Friday, October 22, 2010

the tiny little seat in the end of my boat

There is a tiny little seat in the end of a boat, and it belongs to the coxswain who believes in me.

The head season descends. New rowers come for try outs. The inevitable happens. An email from the coach: "5k Erg test on Friday". The knot in the pit of my stomach starts to form.

A 2k erg test is pure misery. A 5k erg test is worse. 20 minutes of pain, and the shaking and nausea drag on even after that. The only way through it is to dig deep inside, and believe past believing. To try past the possible. To extend past infinity, and keep on pulling. This feat is not just physical, it is mental.

It requires a coxswain.

A good, kind, loving, kick-your-a$$-and-serve-it-to-you-for-dinner coxswain who promises you ice cream if you pull your splits down just a little further, and threatens humiliation if you don't. A coxswain who believes there is more inside. That I can do it. That I can be fast. And who won't settle for less than everything.

I know this coxswain. Susan crouches in the tiny little seat in the end of my boat and believes in me. Whatever she asks, I will do. 

Unfortunately, there is also a bad little coxswain, who crouches in my head. Not the inspirational coxswain who loves me. This one is the evil little voice that chortles when I falter. Who believes I am a loser. Who loves when I fail. Who wants me to quit. And then urges me to vomit all over the floor, just for a final bit of public humiliation. 

This bad little coxswain (hereafter referred to as BLC) is not my friend.

Our 5k erg test begins. The first 200 meters is the sprint. But somewhere in the first 10 strokes, BLC says "hey. why are you sprinting? you are going to die in the final 500 meters, so why waste this precious energy now?"

Bad little coxswain! I ignore the voice and make myself focus. Susan is at the back of the room, cheering on other rowers. Her distant voice soothes me.

I settle into the first 1000, and try to keep my split at 2 seconds above my goal. My mind wanders. BLC starts playing distraction games with me "Hey! The sun is just coming up over the river outside the window and look! Birds! Flying! Wow." And I turn my head. BLC knows my weaknesses, and capitalizes on them.

I look back at the monitor. Too slow! I pull harder. I still have 4000 meters to go. Damn. I can't imagine how I am going to get through this. And BLC hears my thoughts and answers "You won't. You will give up. You can't keep going for 4000 more meters. It is hard. It is boring...." 

Usually, we have music. Music drowns out BLC. Any music. It just needs to have some sort of beat. And maybe a few repetitive lyrics that I can learn on the fly. In fact, I am pretty sure Vivaldi's Four Seasons would be preferable to nothing. Because nothing means only one thing--BLC in my ear.

This morning, we have nothing.

Another 1000m down--3000 more meters to go. 3-friggin-thousand-bloody-meters-of-stupid-rowing-machine-torture-to-go. Was that me talking? or BLC? Sometimes our voices sound the same. 

The drone of the ergs, and the rhythmic gasping breaths of my teammates keep me grounded. They are strong enough to keep pulling, so I can too. Again, I hear Susan's voice as she walks around, urging rowers to pull a little harder, reminding them of how much they want it. I want it too. I can do this.

2000 meters left. Just a 2k. "Oh. An ENTIRE 2k??? You can't do a 2k. You are already beat. You know how bad a 2k makes you feel. Do you REALLY think you are capable of that? Just quit. Just stop now."

I waver. Susan's voice is growing stronger. I know I have to shut this BLC down once and for all.

I pull the first 500m of that final 2000m and I watch the splits drop, one tenth of a second at a time. I press and think "big legs". I pull and think "hang". I gasp and think "911".

"Help" I manage to squeak out.

And then my Good Coxswain--not the one in my head, but the live, flesh-and-blood, Susan the Good, wanders over and drowns out the BLC's voice. "C'mon, Robyn, you want this! I have seen you pull, and I know what you can do! Don't show me weakness, press those legs down. Show me your power!"

1k to go. I can do this. BLC tries to butt in with a negative comment, but I shut him out and focus on Susan. She squats down next to me, and yells in my ear: "100 strokes to go! You have this, Robyn!" 100 strokes between me and severe nausea. I can do this. I pull that split down a little further. I knock that BLC off my shoulder, and pull harder for my good coxswain.

And she believes. Like all the children who believed in tinker bell, and made her little light glow brighter, Susan believes in me, and my little adrenaline light shines brighter.

I pull my splits down farther and farther, hoping to make her glad that she believes in me. Hoping to show that BLC that he is wrong. Hoping that I will not puke on the floor.

"5.....4....3....2......1"

I look around. BLC is gone. Susan is smiling. My splits were good. My nausea is abating. I am done.

Sigh. The 5k test is over.

Tomorrow, we will go back out on the water. Susan will crouch in the tiny little seat in the end of my boat and believe....



Sunday, October 10, 2010

Talons on the Stern Deck

You swoop out of the trees, across my shell, talons just skimming the stern deck, wings stretched wide.

You look as surprised as I am at our close encounter. With a small shift in your wings, you circle to the left, and fall in beside me, curious and wary. You are studying me. I am no longer alone.

I watch you as I row. Catch and finish. You watch me as you fly. Flap and glide. Our rhythms lock on in one synchronized pulsating motion. Your muscles tense with each flap of your wing, and release as you allow the airflow to carry your body along. My muscles contract with the press of the oars in the water, and release as the boat runs out underneath me.

For 300 meters, we move in sync, rower and osprey. Flap and glide, catch and fly. You look ahead, I look behind. Out of the corner of my eye, I sense your presence. Nature in motion. A kindred spirit.

The river bends to starboard. I press hard with my port oar. You shift your wings and stay beside me. A few more strokes and then you veer off to port, a solitary spirit, circling around behind me. I watch as you use the updraft to skim above the trees, finally disappearing from view.

I continue my own watery flight. Press and release. Catch and send. The boat feels lighter as I find that natural rhythm. The rowing is easier after following your smooth flight.

I gaze down and look where your talons skimmed across my stern deck. And silently thank you for the lesson.

Thursday, September 30, 2010

Big Quads

I used to be small. Not teeny, but thin, with strong, wiry legs. Then I discovered rowing and winter training.

Last summer, I learned how to row--not beautifully, mind you, but the basic rudimentary mechanics have been acquired.

Last fall, I entered a regatta. I came in last.

This winter, I decided I needed to add speed to my rowing. So I joined an indoor rowing class, and starting to workout on a rowing machine. I joined a weight training class. I ran stadiums weekly.

Over the course of the winter, my 2k splits dropped over ten seconds. My VO2 max increased. I have muscle definition in places I didn't know there were muscles. And I have BIG QUADS.

My height hasn't changed. My sock size is the same. My cotton t-shirts pull across the shoulders, but I can still wear them. Jeans, however, are a different matter.

I don't generally wear tight jeans. But when I pulled on my favorite pair of soft, worn-down Levis, they came up over my knees...and stopped.

Seriously. I could not get the pant legs up over my quads.

I examined my legs carefully. There were certainly some bulges that I hadn't noticed before. Like that bump just above the knee toward the inside of my quad. And, most noticeably, the quad itself was HUGE! It poked out several inches from its old, runner-defined status.

How had I missed this? And what was I going to do about my jeans?

After trying the old 1980s high-school trick of putting the jeans on soaking wet in a full bathtub and then letting them dry--like shrink-wrap--on my legs (and they still didn't come up over my quads), I considered  my options. I could slit the seams, take them somewhere to get altered, or just throw them away.

I glance down at my big quads again and decide that jeans are not in my future. I will wear shorts from here on. Sweatpants. And an occasional skirt if work demands it.

Overall, though, there are worse things than Big Quads. Like life without rowing.

I fold up my jeans and pile them up. I head to my computer and type in "CRAIGSLIST":

"For Sale. Cheap. Comfortable jeans. Skinny legged inquiries only."

I sigh, resigned to the next phase of my life. I used to be small. Now I am small with Big Quads. I am a rower.

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Rowing Fatigue

Rowing is hard on the body and hard on the soul.

There is the physical work of training. One or two workouts six days a week will fatigue any body. Quads, back, lats, shoulders, arms. Every interval, every steady state, every race piece takes its toll on the muscles, soft tissue and joints, abused by the cumulative effect of repetitive, challenging work.

But there is also mental fatigue.

Spring comes, the river thaws, and life in New England bursts forth. There is a giddy joy that comes from being allowed back onto that native rowing water. The new-found escape from the erg. But gradually, over weeks and months of training and racing, the brain tires of focusing on technique, of pushing past pain, of pulling another power ten. The strokes taken over weeks and months are taking their toll.

The brain--hypnotized and deadened--slows with the stroke rate, as spring sprints shift to fall head races.

And somewhere in there, the days get shorter and the rows get longer.

My muscles have hardened over the course of the summer, but in the cooler temperatures, strong veers toward rigid. The waves are higher, the rows are wetter, and patience is shorter. My body aches, my brain numbs.

The leaves change color. The sun sets earlier. Lethargy creeps in. Winter will soon arrive, and I will be ready to welcome indoor training.

Rowing is hard on the body and hard on the soul.

