Here's my two cents about good olde Boston; after not running it for the past five years, I can say that I have finally recovered from the PTSD that the infamous marathon course caused me. I can now run up monster hills and not suffer from frightening flashbacks.
I was at the track Wednesday night with about 30 other runners and the track coach asked, "whos going to Boston this year?" A few runners raised their hands and the group started to applaud. I confess that I actually felt left out for a second. This process suddenly reminded me of child birth where with time, you forget the pain. So would I run it again? I could be persueded with a little peer pressure...Yikes, did I say that?
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Here's my two cents about good olde Boston; after not running it for the past five years, I can say that I have finally recovered from the PTSD that the infamous marathon course caused me. I can now run up monster hills and not suffer from frightening flashbacks.
I was at the track Wednesday night with about 30 other runners and the track coach asked, "whos going to Boston this year?" A few runners raised their hands and the group started to applaud. I confess that I actually felt left out for a second. This process suddenly reminded me of child birth where with time, you forget the pain. So would I run it again? I could be persueded with a little peer pressure...Yikes, did I say that?
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