My birthday month is over, I guess that means I have to stop celebrating. It was a pretty great month. Here's a quick summary of all the awesome things: Marathon #20, Cinqo de Mayo drinks at my favorite Mexican place, dinner in Boston at the new Mario Batali Pizzeria "Babbo", Lawn on D night out with friends, Pub run in Waltham, road trip to Vermont to do my first mountain goat series race, my first DNF (a giant ice cream sundae, not the race), lots of unexpected birthday cards and gifts, volunteering for the Run to Remember, 2nd race in the mountain goat series, half marathon in Boston the next day, built myself a nice little patio for after work wine drinking, and enjoying that patio.
The Lawn on D thing was really cool. It's a open space a few blocks away from where I work in Boston and they have food trucks, live music, games, and various art installations including light up swings that are pretty fun. I went for the opening night and it was amazing.
Then the Sunday before my actual birthday I continued my tradition of doing something crazy and fun on my birthday weekend (duathlon, stair climb + marathon, ultra relay, 3 races in 3 places) and I ran my very first mountain trail race. I made a day of it and my friend Emilee joined me for the road trip. It was a 10K in Vermont called Sleepy Hollow and it was insanely challenging. I basically ran up and then back down a small mountain 3 times. The 3rd mile was such a steep slope that it took my 25 minutes to run it. After the race Emilee and I stopped at the Ben and Jerry's factory for ice cream. It was early afternoon and we hadn't eaten lunch yet so naturally we ordered giant ice cream sundaes. We both got the mini-vermonster, It was 4 scoops of ice cream, brownie chunks, hot fudge, and whipped cream. I am sad to say it was my very first "DNF". I "Did Not Finish" the sundae.
The following weekend I had another mountain race (part of the mountain goat series I'm doing this summer). It was a 10K up and then back down Wachusett Mountain, about 1000ft in elevation up for 3 miles and then right back down. This time instead of trails it was on paved road which I think made it a little easier. No thick mud and uneven terrain to deal with. The last 2 miles or so were on grass and gravel ATV trails, but they were dry so it wasn't bad at all. I felt great and finished the race really strong (I even beat a guy I chased for the last mile, even though he tried to kick past me in the last 50 meters). The next day I had the Run to Remember half marathon in Boston and I had very low expectations considering I run up a mountain the day before. The weather ended up being perfect and I felt really good. It wasn't a PR by any means, but I finished feeling great and was able to enjoy the rest of the day and the rest of the Memorial Day weekend not dehydrated or ridiculously sore and tired.
Monday I even did some yard work and removed a giant tree stump from my garden and placed a few pavers down creating a lovely patio space next to my porch. I got a nice bistro set with a table and two chairs and sat outside almost every night of the week with a glass of wine and a book just soaking in the sun and listening to the birds.
Although I didn't run that many miles in May, only just over 68 miles, I was too busy having fun to really notice I kinda slacked off. I need to get back into a solid routine of running and my goal this summer is to get back on my bike and get over my fear of being hit by a car AGAIN. I have 4 more races in the Mountain Goat series to complete and a couple of half marathons coming up. I'm also planning on checking off a few more items from my "to-do" list this summer. Coming up soon, I will learn to fly a plane. I might even learn to ride my unicycle or try walking on stilts. I have to look at the list again and see what sort of silly stuff I can accomplish on the days that I am not running. I'm still narrowing down my choices for a fall marathon and have a few ideas, but struggling to pick one so who knows maybe I'll do more than one or maybe I'll do something else entirely. I can't decide.
...begins with a single step. Confessions of a long distance running addict and former Fatty McFatterson.
Tuesday, June 2, 2015
Wednesday, May 6, 2015
Flying Pig recap
Really, the only "hell" we went through for the Flying Pig Marathon was the winter we had to train in, then getting a 75+ degree day for the race. Other than that, the race was amazing!
