Getting There is Half the Fun.
August 24, 1998
How do explain color to a blind man?
Eric
Weiss The Great Floridian Race Report, Fall 1997.
Such was the statement I thought summed up all there was in triathlon, but especially what I thought of the Ironman experience. It has been 17 days since I leapt across the finish line, and into the hopelessly unmatched but caring arms of Jean, my finish line attendant. In one second I went from dreamer to doer my faith became fact and the Ironman looking glass became a new window for my view of the world. It was so powerful and so deep an experience, I have had to walk away for a bit.
Since
that moment I have had to turn away from everything that had anything to do with
triathlon. I needed to let the
pieces of that day put themselves together in my mind. The best moments came to
the fore from all the emotions I released, and settled themselves into a report
I hope will do justice to all of the people and happenings I found on my way to
Main Street on that day.
I
ask for your forgiveness in being one of the last to come home from B.C. as it
were
but I wanted to do this right.
And dont feel slighted my bike is still in pieces, too.
Speaking of my bike thats where the story begins.
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Okay
this
is it. We get it this time, right
guys?
My
eyes are stinging with sweat
my arms are numb with fatigue
and my legs are
shaking from the effort of the last push. Im
not lifting weights. This is not the run. This isnt even the ride.
Skaha Lake road is 3,107 miles to my West right now.
Its Monday, August 24
and Im in the basement of
a local bike shop with two mechanics, Ford and Mike. Tomorrow morning at
8:05am, I get on a plane for Penticton to start the last week of an epic year. This is supposed to be the fun and easy part.
Ive swum 204,176 yards, ridden 2,413 miles, and run 494.
Im as ready as I can be
celebrating the fact that the long days are
over
the taper is coming to a close! Just
6 days to go
and just my bike to pack up. Fun, right?
Just an hour or two? Hah.
After
behaving well for the entire year, my faithful steed has developed a last minute
fear of flight. The stem has mated
to the fork inside the head tube
meaning that Phoenicia is 2 inches too tall
to fit in her case. Since its a soft case, there is a work-around
weve
decided to leave the stem in, and remove the handlebars. Itll look goofy, but
I can remove the bars and get it there. The
problem is that bloody stem. In
trying to get it out before, weve managed to move it 30 degrees left
but
now its stuck there. The goal at
this point is to just get it straight so I can steer it without going in circles
in the transition area. I am NOT
enjoying my last day in Pennsylvania.
Ford
is holding the mallet between the fork blades at the crown, to keep things
straight. Mike is laying across the workstand as human ballast.
Me? Im the lucky one
I
get to grab the handlebars and wrench for all Im worth.
That way if it breaks
I can only yell at myself. This was my
choice
although at this moment, Id love to fire myself from this job.
Ready
guys? 1
2
3
I breathe out, and pull for all Im worth
. *CRACK!* Once more, the grip of a neglected steerer tube lets
go
and despite my efforts to stop, the stem whips too far. 30 degrees right. We rotate for the 4th time,
wordlessly, neither mechanic mentioning to me how bad the corrosion must be in
there to make this so freakin hard. Each
time it moves
I wonder how weak were making it in there
it just feels
BAD. 1..2..3
*CRACK!*.
Too far again
rotate. As a former mechanic I should be embarrassed for
the state of my rig
but right now Im too pissed off and tired to care.
Ready
guys? 1
2
3
After
2 hours of hoping, weeping inside, and praying
the stem has been centered in
the fork, and all is as it was when the day began. Yet as I walk up the stairs,
I cant help but think How much life is left in this thing after all
that? I try to ignore the images
flooding my mind of a fork failure on the backside of Richter
and the tumble
that would follow. Thoughts of
Thursday in my last training crit leap at me: I was a few bike lengths behind a
skin-suited demon on his Litespeed when his Carbon fork snapped
no warning, no
nothing
just blades into spokes
and 2 broken collarbones. I decide the best
course of action is to quietly turn away the visions in my head, and move on to
the tasks at hand. As Lynda and I
checked into the airport hotel that night
Im already exhausted mentally and
physically. I feel bad for my sweet saint
I had promised her that I wouldnt
be too much of a wreck race week
and here I was taking my first trip to the
zoo, and we hadnt left Pennsylvania yet.
Hopefully
in the words of Jim Lovell at the start of Apollo 13, Ive
had my glitch for the mission early.
Sleep comes quickly
for its too late to worry, now.
The
next day unfolds much more smoothly. Lynda
and I catch every plane we need to during the day (3!), and I amuse myself by
spotting the triathletes along the way in the terminals.
There are always a few of them at the windows
watching the luggage
carriers for any signs of bike case. Or those reading Runners World,
Triathlete, or VeloNews by flipping the pages at a speed faster than any human
could read
just enough to idle a nervous mind that suddenly has time and
energy to think about how crazy this Ironman journey really is to ending one way
or another.
Boarding
the last flight of the day, we stroll out to the 18 seat puddle-jumper that will
cart us to Penticton. Lynda has
been telling me that I can expect a slew of obscenities, possible whining, and
denial about getting on a plane this small since we made the reservations in
January. Im somewhat
disappointed when she looks at it and goes Hey
Im okay
this is
fine! I notice the guy ahead of me turns and smirks a wacky grin.
His legs are shaved, and hes wearing a Saeco-Cannondale T-Shirt.
I ask out loud You think youre bike will make it on this flight?
He replies No way. No
bikes on this one
but theyll truck it to your hotel room. No worries.
Eric Weiss had warned me about this
so I smile a warm smile, having
been warned about this in the past and comforted by a stranger in the present.
The vibes here are good, I decide
and the stress of yesterday continues
to leave me with each successful leap across the country.
On
the plane, I reach up 3 rows and tap the smirky guy on the shoulder: So where
you flying from? I ask.
Washington D.C. he says. Suddenly,
alarms go off in my head. I notice
the hair. Very bright, recently
dyed blonde. This guy is about 6
feet. He could survive in the
desert for quite some time. I go
with the flow and say Hello, Jason Mayfield. Im Bob Mina.
His
eyes expand to garbage-can-lid size, and with a roll of both and a cartoon-like
head wobble to clear the stars, he says to no-one in particular Why do people
keep saying that to me?
He
introduces me to Eric Austin
a quiet, fast-looking clone to Marco Pantani
complete
with shaved head, earring and goatee. Swamped
with the hopeless task of remembering 35 new names, Lynda will remember his name
for the rest of the week, and affectionately refer to him as You
know
Jasons friend, Marco Pantani!
As
the sun sets below the mountains and we bounce our way on late-day thermals into
Penticton
the plane lands with a steady *thunk*, and Jason smiles. Not
bad at all. Lynda and I gather
our bags, pick up the car, and follow the rapidly gathering troops to meet at
Earls for dinner. I dont know
where anything is, but Im following a black truck with the license plate
FE-DUDE
as I later discover is being driven by IronLegend Bruce
Grant
going after IMC number 10 this year. Once The party arrives at Earls,
the introductions start at a pace impossible to follow. Jason, Art, Bruce, Martha, Wade, Cathy
a group of faces I
dont know
but names I know so well
and suddenly, it feels right.
I
am finally in Penticton. I am
surrounded by friends. I have a beer. I have food. Lynda is here to share this with me. This is a good start. The
bike? As promised, waiting for me
in the hotel after dinner.
Sweet.
I
settle in bed (the Flamingo is my hotel
2 miles from the start
somewhat
forgettable, but good enough)
and pass out with the thought of how easy
itll be to wake up for the Sicamous dip while my jet-lag is still fresh.
I smile
and smile
and smile
Im
here.