind them and starting with them, I kept the recoveries shorter and finally managed to get my heart rate up during one of these workouts.

Friday's tempo felt smooth (I ran it solo and started after the sun rose).  I was really happy with Sunday's long run.   The things that really challenge me are a) trying to run faster than a shuffle downhill; b) running downhill in supershoes; c) uneven footing/rough pavement and d) dodging people and other things while running.  So...I forced myself to deal with this by wearing Vaporflies for the long run and doing the marathon effort work on the Capital Crescent (rough sections and bridges and tunnels and kids on scooters and dogs on leashes and people walking 5 across and cyclists zooming in all directions) with 5 of the 7 miles being downhill.

And...I handled it decently.  Not perfectly.  But well enough that I have a lot more confidence that I will be able to run the downhills at Boston at more than a shuffle.  (Yes, I have run Boston before, and I know that you don't want to run the downhills too fast. But that's not a big risk for me right now.)

Monday: 8 miles very easy (9:34) and streaming yoga.  Foam rolling in evening.

Tuesday: 11.5 miles, including a track workout of 7x800 in 3:36, 3:36, 3:30, 3:25, 3:21, 3:17, 3:14 (recoveries mostly at 2:1x-2:3x; one outlier at 3 minutes).  Followed with leg strengthwork.  Sports massage in afternoon.
 
Wednesday: 9 "miles" pool-running, 500 yards swimming, and upper body weights/core. Foam rolling in evening.

Thursday: 9 miles very easy on trails (9:52); streaming pilates and foam rolling in evening.

Friday: 10 miles, including a tempo on the track in 28:06 (7:12/7:04/6:59/6:51), followed by 2x200 in 51 and 50 seconds.  Then leg strengthwork and 500 yards recovery swimming.  Foam rolling in evening.

Saturday: 12 miles very easy (9:12) followed by upper body weights/core. Foam rolling in afternoon.

Sunday:  21 miles progressive, split as the first 7 miles averaging 9:17 pace, the next 7 miles averaging 8:21 pace, and the next 7 miles averaging 7:35 pace, plus a 1/2 mile cooldown. Followed with injury prevention work and foam rolling in afternoon.

Sunday, March 10, 2024

Training log - Week ending 3/10/2024

This week was 56 miles of running, 1000 yards of swimming, and 18 "miles" of pool-running -- training log is here.

The first part of this week was recovery from my half-marathon.  By Thursday I was ready to ease back into something light; since I had just raced a half-marathon (the ultimate in tempo workouts) I didn't see the point in doing something at tempo pace on the track.  So instead I headed over to Iwo Jima to do hill repeats at marathon effort (a lot easier than the normal hill effort).  

Doing hills at marathon effort (especially the downhill part) gave me an opportunity to practice managing my gait on the downhills, which is likely going to be my biggest challenge there.  I wore supershoes for the workouts (the Puma Deviate Elite) both because I find wearing supershoes makes downhills HARDER and because they protected my legs some from the workout so I could continue to recover from the half-marathon.

Verdict: I am better at downhills but still have work to do there.

Saturday's marathon pace workout (on flat Hains Point) went more smoothly.  Marathon pace seems to be locking into around 7:30 pace on flat ground in good weather.  I guess we'll see what that translates to at Boston 2024.

Separately, I've started adding some swimming back into my week.  I had dropped it because I've been really pressed for time, and swimming made the most sense to drop, given that it's not my focus sport and requires a fair amount of preparation time.  But...since cutting it out it seems like my lungs aren't as strong, so I think I need to find the time somehow to fit it in.

Dailies:

Monday:  6 "miles" pool-running and 500 yards swimming.   Foam rolling at night.  

Tuesday: 7 miles very easy (9:18) in the morning; streaming pilates and foam rolling in evening.
 
Wednesday: 7 miles very easy (9:27), upper body weights/core, and then 2 miles very easy (9:39) plus drills and strides. Foam rolling in evening.

Thursday: 11 miles, including 8 "Iwo Jima" hills at marathon effort, followed by leg strengthwork.  Foam rolling in evening.

Friday: 12 miles very easy (9:27) plus drills and strides in the morning; streaming yoga in the afternoon and foam rolling at night.

Saturday: 17 miles, including a marathon effort workout of 2x5 miles at marathon effort with one mile float between. Splits were 37:39 (7:32 pace) and 37:15 (7:27 pace) with a mile in 8:16 between the two.  Followed with leg strengthwork.  Foam rolling in evening.

