Tuesday, October 22, 2013

My 40th State (and so much more)

I think I just need to stop pretending that I am ever going to start writing in here regularly.  I really want to, but for some reason, it just never happens.  I get too busy with work, with running, with traveling, or whatever, and I forget about it for a few months.  Then something happens.  And I want to talk about it.  And I return to my trusty blog for a post, only to have it then disappear again into the background.  But such is life...

But once again, here I am, feeling compelled to write.  I completed my 40th state half marathon yesterday, and I just have so much I want to say.  So many thoughts, so many feelings, so many stories that I want to get out - to immortalize in words on a page that nobody really reads.  And precious few have any to do with the actual race I ran.


A 20-year-old dream came true this past weekend.


I met Dean Cain.


I don't know if I ever will be able to say/write those words without a part of me feeling like this is something out of a dream - that suddenly I will wake up, comfortably snuggled under my polka dot comforter, and realize that this never actually happened.  That the hugs, the pictures, the ear kiss, and so many smiles are all part of a story that remains wholly contained within my subconscious.  


I actually had that thought this morning, upon awakening.  I was back in New Jersey, back in my bed, back in my reality where it seemed nothing had changed.  I grabbed my phone off the dresser and quickly went to my photos.  There it was.  There was my most coveted picture - one of Dean and me and my newly autographed 40th state race medal.  


This was real. 


I can barely write those words without getting choked up over the magnitude of what this means to me.  I know this must sound ridiculous.  I feel that pretty soon I'm going to start sounding as out of touch with reality as some of my patients do.  Or I'm going to come across as a crazy, celebrity stalker with a few too many screws loose.  But neither of those is true (well, I'm hoping, anyway.)


I want so desperately to find the right words to express what this means to me, but I fear I never will.  The true significance of this event in my life will likely only ever be known or understood by myself.  But that's ok too.  I didn't do this for anybody else.  


My life was changed 20 years ago.  September 12, 1993.  Lois & Clark premiered on television.  I didn't care.  I was an 8-year-old girl.  I cared about Barbies and taking care of my baby dolls and going roller skating.  My parents, however, were interested in this new incarnation of the Superman legend.  They watched every Sunday night.  I remember asking them a couple of times to turn it off, to watch something else.  I didn't want to watch a show about a superhero.  Thankfully, they ignored me.  Not having much else to do at the time (oh, the perils of being eight), I started watching it with them.  It didn't take long.  By the end of season 1, I had asked my parents to get my hair cut "like Lois Lane's" and purchased my first (of many) Superman shirts.  By the time season 2 rolled around in the fall, I was already planning my Lois Lane Halloween costume.  (And, I'm pretty sure the summer between seasons 2 and 3 - after the proposal - was the longest of my life...and the first and only time I wished for summer to pass more quickly.)


From then on, this was the hallmark of my childhood.  I have often asked myself what it is that hooked me - what was so special about this show that 20 years later, after viewing every episode countless times, that it still gets to me.  At any given moment, one has a remarkably good chance of finding Lois & Clark in my DVD player.  Despite knowing every scene and having them mostly memorized, I have never stopped enjoying them.  If possible, I think I enjoy them even more.  What initially offered excitement and anticipation has now come to provide comfort, familiarity and stability.  When the rest of my world is falling apart, Season's Greedings remains exactly the same as it was when I first watched it on television 19 years ago.

And, at the end of the day, I can count on good and evil being back in balance and love conquering all (paraphrased, of course, from H.G. Wells in Soul Mates).  At least in Metropolis.

Lois & Clark provided me with entertainment, but it was also so much more than that.  It gave me hope.  It was the promise of love, of victory over evil, and of the ultimate goodness of mankind. 


And Dean and Teri contributed mightily to the lore and to my love.  They made these characters come alive.  They were the heart and soul of Lois and Clark and breathed new life into them.  I idolized them both from the beginning.  It also didn't hurt that Dean is unbelievably gorgeous (and even more so in person - wowzers!), which helped propel him into First Crush status for me.  I wrote to him when I about 10 or so, and he sent me back an autographed postcard of himself as Superman.  It immediately became my most prized possession.  I found a frame for it and slept with it under my pillow for the longest time.  Then, around the time of the series end, it took the place of honor in the center of my newly created Superman Shrine, filled with my L&C poster, t-shirt, books, trading cards, and a few Superman action figures.  