So many people asked me over the weekend, "why did you pick the Flying Pig Marathon?" The short answer is I'm addicted to marathons and hadn't done this one yet. The longer answer is I was looking for a spring marathon after I finished NYC last year and I had a short list of races I was considering and at the same time I was trying to convince my friend Lisa to run her first marathon. We had done many shorter races together and she trained to run Boston as a bandit in 2012 and bailed at the halfway mark because of the heat (wise decision). I knew she had it in her and I knew she really wanted to run one. We could have done a local race, but I told Lisa that her first marathon should be a big deal (or as it turns out a "pig deal"). Many of the local races were smaller in size, capped at 5000 runners tops. Would have been fine for me, sometimes smaller races have a lot of charm and really cool swag. But for her first marathon I told her she should run a race with 20,000 other runners and go to a giant expo and get a finishers jacket and have tons of crowd support along the course and see a new city that she had never been to. So, at some point in December I finally registered and then forwarded my confirmation email to Lisa with the words "YOUR TURN" typed at the top of the email. She hesitated and it took a little more convincing, but she finally registered too.
So, we were all signed up and now we needed to train. I planned it all out. We had 16 weeks from the time I got back from doing the Dopey Challenge in Disney and I designed a training schedule with a few micro-cycles of building mileage and then recovering. While I was in Disney running 48.6 miles I gave Lisa a homework assignment to ease her into the training and ensure she was ready to get going when I got back - run 6 miles, nice and easy, we'd done it a million times before. I did Dopey and came back and asked her how the 6 miles went....she skipped it. She said life got in the way, she was too busy. I told her training for a marathon is a big commitment and life has to sometimes take a back seat for a bit. I sort of wondered if she was really up for the challenge and if she really knew what she signed up for. It's not just a race, it's months of preparing for that race.
So, the next weekend we did 8 miles on the Newton Hills in sub-zero temperatures with a ridiculous wind chill that froze my water bottles and my face. It was tough but we got it done. Lisa worried about the time it took us to drive to Newton and then run and drive back and wanted to run closer to home the following weekend to save some time. I figured an hour travel time total for a safe place to run was not too bad and our long runs were only going to get longer and take more time. All part of training for a marathon in my book. Saturdays are not for running errands and getting things done, they are reserved for long runs, followed by a nap and maybe some food and beverages.
Anyway, the next weekend began the most epic winter of snow dumping on New England EVER and we didn't get to run at all so travel time wasn't an issue. For the next three weeks in a row, we got over a foot of snow and no end in sight. Roads were not clear and snowbanks were like mountains. Lisa began to worry about the training and I started to worry a little too, but I just revised our plan and removed a few recovery weeks and reassured her that we would be fine. We still had plenty of time. If we needed to we could even take out one of the two 20 milers and still be ready for the race in time.
It didn't really stop snowing, but it stopped snowing in huge ridiculous total accumulation amounts so we were able to get out and start our training over again. We did a continuous build with no recovery weeks 10-12-14-16-18-20. In those 6 weeks of training we ran in every type of precipitation possible. Snow, sleet, rain, torrential down pours and blizzard conditions. It was brutal. We got one recovery week and one more 20 miler in before the taper and then we were ready to race. We got one really beautiful day to do our last double digit run. 14 miles of hills. I told Lisa to use the taper to start to mentally prepare for the race. Practice visualization and mentally plan out the race, break it into small manageable chunks and think about a positive experience and a strong finish.
As the race got closer, the taper madness set in. It was sort of fun to watch it happen in someone else. I'm kind of used to it by now and don't get that nervous. I get more excited than anything. Lisa started to panic about what to wear, what to pack, what to eat. All normal things. Training her and talking her through all of it was like re-living my first marathon. It was so fun. Race weekend finally arrived and it was time to go. The forecast was less than ideal, 75 and mostly sunny, but we kept telling ourselves that the race started at 6:30am and we should be almost done before it gets real hot.
We explored a little of Cincinnati and the surrounding area, met some other runners and went to the Expo and got Lisa her official finishers jacket (not to be worn until after she finished). We had our pre-race dinner and got to bed early and planned to meet in the morning to walk to the start. I met Lisa in the lobby of her hotel at 5:15 to walk to the start area, she was checking and double checking that she had everything and hadn't forgotten anything. I said, "do you have sneakers on? Clothes on? A positive attitude? yes? there's nothing else you need."
We walked to the start and found our corral (or "Pig Pen") and used the port-o-potty one more time and then talked with some of the other runners in our pig pen. There was a cute older woman there running the half marathon from St. Petersburg, FL. She said she had done the full marathon before and the course was nice. Then she pointed to a tattoo on her calf and said she did the Ironman in Kona too. She was AMAZING. I love all the people you meet at races. It is so fun to hear everyone's story and to share your own. I tried to make the whole weekend all about Lisa. It was her day. Her first marathon and I was determined to make it awesome. I told everyone that would listen, "It's her first marathon today!" She must have felt like a celebrity.