Sunday: 6 "miles" pool-running and 500 yards swimming.  Foam rolling at night.




Tuesday, March 5, 2024

Training log - Week ending 3/3/2024

This week was 53 miles of running -- training log is here.

Just a place holder for a race week.

Monday:  8 miles very easy (9:20) and strides, followed by upperbody weights/core.  Foam rolling in evening.

Tuesday: 9.5 miles, including a track workout of 1600, 4x800, 400 in 7:05, 3:26, 3:23, 3:18, 3:16, and 96.  5:14 recovery after the 1600 and recoveries of 2:4x-3:2x after the 800s.  Sports massage in evening.
 
Wednesday: Upperbody weights/core and 7.5 miles very easy (9:24) plus strides.  Foam rolling in evening.

Thursday: 5 miles very easy on trails (10:27); streaming pilates and foam rolling in evening.

Friday: 7 miles, including an uptempo 1600 (7:10) plus 2x200m in 51 and 51.  Foam rolling in evening.

Saturday: Off except for DIY yoga and some foam rolling in the afternoon.

Sunday:  3 mile warm-up and then a half-marathon in 1:34:11.   Foam rolling in afternoon.

Monday, March 4, 2024

Race Report: One City Half-Marathon, March 3, 2024

 I ran the One City Half-Marathon yesterday, finishing in an official time of 1:34:11 1:34:05 (the race results were corrected, which is cool, since the corrected result matches what I had on my watch).

This is my second time running this half-marathon.  I mostly repeated last year's pre-race logistics, since they had worked so well.  I left my house at 7:45 am on Saturday to drive down and avoid traffic, and stayed at a hotel in the Hampton Convention Center area (10 minutes from the parking at the finish line).  Grabbed my bib, grabbed Chipotle, and then did some yoga, stretching, foam rolling, and reading before hitting bed.

Like last year, I also woke up at 3:45 am to give myself enough time to eat, digest, and stretch.  However, I waited an extra 15 minutes before leaving my hotel (5:00 am instead of 4:45 am) because last year I had arrived at the start line a bit too early and had frozen for 20 minutes before it was time to start jogging.

Leaving my hotel at 5 am meant that I had parked and made my way to the start line buses by 5:16. I got on a 5:25 bus, which got me to the start line at 5:55 am (I note all of these timestamps because it's really helpful to look back at these notes in future years, or to point others towards these notes when they ask me about a race).

There was one notable change from last year - the high school gym was open!  Had I known this, I would have left my hotel much earlier, so I could have gotten to the race start and then done my stretching and mobilizations.  Noted for next year.

I did hit one snag, which was waiting for approximately 5 minutes outside a porta-john before realizing that it was unoccupied but locked from the inside.  Fortunately, I was able to find another one with no line and do the needful.  The quest for porta-john entry did cut into my warm-up time, but I actually found that I didn't need that much today (just a bit less than 3 miles).

Then I lined up at 6:50 for the 7 am start (one nice thing about smaller races) and we started right at 7.

***

One of the challenges I have when trying to race with neuro issues is that my legs don't behave themselves well when I start running.  My ankles get really stiff and locked and it usually takes about 10 minutes for things to start working correctly.  Unrelated to the above (or at least it was until now) I have an ankle strengthening exercise I do a few times a week where I do two sets of 45 seconds of each of the following - walking on my toes, walking on my heels, walking on the outside of my feet, and walking on the inside of my feet.

I've noticed at the gym that after I do this exercise my ankles and feet feel really good. So, I decided to try it on race morning.  When I arrived at the race, I walked back and forth in the parking lot on toes/heels/outside/inside for about 6 minutes before putting on my Vaporflies and starting to warm up.  I looked very odd, but I am very odd, so it mapped and I didn't worry too much about it.

And...(returning to the race start)....it seemed to help.  The first mile of the race was still challenging, but nowhere near as bad as it was last year.  I felt much more stable, which meant that it was easier to handle the chaos of the first few minutes of the race, as well as the gentle inclines and declines.

***

As always, I paced my race by feel, rather than looking at pace, heart rate, running power, etc.  (I actually wear a heart rate strap and a pair of foot pods because I think it's fun to look at that stuff later, but I ignore it for the race).  My plan was to ease into the race over the first mile or two, then hold at just below my lactate threshold (which I can feel like a bright red line) before pushing over that line in the final miles. I've run my half-marathons that way for years and it's always worked well; the only thing that has changed is the paces.