For now, I just need one more nap.

Saturday, July 10, 2010

Boat Feel

I learned so much about rowing this weekend. Two days and 5 races later (all in different line-ups), I finally know what it is like to (occasionally) have good ratio even at high rates, and what is it like to (more frequently)  be rushed up the slide and feel like you are fighting against every other oar in the boat. I learned how to make a boat fly, and how to fall apart in the final 250 meters as the boat next to you starts walking on through you and there is nothing you can do about it. I learned that you can win even with a bad row, and you can lose even when everything in the boat feels right. I learned that medals, while fun, don't always reward the best rowing. I learned I have super powers. I learned I am mortal.

I love to win, but I want to win without feeling like I went through a bar brawl to get there.  I want to win with that feeling of pressing the oars through the water together, of whooshing our hands away and bodies over in one fluid movement, of drawing a collective boat breath as we ease up the slide and drop our oars in the water together, as one. I want to feel that with each stroke we repeat the perfectly choreographed stroke cycle, lifting the bow and letting the boat fly...

That, from my novice perspective, must be what real rowers call "boat feel".

In practice, my coach, Dusan, asks me after a row: "how did it feel?" and I am not even sure quite what he is asking, nor what I think about the row beyond "it was good" or "it was miserable", or occasionally "it was so bloody hard that I wanted to puke". I assume that "It felt wet" or "it felt hot" is not what he is looking for. So  I say "I don't know". Dusan looks at me quizzically for a moment or two, then just throws up his hands in frustration and says "you are new, you will learn boat feel" and turns away with a gruff "just pull harder next time". And I feel like I have failed him, failed my boat, and failed myself as a rower.

But I don't know what exactly it is that I am failing at.

I want to understand how to feel the elements of a row and put them together in my head so they come out as a coherent, intelligent, analytical response to Dusan's question. But everything just melds together, and the most specific thing I recognize as a problem is the set of the boat. I have heard Dusan dismiss a bad set as "a rowers' problem, not a rowing problem". So clearly, noticing the set is NOT what he is after either.

So I strive, in every boat, to "feel" what is going on. To discern what makes a good row good, or a bad row bad. I ask people questions, beg coxswains for feedback, study our catch, and try to discern if we are thrown into the stern on the slide. I read about rowing. I watch videos of top rowing teams. I beg coaches to join them on their launches so I can see what they see. I am a very dedicated student of rowing.

But boat feel can't be learned from books or from videos. It can't be explained and it can't be seen. Boat feel has to be...well....felt.

Saturday morning dawns bright and early, and I am already in a car, sucking down my latte on my way to the Lawrence Regatta. I'm excited to race so many times and I hope I have some intelligent answer to Dusan's end-of-the-day question "How did it feel?"

As we launch for the first race, I realize I have to pee. We are already in the water, with no place to hide, so I figure I have to sweat it out. My stomach is in knots, but I feel loose and strong. We practice racing starts and high 20s. We spin and practice again. Our starts aren't consistent, but at least we keep the boat moving forward. As we approach the starting line, I look over at the boat next to us and gulp in fear: those women are huge. Amazons. 8 feet tall. With scowls on their faces, and bulging quads, and biceps as big as old growth trees. I don't know if they are sneering at us, but it certainly feels like they are.

We line up next to them, and I quiver as the call comes: "Attention!"

"Row!"

And we row. 5 stroke start, and then a high 20. We lengthen and and it feels pretty good. We even have some swing in the middle. In fact, this is the first time I can honestly say that I feel "swing". I also feel something in the back of my throat--bile. And lactic acid in my quads. And jelly-legs. I panic. I don't have enough energy or strength to finish this race.

And yet... I pull harder--until the nausea and lactic acid kinda pass me by. And I keep pulling. Hard. And pressing with my legs. Powerfully. I breathe deep and keep rowing.

And I feel that too--that supernatural place where the physical pain cannot touch me. The place where my human limitations are suddenly, and briefly, lifted and I can go beyond anything I ever thought I was capable of. This is how mothers lift trucks off their children. This is what allows little bunnies run fast enough to keep from being eaten by mountain lions. This is that ephemeral moment when Superman and Wonder woman have bestowed their superpowers upon me.

For the last ten strokes of this race, I am INVINCIBLE!! I can do anything!

And then, suddenly, it is completely gone. As soon as we cross that finish line, my mortal body comes back to claim me. I cannot breathe.I cannot "paddle" (silly coxswain who has been sitting down for this whole race and thinks that rubbery arms can possibly keep moving). I cannot open my mouth or vomit will spew all over the person in front of me. My lips are blue and my lungs have collapsed. If I am lucky, we will stop rowing and I will be able lean back and kick my feet out of their shoes. But I am not lucky, and my coxswain makes us keep paddling. I just hope I don't have a stroke or a myocardial infarction before we are allowed to stop. I hope the coxswain knows CPR.

And as awful as that feels, it also, simultaneously, feels better than anything I have ever felt before. It is addictive, that adrenaline high. And I want more.

We won that race.

An hour later, I hop back into a 4+ with the lightweight stern four of the earlier 8+. We are in our new red Vespoli. The sweetest little boat that ever rowed on water. She is pretty. She is responsive. She is not heavyweight. And, most importantly, she is red.

(For anyone who thinks color doesn't matter in a boat: you are wrong. Red is fast.)

That 4+ feels FABULOUS.  Of course, at the start, my bladder thumps me to attention--I have to pee. Oh well. Extra fluid to sweat out again. At the start, my heart races, my feet tap, and my spirit soars. I am learning to like this adrenaline. "Attention! Row!" My oar feels light at 3/4, 1/2, 1/2, 3/4 and full, and we fly through the water!  A high 20 again--reaching a 38 stroke rate, but we have ratio! The slide is controlled. We lurch minimally, and we really swing together, and press through the drive in unison. The cox'n calls 10 for Katie's "leg trick" ("What's the leg trick, Katie?" "I have to use them"). We all use our legs, pressing down hard, and snapping out of the bow together. We pick it up and surge ahead--far ahead--of the next boat. We cross the finish line with open water, and I have that same lovely bile feeling in my throat. My quads quiver in joyful jelly. I gasp to fill my lungs and pull my feet out of their shoes. I dabble my feet in the cool river, and notice I forgot to take off my socks, but I am happy, so happy. I had been Superman again!

We lost that race. To a 14 second age handicap. But the FEEL!!!! I am addicted to that motion. I want to feel that again.

And I want to know why it feels so good.

The next day, we have three more races with three new lineups. A masters 8+ which feels pretty good. After a week of bad rowing, this is the first time we feel like we are rowing together. We pull off a gold medal--the first time the medal and the row are synchronous.

A spunky lightweight 4+ is next, and once again, at the start, I have to pee. I am beginning to associate that sensation with the excitement of racing, so I take another gulp of water and settle into 3/4 slide. "Attention!" and we are on. Our start is clean and we do a high 25--41 stroke rate with actual ratio. It feels slower because it is so fluid. We lengthen to a 36 and then to a 34, and it is smooth and strong and sexy. We pull hard, knowing we have to beat a 13 second age handicap over the next boat. We have open water, and we keep moving out. We  power up for the last 250 meters. And flounder a bit. The nausea, anoxia, and lactic acid wave their ugly taunts at us, thinking they have us beat. But we struggle, hold on, and then Superman and Wonder Woman help us out on our final sprint--past that point of collapse. Superpowers are ours, and we cross the line--but only ten seconds up on the next boat, which has a 13 second handicap over us.

It was a great row, with great swing and rhythm and ratio, but only a second place. No medal, yet we feel like winners. Superman pats us on our backs, and we smile all the way to the dock. We had a great race!

The final event is an open 8+. No age handicaps. Simple racing. First boat across the finish line wins. Period. Raw competition. And we want it bad. But wanting and getting are two different things. The start is by now familiar--full bladder, quivering legs, butterflies in the stomach. But this time, from our first stroke, we just aren't rowing well. We struggle and rush up the slide. We never quite catch together, and the ratio is off. We pull it together for 50 meters, and then fall apart again. With 8 oars in the boat, it feels like there are eight opinions and eight separate swings. We rely on our strength--which is considerable--and force ourselves on raw power and sheer stubbornness through the brutal 1000 meters. We fall completely apart in the final 250 meters. The collapsed lungs, the searing pain in the quads, the jelly-for-muscles feeling are all there, but this time, there is no Superman. The magic just isn't quite there. We cross ahead of the next boat by a hair, so technically, we have won the race. But it feels like we have been through a back alley mugging, and the bruises are just beginning to swell.

We put on a good face and said "hey, we won" as though that is all that matters. But we know there is more. Something is missing. Something in that boat just hadn't felt right. Every one of us knows that had that race been 100 meters longer, the medals would belong to the other boat. We almost gave that race away. Despite our collective strength, we lacked those superpowers. And it is that super-human force--the intangible "whole is greater than the sum of its parts" power that really wins a race.