Before we knew it, we were moving....it was time to run. We got to the start line, right at the front of our pig pen and then fireworks went off and we were running. My 20th marathon and Lisa's first. I told her not to get sucked into the excitement and bolt out of the start, just hold back and settle in. It was just another long run. The sunrise was amazing and the miles flew by. We crossed into Kentucky and then back into Ohio in a flash.
The course was so much fun. There were bands on every corner and spectators everywhere. They had "feed stations" with various candies and snacks all along the course. People had the best signs, some typical ones like "worst parade ever" and "Go random stranger" and some really funny ones like "I like PIG butts and I cannot lie" and "Humpty Dumpty had wall issues too". By far, the best part of the entire race was the biggest hill on the course between mile 7 and 9ish. There was a guy on the side of the road in camo pants with a bullhorn handing out wooden pink painted letter F's and telling people to "GET THE F UP THE HILL". It was hilarious and awesome!
After that hill I thought the rest of the course was supposed to be mostly flat with some rolling hills. It was NOT. The rolling hills were abundant and some of them were pretty steep. The miles still went by pretty fast and we felt great. We kept a good pace and even met up with the 5:30 pacer around mile 18 and hung with him for a bit. Since we started before him I figured we were still on track to be under 5:30 and he even said he was 2 minutes ahead of his pace. Then we got to mile 20....
The only way I can describe it is it felt like someone magically switched on a heat lamp right at that point. I knew the last 10K would be tough, but when it got hot and the sun was almost directly above us and there was no shade to be found, it was beyond tough. I had to stop and walk and pour water over my head at each water stop. I put ice in my armpits. I did everything i could to keep my core temperature down and it would spike right back up as soon as we started running. The water stops were not close enough together and I felt like I was cooking form the inside out. At one point they handed out wet towels and I draped it over my shoulders. That helped a lot, but it quickly evaporated and was a dry crusty towel.
We kept moving forward and I kept telling Lisa to go on without me if she felt strong. She insisted we started together and we would finish together. I tried to put the miles into perspective for her and give her landmarks from home and all our training runs to remind her how far we had gone and how little was left. We could do it. She reminded me of other races I had done in the heat and completed and tougher challenges I had faced. We were an unstoppable pep talking pair. One at a time we checked off mile by mile. And finally, I could see the "FIN.." of the Finish line banner. I told Lisa to dig deep we were almost there and almost done. I could see some shade that we could get into immediately and I pushed a little harder. One step at a time, we made it! We crossed the "Finish SWINE".
I completed my 20th marathon and Lisa completed her first marathon in 5:44. (which given the weather, was exactly where I expected us to be, somewhere between 5:30 and 5:45). It was not easy, the last few miles were a struggle, but the struggle makes the accomplishment that much more amazing and gratifying. All the months of training in snow and wind and rain, finally rewarded with an impressively heavy medal placed over my head and around my neck. We DID IT!
Now I need to decide what's next......stay tuned. I'm not sure what it will be, but I know this for sure, it will be AWESOME.
So many people asked me over the weekend, "why did you pick the Flying Pig Marathon?" The short answer is I'm addicted to marathons and hadn't done this one yet. The longer answer is I was looking for a spring marathon after I finished NYC last year and I had a short list of races I was considering and at the same time I was trying to convince my friend Lisa to run her first marathon. We had done many shorter races together and she trained to run Boston as a bandit in 2012 and bailed at the halfway mark because of the heat (wise decision). I knew she had it in her and I knew she really wanted to run one. We could have done a local race, but I told Lisa that her first marathon should be a big deal (or as it turns out a "pig deal"). Many of the local races were smaller in size, capped at 5000 runners tops. Would have been fine for me, sometimes smaller races have a lot of charm and really cool swag. But for her first marathon I told her she should run a race with 20,000 other runners and go to a giant expo and get a finishers jacket and have tons of crowd support along the course and see a new city that she had never been to. So, at some point in December I finally registered and then forwarded my confirmation email to Lisa with the words "YOUR TURN" typed at the top of the email. She hesitated and it took a little more convincing, but she finally registered too.
