Put me in the osteoarthritis group. I was diagnosed with it today. It is primarily my hands and the thumbs seem to be the worst. I do have quite a bit of foot pain which I have chosen to ignore and did not mention to the doc. I will say it is very painful in my hands and I have come close to tears a few times. Doctor I saw was pretty blunt and asked if I had any disability insurance. His words were "your screwed"
I spent some time feeling sorry for myself and I could feel that in my stomach which was weird. I cant really afford surgery so I am doing the internet research thing right now. Looking for Natural treatments and hand exercises. I do quite a bit of self defense training and I spar twice a week. I am very concerned about that hobby but I plan on continuing.
Looking at Turmeric Curcumin as my first stab at treating myself.
I did get some kind of injection in my left hand today for a trigger finger.
Bummer dude, that sucks.Put me in the osteoarthritis group. I was diagnosed with it today. It is primarily my hands and the thumbs seem to be the worst. I do have quite a bit of foot pain which I have chosen to ignore and did not mention to the doc. I will say it is very painful in my hands and I have come close to tears a few times. Doctor I saw was pretty blunt and asked if I had any disability insurance. His words were "your screwed"
I spent some time feeling sorry for myself and I could feel that in my stomach which was weird. I cant really afford surgery so I am doing the internet research thing right now. Looking for Natural treatments and hand exercises. I do quite a bit of self defense training and I spar twice a week. I am very concerned about that hobby but I plan on continuing.
Looking at Turmeric Curcumin as my first stab at treating myself.
I did get some kind of injection in my left hand today for a trigger finger.
Thanks @MAC@SteveC702 Do you know what time est you run this weekend? Not sure I'll be able to follow along, but if I'm home when you're racing I'd like to.
Been a pleasure watching you this season. Can you remind us where you need to finish to qualify?Thanks @MAC
My race goes off at 5:20 PM EST on Saturday night. (so 6:20 PM CST, 7:20 MST, 8:20 PST, etc...)
There should be a live internet race feed, I think. It'll probably pop up on their website on race day. http://goldcoastmarathon.com.au/
I got bib number 26. Race is pretty stacked with it being the last and only race left for marathoners to try to earn a spot to Rio. Conditions looking great right now though and really hoping it stays that way. (low/mid 50s at start, and high-50s/low-60s at finish)
Thanks, and yepBeen a pleasure watching you this season. Can you remind us where you need to finish to qualify?
Edit to add: think I found it. 2:19 or top 10 finish. Is that correct for this one also?
. Also need to be one of the first 2 Taiwanese runners across the line since there's already one qualifier. The top 2 Taiwanese entrants have run 2:16 and 2:18, although both are dealing with issues and those PRS are 2-4 years old, so it *should* be a matter of getting the time.If that recent HM is any indication, you're looking primed my friend. You've more than earned this - just time to execute!Thanks @MAC
My race goes off at 5:20 PM EST on Saturday night. (so 6:20 PM CST, 7:20 MST, 8:20 PST, etc...)
There should be a live internet race feed, I think. It'll probably pop up on their website on race day. http://goldcoastmarathon.com.au/
I got bib number 26. Race is pretty stacked with it being the last and only race left for marathoners to try to earn a spot to Rio. Conditions looking great right now though and really hoping it stays that way. (low/mid 50s at start, and high-50s/low-60s at finish)
  Cool, thanks. And that forecast sounds great. Kick some ###.Thanks, and yep. Also need to be one of the first 2 Taiwanese runners across the line since there's already one qualifier. The top 2 Taiwanese entrants have run 2:16 and 2:18, although both are dealing with issues and those PRS are 2-4 years old, so it *should* be a matter of getting the time.
 Duck, not sure if it's just me but when I click on your blog link it's simply a link to the top of this page rather than your blog. Mind reposting the link?Most of the diet fixes are for the rheumatoid since it is an autoimmune disorder.
Duck, those stories are just unbelievable. I can't even imagine what those races are like. You and I are participating in different activities!
Do you have bib #s for these guys?Thanks, and yep. Also need to be one of the first 2 Taiwanese runners across the line since there's already one qualifier. The top 2 Taiwanese entrants have run 2:16 and 2:18, although both are dealing with issues and those PRS are 2-4 years old, so it *should* be a matter of getting the time.
Whoops....I fixed the link in the post, and here it is: http://sfbayduck.blogspot.com/2016/06/2016-western-states-crewing-and-pacing.htmlDuck, not sure if it's just me but when I click on your blog link it's simply a link to the top of this page rather than your blog. Mind reposting the link?
This was my thought, too. I'd like to put a voodoo cur...um, I'd like to be able to follow them as well.Do you have bib #s for these guys?
Get some Steve! Local runner (mostly ultra stuff) Jorge Maravilla is down there, too, hoping to make the El Salvadoran team. I'll be rooting hard for both of you!Thanks, and yep. Also need to be one of the first 2 Taiwanese runners across the line since there's already one qualifier. The top 2 Taiwanese entrants have run 2:16 and 2:18, although both are dealing with issues and those PRS are 2-4 years old, so it *should* be a matter of getting the time.
