When my body gives out and my head tells me to quit, my heart compels me to struggle on. At some point, however, my head and my heart get in 'cahoots' with each other. They both demand I stop. That is when my spirit soars and their protestations are of no avail. I am propelled by a force unseen, drawn to a potential I have yet to realize. I shake off the burden of the physical and wake up to experience my dream. At last I am free....
Some have dubbed it the final frontier. Well, for the moment at least. The fact of the matter is, right now there is no longer road race in the country. The Bataan Death March 160k Ultramarathon is in a league of its own, and dwarfs all comers to the table. Nothing even remotely comes close. Participants are either honored in hushed, reverential tones or maligned as foolhardy and ignorant.Maybe even stupid. Save for a trifling number, after KM 102 pretty much everybody would be entering the twilight zone. The first ever 100-mile race in the country sticks out like Everest on steroids to the hungry masses, the novelty of the great unknown drawing these inquisitive endurance athletes like moths to a flame. The appeal to be part of history ups the risk/reward scale on an unprecedented level, and athletes will be tested as they have never been before. How long should one soldier on, and when should one know when to quit? It is the quintessential paradox of a discipline that is fueled by blood, guts, and an indomitable will to make it to that finish line. It is a paradigm that will be revisited in recurring snippets as the tale unravels.
Prologue
"May invite ka na ba pre?" That was the prevailing water cooler topic for ultra running denizens a couple months back. As for me, the answer was a resounding NO. I wasn't too surprised though, and already had already somehow come to terms with it. After my maiden stint last year with BDM 102, I never really did anything that could be remotely considered "ultra" anymore. While my contemporaries had joined practically every "mid-distance" (if one could consider 70k as such. Really now.) ultramarathon race that Sir Jovie Narcise (better known in running circles as the irrepressible Bald Runner or just plain BR for short) had put out there, it was no big secret that I have been dabbling into multisport and cycling for the most part and had pretty much been out of the scene. So it was really no shocker. I would be lying if I said it didn't bug me though. Just to be considered for the race is a big honor already, and after all I did apply for it. Thing was,we had absolutely no idea what the criteria was for selection. Rumors abound that supposedly only 15 hour finishers would be considered. But then as the initial wave of invites came out, people who were right around my finish range were getting golden tickets, which pretty much added to my anxiety. Perhaps it was my inactivity with the PAU (Philippine Association of Ultrarunners) that contributed to it. Maybe it's just not in the cards. Sigh. We all move on......
Then one day, as me and Abby were walking around BHS , i get a buzz on my Blackberry. Thank God for instant email. When that header said "Jovenal Narcise", my heart skipped a beat. When I saw the subject line " Letter of Invitation to the BDM 160", I let out a yelp of joy in the middle of the walkway. Okay maybe not, but you get the idea. Abby got hers at pretty much the same time.And why shouldn't she? I'm probably the only guy in the country who has a girlfriend who runs 102 kilometers faster than he does. Happy night.This was what I wanted right? Right? But..... I haven't had any long-distance training. Nada. Zilch. Farthest I've ran in a year was 21k. Oh my. With one fell swoop, suddenly the ball was in my court now.
Decisions, Decisions
When the announcement first came out, the race was actually meant to be BDM 151, 151 kilometers representing the cumulative total distance including the train ride of the Death March prisoners to Camp O' Donnell in Capas, Tarlac. However, there was a clamor to increase the distance to just over 160 kms to make it the official 100-mile race in the country. When BR acceded, the wheels in my head were suddenly turning. I suddenly have a shot to cross one off the old bucket list. After a prolonged period of soul searching (that took roughly about 30 minutes) I had made my decision. Obviously, you know what that decision came out to be. The die had been cast. No turning back now.
Forming the Crew
Perhaps unbeknownst to many, the support crews that you tag along for these races aren't of the prototypical cheerleader rah rah kind, which is a common misconception. It's not fun and games, it's not a street party. If at all, the support crew may even undergo more stress than the runners themselves. They are awake during practically the same time frame, and undergo constant anxiety on their runners well being. The crew has to be part inspirational leader, part drillmaster, part nutritionist, part nurse and part driver. They are perhaps the most integral supplementary element to the success of the race, and their relative efficiency could provide the final difference in toeing the fine line between life and death when push comes to shove (I'm not kidding).