So, we were all signed up and now we needed to train. I planned it all out. We had 16 weeks from the time I got back from doing the Dopey Challenge in Disney and I designed a training schedule with a few micro-cycles of building mileage and then recovering. While I was in Disney running 48.6 miles I gave Lisa a homework assignment to ease her into the training and ensure she was ready to get going when I got back - run 6 miles, nice and easy, we'd done it a million times before. I did Dopey and came back and asked her how the 6 miles went....she skipped it. She said life got in the way, she was too busy. I told her training for a marathon is a big commitment and life has to sometimes take a back seat for a bit. I sort of wondered if she was really up for the challenge and if she really knew what she signed up for. It's not just a race, it's months of preparing for that race.
So, the next weekend we did 8 miles on the Newton Hills in sub-zero temperatures with a ridiculous wind chill that froze my water bottles and my face. It was tough but we got it done. Lisa worried about the time it took us to drive to Newton and then run and drive back and wanted to run closer to home the following weekend to save some time. I figured an hour travel time total for a safe place to run was not too bad and our long runs were only going to get longer and take more time. All part of training for a marathon in my book. Saturdays are not for running errands and getting things done, they are reserved for long runs, followed by a nap and maybe some food and beverages.
Anyway, the next weekend began the most epic winter of snow dumping on New England EVER and we didn't get to run at all so travel time wasn't an issue. For the next three weeks in a row, we got over a foot of snow and no end in sight. Roads were not clear and snowbanks were like mountains. Lisa began to worry about the training and I started to worry a little too, but I just revised our plan and removed a few recovery weeks and reassured her that we would be fine. We still had plenty of time. If we needed to we could even take out one of the two 20 milers and still be ready for the race in time.
It didn't really stop snowing, but it stopped snowing in huge ridiculous total accumulation amounts so we were able to get out and start our training over again. We did a continuous build with no recovery weeks 10-12-14-16-18-20. In those 6 weeks of training we ran in every type of precipitation possible. Snow, sleet, rain, torrential down pours and blizzard conditions. It was brutal. We got one recovery week and one more 20 miler in before the taper and then we were ready to race. We got one really beautiful day to do our last double digit run. 14 miles of hills. I told Lisa to use the taper to start to mentally prepare for the race. Practice visualization and mentally plan out the race, break it into small manageable chunks and think about a positive experience and a strong finish.
As the race got closer, the taper madness set in. It was sort of fun to watch it happen in someone else. I'm kind of used to it by now and don't get that nervous. I get more excited than anything. Lisa started to panic about what to wear, what to pack, what to eat. All normal things. Training her and talking her through all of it was like re-living my first marathon. It was so fun. Race weekend finally arrived and it was time to go. The forecast was less than ideal, 75 and mostly sunny, but we kept telling ourselves that the race started at 6:30am and we should be almost done before it gets real hot.
We explored a little of Cincinnati and the surrounding area, met some other runners and went to the Expo and got Lisa her official finishers jacket (not to be worn until after she finished). We had our pre-race dinner and got to bed early and planned to meet in the morning to walk to the start. I met Lisa in the lobby of her hotel at 5:15 to walk to the start area, she was checking and double checking that she had everything and hadn't forgotten anything. I said, "do you have sneakers on? Clothes on? A positive attitude? yes? there's nothing else you need."
We walked to the start and found our corral (or "Pig Pen") and used the port-o-potty one more time and then talked with some of the other runners in our pig pen. There was a cute older woman there running the half marathon from St. Petersburg, FL. She said she had done the full marathon before and the course was nice. Then she pointed to a tattoo on her calf and said she did the Ironman in Kona too. She was AMAZING. I love all the people you meet at races. It is so fun to hear everyone's story and to share your own. I tried to make the whole weekend all about Lisa. It was her day. Her first marathon and I was determined to make it awesome. I told everyone that would listen, "It's her first marathon today!" She must have felt like a celebrity.
Before we knew it, we were moving....it was time to run. We got to the start line, right at the front of our pig pen and then fireworks went off and we were running. My 20th marathon and Lisa's first. I told her not to get sucked into the excitement and bolt out of the start, just hold back and settle in. It was just another long run. The sunrise was amazing and the miles flew by. We crossed into Kentucky and then back into Ohio in a flash.
The course was so much fun. There were bands on every corner and spectators everywhere. They had "feed stations" with various candies and snacks all along the course. People had the best signs, some typical ones like "worst parade ever" and "Go random stranger" and some really funny ones like "I like PIG butts and I cannot lie" and "Humpty Dumpty had wall issues too". By far, the best part of the entire race was the biggest hill on the course between mile 7 and 9ish. There was a guy on the side of the road in camo pants with a bullhorn handing out wooden pink painted letter F's and telling people to "GET THE F UP THE HILL". It was hilarious and awesome!
