After the Winter Death Race, I wrote a post about how its easy and fun to be in the lead at the Death Race; the real test of strength and self, however, is when you have fallen (or feel like you've fallen) helplessly behind the leaders. Given my success at the WDR and CMC and other recent races, it's a feeling that was foreign to me, and one that I could only talk about in the abstract.
Until now.
For the first time, late Saturday night and the wee hours of Sunday morning, I experienced what it felt like to be at the bottom of the pack. In last place. And in that position where you start to question whether you are going to make it through because there is SO MUCH ahead, and people are SO FAR ahead of you.
Team 7 and our pink kayak |
20 minutes later, this would turn to tears when the dreaded cheating penalty came |
So we turned in our stake with no problems, and set out to chop our wood, still in the lead. My wood was split and I was ready to haul it over the mountain back over to Amee, when Peter Borden, a race director, called out all the cheaters and asked for us to fess up if we had done so. As many of you know, I race with Bryan Selm, who is perhaps the most honest and stand-up Death Racer I know. So we looked at each other and knew immediately that we needed to confess.
Cheaters in the duck pond. |
Back at Tweed, the reality of how much time I had lost started to set in. Bryan and I made the strategic decision to carry all 12 logs in one trip back over the mountain to try and make up time. This meant, however, extreme slow going. So as the sun rose on the third day, we passed by racer after racer coming the opposite direction, already done with their wood and heading onto the next task (or the task after that). Inside, the feeling of defeat started to build. I was hours and hours behind. In fact, I believe Bryan and I were dead last.
It was a position I'm not used to being in, and one that I brought on myself. I suppose I had set expectations for myself: I'm a competitive girl, and I was in it to win it. As I sat there on the mountain crying, I was reminded that I was being a stupid brat. No, seriously, a stupid brat and a crybaby. And I was. I was pouting, I was whining, and I was self-righteous for no good reason. I was disgusted with myself. And I was told that I could quit, or I could nut up, change my attitude, and move on. I couldn't change what happened, but I could control how I behaved the rest of the race. And at that moment, I let go. As soon as I let go of the idea that I HAD to win this thing, and accepted the fact that all I could hope for is to finish it, the proverbial weight lifted off my shoulders. Hours behind, and with nothing to lose, I decided that finishing was the only goal, even if it meant finishing in last place. (still a finish, eh?)
From there on out, I hauled ass as much as possible, making time up where I could, but generally focused on moving through the tasks and ignoring the laundry list of things that lay ahead of me. It killed me to see other racers so far ahead of me, to pass by them and figure out what they were on to next, and how many more tasks I had to go. But in that battered emotional state, I learned how strong I could be. It would be easy to give up at that point, to throw in the towel, to say eff it and go have a beer, given the long road that stretched ahead. The thought never crossed my mind. I stepped forward with a new humility, and a new outlook on the race.
So when I finished the roll at 60 hours and some change, and Joe told me I took 2nd place in women, I must have looked at him like he had 3 heads. "Impossible," I thought, "I was SO far behind." But, as I said earlier, things in this race change on the drop of a dime, and in the end, perseverance will pay off. So I could care less about the kettlebell and the place -- what I am proud of is finishing despite feeling like the odds were stacked against me.*** Finishing despite creating a hole so deep I felt like I couldn't dig out of it. And finishing despite that voice inside my head yelling at me for being so far behind for so long.
It's a lesson I needed to learn. And a humility that I needed to experience. And I'll carry it with me to the next race and beyond.
*Side note: as we were changing the stake number, another racer came up and threatened to rat us out unless we gave him half the stake. Call it hunger and exhaustion, but at that point, the race had turned nasty and I didn't like it. Perhaps the closest I've ever come to blows with someone, but we gave him half. Unclean hands all around, I suppose
**Other cheaters had hauled their wood back over the mountain BEFORE confessing to cheating. So while they had to endure the duck pond, they already had their wood back at the farm and didn't lose that much time. So, let's be honest, there was no incentive to confess as early as we did. It's something that I'm still mulling over in my head, but something that I do not regret.
***Self-created, I suppose.
Great read
ReplyDeleteGreat post! Ironically, I think my team was #5 in the Great Stake Hunt! No hard feeling or grudges though! You did what you had to do as did we. We figured (incorrectly) that there were only a few stakes and our chains were being yanked. So we grabbed someone else's stake (after about an hour plus of searching and not seeing ANY stakes), broke it in half and shared with another group, wrote our number and turned it in. When Roger called for cheaters to step up I hung my head and stepped forward to admit my crime. I don't know if my teammates for that challenge did the same since we separated after it. Going to Amee Farm for our punishment, getting lost on the way there and seeing others moving on with tasks was really demoralizing. I managed to finish and though I was exhausted I still managed to joke and laugh through the hay rolling...my crew says I actually lost it for awhile as I laughed uncontrollably for a really long time at one point near the smelly bucket :)
ReplyDeleteCongrats!
this is the kind of thing....people often times say doing a marathon or an adventure race, or on an even greater level with this race, is crazy. It can be fun, and challenging, but it doesn't really have anything to do with anything. But there's so many things you learn about other people, and yourself, and how you'll react in different situations. Too many people don't understand how relatable it is to "normal" life.
ReplyDeleteBig time respect for how you handled things, and congrats for not just finishing but finishing as well as you did. Hope my VT race goes as well next month!