Last year, I got my buddy AJ, my internet legend uncle Tito Caloy and random/seasonal friend RV (by virtue of six degrees of separation he somehow got ensnared into this) whom I met just on the day itself. They were all somehow under the impression that this would be a fun, all-night drinking session with me somehow running in the background. Of course, given the shock and stress that they were suddenly, unwittingly subjected to, they forever hold a "BDM card" on me, that they can pull as they wish. Warning to BDMers - this is prone to general abuse, so choose your crew wisely. Smirk.
This year, Abby agonized over the decision on whether to run or not. She was one of what seemed like only ten women who had qualified for it, and the chance to make history was tantalizing. On the flipside, while she was in phenomenal shape she scarcely had any run training. Crucial year in setting up her business, and I guess at one point we all just have to draw the line with priorities. With much trepidation, she decided to hold it off for next year and I hope to make it up to her then. With her addition though I finally have the benefit of not just a seasoned runner on the crew, but an veteran ultrarunner who knows what it takes to get to that finish line.
I've been bugging AJ, who worked harder than anyone last year in keeping me alive out there, to once again be part of my crew. After incessant faux rejections ( no way in hell he would turn down the possibility of two BDM cards to pull), he finally "caved in" after my assurances that this would be the "last". Which was what we said last year. Hihi.
Internet legend Tito Caloy (old Takbo.ph joke, just google my old material) wasn't supposed to be part of the crew this year and was an 11th hour callup because we needed the extra hand. He had all but retired from the running scene and promptly returned to his competitive drinking roots. His son, my cousin Mel (but we call him Shtuey, go figure) was ostensibly going to crew me, back had to back out at the last moment due to his slated thesis defense. I told him "yung thesis pwede naman ulitin, eto once in a lifetime lang to!" Bad Kuya GBM.
The final piece of the puzzle was Duart, who along with myself and AJ have formed a decade-long triumvirate dating back from our days as gangly freshmen at DLSU. He was crestfallen at missing my maiden campaign last year, and was determined to make it up this year. My energetic buddy not only signed on in a jiffy, he even provided the Innova which would become our support car.
With everything in good stead, now all we could do was wait for our date with destiny.
The Briefing
The race briefing is an annual tradition wherein everyone makes the pilgrimage to Camp Aguinaldo to hear last minute instructions from BR. It is also the last chance for you to take hang and socialize with your "batchmates" in a somewhat lucid manner, you may be even lucky to snag a helping or two of lechon. The whole thing is pretty and cut and dry, but one slide of BR stood out to everybody that night.
D-Day
The advantage of having the race start in the morning is that your body clock is not out of whack. You can sleep like a normal human being and you don't have to be a zombie the first leg or so. With the rest of the team following after office hours (too bad it wasn't an official holiday pfft), me and Abby hitched with TPB bud and BDM 102 partner Mark Hernandez along with soon-to-be marathoner/TPB wifey Bea. While waiting for them at our pre-arranged BHS meeting spot, we see an Audi TT roadster park just in front of Rox. Oohhh fancy. Oddly enough, the silhouette inside was waving to us. Was someone trying to pick up Abby in broad daylight? Que Horror. Amusingly, it turned out to be none other than our good friend Rio with his new toy. The afro gave him away. Soon after Mark and Bea would arrive, and we were well on our way. Last year, I wasn't too happy with our place. This year, we decided to check-in at the MC Lodge, highly regarded by practically everyone and much nearer to KM 0. Place was cool, rooms were just slightly smaller but much cleaner and with better appointments. Of course, I pretended not to see the "295, Aircon 3 hours special" sign outside. Groovy.
The race with no equal started off without much aplomb, with runners trotting warily in lieu of blasting off on all cylinders. Surely, these veterans knew better. Some were setting a faster pace, and only time could tell if they could hold it. After all, this was the biggest battle of our lives right here. I opened the race with buddies Mark Hernandez and OJ Giron, a couple of familiar faces that I hoped would make the journey a lot more meaningful. And in hindsight, hoping that once we enter our own Battle of the Bulge, our own private Normandy, we would all be there to keep each others sanity in check. They had a fairly ambitious goal though- finish the race in 24 hours or less. While I felt that was purely wishful thinking for me given my fitness level, the plan was to just hang with them as far as it takes me. I mean, these guys were in phenomenal shape. OJ coaches nearly full-time and Mark has been on a tear on the running circuit as of late. I would have my work cut out for me but I couldn't allow myself to be left behind.