After that hill I thought the rest of the course was supposed to be mostly flat with some rolling hills. It was NOT. The rolling hills were abundant and some of them were pretty steep. The miles still went by pretty fast and we felt great. We kept a good pace and even met up with the 5:30 pacer around mile 18 and hung with him for a bit. Since we started before him I figured we were still on track to be under 5:30 and he even said he was 2 minutes ahead of his pace. Then we got to mile 20....
The only way I can describe it is it felt like someone magically switched on a heat lamp right at that point. I knew the last 10K would be tough, but when it got hot and the sun was almost directly above us and there was no shade to be found, it was beyond tough. I had to stop and walk and pour water over my head at each water stop. I put ice in my armpits. I did everything i could to keep my core temperature down and it would spike right back up as soon as we started running. The water stops were not close enough together and I felt like I was cooking form the inside out. At one point they handed out wet towels and I draped it over my shoulders. That helped a lot, but it quickly evaporated and was a dry crusty towel.
We kept moving forward and I kept telling Lisa to go on without me if she felt strong. She insisted we started together and we would finish together. I tried to put the miles into perspective for her and give her landmarks from home and all our training runs to remind her how far we had gone and how little was left. We could do it. She reminded me of other races I had done in the heat and completed and tougher challenges I had faced. We were an unstoppable pep talking pair. One at a time we checked off mile by mile. And finally, I could see the "FIN.." of the Finish line banner. I told Lisa to dig deep we were almost there and almost done. I could see some shade that we could get into immediately and I pushed a little harder. One step at a time, we made it! We crossed the "Finish SWINE".
I completed my 20th marathon and Lisa completed her first marathon in 5:44. (which given the weather, was exactly where I expected us to be, somewhere between 5:30 and 5:45). It was not easy, the last few miles were a struggle, but the struggle makes the accomplishment that much more amazing and gratifying. All the months of training in snow and wind and rain, finally rewarded with an impressively heavy medal placed over my head and around my neck. We DID IT!
Now I need to decide what's next......stay tuned. I'm not sure what it will be, but I know this for sure, it will be AWESOME.
Monday, March 9, 2015
The List
It might be the roughest winter ever for marathon training, but that is not stopping me from having fun with it and challenging myself. This past weekend I went ice climbing in New Hampshire with North Ridge Mountain Guides (Yes, that's me in the photo). It was amazing. Just one of the many items on my "To-do" list. I don't call it a bucket list because I think that's morbid. It's just a list of things I want "TO DO" so it's my "to-do" list. I also managed to get in my 14 mile training run yesterday and let me just say, running after a day of ice climbing was extra challenging, my whole body aches today.
Anyway, the list started when I originally lost weight. I've mentioned it before. At first it was just things that I couldn't do because I was over a weight limit or things I wasn't comfortable doing because of my size. Now it's grown into a little of everything, simple tasks that I always say I need to get done but somehow never do them and amazing adventure vacations I'd like to take someday, but maybe can't afford right now. I talk about it a lot and share it with anyone that will listen. Mostly because it's fun to hear what is on other people's lists and it's great when people see my list and feel inspired to start their own.
Anyway, it's been a while since I published the list for everyone to see, so I thought I would post it here and share. Maybe you've done some of these things or maybe you'd like to or maybe the list will help you come up with your own things. Either way it's fun to think about, so here it is:
Anyway, the list started when I originally lost weight. I've mentioned it before. At first it was just things that I couldn't do because I was over a weight limit or things I wasn't comfortable doing because of my size. Now it's grown into a little of everything, simple tasks that I always say I need to get done but somehow never do them and amazing adventure vacations I'd like to take someday, but maybe can't afford right now. I talk about it a lot and share it with anyone that will listen. Mostly because it's fun to hear what is on other people's lists and it's great when people see my list and feel inspired to start their own.
Anyway, it's been a while since I published the list for everyone to see, so I thought I would post it here and share. Maybe you've done some of these things or maybe you'd like to or maybe the list will help you come up with your own things. Either way it's fun to think about, so here it is:
1.
Get a Passport √
2.
Be in a parade √
3.