Derigging and celebrating the various boats' victories brings us together as a team. We talk about the good moments, and set aside the bad. In just under12 hours we will be back in our boats for the morning practice--this next stretch of workouts will, no doubt, focus on developing a stronger final sprint, and better boat swing.

I am tired as I head home, but satisfied. I know when Dusan asks me "how did it feel, Robyn?" I have some context now from which to respond. I have learned something of boat feel. I know when it is good. I know when it isn't. And, I know what my answer to my coach's question will be.

"It felt better than a bar brawl" or "It felt like Superman dropped by and loaned us his superpowers".

I am pretty sure that is exactly the response he is looking for. :)

Friday, June 18, 2010

Bad Ass Coxswain

I love coxswains. Really and truly. My husband listens to me talk about them, and wonders why I don't have such emotion in my voice when I talk about him. I think of a coxswain as the preacher. The mother. The liar. The dreamweaver.

A good coxswain can convince 8 individuals to believe in one thing. She can make us think we are fast. We need to pull harder. We are the best. She loves us. We are capable of the impossible. We can win Worlds! She is a dreamweaver. And, if she is really good, she can be sweet and kind and encouraging while kicking our collective butts all in the same sentence.

We are so fortunate to have so many good coxswains. I learn from each of them, and I will play the field happily. They each offer me lessons that I need to learn. But today, I confess, my rower's heart belongs to Mandi--the Bad Ass Coxswain.

Mandi is starting with us part-way into the season. Dragged along by a teammate, she shows up for a 5am practice in late April in the pitch dark. The weather is awful. Torrential rains, 30 knot winds, 6 foot swells, and 40 degrees--a recipe for rowing disaster and hypothermia.

The coaches announce we are staying inside to erg. [One coach is Serbian--accustomed to nicer Balkan weather, I guess, but the other is from Chicago--really, you would think that Matt would embrace this weather from nostalgia, if nothing else.] But we rowers are hardcore. Afterall, rowing is, in the words of a teammate, a water sport. Weather doesn't scare us. Rain isn't a problem. Wind--have at us! Waves!? Ha. Our coaches' wakes are bigger than anything nature can give us!

So we convince the skeptical coaches to let us go out on the water. All without a thought to our new coxswain. I glance over at her, wondering if she will quit on the first day.

Mandi--big brown eyes under her Smith Crew hat--smiles broadly at this new announcement.

This is a good sign. She is not afraid to get wet.

As a new rower in stroke seat, my coxswain is essential. Without her, I am dumber than a golden retriever on Ambien.  I like looking into my coxswain's face for reassurance. I hate seeing her disappointment, and I will do anything--including pull harder, or faster, or longer--just to make her smile. Today, Mandi's smile is working for me.

We are soaked through before we get into the boats. We settle ourselves into our seats, adjust our foot stretchers and spacers, and head out into the storm. The geese--who usually fight us for space on the docks--are gone--no doubt hibernating in the nor'easter'.

Our pick drill is sloppy--the waves slap at the squared oars and toss the boat to port and then starboard. We have a fierce tail wind, so the connection is hard to find. Our boat moves quickly though, as our squared oars act as sails. Before we know it, it is time to spin and do our pieces.

Into the headwind.

Over the 6 foot swells.

Through the wall of sideways driven rain.

I look tentatively at Mandi, and her reassuring smile broadens. "Anyone can row in good weather. It takes some BAD-ASS rowers to row in bad-ass rain!" she cries gleefully.

And I know that each of us, nestled into our sliding seats, oar handle crooked in our bent knees, is feeling a little more pride...a little more strength...a little more self-confidence...a little more BAD-ASS because of this tornado. (We are also shivering uncontrollably in the cold.)

So we start the piece--working hard just to keep the boat moving into the wind. Mandi cheerfully calls out the catches, and a couple of power tens. Her boathouse jacket is zipped up over her ears, and she crunches down into her seat. Her voice is soothingly rhythmic, urging us into one catch, one drive, one swing. Then, the magic begins. Suddenly, Mandi puts on her "man voice":

"Narragansett is up 2 seats on Starboard. Greenwich is up by 1 on Port. Are we gonna let that happen, ladies? I DON'T THINK SO! Let's PRESS on those legs! BIG QUADS! Let's go, ladies! We are moving on Greenwich, let's focus for ten!"

And we do. Whatever it is, Mandi has tapped into that motherlode that motivates us to pull. By creating that imaginary race, with our opponents in the lead, we press harder, swing more aggressively, and work to take them, seat by seat, through the driving rain, over the waves, through the headwind. Mandi moves us. We move the boat.

"That's IT, we are even with Greenwich and just one seat down on Narragansett. You are BAD-ASS ROWERS, Ladies! Let's make a move here! Elbows all the way back. Punch them through the wind. Hit the rower behind you. Reach for the bow ball with those elbows. You REALLY WANT IT! Let's take this boat forward!"

And we move. I feel Greenwich's boat on my port. I feel the splash of their oars. I sense their mounting frustration as we pull through them. I want to pass Narragansett. I rotate just a little more around my rigger for more water. I press harder. The whole boat follows. We all want this. We are stronger than the rain, bigger than the waves, more powerful than the wind. We will beat Greenwich. We will beat Narragansett. Because we are BAD-ASS ROWERS!

"That's it, ladies! We have moved past Greenwich and are walking through Narragansett! Let's take ten to push on through! And ONE..." and she rallies us with her count. She makes us push harder. She makes us happy that the weather is crappy because it means we are tougher, meaner, badder, faster. More HARD CORE.

Mandi calls out encouragingly, cheering us on "We've done it! We've taken Narragansett! Well done ladies! Let's head for the finish!" as she calls out the final ten. Eight strokes in, she calls "Woo-hoo! Let it FLY!"

And it does. Into the wind. Into the driving rain. Into the 8 foot waves.

Our boat flies through the water. Or at least that is what we believe. That is our dream.

Today our preacher, mother, liar and dreamweaver is Mandi. She is bad ass.

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Proper Technique

Rowing is all about technique. And a lot of strength. A little self-hate. A bit of lunacy. But mostly technique.

I am already reasonably strong. 32 years of running and cycling have given me big quads (ah. big quads. I will write about those some day). 12 marathons and thousands of miles of hiking have yielded vast amounts of endurance. And a bull-headed stubbornness, with a masochistic streak and a never-give-in-to-pain attitude has set the stage for my rowing career. The upper body strength is a new and curious phenomenon. I have never had definition in my arms, but hauling butt on an oar or an erg handle has created muscles that seem to have an intimidating effect in certain circles ("really?! you are going to deliver my baby?? You won't hurt it, will you?" and the timid mother quakes in fear...).

The problem with all this brute force, masochism, and pig-headed endurance is that not one of those matters if you flip the boat. You cannot win a race if you are upside down in the water.

And this is where technique comes in.

In order to row fast, I have learned you need the following qualities:
1-strong legs (see "big quads" above)
2-a strong back (or a couple of herniated discs)
3-strong arms (which never fit in women's shirts, btw. You have to reinvent your professional wardrobe from the boys large shirt section. I love my new Scooby-Doo button-down shirt.)
4-relaxed hands. Coaches always yell at you to "relax your grip!"--like the oars will just levitate back to you without you holding on to them... Once I rowed with my pinkies pointed up, like I was drinking high tea. I thought this would remind me to stay relaxed on the oar handles. My coach fell backward off his launch from laughing so hard. I no longer row like that.
5-rhythm and swing (that might be two separate qualities but they come together)--no, this is not something you learn on a dance floor. There is something about ratio, and a 3:1 recovery to drive. And god help you in a group boat, because you all have to have the same rhythm (no dancing to your own drummer, or you will check the boat), and the same swing. I remember in high school, we used to joke about swing. But boat swing is NOT a joking matter. My coach yelled at me for more swing in one boat, and less in another. My swing seems like a loner. Not well-matched. No in sync with the rest of the boat. Like in 7th grade dances--I would stand by the punch bowl and drink pink lemonade and watch the disco ball flash while the cool kids did something swingy together. In rhythm. And ratio.
I did drink a lot of pink lemonade that year.
6-good separation--like an uncontested divorce, this is unlikely to be achieved perfectly. Legs. Back. Arms. Arms. Back. Legs.
Doesn't anyone remember the song "the leg bone's connected to the back bone. The back bone's connected to the arm bone...". Separation is a theoretical construct. Physiology will not change because your coach says it has to. (But don't tell him that. He'll make you do 7x2k intervals at race pace.)
7-and, finally, PROPER TECHNIQUE

The definition of "PROPER TECHNIQUE" is curious. Nobody agrees on all the elements, nor on which is most important. Different coaches use different analogies--bicycle chain, hook the water, don't row over the barrel--and different phrases, but they all agree that there is no single rower out there who has perfected "PROPER TECHNIQUE" (except, from what I have see on the internet, Xeno Mueller thinks he has.)

So I want to learn "PROPER TECHNIQUE". I want to get there--like there is a "there" to get to. My personal quest for the Holy Grail of rowing.

Unobtainable at best. But well worth the pursuit.

This is my list of what to learn. 

