Transition area and swimming start were crowded, with many colorful distractions and loudspeakers, and I almost missed the start of my wave. The Russian River is a beautiful place, and its warm calm and shallow waters were a pleasure to swimmers of all levels. At mid-course I regretted to wear full wetsuit, sweating while touching the bottom with my hands. At the end, I regretted not to have trained better: 57:32, in such ideal conditions. Of course, transition area was half empty. Little problems packing everything, and T1 was 4:19.
Best bike ever was followed by my worst run ever; cooking under the hot sun, I had foot cramps over the first four miles, followed by excessive fluid intake up to mile 6 and consequent abdominal cramps and nausea over the last six miles: 2:44:20. Last three miles were
a slow long nightmare, watching the minutes fly over my tired legs and dizzy head.
Packing everything under the hot sun and my burning rage, recovering from nausea and abdominal cramps, I felt the bitter taste of dissatisfaction. 7:16:50 was my time.
One last lesson was still to be learnt from Coach Brian Melekian, at the exit of transition area.
"Hey, are you OK?"-he asked.
"I am upset because I did not break seven hours."- I said.
"DID YOU have FUN?"- he returned.
Yes, ideed. It was fun, probably even when I was hurting.
That's why I love Triathlon. And that's why I will come back to Sonoma.
"A person who aims at nothing is sure to hit it." - Anonymous.
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