Go skinny dipping √
4.
Get tongue pierced √
5.
Get a tattoo √
6.
Sing Karaoke √
7.
Go to a burlesque show
(suicide girls) √
8.
Build a piece of furniture √
(hockey table)
9.
Knit a sweater √
10.
Knit a pair of mittens √
11.
Sneak backstage at a concert √
12.
Meet the US President √√√
13.
Climb the Bunker Hill Monument √
14.
Go to Las Vegas √
15.
See Cirque du Soleil √
16.
See the Hoover Dam √
17.
Ride a cable car in San
Francisco √
18.
See Alcatraz √
19.
Ride in a horse drawn carriage √
20.
Run up steps at the Philly Art
museum √
21.
See a Broadway show in NYC √
22.
Go to the top of Empire State
building √
23.
Go on “the Ledge” in Sears
Tower √
24.
Save a life √
(girl at UNH)
25.
Adopt a shelter animal √√
26.
Draw/paint a mural √
27.
Complete a Triathlon √
28.
Write a blog √
29.
Boston Marathon √√√
30.
Maine marathon Oct2010 √
31.
Half marathon in less than 2
hours √
32.
Marathon in under 4:30 √
33.
Chicago marathon √√
34.
Do the Boston Stair Climb
√√√√√
35.
Do the Goofy Challenge
√√√√√
36.
Win an award √
(best costume Devil’s Chase)
37.
Finish Tough Mudder
07May11 √
38.
Go on a Century bike ride √
39.
Get published √
(Huffington Post article)
40.
Write a book √
41.
Go Kayaking
04Sep11 √
42.
Complete a ½ Ironman
11Sep11 √√
43.
Do a polar bear plunge
01Jan12 √
44.
Learn to snowboard 14Jan12
√
45.
Sit in a Jacuzzi in the snow √
46.
Zombie Preparedness Class
24Jan13 √
47.
Try snowshoeing 09Feb13
√
48.
Ride in someone else’s limo
Feb2013 √
49.
Boston Trapeze School
22Mar13 √
50.
Pay off my college loans
22Mar13 √
51.
Take a glassblowing class
26Mar13 √
52.
Wine tour in Carmel Valley
26Apr14 √
53.
Big Sur Marathon
28Apr13 √
54.
Run RTB Relay Ultra team
17May13 √
55.
Mt. Washington road race
15Jun13 √
56.
Take a Pole Dancing class
25Jun13 √
57.
Go to Walden Pond 17Jul13 √
58.
Get a caricature drawn of
myself 27Jul13√
59.
Go skydiving √
25Aug13 √ 08Sep13
60.
Berlin Marathon
29Sep13 √
61.
See the Berlin Wall √
62.
Drink a beer at Oktoberfest
01Oct13 √
63.
Learn to ride a horse
19Oct13 √
64.
Donate a lot of money to
charity 24Oct13 √
65.
Take an aerial silks class
12Nov13 √
66.
Paint n Sip wine tasting
21Nov13 √
67.
Learn to cartwheel
03Dec13 √
68.
Taza Chocolate factory tour
06Dec13 √
69.
See the Nutcracker in Boston
19Dec13 √
70.
Dopey Challenge
Jan2014 √
71.
Go cross country skiing √
09Feb14
72.
Be on the cover of a magazine
(Sports Illustrated) April 16, 2014 √
73.
Plant a vegetable garden
12May14 √
74.
Go to Provincetown, MA
10May14 √
75.
Donate my hair
20Jun14 √
76.
Swim with Sharks
21Jun14 √
77.
Duck boat tour in Boston
25Jun14 √
78.
Go Zip lining
20July14 √
79.
Replace garbage disposal
Sep2014 √
80.
Wineglass marathon 05Oct14
√
81.
Make a 6 figure salary
20Oct14 √
82.
Get a psychic reading 25Oct14
√
83.
NYC Marathon 02Nov14
√
84.
Join a CSA
05Nov14 √
85.
Pay off my Visa bill
10Nov14 √
86. Print and frame a photo I took
10Dec14√
87.
Take a self-defense class
11Dec14 √
88.
Take a stained glass class 20Dec14
√
89.
See Blue Man Group
27Feb15 √
90.
Go Ice Climbing
07Mar15
91.
Flying Pig Marathon
(03May15)
92.
Buy a
stranger a meal
93.
Give a
stranger a $100 bill
94.
