Saturday, September 14, 2013

Running With Endurance


“...and let us run with endurance the race that is set before us..." - Hebrews 12:1 

Running With Endurance

The horn went off.  For the first 200 meters I was out in front.  I partook of the serene open water, untouched by any other swimmers, then the chaos began, elbows in my face, heels in my ribs, hands pushing my legs down, yup you guessed it, I got swallowed up and sucked into the pack.  As I lifted my head up to spot the buoys I could see that I was only finger tips away from breaking free from the pack but they seemed to keep it that way till about the 550 meter mark.  Then the chaos ended.  I got into form, turned on my kick and began to play catch up with the lead swimmers.  I kicked it in hard, I kept it classy and finished the swim strong.  Then, I had the grand opportunity to participate in the longest transitions ever, I took me 2 minutes and 43 seconds to complete transition one when normally I am under 40 seconds.  For some reason the race directors thought it would be best if the designed the course with a 900 meter run after the swim and before they bike, it burned so good!

Off onto the three loop bike course where I continued to play catch up.  It was wet, slippery and technical, twenty people were hospitalized for broken bones.  At every turn I could feel my tires skipping along the wet street, just on the verge of slipping out underneath me.  I began to pass other racers one by one.  Then course went silent.  I could not see another person for about 300 meters.  It was at this point I figured I had caught everyone in my wave.  I glanced back and I had two sneaking up on my wheel.  One from Canada and one from Great Britain, then they passed me.  As I started the third and final loop I passed the Canadian and the Brit.  The Canadian responded and went with me and we dropped the Brit.  We dismounted off the bike and went into another 900 meter transition, then into a 5k run, the Canadian and I, shoulder to shoulder.  I immediately through a serge in and pulled away, hoping to catch the last of the leaders.  For sixteen minutes and twenty four seconds I was chasing the leaders but what I did not realize was that, I was leader.

After two loops through the park I brought it in,  I came down the final stretch and finished with a huge smile and a fist pump.  Relived and excited because I knew I had a great race, no crashes, no injuries, no bee stings and no flat tires, but still not sure that I had won.  As I walked over to the finishing area I only saw about fifteen athletes, all of whom were in one of the waves that started before me.  As I doubled check all of their race bibs it dawned on me, I just won the World Championship Title for the 20-24 age group.

With only a day of recovery I get to do it all over again on Sunday but this time for the Olympic Distance (1,500 meter swim, 40 kilometer bike, 10 kilometer run).  The Olympic Distance is exactly twice the sprint and this time around it is going to be hard and take a whole lot of endurance.

A Spiritual Thought or Two
Running the Race with Endurance

Let us run with endurance. What is needed is endurance, both to finish my race on Sunday but also to finish what I have begun in Jesus Christ.  God has set before me two races.  A physical race and a spiritual one.  I must run them both.  They will involve effort, commitment, discipline and a whole lot of pain.  Being passive never runs a race. God wants us to run the race, and finish it right, with joy and zeal but we cannot do it alone.  We need His help.

Endurance is needed to run that race.  It is a determination which goes steadily on and refuses to be deflected.  In Hebrews 12:1-2 the author, alluded to the idea that the Christian's faith is like a race, an endurance race, one in which there is not a single winner but rather everyone who finishes is a winner and all racers should race with a kind of steady determination that refuses to be deflected. 

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Laying Aside Weight



"...let us lay aside every weight, and the sin which so easily ensnares us..." Hebrews 12:1

Laying Aside Weight


One comical moment came in 2011 after I had just won the Santa Barbara Triathlon for the first time.  I was cleaning up my transition area after the race and I overheard two guys talking as they passed behind me.  The first guy said to his buddy, “That is the kid who won the race.”  Astonish his buddy replied, “But he’s fat.”  I just grinned.  


As an endurance athlete many would never realize that I struggle with my weight.  My struggles with weight are not in the realm of obesity nor are due to self-image but rather unnecessary weight that slows me down from a lack of discipline.  For an triathlete my height, age and level of racing in which I compete, I should be at least 10-15 pounds lighter, I know exactly where it was coming from, cheese-on-everything and  home grown avocados that I like to eat.  


