Boston Marathon 2013… 2014
I wrote the first half of this post on the eve of the 2013 Boston Marathon but never published it. Here’s an updated version on the eve of Boston 2014.
I’m a runner because my Mom is a runner.
I think I was in the 9th grade the first time I ever went for a run on my own (I think we called it “jogging” back then). This was directly inspired by my Mom who had run the Boston Marathon a few years earlier. “Running Boston” is a big deal where I am from (I grew up in Medway, MA — 12 minutes away from the marathon’s starting line in Hopkington). My Mom went on to run Boston two more times before I’d finish college. Seeing her run Boston made me want to run Boston.
I was never a track star or any type of athlete really — I’d just do my 3 mile runs now and then. Back in 2000, I decided I’d train to run the Boston Marathon as a “bandit” (aka: without a number). I worked my way up to a 10 mile training run (one of those “it’s January, 5 degrees out, wind whipping from the Hudson River” training runs) before I convinced myself that my knees were so messed up from snowboarding (at the ripe old age of 24!) that I’d never be able to do it. So I just gave up.
About ten years later, in 2010, our friends at Camp Interactive (an amazing charity that helps inner city youth learn technology skills) asked if I wanted to run the NYC Marathon for them as a fundraiser. Now, this was about a year into building Foursquare — arguably one of the harder challenges I’ve ever taken on — so while my first thought was “I tried the marathon thing before and I don’t think I can do it”, my second thought was, “If I can handle Foursquare, I’m sure I can handle a marathon”. So I trained. And I ran it. And I finished. 4:19. Not the best time (I had to walk a little), but hey, I finished it.
I went thru this again in 2012 when Camp Interactive offered me a fundraising spot for the NYC Triathlon. First thought: “Sounds great, but I can’t swim.” Second thought: “If I can handle Foursquare, I’m sure I can survive a 1 mile swim”. So I trained. And did it (though I almost drowned… long story). And I finished.
And then in 2013, Camp Interactive offered both Chelsa (my wife) & I the opportunity to run the Boston Marathon. No hesitation this time — “I’m in”. Getting a number for Boston is no easy task (normally you have to qualify, and to qualify you have to be fast, which means you ran a sub-3:10 marathon elsewhere). But a spot on the Camp Interactive fundraising team was a Golden Ticket that gave me a chance to run without qualifying, a shot to run the race I watched my Mom run way back when, the one that that inspired me to start running in the first place. Running Boston was a big deal to me.
So, we trained and we ran it. Chelsa ran on a bum knee, yet still ran super fast. I felt good until I hit Heartbreak Hill and then struggled from mile 20 on. I had to walk a bit, but I was going to finish. I really wanted to finish.
I was about a 1/2 mile from the finish line when the bombs went off. I didn’t hear them (I was wearing headphones) or see them (I hadn’t yet turned the corner from Mass Ave onto Boylston). I was one of the first 5 or so people to get stopped in what ended up being a mass of about 4000 people who didn’t get to finish the race. None of us knew that a bomb went off — the police officers who were blocking off the street said there was “an accident” and we all assumed there was a car crash somewhere on Comm Ave. Why else would you close the course mid-race? Why else would you close the finish line? Runners started piling up — people who just ran for 4 hours / 25 miles coming to an abrupt stop with nowhere else to go, nowhere to walk. The sun was just starting to disappear over the top of the buildings and it started getting cold really fast. We had no idea what was going on so we just stood there. Probably five or ten minutes pass.
I first heard about the bombs via a Twitter DM (Direct Message) sent from my buddy Ryan Sarver. “Are you okay? Bombs at finish line.” Whoa bombs? Finish line? Cell service was super spotty. I wasn’t getting any texts. Most runners didn’t have their phones and the few that did had little battery by this point. A few minutes later, a mass of people started running in our direction… many crying, some covered in debris. I started getting texts from friends, “Are you okay?” “Is Chelsa okay?” “Are your parents okay?”
I had no idea where Chelsa was, except for that fact that she was in front of me somewhere. We got split up around mile 16. I’m thinking: “Bombs at the finish line? I’m 4 mins from finishing the race… and Chelsa can’t be any more than 10 mins ahead of me…. !!!” <btw, my stomach just dropped as I typed this and all the emotion comes rushing back> And somewhere in that half mile from <here> to <finish line>, my Mom, my Dad and my cousin Michelle were all waiting to cheer us on for that last stretch down Boylston Street.