Compete
in the human dogsledding race
95.
Paint
the trim in my house
96.
Retile
my kitchen
97.
Do a snowshoe race
98.
Do the USATF Mountain Goat Series
99.
Sell a
piece of original artwork
100. Give a
loan on Kiva
101. Climb Mt
Katahdin
102.
Run the Bay to Breakers race in SF, CA (May)
103.
Do the
Freedom Trail run in Boston
104.
Go to
the USS Constitution
105.
Go to
the Boston Tea Party museum
106.
Try
‘funambulism’ (tight rope walking)
107.
Learn to
ride a unicycle
108.
AFF
(Accelerated Free Fall) training
109.
Nantucket
110.
Martha’s
Vineyard
111.
Run
Beach to Beacon
112.
Walk on
stilts
113.
Catch a
fish and eat it
114.
Take a
pottery class
115.
Take a
blacksmithing class
116.
Take a
dance class
117.
Take ballet
class
118.
Learn to
Surf
119.
Learn to
play a musical instrument
120.
Learn to
speak another language
121.
Professional
pin up style photo shoot
122.
Recreate
an iconic photograph
123.
Play the
tambourine with a band live
124.
Open a
B&B or Bakery or restaurant
125.
Have
coffee/tea/beer with a celebrity
126.
Volunteer
with Habitat for Humanity
127.
Learn to
fly fish
128.
Go on a
blind date
129.
Finish a
crossword puzzle in pen
130.
Inspire
people
131.
Organize
a road race
132.
Do a
ride along with the police
133.
Ride on
a fire truck
134.
Slide
down a pole in a firehouse
135.
Go to
the 4th of July Boston Pops concert
136.
Invent
the next pet rock
137.
Learn to
shoot a bow and arrow
138.
Do an
unassisted pull up
139.
Fall in
Love
140.
Play
bingo and win
141.
Try stand
up paddle boarding
142.
Buy a
farm
143.
Buy a
stranger’s groceries
144.
Do a
high ropes course
145.
Take Masters
swim lessons
146.
Do the
Peaks to Portland swim (2.4m)
147.
Learn to
sail
148.
Learn to
row crew
149.
Participate
in a cook off/bake off
150.
Be a
seat filler at an awards show
151.
Spend a
week “off the grid”
152.
Play in
a Roller Derby
153.
Get
SCUBA certified
154.
Accept a
dare
155.
Give a
bag of food to a beggar
156.
Try
country line dancing
157.
Ring the
opening bell at the NYSE
158.
Cut a
ribbon at an opening ceremony
159.
Try
fencing
160.
Attend
opening day at Fenway
161.
Create
my family tree
162.
Ride on
an elephant/camel
163.
Read at
least 10 of the top 100 novels
164.
Learn to
start a fire with flint
165.
Take a
basic navigation class
166.
Try
boxing/train in a boxing gym
167.
Learn to
juggle
168.
Go to
Culinary school
169.
Act in a
play
170.
Be an
extra in a movie
171.
Have a
speaking role in a movie
172.
Shoot a
rifle/handgun
173.
Publish
book and donate 26.2% to DFMC
174.
Go deep
sea fishing
175.
Learn to
fly an airplane
176.
Play
Polo (Stage Hill Newbury, MA)
177.
Do a
Ghost tour
178.
Go
Hang-gliding
179.
Have
dinner at the Top of the Hub
180.
Participate
in Pillow fight day
181.
Go white
water rafting
182.
Complete
an Ironman triathlon
183.
Run an ultra-marathon
184.
Qualify for the Boston marathon
185.
London Marathon
(April)
186.
Paris Marathon
(April)
187.
Marathon in under
4:00
188.
Philly Marathon
(November)
189.
Route 66 Marathon
(November)
190.
Little Rock Marathon
(March)
191.
Catalina Island Marathon (March)
192.
Moose’s tooth marathon (August)
193.
Newport Oregon Marathon (May)
194.
Nike Woman’s Marathon SF (October)
195.
Outer Banks Marathon
(November)
196.
Niagara Falls Marathon (September)
197.
Medoc Marathon
(Bordeaux, France)
198.
Portland (OR) marathon (October)
199.
Napa Valley marathon
(March)
200.
Complete a marathon in all 50 states (7/50)
201.
Run on all 7 continents (2/7)
202.
Do a winter triathlon
203.
Win a race
204.