We start out conservatively, alternating a brisk jog and walking the entire 4k incline. Many are passing us at will while BR passes by in a van and chats us up. Our man is in a good mood this morning, in stark contrast to last year's drillmaster barking on a megaphone. Ordinarily, a competitive junkie like me (and I'm pretty sure these two have that same genome in them) would go nuts at being passed so.... effortlessly. But this wasn't a 10k. The reality was, we had 153 more kilometers to go. Just the thought of it scares the hell out of me. What did I get myself into again?
The Lolo Diaries
At one point, we run into a group led by the "grand old warrior" himself, the ageless Victor Ting. If you see your old man lounging around in the sala watching TV or discovering this fascinating thing called "internet" while forwarding you funny emails (just as we did in well, 1999), this guy puts them all to shame. Imagine, his apos must have it good. No way they are losing an eh ang lolo ko mas magaling sa lolo mo argument. Like, "eh ang lolo ko tumakbo mula Bataan hanggang Tarlac" End of conversation. The ageless wonder somehow had it in him to drag his 66-year old legs across a hundred miles side-by-side with runners young enough to be his grandchildren. Mark told me he could never catch the old codger during the test runs no matter how hard he tried. Thing was, he was maintaining such a ridiculously efficient, no-stopping strategy that it was practically impossible to keep up with him. Perhaps in utter embarrassment at being shown up, we finally caught up with him eventually. And here are some snippets of what I got from a living legend.
" Dati may 100k na , diyan sa may Burnham sa Baguio. Bata pa si Jovie, alam niya yun. Tumakbo ako dun! Paikot ikot nga lang kami."
"Mabagal lang tayo. Sanay tayo sa mabilis pero dito mabagal lang tayo malayo layo pa to"
"Nung 1981 sa Manila International Marathon sub-3 yung marathon ko"
"Nag two bottles pa kami ng Red Horse kagabi"
Hmm, maybe that's his secret. Damn, you mean our very own "super lolo" was a sub-3 hour dude the year before I was er, born? I suddenly conjured visions of myself running in 2041, with a young buck chatting me up at the 31st Runrio Trilogy Anniversary Run
Kid : Lolo, sigurado po ba kayo na kaya nyo pa? Tubig po? Malapit na lang, wag po pilitin.
Lolo GBM : Bah. Alam mo ba noong araw eh natakbo ako mula Bataan hanggang Tarlac?Patakbo yun ni Presidente Narcise dati kada taon
Kid : Um, er, ah ganun po ba? Waw. Talaga lang ha. Sige lo, init lang yan. Inom ka na lang ng tubig nagdidiliryo na po kayo.
Lolo GBM : Totoo! Anong akala mo nagbibiro ako? Eto ipapakita ko pa ang silver buckle ko bilang katibayan (lifts up singlet to show buckle)
Kid : Yuck indecent exposure! DOM! PEdo! Security!!!!!!
Kids. Pffft. As I was snapping out of my misguided daydream, I realized that the urge to do the number two was somewhat compelling enough to tell the crew about it. Abby texts back, we found one in 1.5k, that ok? Of course that was okay. I was thinking, the earlier I get this out of the way the better. Last year was an utter nightmare, first try I was shown a hole on the ground, second try I had to run nearly 1k inside a subdivision just to make it to their clubhouse and I nearly fell asleep inside. They even thought I passed out. This year there was no such problem as the crew found a very nice spot right around the 20k mark ..... inside an Iglesia ni Cristo church. As Abby assured me that my presence there wasn't bordering on anything sacrilegious, I was successfully able to execute probably the fastest and most efficient pit stop ever. Thank you INC, I owe you guys one.
Isolation Therapy
During that break, I had lost Mark and OJ. I kept on looking back, and I asked a Team Ungas van where they were and I was given the impression they were far back. So I was all alone. Felt like I was making good time though, pace at a rock solid 7:30. Much to my consternation, it turns out that they were actually ahead of me. Finally back with my buds, it was supposed to be all smooth sailing from here. It didn't last long though. One pit stop later and the group was once again splintered. What I couldn't understand was why was it that I was the one getting ahead when I'm the weakest runner in our group by a mile. Perhaps, was I doing something wrong? Going too fast? Not even. With no sight of my, I just had to trudge on.
Me, Myself, and the Long Winding Road.
All by myself.... don't wanna be. All by myself..... anymore.
As the bars of the seminal Celine Dion classic rang through my head, I was thinking, this wasn't how I wanted my story to unfold. It was supposed to be packed with stories of guts, glory, and the will to continue. Of camaraderie and an unspeakable bond with brothers who share the same iron-clad mindset in helping each other succeed through seemingly insurmountable odds. It would have made for great drama, the piece that would finally nail me my first Philippine Blog Award win..... a tale of hardship, friendship, and sacrifice through....
