Yes yes yes. Let's catch us up, shall weee?
After the marathon, I decided that I needed to focus on a) running and b) work, and also have time for FRIENDS. Sooo...I dropped bellydancing, cut back on a few things, and learned how to say "no". Okay, I'm still learning...and cutting more things back before the summer...no really! I am!!
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So, for running:
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I ran another 5k back on February 13th: the Cupid's Chase at the Princeton Shopping Center. It was FREEZING, and icy. I didn't PR, but got a decent time:
Time 28:39
Pace 9:13.2
Gender Place 89/282
Age Group Place F25-29: 21/63
Then, April happened. April was CRAZY. As you'll read about in a bit, I drove down to Annapolis, MD, for a conference from April 12-16th. On April 17th, back in NJ, I ran a half marathon in the morning. In the afternoon, I flew to Seattle for another conference and a visit with the family. Yeah. Crazy.
Despite being super tired from the Annapolis conference, I ROCKED the Asbury Park Half Marathon! My goals were 1. PR (so faster than 2:18:50) and 2. if possible, be under 2:10:00. The race was out at the Jersey Shore, so Amanda and I left Princeton pretty early. It was her first half, and she was nervously excited! :) We got there in plenty of time to park and pick up our shirts. But, because it was windy and kind of cold, we didn't decide until the last minute how many layers to actually wear, and took a trip back to the car to shed. Then I had to use the restroom, and by the time we got through the line and back out, the race started. :P Thankfully, it was chip-timed. We were only a minute off of clock-time.
This race had two routes: one straight out-and-back along the shore, and one done in three loops. I chose the three loops, mainly because there's a drawbridge which occasionally strands out-and-back runners. I was pleasantly surprised to find this route was pretty empty, which meant I didn't have to waste time dodging slower people (or feel bad that faster people had to dodge me). I started running in shorts, a tank, and a long-sleeved dri-fit, but after 0.5 miles, that was too hot. I showed off my mad skillz at removing pinned race bib, shirt, and re-pinning race bib to undershirt WHILE RUNNING. :) The mile markers were practically non-existent, so I mostly relied on knowing that each loop was 4 miles. The first 1/3 was really fast, the middle hard, and the last as speedy as I could muster. I passed the 12 mile marker and saw that I would definitely make my goal of under 2:10:00 if I kept it up, so I pushed and pushed the last beautiful mile, and sprinted in at a chip time of *****2:08:29.01*****!!!! SO excited!!! Both goals=met.
Overall place: 268/500, F25-29: 60/100, F: 138/305, Clock time: 2:09:02.16, Pace: 9:51, Chip time: 2:08:29.01
Met Audrey and Kate afterward--they did GREAT! Audrey was 2nd of all females with a time of 1:39:15.48!
Amanda finished her first-ever half marathon with an awesome time of 2:21:10.07! :D
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So, for work:
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My advisers sent me to two conference in April. Back-to-back. I presented the same poster at both, so at least it wasn't double the work, but BOY was I sick of talks and discussing physics by the end of the second! Whew!
We mustn't forget Faraday. HE spent two weeks with Aunty Kelsey! I MISSED THAT BUGGER SO MUCH. But the two of them had a blast. :)
Faraday packs up:
~~First: U.S. Transport Task Force, Annapolis, MD. I drove down with some friends. We stayed in the swanky conference hotel right in cute, historical Annapolis about a five minute walk from the harbor. I've visited the town a couple of times, and love wandering around shops and the pretty US Naval Academy campus. I took one sunny afternoon off to enjoy it by myself.
I visited Justin and his fiancee, Charissa, in DC for dinner:
We ate a lot of crab, mostly in the form of crab cakes:
However, on the night I ate that particular plate of crab cakes, the six males I had the pleasure of accompanying ate all-you-can-eat crab...FOR TWO HOURS. Two hours of watching this:
I have rarely seen such happy, contented, ravenous cave-men.