Empire State Building Stair Climb (February)
205.
Do the Dempsey Challenge (October)
206.
Norseman Extreme Triathlon (Norway)
207.
Do Reykjavik marathon (or half)
208.
Do the Escape from Alcatraz triathlon
209.
Do the Vermont 50 miler (September)
210.
Do the JFK 50 miler (November)
211.
Ironman Lake
Placid?
212.
RUN The Great Wall of China (May)
213.
Do the Bermuda Triangle challenge
214.
Run the grand canyon rim to rim
215.
Wife
Carrying Championship
216.
Skydive Ultra marathon (Florida)
217.
Drive
across the US
218.
Dude
Ranch trip
219.
Mardi
Gras in New Orleans
220.
Carnival
in Rio de Janiero
221.
Tomato
fight in Spain (outside Valencia)
222.
Maldives
Islands
223.
See the
Tour de France in France
224.
Swim in
the Mediterranean Sea
225.
Stand on
4-corners (4 states at once)
226.
Eat a
beignet in New Orleans
227.
Kentucky
Derby (May)
228.
Longleat
hedge maze (England)
229.
Gondola
ride in Venice
230.
Stonehenge
at summer solstice
231.
Bathe in
the geothermal spa (Iceland)
232.
See the Aurora
Borealis
233.
Easter
Island
234.
Zip line
in Costa Rica
235.
Climb an
active volcano
236.
Graceland
(Memphis, TN)
237.
Statue
of Liberty
238.
Area 51
239.
Redwood
national park
240.
Yellowstone
National Park
241.
Sydney
Bridge climb in Australia
242.
African
Safari
243.
Machu
Picchu, Peru
244.
Coliseum
in Rome
245.
Taj Mahal,
India
246.
Grand
Canyon
247.
Niagara
Falls
248.
Great
Pyramids
249.
Eifel
tower
250.
Carnival
in Venice
251.
Running
of the bulls Pamplona, Spain
252.
Mount
Rushmore (South Dakota)
253.
Pearl
Harbor (Hawaii)
254.
Pike
Place Seattle, WA
255.
Hollywood
sign in LA
256.
Space
Needle Seattle, WA
257.
Wave
Canyon Arizona
258.
Glacier
National Park Montana
259.
Florida
Keys
260.
Hike all
of the 4000ft mountains in NH (48)
261.
Watch a
sunrise and sunset in the same day
262.
Try 10
types of exotic ethnic cuisine
- Ethiopian √
- Moroccan √
- Burmese Aug2014 √
- Liberian Aug2014 √
- Vietnamese
- Portuguese
- Armenian
- ????
263.
Ride a
Segway
264.
Take a
cooking lesson
265.
Host a
dinner Party
266.
Try
caviar
267.
Play a
round of Golf
268.
Write my
Will
269.
Organize
a poker night
270.
Organize
a scavenger hunt
271.
Make
pasta from scratch
272.
Send a
care package to someone randomly
273.
Host a
theme party
274.
Buy
something for a stranger off their registry
275.
Use a
valet service
276.
Go to
the highland games in NH
277.
Do
something that terrifies you
278.
Eat
something really crazy
279.
Buy
something at an auction
280.
Go to a
book signing
281.
Learn
origami
282.
Write a
letter to yourself to open in 10yrs
283.
Start a
gratitude journal
284.
Make
something out of paper mache
285.
Give up
TV for a week
286.
Make
homemade pickles
287.
Sew
something wearable
288.
Learn
sign language
289.
See the
Tonight Show LIVE
290.
Be on
the Price is Right
291.
Try
water skiing (again)
292.
Ride a
double decker bus in London
293.
Participate
in a competitive eating challenge
294.
Throw
out the first pitch
295.
Go to
Plymouth Plantation
296.
Try
escargot
297.
Go to
Bar Harbor
298.
Run the Mount Desert Island marathon
299.
Quoddy
Head Light Lubec, ME
300.
Go dog
sledding
301.
Go
Curling
302.
Add a
lock to a lovers bridge
303.
Cook all
the recipes in a cookbook
304.
Eat a
“brownie” in Amsterdam
305.
Eat Fish
and Chips in London
306.
Learn a
burlesque routine
307.
Build a
gingerbread house from scratch
308.
Build an
awesome treehouse
309.
Walk
across hot embers/fire
310.
Dye a
portion of my hair pink
So, what's on your list????
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