Wait, who am I kidding? It's just me, myself, and the road. The sheer drudgery is getting to me. It's pretty much.... mundane and er, unexciting. It's a microcosm of your typical countryside life, and it's a change passing by here during the daytime. Aside from regular contact with my crew and the occasional chit chat with other teams, it's pretty much me and a bunch of nameless faces along the road who keep getting me engaged in this incessant cycle that never gets old :
Bystander : Koya, san kayo galing?
GBM : Mariveles
Bystander : San paponta koya?
GBM : Tarlac
Bystander : !!!!!
Rule of Thirds
I tried to boost my newfound friend's flagging spirits by telling him that even if we were feeling horrible now, we were still well-entrenched in the top half of the draw. And as much as we felt that we were sucking, those who are still behind us must be sucking too. Of course, that wasn't necessarily true, but I had to say something. He was asking if we walked from that point to the 160 line, would we make it? Perhaps, maybe. But we have to make it to 102 first. Obviously, we wouldn't if we did. But it takes an ultrarunner to know anothers suffering, and at that point you do what you could to help them go forward.
I want to puke. I'm dizzy. Maybe I was just being too brash. Who was I anyway, thinking I could just step in here and do a 100 miler without any serious long run training?These guys have been training for a year now. I didn't belong here. I knew I was in decent shape but I guess that just wasn't enough. I'm in pain, everything is painful. Maybe I should quit now and just suck it up later. Oh great Argow just passed me again. He does that every year around these parts. He's very strong. I wanna puke again. This was a big mistake. Where's Tito Lito Lapid? Maybe I could start to rally here just as I did last year. Finally, the crew is here. Maybe I can show them that I am still strong, get something good energy going. Good thing I have shades on. They can't see a defeated man's eyes.
Which at that point I felt was what I needed. I had lost a lot of ground and this was all really getting to me. The competitive nut in me had wanted to do well in this race, showing everybody "it could be done" on a cross-train base. I had a chip on my shoulder if you would call it that. However, at this point that chip could have been easily mistaken for a heavy cross, as I was in heavy suffering.More stops. More pain.
The pain in my left knee grew in intensity with each pause. My crew was pulling out all the stops to ensure that I made it. The pain was incredible. But to quit this near, after all that you've been through? No way in hell. If you told me that I had to roll down the road just to finish, I would have.
As I allowed my blood pressure to settle down a few notches, I just realized that I still remembered quite distinctly each nuance this final stretch had to offer..I remember everything - my shuffling gait, the left to the eskinita, the cheers, the hug from BR. Everything is all still so vivid. Even amidst being embroiled in all this physical suffering, the reassurance of being in somewhat familiar conditions was invaluable. Soon, we would be leaving the comfort of these toiling grounds for a stab at the twilight zone. I check my watch. I actually have a shot at a 102 PR. In what was probably not the smartest move to do at that point , I yearned for a strong entry into KM102 so I "tempo ran" that final kilometer going as low as 7:00. At I approached the famous eskinita Abby, AJ and Duart were there to ensure I didn't get lost. I ran strong into the train station sixteen hours and 30 minutes after I had began to a cacophony of cheers from the remaining crowd, an hour erased from last year's finish. 102 kms done. 58 to go. Last year, this was the scene of our greatest triumph. Now, it is where we begin our greatest battle....
We put Salonpas on the throbbing upper arch of my bothersome left foot, some on the calves. Otherwise, I was okay. Or so I thought. Coming in at around 16:30ish, I decided to burn 30 minutes to simulate a 17 hour split , which more or less gives me 13 hours to complete that final 58k. I had fulfilled my short-term goal to bridge it to my pacers while keeping my sanity. Now the real challenge begins.
First up was AJ, my de facto crew chief from my BDM 102 campaign and eternal buddy. The plan was for him to cover anywhere from 5-10 kilometers while buying Abby some valuable shut-eye before she came on.. While not exactly a regular running denizen, AJ was a former UAAP Volleyball MVP and could count on his natural athleticism to take over should push come to shove. He was hyped up and raring to go as a strange new world awaited us out there.
We had wasted an inordinate amount of time just getting out into the main road, and I was deathly paranoid of getting lost at such a crucial juncture. My absence at that crucial, final test run was now coming back to haunt me. On the way to Macarthur Highway, I had AJ ask practically every manong if they saw runners along the route. Even if the answer was always in the affirmative, the eerie absence of support cars was agitating me. After asking like thrice, Hasa was like Ano, satisfied na? I probably muttered something unintelligible as a reply.