 As someone who tends to overthink things myself... Sheesh, that's some mental gymnastics.Conversation I had with a friend of mine earlier today - we're both chasing PR's at the same 5K this weekend. She noticed The Projected Suck is only supposed to be 118 Saturday. You'd think this would make both of us excited, right? Nope, nervous. We both realized that the pressure is now on. We lost our built in excuse as if the race went south we could say the conditions just got the best of us. Looking back, the #### conditions in which I PR'd my half may have actually helped maximize performance as I was much more loose going into it than I usually am race day. If I failed? Oh well, I was racing in sleet, snow, and hail on a historically bad day in the middle of May - I'm sure I can find a way to positively spin this no matter what happens. Not this time.
Going to try not to think about it anymore until late Friday afternoon - knock out all of my prep work then check out again. Trusting the work you've put in will yield the results...so much easier said than done.![]()
  
    Ultrarunnerpodcast linked to it this morning in the daily news! Sweet!Much of it is repeated from what I wrote here already (yes, you guys get the immediate reaction/first draft), but I wrote a blog post about this weekend's experience. There is more about my buddy's race, and it embeds the videos and pics a little better than this format.
Not sure how picky you are about this stuff, but the formatting comes out funky (but readable) on the iPhone/Safari. In contrast, it looks great in Chrome on my PC.Ultrarunnerpodcast linked to it this morning in the daily news! Sweet!
I noticed that, too, thanks. Not sure what's causing that, blogger formatting isn't the easiest to work with, and my html knowledge is minimal. Might play around with it a bit when I get the chance to see if I can fix that.Not sure how picky you are about this stuff, but the formatting comes out funky (but readable) on the iPhone/Safari. In contrast, it looks great in Chrome on my PC.
Good read!
Finished out June with a good run this morning. 7mi with 4 strides at the end. The first 6+ were around 7:59/143 - feeling smooth and in complete control. I was pleasantly surprised at how good my turnover felt on the strides. Hitting <5:00 pace for just 100m and having a gear left felt awesome.
June was a good month in a string of some improving consistency. 26 straight days of running is close to a record for me, I think.
Apr - 23 runs; 148.9mi; 8:40; 146
May - 21; 151.4; 8:27; 145
Jun - 29; 232.8; 8:24; 141
   Very nice! great HR too! June:I'll get more strength training in during June with no races scheduled. June's goals are 370.9 miles riding, 116.2 miles running, 22,750 yards swimming, and 12 strength sessions. That should equate to ~48 hours of training and round off the first six months.
  Increased running by 50% (which just shows how bad it was in May and I'm seriously under the goal these last few months), swam 4k fewer yards and more than doubled my strength training.  
  Awwesome Tri! Sounds, and looks, like an amazing trip.Those seaside, hillside villages are amazing to me - I'd love to just do a tour of those throughout Europe.Trip of a lifetime! Loved all the places we visited; loved the great food and (plenty of) wine.
This! Hammer that thing.Looking forward to sweating the Gold Coast Marathon this weekend. Good luck @SteveC702!!
 Is this that event where the world's best biochemists compete?In case the runners here forgot or didn't know, the Tour de France starts today.
The 3,500km route comprises nine flat stages, nine mountain stages - with four summit finishes - one hilly stage and two individual time trials.
A total of 198 riders from 22 teams will start Saturday's stage from Mont Saint-Michel to Utah Beach in Normandy before heading south to the Pyrenees mountains during the opening week.
The route then takes the riders to the Alps, via the legendary ascent of Mont Ventoux and a stage in Switzerland, before heading for the traditional finish on the Champs-Elysees in Paris on Sunday, 24 July.
Froome said: "The route this year is very much climber-based in terms of even the two time trials we have. One is straight uphill and the other one has two long climbs on it.
"Even though we have time trials, they're time trials where a climber will do well.
"I imagine a lot of people will be looking at that last week given it's so heavily loaded with mountains - stage 17, 18, 19 and 20 - anyone trying to make up time, it will be a great opportunity.
"Whoever's defending the yellow jersey, it will be tough, four days back-to-back like that."
Where will the race be won and lost? Read Geraint Thomas' stage-by-stage guide
Saturday, 2 July - Stage 1: Mont-Saint-Michel - Utah Beach, 188km (116.8 miles)
Live feed
Used to be.Is this that event where the world's best biochemists compete?
Although with all the rumblings about Salazar the last few years, we may soon find out my boy Galen is a lab creation as well.
 Only the ones who need bikes to get around....Used to be.
Now it's where the world's best endurance athletes compete.
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that was incredible. thought it may come down to the wire. and i guess it did if the wire was 250 yards from the finish.It's like he was just toying with them.
Steve 1:05:35 through 20K, 31st. Other guy I know, Jorge, three spots back at 1:06:42Thanks @MAC
My race goes off at 5:20 PM EST on Saturday night. (so 6:20 PM CST, 7:20 MST, 8:20 PST, etc...)
There should be a live internet race feed, I think. It'll probably pop up on their website on race day. http://goldcoastmarathon.com.au/
I got bib number 26. Race is pretty stacked with it being the last and only race left for marathoners to try to earn a spot to Rio. Conditions looking great right now though and really hoping it stays that way. (low/mid 50s at start, and high-50s/low-60s at finish)