~~Next, after running a half marathon and eating dinner with Farad--I mean, Kelsey, I flew on home to SEATTLE. My entire-family-minus-Amy-who-is-in-Morocco met me at SeaTac late at night and drove me home. The next morning, I enjoyed shocking everyone at their church. They are used to seeing me once a year at Christmas..."why are YOU here???" "Goood to see you all..." ;) Today was extra special, because it was my daddy's and grandpa's BIRTHDAYS. Nama, Papa, Aunt Cindy, and Aunt Kristie came over for a lovely family lunch. Then, Mumsy drove me to the ferry, took the ferry over to Seattle with me, and rode it immediately back. Ha!
As I was the only female grad student from PPL attending this, the Sherwood Fusion Theory conference, I GOT MY VERY OWN HOTEL ROOM. I KNOW. I had two queen beds, an entire bathroom filled with mini-shampoos, a flatscreen TV, and a 19th-floor view ALL TO MY SELF. :D This conference was even smaller than the last one, and I only knew a couple of people well enough to hang out. So, I enjoyed me-time in the room, the swimming pool, and Starbucks, when I wasn't attending talks and giving my poster.
Monday night, my very bestest BFF, Bethany, drove down from Bellingham to spend the night and next day with me. Weeee! We started off with dinner with ANOTHER BFF, ANOTHER Bethany. :D Bethany^2 and I ate ourselves satisfied at the Ol' Spaghetti Factory on the waterfront. Love Bethany^2.
After the morning talks, Bethany (the one who spent the night) and I moseyed over to the UDistrict for lunch at MY FAVORITE INDIAN RESTAURANT EVER and favorite eating place in college memory: Cedars' on Brooklyn. I can't remember getting anything ever other than Mango Lamb Curry and their famous bottomless "we pour it like water" chai. Gooood tiiiimes.
Then, we walked through my dear UW campus, and I discovered that I subconsciously chose to wear Purple and Gold:
We made it to the UVillage, finally, after we learned that my memory of the area isn't as sharp as it used to be. To our GREAT delight, a Trophy's Cupcakes moved in!
The conference ended around lunchtime on Wednesday, and after a few plans fell through, I had a fabulous time reading and listening to music in a Starbucks and watching the rain for a couple of hours. Then, I took the ferry to Bremerton, had MORE coffee with a college bff, Karyn, and then my lil' bro, David, picked me up and took me home. :)
Home was amazing. I relaxed for 2.5 days. Completely. David took up running recently, so we had a couple of great runs, a good brother-sister date to Bertolino's coffee shop, and bonded over our Muse concert experiences (I saw them in March in Philly; David saw them in April in Seattle):
Jenny the sister and I bonded over coffee, early one fine morning before she headed off to college classes and her first real job as an admin in a lawyer's office!
Mom, Dad, and I had good talks about our upcoming trip to Madrid and Morocco, to visit Amy the other sister!
And of course, I spent MUCH quality time with the other important family members:
Scout (who got spayed while I was home and has a shaved arm for the IV):
Ashley (who, in her old-age dementia, forgot that she hates me):
and Maddie (who is my darling perfect doggy):
~~On May 1, PPPL had a rare open house. About 2000 people stopped by lab to tour the experiments, play with Van de Graaf generators and find out what a plasma is, and generally be amazed by science and the incredible research happening in the middle of New Jersey.
I manned a demo in the Science Education lab: a fluorescent light bulb which is only half-coated with the fluorescent coating, so you can see what's inside. What's inside? PLASMA, OF COURSE.
One cool thing for me was seeing the partially-finished, sadly-cut NCSX, a stellarator. This was going to be a sweet experiment at lab, but was mismanaged, badly over-budget and behind-schedule. But the coils look awesome:
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Sooo that's it! See more pictures (including of the Muse concert) here, and stay tuned for the next post of last Sunday's Tough Mudder!
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