And now, 16 years since the finale, I still have my Superman Shrine, although it's grown significantly since then (and, not to mention, is scattered between two states).  But now I have a new photo to take center stage - one of Dean hugging me.  ME.  Lowly, little ME got a hug from Dean Cain, from my Superman.  Actually, I got a lot of hugs from Dean - so many that eventually I lost count.  So many words come to mind when I think about that: amazing, incredible, fantastic, wonderful, awesome, super.  But not one can come close to capturing the feeling I had in that moment and in all the moments I've reminisced since then.


It was perfect.


With all of the excitement and anticipation leading up to this past weekend, I would be remiss if I didn't also admit that there was a bit of hesitation as well.  This was so important to me, and Dean has played an integral part in my life since I was eight.  Eight!  I had heard from many other fans who had already met him who shared how sweet and nice he is in real life, so I felt pretty confident that our meeting would go well.  But I feel it's always a little scary to take this person who had previously existed to you only in unreachable media, whom you've placed on a pedestal for the vast majority of your life, and having him be there in front of you - flesh and blood, a real, living, breathing person, just like anyone else.  I worried if it would ruin the magic of Lois & Clark for me.  Would I still be able to enjoy my favorite show, if it turned out that the person who portrayed my hero turned out to be unkind, uncaring, or even a jerk?


Then I met Dean Cain, and all my fears dissipated.  He is amazing.  Truly, utterly amazing.  I expected him to be nice, but I couldn't have expected him to be as incredibly sweet, interested, and down-to-earth as he was.  Here I am - having flown from NJ to TN just to meet this hero of mine - and he made me feel like I was the hero.  He made me feel that the honor and privilege I had in this meeting was equally shared by him.  I left our interactions feeling as though I was special.  That, to me, is pretty incredible and speaks volumes about Dean as a person.  And that is when I realized that meeting him could never destroy the lore or the magic of Lois & Clark.  Because, at the end of the day, he is Clark.  He may not work for a major metropolitan newspaper or wear tights and a cape under his suits, but the very essence of Clark - his charm, his quiet strength, his humility, his kindness, his unwavering goodness - in reality emanates from Dean himself.  I didn't think it was possible to love Lois & Clark any more than l already did, until now.


And I have Dean to thank for it.


When I was younger, I used to have all these incredible fantasies of meeting Dean and falling in love and riding off into the sunset together.  Or maybe flying off into the sunset together.  I mean, he is Superman, after all.  And while a girl can dream, in reality, I couldn't be any happier with what I had the opportunity to experience this weekend.  Dean and I talked for several minutes on a few different occasions (you know, when I wasn't acting like a bumbling idiot and giggling like a schoolgirl).  We exchanged multiple hugs and an ear kiss (haha).  We posed for a couple of pictures.  And this means everything to me.  Because, as crazy as it sounds, for those few minutes while I was wrapped in his arms, I meant something to him.  Not necessarily much, but something.  And that's really all I could have ever hoped for.  Even if I never have the opportunity to say hello to him again or to get another hug (but oh God, I sure hope I do), I am content with the knowledge that for those few minutes in Nashville my life had even the smallest impact on his.  My little life intersected briefly with that of someone I grew up loving and whose life has had the most profound impact on mine.  And that means the world to me.


Dean, if by some crazy miracle, you are actually reading this (God help you), I really just want to say thank you.  Those two little words are definitely not enough to express the depth of my gratitude, but it's all I have.  Thank you for bringing magic and life into Lois & Clark and into my life.  Thank you for giving me a wholesome hero to look up to and a life of service and goodness to emulate.  Thank you for the many hugs, a kiss, a most special race medal, and several photographs that I will cherish for the rest of my life.  Thank you for making me feel special.  But mostly, thank you for being the wonderful person that you are.  I hope our paths will one day cross again.  


But, until then...

TeriDean4ever!  

(haha)




Friday, May 10, 2013

Clearly I'm not any good at keeping up with my blog and posting when I say I will.  I think this is my 4th time I've started (restarted, actually, I guess) trying to write in here regularly.  Part of the problem lately has been that I've waited so long, I have no idea where to start!  I still don't really know where to go with this, but figured I needed to start writing something, or I'd never come back to this thing.

There's been a lot that I've wanted to write about recently, and I hope that now that I've restarted my blog again, maybe this will be the outlet that I've been looking for.  Running, of course, has essentially consumed my life, and I never tire of talking about it.  However, my family and friends most definitely have tired of listening to endless race reports and race schedule planning sessions.  So perhaps I will turn to my trusty blog instead!

