Sunday, August 9, 2020

Go, ninja, go.

Go, ninja, go. UPDATE April 16, 2011 Five years ago I ran the Boston Marathon bandit and posted a mile-by-mile account in this blog entry. It was pretty exciting. My parents drove up from Harrisburg to watch me. My friends painted their chests to read GO SAM! I ran it with Mitra, my best friend from college and probably my best friend from MIT to this day. We got our picture on the front page of The Tech. It was kind of cathartic; I was a chunky kid in high school and standing at the finish line of the Boston Marathon looking up at my time made me feel like I was standing on the threshold of a new world of possibilities, like I could really achieve anything in the world, mental or physical, if I just put some time and training into it. In the past five years Ive done a lot of thinking, Ive done a lot more running, Ive read a lot of accounts from legitimate Boston runners, Ive run (and paid for) a few other marathons, and Ive come to the following conclusion: running the Boston Marathon bandit is a bad idea. Not only do bandit runners like me steal physical resources (water, road closure, medical facilities) paid for by the entry fees of legitimate runners, we also steal the prestige that those runners earn by training hard enough to qualify for Boston. Theres a reason that Boston is the most famous, most elite marathon in the world, and the only one that anyone runs bandityou have to qualify for it. You have to run really fast just to get into Boston. I feel kind of dumb now thinking that my moment of ultimate catharsis came standing under a clock that was displaying a time over an hour slower than the qualifying time. What I did wasnt impressive. Qualifying for the Boston Marathon and running it officiallythats im pressive. So, yo, Im talking to you, Greater Boston college student thinking about running bandit. Maybe you know some people who did it last year. Maybe your friends have promised to take the bus out to Wellesley to cheer you on. Maybe your parents promised to come up and watch you. Maybe youre thinking about training really hard. Maybe you have something to prove to yourself. Dont do it. If you want to run a marathontheres a nice one in Cape Cod. Take the Bolt Bus down to New York (not the Chinatown bus, that one might explode). I bet your hometown has a nice marathon for you to run, and then your parents wont have to make the trek all the way up to Boston. Youll still get in great shape, youll still feel great at the finish line, youll still have a lot of people cheering you on, and I promise that it will all be a lot more fun than wandering around the woods in Hopkinton at 6 AM trying to sneak by cops. If you absolutely, positively must high-five your 8.01 TA in Kenmore Square, there are a lot of charities for whom you can raise money to circumvent the qualifying time. Youre still not quite really running the Boston Marathon, but, hey, at least some money went to a good place. Ive thought about taking this entry down in the past, because now, five years later, I have a completely different outlook on everything that I talk about here. But, well, getting into running, doing some training, and running Boston bandit wasfor better or for worsekind of a defining experience of my time at MIT. So, anyway, take this for what it is: a snapshot in the life of a twenty-year-old student who didnt know much about the world, who was doing something that really made him excited when he was twenty, but who would come to think better of it by the time he was twenty-five. DID YOU KNOW? Ultramarathon runner Pam Reed of Tuscon, Arizona was the first person in history, of either gender, to run 300 miles without sleep. It took her almost 80 hours. But me? Well, I just ran one marathon. One more entry about it and then we can get back to my regularly scheduled blogging. Heres some pictures and a mile-by-mile recap of what was going on inside my head. Mile -20 Back at MIT, I have a delicious breakfast of three servings of steel-cut oatmeal (introduced to me by my personal hero Alton Brown) and an Odwalla Bar. Mmm, carbs. This was after an Italian dinner at Bertuccis the night before, which I began with an appetizer of 5 complimentary rolls. Mile 0 So, apparently they have people in army fatigues along the side of the road to deter bandits. After meeting up, quite fortuitously, with fellow bandit Kyle 08, who had considerable experience in banditry, we headed far enough down the road that there were no longer any armed guards, waited for the second wave of runners to come by, and hopped in somewhat arbitrarily around number 13,000. Oh my God, were running the Boston Marathon! said I, giddily. Mile 2 So, since it was 55 degrees outside, and since I had sent an e-mail for my floor asking for their support in Kenmore Square, I thought that it would be a good idea to wear my long-sleeve, heavy cotton, black, one-size-too-small floor shirt to the marathon. Its pretty cool! It says Conner 2 on the front and Varsity Apple Bake on the back. Note that I am emulating MITs mascot, Tim the Beaver, in the above photograph. anyway, around the beginning of Mile 2, I had stripped it off and tied it around my waste. A few minutes later, I chucked it into some lucky Hopkintonians yard. Mile 4 Mitra had the forethought to go to The Coop and buy a red MIT tank-top on Friday. So, the entire race people along the sidelines were yelling, Yeah, MIT! and I pretended that they were cheering for me too. Anyway, Mile 4 was the only time somebody yelled Yeah, shirtless guy! I was so happy that I jumped up into the air with my arms outstretched. Somebody else yelled, Yeah, Jumpy! And that was all the cheering that I would personally get for a while. Mile 5 This is about the first time we heard, Yeah, Mit! Pronounced as in baseball mitt. We never figured out whether its a Bostonian colloquialism or if somebody thought that this was really Mitras name. Mile 7 It was around here that I realized that there are really going to be people lined up the ENITRE ROUTE cheering you on. Okay, maybe its like that for every major marathon in the world but, seriously, this thing is huge! Non-stop yelling. Live rock bands playing Rush (heh)! Girls chanting the Michael Jackson classic Come on, dont stop now! Dont stop til you get enough! in unison! People hand out orange slices, ice pops, sponges, little popsicle sticks covered in vaseline (I was