1-Puddles. I don't understand puddles. I know too much white water is bad. I know deep and swirly is good. But beyond that, what makes a puddle nice? What do you look for in a puddle? What does it show? Other than I should be pulling harder. And I should have proper technique. This is part of the "top-secret-knowledge" hoarded by rowing coaches, and never divulged, even on pain of death and torture. So I am giving up on the secret of puddles.

2-Slide control. "Slow the Slide!" every coach yells out with fury. Slow the slide, indeed. Now that is a freak of nature. Look out at our environment. There is nothing in nature that is slow sliding at all. When you build momentum, nature is very quick to take advantage of that to JUMP on its prey, or FLING the object with the momentum. I defy you to identify even one example from the natural world, in which an object in motion slows down just as the velocity is reaching its peak.

It. Doesn't. Happen.

This is proof that rowing is not natural. And yet, slowing the slide is probably one of the most agreed-upon components of "PROPER TECHNIQUE". So we rowers are required to defy logic. to defy the law of gravity. to defy nature itself. All in the name of PROPER TECHNIQUE.

ha.

3-Quick catches. Ok. I have seen stroke seats have tea parties at the catch. I have watched whole sit-coms between the slide and the drive. I get what a really slow catch is. You can't just slow the slide and then STOP. That is more unnatural than even a slow slide. Even a snail doesn't grind to a halt--she just moves steadily onward.

But lets think about the quick catch. You reach the last two inches of your slide-STILL MOVING INTO THE STERN--and you are supposed to drop your oar before the end of that motion and in one fraction of a fraction of a second just as you change direction exactly 180 degrees. Yet another breach of the laws of nature.

This is not what your oar wants to do. This is not what your body wants to do. This is not what your brain wants to do. In fact, they all want to wait, politely, until the slide has stopped moving, before carefully inserting the blade into the water, making as little splash as possible. And then they want to wait some more until they feel ready to muster up the strength to drive that oar through the water, pressing their legs down to the finish. And then they want to congratulate themselves on a job well done. And only then will they scurry back up the slide--QUICKLY--to try again.

As someone who has a LOT of backsplash, I can tell you that nobody sitting behind you wants you to develop that backsplash. Folks have developed special rainwear to don when rowing behind Robyn. They swear up and down at me. They bring shampoo into the boat to wash their hair from all that showering backslash.

And yet every coach says "backsplash is good".

They are lying. I don't know enough yet to figure out HOW they are lying, but I know they are. It is the great coaching conspiracy against Robyn--to keep me from ever attaining that PROPER TECHNIQUE.

Whatever.

So I spend 6 days a week rowing. In sweep boats and sculls. In group boats and singles. In the heat and in the rain. I work on fast hands away, slowing the slide, quick catches and backsplash.  I am on my life-long quest for technique. And a lot of strength. A little self-hate. A bit of lunacy. But mostly technique.



Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Storms, Starts, and Serbian Sorcery



(*some poetic license was taken in this post--no safety violations actually occurred during this rowing lesson)

Today, two days before my first race in a single, I am going to learn racing starts. I still don't know what I am doing, and I am nervous as hell. The idea of sitting at 3/4 slide, oarblades behind me, waiting for an official to call "Attention! Row!", all without flipping the boat, is terrifying. The 4 fast strokes following that first one are unthinkable. But my coach, Marko, all 6'6" of his large, imposing Serbian self, gets into his single, and says I will learn how to start a race today.

I have worried all day about this lesson, as the sky has filled with thunderheads, the wind has picked up and the humid air tingles in anticipation of atmospheric drama. But there has been no storm yet, and time is short. So Marko and I head down-river to find some shelter in which to practice racing starts.

As we begin our pick drill, I hear a loud noise and look up at the anvil clouds overhead.

"It's a truck" Marko reassures me. I peer over at the road, and see nothing. But I nod in agreement.

We continue down through the bridge, and he has me sit at 3/4 slide with blades flat on the water, helping to balance me.

Another loud peal.

"The train is going by" and Marko continues giving me instruction. I try to focus on what he is saying, but my mind keeps questioning how there can be a train, when there are no train tracks in the vicinity.

I quiet my anxiety, and do my first 3/4 slide stroke.

I nearly flip, but I don't. And that is an important distinction. NEARLY flipping a boat is a lot dryer and a lot less humiliating than ACTUALLY flipping a boat.

We try a few more starting strokes, and I gradually feel a bit more confident.

Another loud clap from the sky. Marko looks up and says "we should head back closer to the dock." But this time, he doesn't give the noise a name.

We paddle up-river, past the boathouse, and he continues giving me pointers--"faster hands away!" he encourages. I have been told this is Serbian Style Rowing--super-fast hands away. My hands are pathologically slow. Whatever. I will try to row Serbian style. Or Greek style. Or Australian style. Honestly, whatever it is that I am doing is not recognizable by any national rowing team as their style. It is just messy rowing. Robyn style.

Marko and I get up to the wide upper stretch, above the boathouse. No one else has ventured out today. We have this section to ourselves. I try the starts again, and again. These starts are getting easier. I have one good start, and Marko's smile lets me know I am getting the hang of it.

A bolt of lightning shoots through the sky in the distance.

"3/4 slide!" Marko commands. I want to obey. I slide my body up into a semi-crouch, trying to ignore Nature's angry storm. My knees quiver with fear. I am wary of what lightning does to people in small boats in the middle of wide expanses of water. Marko does not seem to care.

Marko snaps "Stop your knees from shaking! You can't keep the boat set if your knees aren't still!"

He glances at my face, and must sense my terror.

"Don't worry, Robyn! You are not the largest thing out here!" And he sits up taller to illustrate this point. His massive frame towers above his boat, and even in the wide expanse of river, Marko is significant. The lightning will choose him over me--a strangely reassuring thought.

I chuckle and calm myself enough to still my knees. There is a certain power that Marko commands, and I imagine that not even nature is immune to his Serbian sorcery.

"Attention! Row!"

I pull the first 3/4 stroke, and move back to 1/2, 1/2 3/4, 7/8 and full. Not too awful. My boat actually picks up speed. I pull another 5 high strokes and weigh enough.

Over Marko's head, a brilliant zig-zag of lightning lets loose, and the clouds open up, large drops of water fall on our heads, drenching us in seconds. We both race furiously back to the boathouse and pull ourselves onto the dock.

As we peel off our socks, and put on our shoes, Marko's face lights up with a wide grin. "I had forgotten how much fun rowing in the rain can be!" he confides happily.

We pull our boats from the water, and head up to the boathouse.

I watch the storm from shelter of the pavilion, and feel the satisfaction of having made a reasonably successful stab at acquiring a new rowing skill, in less than ideal conditions. I will not win my first race, and I may even flip my boat. But I am confident that my first five strokes will most likely start my boat moving in roughly the right direction.

Sunday, May 30, 2010

Rowing with the Devil and gambling my soul

This morning's coached row is in singles. I signed up for me and my boat: the Capo Bovo. We go back...oh....about 50 miles. I know boats are supposed to be "she"s, but Capo is definitely a "he". And he has treated me well, and carried me reliably.

Until today.

Today, Capo is filled with water. I lift him onto my head, and just as I find the balance, a gurling swish streams into the bow, along with about 45 pounds of liquid ballast. I manage to get the shell down onto slings, but fail to empty all the water from the hull. The footstretchers are missing a screw, and the port rigger is bent.

Someone had had a terrible row.

So I exchange Capo for a new (to me) boat--a mid-weight Kashper I have never met before. The rest of the sculling group has already launched, so I hurry down to the dock, my unmet boat on my head, and we make our requisite rower/rowee introductions in haste.

It is never a good idea to hurry. It is never a good idea to be last. It is never a good idea to row a new boat without a thorough introduction.

Today's row is premised on all of these not-good ideas.

I grab the last set of matched oars from the sculling bay, and put them in the oarlocks. I set the footstretchers at an estimated distance, and launch quickly--still hoping to catch the group for our interval workout.

Five strokes in, I realize that I am not alone in that boat. The Devil has joined me and is making a play for my soul.

As you all know, I love to row. In the rain and in the snow. In sleet and hail. In heat and cold. I love to row.
I have never really had a row I didn't enjoy. But I had never rowed with the Devil on my stern.

I pull a couple of hard strokes, and weigh enough. My stretchers are completely off. I move them toward the stern, and try again.

Nope, still not right. I feel like crying.

My novice status means that I have evolved enough to know when something is wrong, but I am not always clear on how to make it right.

I try again, and watch my hands through the recovery--there are at least 12 inches of overlap. It dawns on me then--the inboard length is far too long for me. These oars were made for large men in large boats. I feel small and insignificant. The Devil cackles merrily. But there is nothing to be done, so I make the best of it, figuring I will be slow, but at least my left fingernails won't scratch the top of my right hand. And I will focus on run, more than on drive.