Another five minutes pass. I got a text message from Michelle first. She was okay. And within a few minutes she was able to confirm that my Mom & Dad were okay too. A few minutes later I got a text from Chelsa that she had already crossed the finish line and was okay, though she was in a panic because she didn’t know where she was (she doesn’t know Boston at all) and couldn’t get in touch with anyone. Now, what just took you 5 seconds to read took me about ten minutes to piece together — which was a pretty awful ten minutes. And while I’m trying to send and re-send all these texts, I’m also letting people borrow my phone so they can call and text their friends and families to tell them they’re okay, and my phone is also is buzzing like crazy from my friends texting and calling trying to figure out if I’m ok, and on top of that a bunch of reporters keep calling trying to get me to report live from the scene (ugh — they had my phone number from Foursquare stuff — this was especially annoying).
Meanwhile back in NYC (and elsewhere I suppose), I had lots of friends keeping tabs on my progress thru Foursquare & Twitter thanks to an app (UberCheckin) I set up to auto-checkin at each mile marker. Those following along on the internets were seeing my checkins and tweets as I made it past Mile 22… Mile 23… Mile 24… Mile 25… but then… nothing. My brother was one of the people who was following along on Twitter, heard about the bombings (via Instant Messenger from our buddy Will), noticed I never made it past mile 25 and felt some of what I felt being stuck at Mile 25. I wasn’t able to get my first “I’m ok” tweet out until 3:07 (about 20 mins after the bombs went off) which can feel like forever when you take connectivity for granted.
I ended up stuck at the corner of Mass and Comm ave for about 45 mins. After lots of dropped calls and texts-that-barely-sent, my cousin Michelle & I found each other. She was crying and she had dust & debris from the bombs in her hair. Turns out she was standing directly across the street from where both bombs went off.
Together we walked to Symphony Hall — the rendezvous point chosen over the course of 50 dropped text messages. Somewhere along the line my Mom found Chelsa. Mom & Chelsa then found my Dad. When we all saw each other for the first time I cried. My Mom was holding Chelsa who was shaking from being in shock. They were crying too. We were all a mess.
I never saw the finish line. Or any of the blood or smoke. We got in the car, drove home and listened to the radio. We all went to dinner together at the Bellingham House of Pizza and sat there and watched the news for two hours. Mom & Dad drove us back to NYC the next day and I went straight to the office. I sat at my desk numb and aimless until I made myself go home. I cried at my desk twice that week. I was trying hard to just get back to normal and it wasn’t working. Chelsa and I both got hit with the Norovirus later that week. We ended up laying on the couch for five days straight just watching the news.
Fast-forward a few weeks. I got a package in the mail from my Mom with the marathon medal I wasn’t able to pick up in person. (She grabbed it for me a few days after the bombing — runners who didn’t get to finish were still given an estimated completion time and awarded a medal). I wore it under my sweatshirt for a few days.
Fast-forward another month. In May, I got an email from the Boston Marathon folks breaking the news that anyone who didn’t get to cross the finish line would get the chance to run again in 2014. I was surprised by the number of people who asked me “Are you going to do it? Are you sure? Aren’t you worried?”, but no hesitation this time either — 100% in.
Fast-forward a year later. Last weekend I caught a post on Tumblr honoring both the victims and the survivors [original]. It hit me much harder than I expected emotionally. It’s what motivated me to write this post.
So here we are today — 4 days out. I’m ready to run it again. I’m ready to finish it this time. I’m hoping finishing will give me some closure / relief from whatever is still left over from last year. It’s clear that there’s still some unresolved shock and grief that I didn’t deal with a year ago and I’m looking forward to letting that go.
This race means a lot to me. I’m fired up for it.
As mentioned, I’m running to support Camp Interactive — an organization full of great people dedicated to helping inner city kids learn technology and leadership skills. If you can, I’d love it if you’d be willing to chip in a few bucks to support their cause. Every donation helps.
http://www.crowdrise.com/CI2014BostonMarathon/fundraiser/dens
Footnotes:
- If you want to follow me me this year (2014), I’m #34001 — you can sign up for text message updates or just follow my checkins/tweets.
- Chelsa’s officially finished in 3:56:16. The bombs went off just as she was getting the medal around her neck. She is going to try to run again on Monday, but she doesn’t have an official number.
- My Mom ran in 1991, 1992 and then again in 1996 (the 100th anniversary of the Boston Marathon). She finished all 3 times.
- Here’s the archive of my tweets from April 15, 2013.
ps: Thx for the inspiration, Mom. xo ☺