I tried to get on with the 700-300 formula that had worked so well for me, but after a solitary kilometer I felt sick. I was crashing. Hard. Again. Could the strong push leading to 102 drained my last reserves? I was hitting more than 17 hours of the road already. I guess the relative unfamiliarity of the terrain all added to this notion brewing in my head . Once I hit 103k , I was in no man's land. Pessimistic realities were beginning to form in my head. Damn, ang layo pa. Wala na akong ibibigay pa. I implored AJ that all I could do was walk first. All of a sudden, it seemed like I was in a daze. Parang high. To make matters worse, our support van was nowhere in sight. Apparently, Tito Caloy went freestyling on the route and insisted on the "Macarthur Highway" route that he knew.... which was going to Bulacan. Apparently, I wasn't the only one bonking. Try as I could, the legs were not responding. I was doing the tukod move at a higher ratio than at any point in the race. I almost even fell into AJ at one point. We were barely moving. Once again, fears of a late game choke were getting to me.
Good thing that this was an all-too-familiar sight for my friend, having seen me buck injury and dehydration during the previous campaign. He still had his mental notebook full of pre-memorized inspirational quotes, but he didn't pull a single one. The one he did drop though, was probably the one that mattered the most.
A poignant moment in a journey made possible not by one man's singular effort, but by the collective sacrifices of those who share a single-minded determination to tow him to that finish line. Infused by a sudden stream of positive energy, it was just the thing I needed.
Big steps lang. I tried running but gave up seeing that my "run" and AJ's walk were roughly around the same pace. So what's the point. Our progress was miserably slow. After close to an hour, me and AJ had only covered four ridiculous kilometers using this tactic and time was slowly ticking away. I was trying to get myself together by convincing myself that this hour long walk would serve as the much needed "rest" to help me once Abby came on. In pretty bad shape though. Ironically, AJ was somehow relieved when Duart offered to take over pacer duties. Apparently his surgically repaired knee was acting up, a heroic effort for a friend in need. Too bad I was too preoccupied battling my inner demons to fully appreciate it at the time
He was listening to my instructions as much as he could while dropping the occasional motivational line, and we were making some semblance of progress. Pap, mental lang yan. Bumibigay na ang katawan pero it's all mental. Not sure if I got it verbatim but that's pretty much what I could remember.
We had another mad dog episode, and he was brutally honest in telling me he wasn't exactly too thrilled with them wild doggies. A noble effort from my bud to keep me in there, but it was clearly bothering him. In short, at this point where my brain had pretty much short-circuited, I scarcely had any energy to to help him out against any anxiety as much as I wanted to. I needed to be carried, not the other way around. Another point of concern was when he told me he suddenly became dizzy, no doubt a byproduct of the sudden stress put upon his sleep-starved system. As much as Duart was shrugging it off, a glance on my watch was telling me we weren't trending well.
As rhythmically disjointed as our current little sortie was, I was hanging on to the hope that once she came on, everything would fall back into place. I labored heavily with each run, my pain-wracked body slowly being battered into submission. At only 115k in, we were nearly 20 hours out there. 10 hours for 45k? In this state? I pushed the panic button and told good buddy Duart we had to cut short his stint. Always the proud warrior (he's already planning his own BDM 102 stint for next year. AJ is his support crew chief which rocks, problem is AJ doesn't know yet.), he seemed visibly bothered that I had cut his stint short. I scarcely had the energy to explain things, just muttered that it was all about "strategy"whatever that meant amidst his half-serious protestations.
The result was nothing short of spectacular, For one completely inspired, ethereal stretch, everything just clicked. The adrenalin was overflowing. All the pain disappeared., not a trace. I was running like I just started on one of them BHS races. Abby was shocked out of her wits, but kept pace as much as she could. We were passing the others at will, and it was just an incredible turn of events. At a time when we were covering about 4 kilometers an hour tops at around 15:00 min/km pace, we zoomed to an unfathomable (given the circumstances) 5:50 min/km pace. Even I myself was shocked. In plain and simple terms, we had earned back that extra hour that we had lost earlier with the effort.
And in one fell swoop, we were back in the game.