And thus the games begin:
Devil-1
Robyn-0

Another 100 strokes, and my neoprene bite guards catch in the right slide. I weigh enough again and look down. The plastic cap on the end of the left slide is missing. Thankfully, I am wearing my bite-guards, but even they can't hold off the sharp, knife-like metal ends of the slide as it bites into my calf. There is already a trickle of blood seeping out of the wounded neoprene. I feel the twinge of pain lighting up my calf. The Devil's grin broadens as he holds up 2 fingers:

Devil-2
Robyn-0

Tears spring to my eyes. My team is 1000 meters ahead of me, my oars are rigged wrong, and now I am going to develop gangrene from an inevitable slide-bite that will no-doubt get infected with a drug-resistant strain of staphylococcus. I am not having fun. In fact, I am not sure why I ever loved rowing. What the hell kind of sport is so dependent on equipment, anyway???? If it weren't for the heavy metals in the bottom of the river, I would jump out of that boat and run for shore.

I take a minute to collect my thoughts and remember my tool kit. The one everyone laughs at--"you are equipped like a coxswain, Robyn!" "Isn't that pretty heavy to carry on the boat?"

I pull a roll of athletic tape off the wrench and begin to wrap it around and around that offending metal edge. I wrap some more around my calf. When it is 3 inches think, I know that even a ginzu knife won't be able to penetrate that dressing. I look up slyly, and muster a wan smile. I stick my tongue out at the Devil.

Devil-2
Robyn-1

I pull at a steady state, giving up on catching my teammates, but unwilling to give in to my evil boatmate. The rhythm of the strokes starts soothing my nerves. I press with my legs, and breathe on the recovery. The oars are still awkward, and the catch is short. But I know I can move this boat from here to Riverside and then back again. A ten mile steady state row will be fine. The Devil looks a little surprised and a lot disappointed.

Devil-2
Robyn-2

A yacht comes by and wakes me, and the Devil looks at me expectantly, but I give him nothing, and just pull harder, a little more water by my feet. A kayaker hovers on the wrong side of the river, perpendicular to the shore (an accident waiting to happen). I just change my course and go around him. The Devil is intrigued with my calm demeanor, but he does not know that I am seething inside.

The score stands.

I pick up the stroke rate, and hover around 26. I pull through and have a couple good finishes, making up for my fury. I work on good separation, not misery. I feel the run as my hands move away, and igore the growing blister on my left palm. The boat picks up speed. My mood picks up with it.

A couple of miles further, my coach comes up on the launch--"spin it here, Robyn, and join us". But I am still a little too miserable to do that. I tell him "Naw. I'm having equipment issues, and a bad row, so I think I will just stick to steady state." He looks surprised, since I never say "no", but he drives off with a shrug and leaves me alone.

The Devil grins at this evidence of my unhappiness, glowing in the knowledge that I am not having fun. He holds up 3 fingers, and I grudgingly nod. Another point for him.

Devil-3
Robyn-2

I continue past Riverside and spin. It begins to occur to me that misery is a bad state for rowing. I am not getting better, and I am not letting go. My hands are gripped tightly and my run is short. I look at that Devil, reclining comfortably on my stern deck, and I get mad. Furious, in fact. I will NOT let him ruin a perfectly good row.

I pick up the stroke rate to 30. It is not pretty, and the Devil gets wet. He frowns. But at this point, there is not much he can do. He throws me a couple bad strokes, but I am used to those--I can do bad strokes on my own. He calls on another boat to wake me between the bridges, so I get waked, first by the boat, and then again by the wake's return after it hit the rock walls on either side of the narrow passage. But wakes come and wakes go. Rowing is, after all, a water sport.

So I just pull through and stay low.

Devil-3
Robyn-3

I finally pass one of the singles from our group. She laughs at me. "Looks like you are running away from the devil, Robyn!" she quips. Little does she know...

I pick up the speed, slowing the stroke rate, and making good connection through the drive. I pass another boat. She waves. I pull harder. I round the Elliot St turn, and just ahead, I see the group. The coach calls out through his megaphone "Robyn, we are doing 15 strokes at 30. GO!"

So I go. 30 strokes per minute, and it doesn't feel so bad.

"20 strokes. 10 at 30, 10 at 32. Go!"  I am feeling good. I am beating this boat. I am beating the Devil. I am beating my own misery. I am feeling the rhythm, inside and out. My breathing is paced with the strokes. The boat flies over the water. I love rowing.

We do fartlek intervals the rest of the way up the river. I pull hard and fast. My fury is focused. My goal is speed. The Devil hangs on to the shell for dear life.

We pass the boathouse and the coach calls us in. But, I continue up to the upper stretch to practice racing starts. After a few failed attempts, and a new respect for a squared oar, I finally get a 1/2, 1/2, 3/4, full and move the boat off my imagined starting line. It feels fine! I look up to see the devil as he slides off the stern deck and splashes into the water.

I laugh out loud. My misery is behind me, my fury is calmed. I love rowing! My soul is still intact.

Final Score:
Robyn-4
Devil-3

With a a happy grin on my face, I spin the boat and head back in.

Thursday, April 1, 2010

The Jonah Row

Jonah was a wise mariner. He recognized that there is a time to sacrifice for the greater good of his boat mates. He also knew that any shelter, even a whale's belly, is the best place to be in a storm. I am not sure that New England rowers are that smart.


Yesterday morning, March 13th, I went out in a mixed 4+ in the beginning of a true New England Nor'easter'. It was an optional row, with no other reward than the sheer joy of being on the water.


I arrive on that cool, overcast morning at the boathouse. Weather predictions include a severe storm advisory. As I step out of my car, the first sprinkles hit the windshield, and the wind begins to blow.


Inside, Peter is on the erg, warming up. Peter and I are in the same winter training class. I like his commitment. I like his urge to improve. He looks up cheerfully and says "I can stay and erg, if you want to bail." He immediately follows with "but I am willing to go out and give it a go."


Yay. That's a man I want in my boat!


We head downstairs to the lobby, where Cissy, decked out in pink, is stretching her hamstrings. She looks up with a big grin and says "I can't wait to get out there! Where's Jim?". Cissy is the energizer bunny. At 5am, or 6pm she is bundles of happiness, and doesn't slow down. I have been in her boats where she calls power 20s, power 50s, and power 70s. She doesn't know when to quit. 


Jim is the newest member of our sorry patched-together foursome. He is a REAL rower. He has rowed forever. He knows about Proper Technique. He has rowed long enough to have evolved his stroke. He has fast splits. And, he is big. Which, in the world of rowing, is a huge advantage. Every bit of that bigness, and every bit of that tallness can be converted into moving a boat forward faster. He also keeps everyone laughing. When Jim shows up to a workout, everyone is just a little more upbeat. A little more willing to push themselves just a bit harder. And he is the poster child for teamwork. He cheers others on. He smiles after the most grueling workout. And his smile is contagious. We are always happy around Jim. 


So, when Jim walks through the door, I know he won't back out. I know he will let rain and wind slap across his face and his smile will not waver. He was hand-picked for a day like this. We are in for some misery, and a quick joke and encouraging cheer will keep us moving.


Our little coxswain, Vivian, is all bubbles and joy. Really, given the weather, we are all awfully happy. Like an advertisement for antidepressants. That is what happens to rowers after a long winter of erging. Bears are cranky when they come out of hibernation. Rowers are giddy. Getting out on the water puts a bounce in anyone's step after a winter of body odor and accumulation of sweat.


We choose our oars and pick out a boat. "Hands on!" the coxswain calls. I feel the excitement building. "Split to shoulders" and we face out of the boat bay. And that is when I first see the sleet. Coming down sideways. In a 30 knot wind. Gulp. I glance at the coach, and worry that the weather will cause him to reconsider. He shows no signs of weakness. Good. We chose him well.


"Walk it forward!" And we do. The bow of the boat, once free of the shelter of the boathouse, is pushed by the wind. We hang on and march down the dock, as straight as we can manage. The wind is strong. The waves are big. The rain and sleet are increasing. And we persevere.


It takes some doing to push off of the dock. The wind keeps pushing us back. Bow seat (Cissy) has to take some hard strokes to turn us out. Then, as bow pair,  she and I haul for all we are worth to get us out of there.


I was told afterward that my favorite Harvard rowers were on the water just then. The ones I can never keep my eyes off of, with their slow, strong strokes, and lovely muscular bodies. Today I see nothing. I am heaving and hawing, trying to keep us moving forward. The Harvard heavies walk through us, and I never notice. There is a first time for everything. 


We do some pick drills, and row by pairs on the square into the wind. Every millimeter of my squared oar is met with the resistance of the 30 knot wind. My hands are slow as they move away from my body, but I swear half of it is due to the wind.


Cissy and I row hard, but we aren't used to the wind, or the heavy stern pair, and the shore line doesn't move an inch. Despite all of our effort, we are just barely staying in place. When we finally switch pairs, the boat lurches forward. Our bow-pair's combined 250 pounds mean nothing to those strong men, at more than half-again our weight, as they bend their oars, and we gain momentum. When the coxswain (whose cox-box has shorted out in the rain) yells for us to add in, we finally feel some momentum propelling the boat ahead into the wind.

Four of us, working together, may be able to move this boat! My grin gets wider.


