VANCOUVER June 9th 2015. Digital Champion Karin Jackson began running in July 2008 with some good friends at work and completed her first race that fall. Over the past 7 years Karin has lost 120 pounds and has completed 13 half marathons, 5 marathons, and an Iron distance triathlon! Karin loves the social aspect of running and is grateful for all the friends she’s made on this journey. When she’s not running, she’s swimming, cycling, or yoga-ing and trying to convince others to join her! You can connect with Karin on Twitter, Instagram and on her blog.
Going for Gold at the Scotiabank Vancouver Half-Marathon. By Karin Jackson.
Recently I was accused of being goal-driven. I know, there are worse things…thinking Crocs are fashionable is one of them and thank God, that doesn’t apply. And well, it’s true. I am. I’m a big believer in goal setting. Big, scary, dare-to-dream “stretch” goals, and smaller confidence building goals. I think they keep you focused on a place you want to get to, and motivated to continue on that journey despite any setbacks or pauses along the way. For me, they’ve also played a role in moving forward, in getting better, going further, going faster, in testing my limits. Because when you reach a goal, the logical next step is to set a bigger one, right?
I started running in July 2008 with some girlfriends at work. We were following a learn-to-run program and had set a goal of running an 8k race in the fall. None of us were runners. The first day, we had to run 1 minute, walk 2 minutes, 8 times. On the fifth run interval, I had to stop and walk. I had the big October race day goal but starting out, my goal was smaller. It was about making it through each of the run intervals without having to stop and walk. And then it was about making it to that point where I could do the whole run workout without walking. Not that there’s anything wrong with walking. And if you’re worried that walk breaks make you somehow “less than” the other runners out there, let me tell you, I have been passed by walkers while I was running. When that 8k race rolled around, I ran every step of it and finished happy with having met my goal. My girlfriends? They raced doing the run/walk we had trained with and finished with faster times than me. There’s something to be said for recovery breaks. But I digress… I was talking about goals… Right.
After that fall 8k, I got it into my head that I could run a half marathon the following spring. It was the medal that hooked me. All I had to was run 21.1 km and I’d get a medal? Sign me up! In May 2009, I ran my first half marathon, finishing in 2:52, super proud and excited to do it again, but faster. That was my next goal and I ran a 2:45 in October of that year. Thinking I’d reached the limits of the speed I had in me, I had to come up with a new goal: go further. So I declared that in 2010, just after my 40th birthday, I would push back against Father Time and run a marathon. Because really, what better way is there to deny your advancing years than by subjecting yourself to a grueling physical test that will leave you hobbling around for days afterward? In case you were wondering, I finished in 6:56, just ahead of the sweeper vehicle and while much of the finish area was being dismantled. But I finished.
My goals since those first races have varied – almost always about going faster, sometimes tackling a bigger challenge (hello Ironman!), sometimes trying something new. Trail racing, anyone? In rattlesnake territory? Anyone? Bueller? And I haven’t always met my goals. And that’s OK. Alright, maybe I have had a bit of a potty mouth or shed a few tears, but it’s still OK. It just means that it’s not time to set a new goal yet. Or maybe it’s time to park that goal for a wee while, and focus on something else.
Early in my running days, a friend relayed a second hand piece of advice from a former Canadian Olympic athlete (and yes, a runner!). She talked about stepping up to events with Gold, Silver, and Bronze goals. I love that and is something I’ve tried to adopt before each race. My Gold goals are usually focused on achieving a certain time, my Silver on still netting a PB, even if I didn’t achieve my time goal, and Bronze, well usually that’s no PB, but injury free and chalking it up as a training run. You see what I’ve done there? I always podium! Incidentally, these Gold, Silver, Bronze goals can work for your training too. I always dread track sessions on my training plan. So I negotiate with myself – if I hit my pace target for all my intervals, that’s Gold, within 10 seconds: Silver, and maybe it’s just that I finish all those hard efforts without peeing a little for a Bronze. You mommies out there know what I’m talking about.
Anyone who has read my personal blog, or even my Scotia Half Digital Champion bio, knows that my goal for the Scotiabank Vancouver Half-Marathon is to run it in under 2 hours. I have come so close. So. Close. A year ago, I ran a 2:00:33. That was a PB of 3:32, and a Silver effort by my race goals. I did not celebrate. I asked myself if I could have run every kilometre just 2 seconds faster. And of course the answer is yes. Of course it’s yes. One-Mississsippi. Two-Mississippi. That much faster? Yes. I parked the sub-2 Half goal for a while and focused on something else (an Ironman), but in January of this year, I was ready to try again. Another Silver. 2:00:24. I kid you not. I’m ready for that sub-2 and I’m changing up my goals. Gold is that sub-2. But I am too close to declare a Silver performance if I PB but miss that Gold by One-Mississippi per km! No, Silver is a great race photo (unlike the one above!) And Bronze? Well Bronze would be running it hard, finishing injury free …and not peeing a little.