So very much has happened since I last wrote in here.  Last time I wrote was July 2012 - I was at the very beginning of my PGY-2 year and had just recently returned from my June trip of the Northwest.  Now, I am approaching the END of my PGY-2 year and looking forward to starting my psychotherapy PGY-3 year in just a little over a month and a half.  I still can't believe I'm almost a PGY-3.  Where has the time gone?

PGY-3, while a little terrifying due to it being unchartered territory for me in psychiatry, should be a wonderful blessing for my race schedule and running life.  I will have approximately 6 24-hr buddy calls, which should all fall on weekdays (and Friday).  Aside from a few weeks of pinch scattered throughout the year where I might get called in for back-up, I should have every weekend free!  This opens up a whole new world of possibilities for me.  I am so very excited!

But before I get too carried away talking about all the things I want to do, maybe I should mention what's been going on since I last wrote.  I am now up to 31 states and DC done.  31 states!  I can barely believe it myself.  It seems like not long ago this challenge was just a twinkling in my eye, and now I'm coming up on the end.  Well, not quite the end, but it's getting pretty close.  It's close enough that I'm starting to plan my 50th state half marathon and how I want to celebrate the completion of my challenge.  I've already picked out a running skirt and headgear to wear for my final state.  It's starting to feel like a reality!

But I'm gonna try not to go too crazy talking about state #50.   I still have a good number of states to go first.  And lately, I've been working on another challenge I set for myself.  I've been a member of Half Fanatics (a running group for people who are pretty crazy about running half marathons) since last summer.  And last November, I did something that a couple short years ago, I never would have thought I would do: I ran another full marathon.  My first marathon in almost a decade!  It was an incredible experience.  I came in at 5:17:xx, which was a ways off from my PR set when I was 17 (4:56:17), but not my slowest marathon either.  But just finishing felt like an unbelievable accomplishment for me.  While the half is definitely still my favorite race distance, I just can't stay away from the marathon!  So, this month, I have challenged myself to qualify for the Half Fanatics' sister group, the Marathon Maniacs.  To do this I am running marathons on back-to-back weekends - something I NEVER thought I'd be able to do.  The first of the two races was this past Sunday.  I ran the New Jersey Marathon on the Jersey Shore.  Training for marathons is still very difficult for me, as my schedule is pretty hectic, and I'm pretty slow...which means 20+ mile training runs take half of a day!  But I set out Sunday to just have fun and finish.  I was having a fantastic race, cruising along at 4:33 pace, which was absolutely beyond my wildest dreams.  I was still feeling good and was starting to pick up the pace a bit, and at mile 16.5, I fell.  Hard.  I hurt both knees and both hands.  A couple guys carried me off the course, and EMTs checked me out.  Nothing was seriously injured - I was just banged up pretty bad.  They offered to drive me back to the finish, but I told them I wanted to keep going.  I felt so defeated...not to mention completely overwhelmed by the possibility of having to walk the next almost 10 miles on hurt knees just to finish.  Just as I had gotten up from the curb and rejoined the race, a nice runner named Scott came by.  We'd been kind of leap-frogging for the past 16 miles.  I told him about my fall, and he offered to walk with me for a few minutes.  I hobbled along, wincing with almost every step.  We talked and swapped stories - he is such a nice and amazing guy!  After a few minutes of walking, he asked if I wanted to try jogging.  Honestly, I didn't.  Walking still hurt.  But he was so encouraging that I wanted to give it a try.  So I did.  I found that I could actually jog.  It wasn't super fast, but it definitely beat my walking pace!  When he went back to his walk intervals a little while later, I kept going.  I was too afraid to walk for fear that I wouldn't be able to start running again!  So I kept at it as best I could for the rest of the race.  It was probably one of the hardest things I've ever done in my life.  But I finished!  And I crossed the finish line in 4:54:47...a 1.5-minute PR!  And 23 minutes faster than I ran my marathon in November!  Setting a new PR was something I thought was a long-shot, but might be a slight possibility if I had a terrific racing day.  And instead, I suffered a bad fall and ran the last 10 miles injured, and I still managed to PR!  I don't think the smile has left my face all week. :)

But my knees are doing better now, thankfully, and I'm heading to Delaware in the morning for the next race in this little challenge.  I don't think any PRs are in my future this weekend, but as long as I can finish, enjoy myself, and avoid another fall, I'll be satisfied!  And once I finish this quest, I'll get back to posting about my original challenge and my upcoming states.  I've got a lot to look forward to! :-)