I am sitting behind Jim. His boathouse jacket exaggerates his size, and my field of vision is the red and black of his gortex. I try to keep in time with the movement of his body--press and release...hands away, body over...slowly up the slide... The waves are high, and periodically splash over the side of the boat and break--CRASH!--onto Jim's back. He is sitting in a puddle, and I know it is cold. While his jacket may be waterproof, his pants are not. I mentally check in with my own seat and realize that it, too, is wet. I am sure my back has been hit by some waves as well.


We finally go into some steady state pieces, all the time at a stroke rate of 16. That is what happens when a heavyweight is stroke seat. I keep my slide slow and pull hard, trying to keep down with this rate. I feel strong, but slow. I am used to compensating for my small size by rowing faster. This is pure torture.


I notice that Peter's oar is faster out of the bow than mine. His Serbian coach is a fan of "fast hands away", whereas mine subscribes to the belief that the hands should move out at the speed they moved in. So we gallop--Da-dum--with each stroke. My hands are too slow, and he hangs at the catch. Our drives are synchronized, but we jerk at our own paces on the recovery. And try as I might, I just cannot match his rhythm. Something to work toward. But for now, we just lurch along in dyssynchrony.


After a long hard haul into the headwind, we spin and come back up river. A tail wind is a lovely thing. While we are stopped for a water break, the wind blows us 200 meters up the course. It also blows the sleet into my face, rather than my back. My sweaty body grows cold. Jim suggests a faster stroke rate "for the lightweights in the bow". I feel a wave of gratefulness surge up inside me. Jim, the team player, is always seeking compromise.


"Ready? and Row!" calls our loud, diminutive coxswain in her "man voice". "You are at a 16, up to 18 in two!" and we begin our climb into more familiar stroke rates. The wind scurries us along, and we pull hard and fast, and feel like olympians. Very very wet olympians. With 5 inches of water sloshing at our feet, and a slight crust of ice on our riggers.


I figure Jonah was smarter than we are. He looked around at the high winds, the big swells and the heavy (sideways) driving rain, and headed immediately for the shelter of a cetacean's gastrointestinal
calm. God spoke and Jonah listened.

When God speaks to us, all we know is to pull harder. We tough it out, boat tossing to and fro, waves crashing over the gunwales, sleet driving into our cheeks, my slow hands away, Peter's hanging at the catch, Cissy's late squaring oars, and Jim's seat in a puddle.


When we finally dock, after a final fast piece, I couldn't wipe the smile off my cold, wet face! I look around at my boatmates, and see my joy mirrored in their own. We give each other happy fist bumps and giddy hugs, and all agree that this was the best (and first) row of the season!

Jonah didn't know what he was missing.

Monday, March 1, 2010

bench pulls

Yesterday, in my weight lifting class, we had to do another  bench pull test. I hate these tests. I am almost 44 years old, and haven't been in school for years. I have no interest in tests. I just want to row.

But rowers just can't let go of tests. I have had to do 2k tests, 5k tests and 6k tests. In another month I will be doing more tests, and comparing my tests with other middle-aged women's tests to figure out how fast or slow I am or where I might fit best in a boat. Actually, there are more young women than middle-aged women in our rowing club. So my tests will be compared with the 25 and 30 year olds' tests. If only these tests measured wisdom, or communication skills, or maturity, number of children raised, or how to figure out a retirement investment plan. I could whoop most of their young butts at those tests.

But no. Now I have to lay my middle-aged body across a rickety wooden bench, and yank a 45 pound bar up to my chest, bang it against the board underneath me with a clank, and drop it back down to full extension. I have to do this as many times as I can muster in 60 seconds.

I have done this test before, and I have never gotten a passing grade. In the world of bench pulls, where 60 is an A, and 50 is a B,  40 is a C, etc.I have never gotten above a D minus. In truth, my D minus is a pity grade, just for showing up. Because Tom (the very sweet-natured instructor) just cannot bring himself to utterly fail anyone who at least tries.

Of course, there is no actual grade given for this ridiculous test. It is like the SATs--no failing and no passing, but wander the halls for a day and you know who got the highest score, and you know how you stack up to your peers. The bench pull test is like that. All that peer pressure of adolescence without the pimples.

I love the strong women who are older than I am and can bench press what I weigh. There are several of them, and they are my role models. I want to be them. I want to row like them. I want to erg like them. I want to bench pull like them. They are strong, but also very supportive. If I bench pull 12 times they clap me on the back and say "good job, Robyn!". A few weeks later, when I bump it up to 20, they cheer about my improvement. When the bench tips forward because my legs aren't heavy enough to keep it balanced, they stand behind me and hold the bench down. They keep me from falling off, and they keep me from quitting. They make it feel less like a competition that will seal my rowing fate, and more like a measure that I am making progress.

So when Tom announces that we are doing another bench pull test, I decide to jump on that blasted rickety bench and pull that rotten steel bar as many times as I can--I will improve, dammit. I will do better. I will not tip forward on my head. I will not fail.I will make these women proud.

Jen is my partner and she helps me lay weights across the back legs of the bench, to make it more stable. She gives me a big grin and gives me pointers. "Pull like hell for the first half. Your arms will get tired then no matter how many times you have pulled, so you might as well get as many in as you can."

Ah. Strategy. I like it. There is a trick in here somewhere.

Jen looks at the clock. "5 seconds...3...2...1...GO!"

And I haul on that bar "1-and-clank-and-2-and-clank-and-3-and-clank......and I reach 30 just as Jen says "30 seconds--half way there".

Wow. In half a minute, I have already broken my previous record.

I pull two more times and the pain starts. A numbing fire in my biceps simultaneously travels both up and down my arms. I pull again. The grip on my hands weakens. One...and...clank...and...two...I stop with my arms extended, my chest muscles contracting down on my lungs...one...and...clank...and...rest...gasp...sigh....

"Only 15 seconds longer" Jen warns....or is it a promise of hope?

One more....ugh....clank...again...gasp....screaming pain up into my shoulders....one-half....groan....three-quarters....I heave the bar up--not quite to the bench--I grunt it up all the way--clank--and drop it down.

"5 more seconds"

ssssslooooooowly I pull it up again...arms shaking....clank--and drop the bar down, and again....oh my god.....I am going to explode....my arms are falling off....CLANK....

"Stop!"

I did it. The bar almost falls out of my hands. I roll off the bench onto the floor, my biceps quivering, my hands frozen in a permanent claw.

This is a strange and wonderful feeling. My legs are fine--no discomfort. But my chest is collapsed--I wonder if I need a chest tube to allow some air in--and my arms have stopped feeling altogether. I flop them out beside me on the floor. I have to look to make sure they are still connected to my body.

Yup. Two arms. One left. One right. No sensation whatsoever.

Tom comes over and reaches down to help me up. I slowly lift one hand to meet his. He hauls me to my feet, and grins. "Nice job, Robyn!"

I smile proudly. Until his next words.

"Lets get ready for a 20 minute bar circuit"

Oh. Shit.

Thursday, February 18, 2010

CRASH-Bs

CRASH-Bs. Or why frozen-out rowers should not be allowed to plan "fun" races during the winter season.

Crazy people can think of crazy things to do.  I suspect it would take a group of nutty, land-bound rowers to come up with an idea so ridiculous, so painful, so full of nasty bodily fluids as an indoor rowing championship. And only another group of equally nutty, frozen-out, winter-fatigued rowers would flock by the thousands to the venue, risking exposure to those self-same nasty bodily fluids. 

I like to imagine the conversation (over a few beers, perhaps?) that began the idea for the first CRASH-Bs
"Yo, Tiff, wanna erg?" [sips his beer] 
"Nah, Jake. I am so sick of the erg. I want to throw the erg in the Charles River."[guzzles his beer] 
"You guys are such wusses, I bet I can pull a faster 2k than you can" [gulps half her mug] 
"Yeah, right, Holly. I wouldn't bet on that." [starts 3rd beer] 
"It is a bet, Tiff. Next Sunday?" [double fisted drinking] 
"We are on!" 
[several martinis later] "This will be fun! Let's invite some friends, and we'll meet in the erg room." 
"Prepare to die, smarty-pants." 
"In your dreams, loser!"
fade to black...

And that, as near as I can figure, is what started it all. [the official history can be found here]

2010-Valentine's Day-was my first foray into this world-famous indoor event. 2000 meters x 80 heats. Agannis Arena (Boston University's hockey rink) was filled with hundreds of rowing machines. I arrive 2 hours early and stood paralyzed at the top of the stands, looking down the long flight of stairs (it must be 2 miles down) to the floor far below. I feel a stir of concern. I have pulled some 2ks in the past few months, and I know what my quads felt like afterwards. Those nutty CRASH-B planners had either forgotten this issue, or had a few extra beers and plotted this as an added challenge for the competitors. Kind of a "two-fer". I wonder if these planners occasionally place themselves strategically in the stands to watch the looks of terror crossing the faces of the post-event athletes as they stare up the steps wondering "How the hell will my legs ever get me up there?"