One study had shown that one pound of unused body weight can add two seconds per mile.  In a ten kilometer race, ten to fifteen pounds of unused body weight is the equivalent of adding two to three minutes in a ten kilometer race, astonishing, I know!  My goal this year has been to try to cut down at least ten pounds and make it down to the low one-hundred and sixties.   Five days before leaving for London I weighed in at one-hundred and sixty-two, which is the lightest I can ever remember being.  It has made a huge difference and I have been having incredible track workouts.  I know I am not going to run a sub 30 minute 10k after a bike and a swim but I know I am faster because of the weight I dropped.


For eight years I rode “Old Yeller” a yellow 2002 aluminum framed road bike with aluminum wheels in all of my triathlons.  This year I upgraded to all carbon fiber and an aero helmet.   It was this year at the Ventura Triathlon when I retired Old Yeller from racing, a bitter sweet moment in my life.  I knew my new bike would cut some time, I did not realize it would be three and a half minutes and that I would have the second fastest bike split of the day.  With all the weight dropped there was a price to pay and it came out of my wallet.  Cutting weight and upgrading my equipment has allowed me to “run the race with endurance” more effectively. 


A Spiritual Thought or Two

Laying Aside Hindrances and Sin

As I endeavor to overcome the many discouragements and obstacles in my life I know that perseverance builds character and I am learning key elements that translate over into my spiritual race in which life eternal with God is the prize.  


Being over weight is not a sin and I am not trying to make that parallel.  I understand that genetics play a huge role in our weight.  All of our bodies have a programed body weight which come from our progenitors and this programed body weight is in our genetics, please do not misunderstand me.


There are things that may not be sin “every weight” but are merely hindrances that can keep us from running effectively the race God has for us.  Our choices are not always between right and wrong, but sometimes between something that may hinder us and something that may not.  I know that there is plenty that hinders me from running my spiritual race with endurance.  Then there are sins, sins that easily ensnare all Christians and I am sure it is different for everyone.   Easily ensnares is translated from a difficult ancient Greek word (euperistaton), which can be translated four ways: “easily avoided,” “admired,” “ensnaring,” or “dangerous.”  Some sins can be easily avoided, for what ever reason, they are not.  Some sins are admired, yet must be laid aside. Some sins are ensnaring and thus especially harmful. And some sins are more dangerous than others are.  I am encouraged in Hebrews to lay them all aside.


To often I find myself being ensnared by sin in my spiritual life and doing things that I do not want to do and not doing things that I want to do.  It is so easy to get angry and so hard to return a put down with love.  Why is that?  It is so easy to be selfish and keep blessings for myself rather than share those blessings with others.  Why is that?  It is so easy for me elevate things above God, including myself.  Why is that?  It is so easy to be prideful and stubborn and resist God in my heart.  Why is that?  I am reminded of the Apostle Paul and his struggles when he was inspired to write Romans 7:15-25, “For what I am doing, I do not understand; for I am not practicing what I would like to do, but I am doing the very thing I hate.  But if I do the very thing I do not want to do, I agree with the Law, confessing that the Law is good.  So now, no longer am I the one doing it, but sin which dwells in me.  For I know that nothing good dwells in me, that is, in my flesh; for the willing is present in me, but the doing of the good is not.  For the good that I want, I do not do, but I practice the very evil that I do not want.  But if I am doing the very thing I do not want, I am no longer the one doing it, but sin which dwells in me.  I find then the principle that evil is present in me, the one who wants to do good.  For I joyfully concur with the law of God in the inner man, but I see a different law in the members of my body, waging war against the law of my mind and making me a prisoner of the law of sin which is in my members.  Wretched man that I am! Who will set me free from the body of this death?  Thanks be to God through Jesus Christ our Lord ! So then, on the one hand I myself with my mind am serving the law of God, but on the other, with my flesh the law of sin.”  


I am a sinner saved by God’s grace, His unmerited favor and love, and I await the victory of laying aside the sins that so easily slow me down in my spiritual life.  I understand it is an active involvement by letting God mold and change my heart through the life and work of Jesus Christ.


After dwelling on the verse “let us lay aside every weight, and the sin which so easily entangles us.”  I think there is a lesson to be experienced soon and many more to come.  I know I have learned an equivalent lesson in a the temporal sense with my training, that cutting weight is important, takes discipline, a lifestyle change and there is a price to pay but the benefit is that I am no long weighed down and hindered.