really disappointed to find out it was this, and not popsicles). If you ever feel down or lonely, just run over to the side of the road and get a high-five from one of the hundreds of people there. Thats what really made this such an awesome experience for mefeeling beloved by tens of thousands of people along a 26.2-mile stretch of road in Massachusetts. Because I am a famewhore. Mile 13 This is Wellesley. Now, Ive been to Wellesley once before, and its beautiful, but I didnt really know what to expect here. Basically, Wellesley is one giant scream for about a mile and a half. The entire population of the college, seemingly, comes out, pressed against the barriers in a crowd as dense as a neutron star, screaming for you in one cacophonic birdsong, and screaming extra-loud for your college shirt. About a third of them are carrying posters that offer you hugs, kisses, or other things in that vein. One even offered kisses specifically to gay runners, and I thought briefly about taking her up on the offer, but figured that she probably wanted to kiss gay girls instead. Mile 15 This is where I had lunchtwo bites of an Odwalla SuperProtein Bar, half a banana provided by friendly spectators, and gatorade. Sams Mom said that she would never take food from strange people along the Boston Marathon route, but I guess were really pretty diffrerent people anyway. Mile 17 So, this is where the hills start, and where I first uttered, Come on, Mitra, if we just get up this hill its downhill the rest of the way. Technically true, yes, but said hill lasted for about the next three miles. This is also where I hit the wall, so to speak. Id run 17 miles before without really breaking down or anything, so I was wondering what it would feel like. Basically, it felt like somebody threw a curtain over me, and then I felt like I was falling asleep, as I was running, and then I started crying. But only for a few seconds. I dont know, your mileage may vary. Mile 18 This is where the guy in the gorilla suit jumped in, and I said, Come on, Mitra, we cant let the gorilla beat us! Hes not even a biped! Because I had done a 20-page paper on the evolution of hominid bipedalism for AP Bio, and so I know such things. Mile 19 If memory serves me correctly, this is where they started handing out PowerGel or something like that. Whatever it was, it was basically a tube of frosting spiked with caffeine. I was impressed; they have about 10 different kiosks so you can choose your preferred flavor and dosage of caffeine (maximum). Well, I guess if you were a Mormon or something. Mile 21 So we just got over the so-called Heartbreak Hill, where Sams Mom and my dad were waiting from around 2 PM to the time we finished. Sams Mom didnt end up seeing us, but it is a big, busy, loud road, so its pretty much understandable. She does, however, claim that she took a picture of somebody who she thought looked like me, except that she didnt think I had a beard when she dropped me off. The only such picture that I could find on my camera was this one: however, Sams Mom is a pretty smart cookie, and I think she would also have enough sense to realize that I was probably not juggling for the entire marathon, like that guy was. Mile 23 This was the first Sam! I heard. My entourage in Kenmore Square had planted Maryann 06 and Russell about two miles upstream at Tufts to let them know we were coming. I ran over to the side of and said You guys are awesome! I love you! I get the impression thats how most people feel around Mile 23 of a marathon. Mile 25 Mitra said I. Lets take a break before Kenmore Square. I want to look happy if there are a lot of people there to see us. So, we walk for about a minute and a half, and then start on our (relative) sprint to the finish. And, well, I guess we looked okay, all things considered: Mile 25.5 The first person I saw was Javier 08, who was waiting at the front of the crowd to get a picture. Then I saw all the people Mitra invited. I pointed them out, so we could run over and give them all high-fives, since that side of the street was conspicuously empty. I turned around to yell You guys are awesome! then looked forward again to see all the people I invited. Bobby 05 ran alongside us for a little bit, but we lost track of him in the crowd. Anyway, his girlfriend Alicia 06 way outran him anyway. Then we saw people who I didnt even know were coming and told them they were awesome too. Then we saw one of Mitras TAs. Then, at the end of the Kenmore Square crowd: Gina 09, Ginas two siblings, who I never actually met either before or after the marathon, and Moria 06. Wow. Thanks, guys. Mile 26 And this is where JKuo yells Mitra! and jumps over the huge iron barrier separating the Hereford Street spectators from the runners, and then starts running in front of us, backwards, taking pictures. And thats how I got my new facebook picture: now, without sounding egotistical, I think that Mitra and I would usually would be able to run faster than a girl in a track suit carrying a backpack and a camera pack, taking pictures, running backwards. Maybe it was the other 26 miles of running, or maybe it was my desire to have this occasion photojournalized for all eternity, but whatever the cause, our slow, slow approach to the finish down Boylston Street was one of the most joyous occasions of my life, and one of the only times Ive ever cried tears of joy, or at least I would have, but I think my body had produced so much sweat that it didnt have any more tears left. And then I realized that 55 degrees was still pretty cold to be walking around in only track shorts, if youre not running a marathon or anything. So, I grabbed a free Subaru shirt from some promotional booth, and headed off into the Boston sunset as a seasoned marathoner and walking advertisement. Okay, guys. This time last year the only German word I knew was Schadenfreude, and I had never run more than 1.25 miles in my life, and that was only so I wouldnt fail gym and get an angry letter from Marilee Jones asking why I was failing classes . Now I just ran the most famous marathon in the world last weekend, and in just about a month Ill be leaving for a sweet internship with Bayer thanks to the efforts of the MISTI program. Im living dreams now that I didnt even think Id have when I got to college. You dont have to go to MIT to do that, but it couldnt hurt.

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