Getting any enjoyment out of that psychic pain would be sick (which only increases the likelihood that it happens).

So back at the top of those steps. I have already spent the better part of 24 hours bathed in a sweat of terror about this event. My stomach is knotted, my intestines are fragile, and every voluntary muscle has been tensely quivering with anxiety. 

Fear is also a great motivator, and many of my friends know I am competing and they will be here to make sure I actually sit down at erg #70 and row for my 2000 meters of torture. In fact, this public display is the worst part of CRASH-Bs, and a new concept to me. 

As a marathoner, I am used to anonymity; to being one of thousands standing on the same start line, heading out for 26.2 miles together. Every year, the Boston Globe publishes the list of all 38,000+ marathoners, in order of finish times. If nobody knows how many hours, minutes and seconds I ran, they cannot easily find my name in that multi-page publication. And that is precisely how I like it. Although there are age group winners, I am never one of them. And they are only ascertained after the race. Not as they are crossing the finish line. Not on electronic display overhead. Not while they are still heaving up their nerves, adrenaline, and breakfast onto their nearest competitors.

CRASH-Bs are premised on a public display of glory and humiliation, and organized into separate, age-divided races. I will only be racing other 40-49 year old lightweight (under 135 lbs) women. There is no hiding behind the faster men, or the younger women. My name "R. Churchill" will be up on the scoreboard, my electronic boat icon flogging painfully alongside everyone else's, for all the stadium to see. If I lose momentum, and fall behind in the last 500 meters, everyone will watch this. If I pull a mediocre race, and come in last, this too will be on display. My time and position will stand next to my name for several minutes after the end of my race, while I retch, painfully, below, in full view of the spectators.

One last piece of this concept of the public eye. I signed up to try out for the CRI Competitive Women's team. Most them are aware of this, and will wait to see how I perform under pressure. They will watch my race, and decide my fate. My son (my biggest fan, and one of my most committed coaches) will also watch, and judge me, not as a mother, but as a deserving--or not--fellow athlete. My coach (the crotchedy John Sisk, himself) has been working with me and tells me that I will PR (followed by an unspoken "or else..."). The Competitive Men's team, with whom I have been training, also know I am here. They will be kind, but my value rides, in part, on my performance here. This race is ever so much more visible than any marathon. 

gulp.

Armed with this fear of public humiliation. I head down into the weigh-in area with my lucky "baby catcher" T-shirt. The volunteers cheer and say "you will be the fastest midwife out there". I think about all the rowing midwives I know (zero) and figure they might be right. Narrow the parameters enough and we can all be fastest, right? 

They stamp my tricep with my first tattoo "LWT"--which gets me thinking about tattoos. I feel tough there for a second, with the fresh ink rippling on my muscular arm. I imagine the tattooed pirates, truck drivers, and Harley dudes, and feel a rush of affinity with them. Until I remember what "LWT" stands for.  I don't think "Lightweight" hangs out in the same bars as "Bubba".  In fact, "Bubba" probably eats "Lightweight" with bar nuts as he swigs down his whiskey...I slink out of my reverie and head back into the world of gatorade and GU packs.

With two hours to kill, and a morass of butterflies breeding in my stomach, I am not sure how I will get my banana and Vitamin Water to stay down. But I try. Baby bites, deep breaths, and tiny swallows. I pay attention to other rowers, and to the digital race displays above the arena. Breathe, chew, cheer, swallow. The butterflies eventually embrace the nutrition, and energy seeps into my quivering muscles. I cheer the rowers on. I follow my fellow CRI people, and the boy who rowed with my son last summer. I get teary with the determination of the adaptive rowers, and I feel the pride of the international competitors. I sense the collective drive and the pain, and my legs keep quivering. Is it nerves? or is it growing excitement?

2:15 and time to warm up. Coach John Sisk, the man who simultaneously motivates and terrifies me, walks me to an erg, and talks me through a reasonable warm up ("Stop pulling power 10s, Robyn. You want to have some energy left for the race"). We practice starts. He keeps me focused when I want to scream. He makes me laugh when I want to vomit. He makes me believe that I should stay put when I want to crawl up the stairs and slink back home. He makes me believe I will survive and live to talk about this.

2:40 and my heat starts lining up to head into the race area. John asks "One last trip to the head?" (after a brief moment of translation of navy speak to English, my bladder speaks up). Gulp. "Yes, sir." He takes my water bottle and registration card and saves me a place in line. I run, panicked, to the women's room, and contemplate staying there for the next 20 minutes. As I wait for a stall, out walks a teenage boy, completely poised. He looks at me, suddenly a bit uncomfortable, and washes his hands quickly and proceeds out of the women's locker room. I catch the eye of another female competitor and we burst out laughing. "He must be too nervous to read the sign on the door." she says. I giggle, thankful that I had read it appropriately.

Back in the arena, I catch up with John. He smiles reassuringly. "You are prepared, Robyn. This will be fun."

Ha. This part is always fun for the coach. It is never fun for the athlete.

We somehow find erg #70. John reminds me "once you start, it will just be like you and me in the erg room at CRI. Nobody else." I look around at the hundreds of other competitors, and am not sure I believe him, but I wish it to be so. For the moment, there are loud voices from the stands, and chaotic chatting on the floor. The woman to my left looks over, "Have a good race." She looks determined, and fast. Really fast. I can't look at anyone else, or my wobbly knees will stop working. I strap my feet in, and grab the handle. I hear my husband shout "Go, Robyn!" from the stands, as he takes a gazillion photos of me looking green (I know. I have now seen them all). I hear some other friends shout at me as well. 

I want to vomit. But that's nothing new. I have been wanting to vomit since yesterday afternoon when my friend, Emily, called me and said "Oh, shit! I am so nervous! I can't eat. I can't sleep. I can't think! I want to puke!" My nausea began during that phone call, and continues now. 

We try to adjust the drag factor, but the monitors switch to race status. Too late to change anything accurately now. I swallow nervously. John reaches over me and moves the resistance lever up--I decide to trust him, and not to worry. It is too late anyway. He looks down and me, "Relax, Robyn. Just have fun." RELAX!?!?!? Does this guy have ANY IDEA what this is LIKE???? It is NOT relaxing. A spa is relaxing. A massage is relaxing. This is TERRIFYING. 

But I look up at him, and remember why I am here. My goals are simple: I want a T-shirt. I want to finish. I want to PR. Any one of those three will be reason to celebrate. Everything else is icing, and irrelevant at this moment. This will be ok. I have raced 2000 meters before, and I will do it hundreds of times again. John will keep me honest and slow at the start. I am finally just a little excited.

"Go Robyn!" Dana shouts, or is it Brian? I know they are out there, cheering me on. I know they will be supportive, whether I do anything fast, or whether I throw up on the determined-looking woman to my left. I feel good. The quivers are abating. My stomach is calm. My breathing controlled. 

Like maybe being puked on isn't in the cards for my comrade on erg #71. Like maybe I will finish. Like maybe I will find it in me to smile in 8 minutes.

I take my handle. The monitor reads "SIT READY." Check. It changes to "ATTENTION." Duh. I am totally focused. 

I hear it before I see it 

"ROW!" 

7 fast strokes and then try to settle. John's voice in my ear "you're still too racy, slow it down. slow it down."

I try. 1:57. too slow. 1:52 too fast. 1:56. "Right there" John' calm voice. "Keep it there.". I want to keep it there, but my legs can't do it. My splits wobble between 1:53 and 1:57. Too broad a range, too fast a stroke rate. Too scatter-brained. Too many cheers. Too much action. "Settle, Robyn" John's voice steadies me. "It's just you now. This is your race against you." 

And in that first 500 meters, I find my rhythm. My splits between 1:55 and 1:57. Still a broad range, but gradually narrowing. Stroke rate of 32-34. Better. My breathing keeps pace with the "catch-chaaaa, catch chaaaa" of the erg. 

At one point, I glance at the bottom of the monitor, with the list of competitors and the number of seconds they are ahead of or behind me. I see two people ahead of me, but then I panic. Third place? Should I pull harder? Am I going to fast? 

Wait, What did John say? "This is just you and me in the CRI erg room." Right. I block out that part of the monitor screen. Just hit my splits. Race my race. Row a strong race. Finish with a sprint. I pull and breathe. 1000 down: half-way through. John's voice in my ear "Big legs". I press and breathe. 

750 meters to go and John says "Talk to me, Robyn. How are you feeling?" WTF? He wants me to talk to him? Is he nuts? I never talk during a 2k. Who has enough breath to talk after 1250 meters? WHAT KIND OF A COACH ASKS A ROWER FOR CONVERSATION 1250 METERS INTO A 2K???

I breathe. Hey. I can talk. Maybe I should be rowing faster? "I'm doing ok, John." I say between gasps. But it doesn't seem that hard. Wow. I am doing this thing, and I am going to live through it.

"Let's pick up the pace a bit. Drop to 1:54-1:55."

And I do. In fact, in the last 500 meters, I pick off two other boats. Not by much. Not with glory. But with just a little more push than I thought I had. 