It took about two miles for things to really smooth out, and then I hit a rhythm and held it.  I have to admit that I didn't feel awesome - my breathing was tight during those middle miles.  Post-race, several other people told me they felt the same, and Accuweather indicated that mold levels were high, so I suspect that may have been at play.  Whatever - it was what it was.

The middle miles passed without too much of note - there were a few literal speed bumps on the road that I had to navigate (two of them I was able to avoid by running to the side) and a recurrence of my favorite sign ("you are very far from the finish" - accompanied by a recliner and a six pack).  

I was running with a water bottle and hadn't yet drained it, so there was no need to grab my water bottle at the elite water stand, but I did so anyway for the heck of it.  At this point in my running "career" (said jokingly since I lose money every year on the endeavor), opportunities to run in an elite field are dwindling.  So I wanted to take advantage of all the perks, even if I didn't need them.  I was less than graceful in accomplishing this task, and it probably cost me 2 seconds, but it was worth it for reasons independent of hydration.

Then we hit mile 10 and it was time to slip above the red line for my final approach to the finish line. 

I had mapped out the course and knew particular landmarks that correlated to distances from the finish line. The gentle turn from Warwick onto Huntington was about 2 and 2/3rds of a mile from the finish line, and a mark to open up a bit more.  

About this time, my right shoe started to feel loose.  Annoyingly loose.  I briefly considered and retie it, and then I decided that would be a silly decision, and that I needed to keep going unless the laces actually came undone.  I was close enough to the finish that the 15 seconds spent fixing my shoe would exceed any loss in speed from the loose shoe.  I did my best to ignore the shoe and push forward.

Another right and then a left marked 1 mile from the finish line - my cue to empty the tank.  I passed one woman and focused on another just ahead, while also counting down streets (every 5 streets was a quarter mile) and trying to ignore my right shoe.

I made up ground steadily on the woman ahead but wasn't able to quite reach her before we hit the final turn to the finish line about 100m ahead.  She found another gear after that turn, while I was already at my top end speed, so that was a battle lost (but still worth the fight).    Then I crossed the finish, noting 1:34 and change on the clock.  I was a bit disappointed but also satisfied.  I had hoped to run faster than my recent workouts predicted (and faster than I ran here last year), and instead I ran pretty much what I would project from my workouts.  But...I had run a well-executed race and gotten a solid tune-up for Boston, so there was a lot to be satisfied with independent of time.

Manual splits ended up being:

Mile 1: 7:36
Mile 2: 7:10
Mile 3: 7:13
Mile 4: 7:06
Mile 5: 7:20
Mile 6: 7:17
Mile 7: 7:12
Mile 8: 7:13
Mile 9: 7:12
Mile 10: 7:08
Mile 11: 7:03
Mile 12: 7:01
Mile 13: 6:48
last .11: 48 seconds.




So pretty much according to plan, with 1-2 miles to ease in, 8 miles at a hard effort, and then the last 3 miles building to a hammer (my heart rate chart also indicates this pacing plan pretty clearly, I think).  I just wish those middle miles were closer to 7 flat.  (I actually wish they were closer to the 6:30s of a few years ago, but such is life).

Overall, a fun day, and I'm glad I did this.  Additionally, I get a really big fitness boost from racing half-marathons (I respond really well to tempo work, and a half-marathon race is the ultimate tempo workout) so hopefully I'll be reaping the benefits from this race in the final weeks of my Boston training.

Other notes:

  • The weather was perfect for a half-marathon - high 40s to low 50s with a slight breeze. Unfortunately, it warmed up slightly for the full, which was a shame.
  • Once again, I ran the last 5K of this race faster than I ran a standalone 5K three weeks ago (21:40 versus 21:59).  My last mile of this race was also faster than any 1600 I've been able to run on the track this year.  Just how my body works these days - that's why I'm prioritizing the longer races.
  • Once again I ran this half-marathon at the exact same pace I ran for a 4 mile (6400m) tempo during training.  Like I said, I pretty much ran exactly what I would expect based on my training.
  • This race performance age-graded to 77.4 %.  One of my goals is to get back above 80% for age-grading (I was 82-87% a few years ago, depending on the distance).  Not there yet, but it seems in reach with work and luck.
  • I took 17 back home instead of I-64 to I-95.  Yes, it might add 30 minutes onto the trip if there aren't traffic back-ups on I-95 (which is unlikely to be the case).  But this route is just so much mentally easier and smoother and more enjoyable than the near certainty of sitting on I-95 in stop and go traffic on a Sunday afternoon.