250 meters
My lungs are searing.
150 meters
The bile builds up in my throat. 
I shorten to 3/4 slide.
"Ten more strokes, Robyn!"
9...8...7...
My quads turn to jelly. 
6...5...
My back burns. 
4....
My forearms tingle.
3...
I can't breathe.
2...1...
Snap! I let go of the handle, and put my head between my legs.

I feel John's hand on my back steadying me. "Keep moving" he says as he hands me the handle and forces me up the slide. I wobble up to the catch. "Steady there." I hear him laugh as he holds me on the erg.

I breathe in my first deep breath of oxygenated air. My lungs burst open to receive it. My second breath starts clearing the lactic acid from my legs. My head clears, and my eyes start to focus.

I look up at John and see his big smile. I know I did it. I know I earned the T-shirt. I PR-ed. I rowed a good race.

What I didn't learn until later was that I came in 2nd in that race. The winner is from Denmark, and the other medalist is from Seattle. They came so far for less than 8 minutes of racing. They love it like I do. They smile through their green gills, and talk about Row-Pro and on-line virtual races. They invite me to "row" with them. We congratulate each other. We smile. We laugh. When I stand on the podium, with my medal hanging around my neck, I am proud of all three of us. And proud of the other women who raced with us.

I look around the stadium, at all the sweat, vomit, and spilled gatorade. I smell feet, body odor, and disinfectant. I see smiles of happiness standing next to disappointed eyes. Cheers erupt as the next race begins. I watch the muscles strain, the hands grip, the mouths gasp. I see lips turning blue, foreheads creased in pain. 

I have confirmed, first hand, that there is nothing so ridiculous, so painful, so full of nasty bodily fluids as an indoor rowing championship. And nobody is crazier than the people who flock by the thousands, risking exposure to those self-same nasty bodily fluids .
I also know this. These are my people.

Sunday, January 31, 2010

the joy of the erg


After 6 months of rowing, my first season on the water finally came to an end. I am resigned to the onset of winter, and have headed indoors for winter training. Tanks and weight training are completely new to me, and I am learning just how slow I am at the catch, and how much more I have to learn at the finish. Weight training has helped me identify at least 7 muscle groups that I appear to be genetically lacking. These weekly classes are sure to identify further personal deficits, although the instructors are positively lovely. "Robyn you are doing really well. That backsplash is great." "Robyn, bench pressing 30 pounds is a terrific starting place." "Robyn, your form really isn't so terrible."
Ha. I know better. But I guess the coaches want me to keep coming back, so they can keep their income. Makes sense.
But the erg. Ah the erg. Indubitably invented during the Spanish Inquisition, the rowing machine has been greatly improved with the advent of electronics and the "painometer" screen which tells you just how slowly you are pulling on that chain, despite your screaming quads, and searing lungs. It is the only form of torture that Amnesty International doesn't protest.

And it provides equal amounts of psychological and physical pain.

In a boat, you can be anonymous. On an erg, anyone can come up behind you and watch over your shoulder to see exactly how hard you are working, and how slow you really are.
It is embarrassing.
As a marathoner, I know about steady state. I can pull forever at a decent pace. But rowers do these periodic evaluations called 2ks. These are effectively sprints. Rowers also do intervals--not unknown in the world of running, but marathoners don't do short intervals. Rowers do. And I discovered that 250 meter erg intervals--all out--12 times--is among the worst forms of torture I know. I may need to write Amnesty directly.
I have learned many things from the erg, but here are the top ten.

1-Ergs are more pleasant than tempo runs at 5 degrees fahrenheit. Or 35 degrees and raining.
2-Ergs are less fun than easy runs at 50 degrees and sunny.
3-Always check your drag factor. As one of the tiniest people to use the ergs at CRI, it is likely the previous person was pulling against a lot more resistance than I could possibly do without sacrificing a couple of vertebral discs. I usually have to lower the resistance by a factor of 2+.
4-while erging, be aware of your coach's location at all times. It is not good to suddenly notice that the 6'7" shadow looming over your shoulder belongs to the man who told you to hold your splits at 1:54. Especially if you are pulling at 2:04. Painful (and potentially embarrassing) conversations are started this way.
5-You know you working at below anaerobic threshold when your lips turn blue and your mouth goes dry. This feels like dying. Or worse. (Erging has provided me with many opportunities to ponder how much worse you can feel than just simply dying.)
6-You can only pull a fast 2k if your lips turn blue and your mouth goes dry.
7-You can't actually stand up off the erg after you have pulled a really fast 2k.
8-Your coach tells you get get up and keep moving precisely when he knows you can't stand up off the erg. Fortunately, he is usually willing to lift you up by your armpits and push you in the direction of the bathroom. To puke.
9-Intervals make you faster. Like cod liver oil makes you healthy. If you don't suffer, you didn't do it right. 
10-If it is true that pain is weakness leaving your body, then my body has lost a lot of weakness this winter. I am now waiting for the strongness to fill in the void....

Friday, January 1, 2010

Stadiums


4:45AM. I pull on my running tights, shirt, vest, jacket in the early morning darkness. I don the hat and mittens demanded by the winter cold and head out the front door toward Harvard. The 2 mile warm up to the stadium is peaceful--through the empty streets of Cambridge and across the snow-blown intersections of Harvard Square. I continue over the river and into the sports complex, where the monstrous Stadium looms large in front of me.

The sky is completely dark as I head into the dark entryway under the seats. For this brief moment, I am sheltered from the wind. This is when I feel the nudge in my belly--do you really want to do this? Wouldn't a nice easy run be better? Why go up and down all those steps--30 minutes of torture with little noticeable mileage?

I stop for a moment, contemplating my options. The stairs leer at me--the faintest light coming through the entry at the top. They threaten pain, and seem to shoo me away. Outside is the flat Charles River running path. No pain there. Just an easy pace for a few miles and then back home. Which shall I take?

I sigh. I know that I have no options. At some point, options may have existed. But once I enter the stadium, the choice has been made. I have only one direction to go, and it is a whole lot of up.

So I head up the stairs, out into the nose-biting cold, where the full stadium opens up around me. I jog down the few steps to the bottom, turn, and look up at the height of seats above. The number "37" is painted at the top--this is section 37--the last seats by the goal line. Or in my case, the first.

I start my heart-rate monitor (the only worthwhile measurement to take in this workout), and start running up the seats.

The Harvard Stadium Workout is a thing of beauty. It invokes terror or glee in the hearts of its victims. You run (or plod) up the seats--each step requiring you to lift your leg thigh high--all the way to the top. 28 steps by my count. By the last step or two, you fight the urge to push on your quads with your hands to keep the momentum up. The searing pain starts half-way up, and continues to grow until you can't imagine taking another step. Your lungs are ready to explode from the lack of oxygen, and you want nothing more than to get to the top. To stop going up.

At last, you get to the final step, gratefully turning around, and you stare at the closely-spaced little stairs heading down. These, you will run down as fast as you can, carefully to avoid tripping and falling on your head. This part takes immense concentration, and it diverts your attention from the pain in your quads, which you swore, only seconds before, you would never forget.

At the bottom, you smile. You have made it down 56 steps and you are breathing less like a fish out of water. But you haven't finished. You have barely begun.

This sequence is repeated 36 more times as you run up each section on one side of the stadium, around the curved end, and back up the sets on the other side. In the cold, your lungs alternate between burning pain of gasping breaths and the icy pain of the sub-freezing air you have gulped in too quickly. There is no happy middle. Your quads feel fine for the first step or two, and then they immediately revert back to the searing lactic acid burn for the remainder of the climb. By the half-way mark, your legs tremble on the way down--just one more factor to overcome on the perilous descent.

This is a Harvard Stadium workout.

I am heading down to the middle stretch of the stadiums when the black sky starts to fade into grey. The stars lose their brightness, and I feel the first glimmer of hope. Despite the shaking in my legs, I feel my growing belief that this workout will end. Even if I cannot breathe in enough air, the sun will rise. This day will begin soon. My pain will stop at the end of the last stadium section.

I continue on, past section 19, where I begin to count down rather than up. At the top of each set, I glance at the faint line in the eastern sky. The line becomes progressively lighter--slowly changing from grey to a washed-out blue, and then to a faint beige--moving ever closer to day as the earth spins on its axis. I push up another set, and the sky is no longer black. The stars are too faint to see.

I head up the last flight of seats, and come to a complete stop at the top, facing North, into the cold wind. Here I pause, appreciating the hard work I have accomplished. I feel the burn in my quads, the tightness in my hamstrings, the smoldering in my lungs. And I smile. This pain is a good feeling. The day has not yet begun, but I have finished this daunting task of running up and down (and up and down, and up and down...) these 37 sets of cement seats. I imagine the crowds cheering on the Crimson at the Harvard-Yale game. I all but hear the cheers of excitement and the roar of victory. But I imagine they are for me.

My easy jog home takes me back through the slowly filling streets of Cambridge. My quads register their unhappiness, but the rest of me feels victorious. I will not have to face the stadiums again.

Until next week.