Cruise Control
We had to slow down eventually and fall back into a run/walk pattern as it was Abby's turn to bonk. The sudden speedwork zapped her, and our support car was nowhere to be found. AJ and Duart were plotting our trends in between naps, and they had missed out on the sudden surge. They were at least 5 kilometers away and couldn't seem to find us in their best Keystone Cops routine. Abby was running out of water and Gato as the sudden anaerobic spurt was getting the best of her. With the national engineering boundary for Tarlac in sight, it was somewhat my turn to keep her in there. Eventually the groggy gang caught up, likewise shocked at the little stunt we pulled off.
The adrenalin had worn off and everything was starting to hurt again, but at least Abby was better. As we soldiered on into the wee hours of the new day, we were comfortably settling into a pattern that we had first used when I paced her for the original Rizal Day 32k. It entailed choosing targets from within the prevailing landscape and run to that with no excuses. Let's run to the green house. Waiting shed. 2nd big telephone pole. From this point forth every second counted, each second running providing us a bigger buffer for what promises to be an explosive endgame.
Twenty Four Oras
Set a target. Run.Walk. Rest. As we were nearing the 24 hour mark entering the Tarlac capitol, I was fighting with everything I had. I could scarcely believe that I was still here - alive, standing, running and with a real shot at taking this home. Good vibes. Even the boys were egging me on. Let's do this pap. Let's take this home.
Hitting the 24 hour mark was a poignant, goosebump inducing- milestone. But it wasn't over. Not just yet.
Daytime Shocker
Shocking, because I was still here. Because Abby was approaching 30k pacing me with nary a sign of fatigue. But the single most shocking, absolutely mind-blowing thing that jolted our senses was seeing a crumpled, hobbling figure on the other side of the road. It was Tatay Jonel. I last saw him just after the 50k mark and had figured he had finished hours before.. He looked deathly pale, and our attempts to ask what was wrong were met with some semi-lucid hand gestures, presumably gesturing us to go ahead. Another dagger straight into our hearts. .If I were Daniel- san, he was Master Miyagi. If this were a war, that was our general right there. And right now our general was telling me to leave him and let him be. Reluctantly, we had to pass him, taking painful solace in the thought that this was his battle to face, his mountain to conquer. Just a bit more, and glory would be his.
Hopefully, it would all be ours.
Digging Deep
The sun was starting to beat down and the pain on my left foot was off the charts. Any form of movement would generate a certain level of pain that seemingly only a shot of morphine could negate. Nevertheless, the excitement was building, and we were trending well as we were entering the 140k mark. I could sense it in Abby's voice. We got this babe!! Just a bit more!
Meanwhile, the crew was on chillax mode. A supremely confident AJ was already looking at breakfast plans while Duart was doing a little premature celebrating
Wrong Mistake
I was trying to amp up every step as we were hitting the right turn that was supposed to lead us to the Capas National Shrine. Pain was mortifyingly bad, I've run out of adjectives to describe it. If my Garmin was correct, we just had 13 more kilometers to go to glory. You know how towards the latter part of a marathon, say around 40-41k, you just attempt to block out everything in an attempt at a strong finish? I was trying to pull off the same thing here. In my head, we got this, let's get it over with. As we reached the crossroad, me and Abby ran into Coach Rey Antoque for the final pangtali which serves as your time stamp (they have a knack for just appearing out of nowhere). I asked him how much further, 12k na lang daw. But my strategy was thrown into disarray when veteran ultra dude Ron Sulapas, still very much in the game, told us it was more like 18k out. 18k?? You have got to be kidding me. Coach just said 12k! Abby was getting pissed off because we couldn't seem to get a clear picture of much further we were going. Even AJ and Duart weren't quite sure. Thankfully, Doc Art somehow managed to catch up with us, and he seemed to know the way. Amidst the last-minute chaos, a glanced at my watch. If it were 18k more....
I need to start running. Now.
Malayong malayo pa Kuya....
It's getting to be hot. Really hot. Once again, the lack of a test run couldn't have been more evident as we entered the busy, winding streets going to the shrine. For someone who had made it to to this point relying heavily on pace, distance and time projections.... now I didn't have the slightest damn idea where we were going. Or how far we were. Abby was starting to look a little bit wasted, but was tremendously effective as a drillmaster/inspirational leader. The pain, oh God I don't want to think about the pain anymore. I knew that they were all blistered up, but at this point that was the last thing on my mind. Just wanted this over and done with. I tried asking a tricycle dude how far off we were from the shrine, and was met with an incredulous reply that serves as the header of this paragraph. Digging into what seemed to be my 7th wind already, I was spilling my blood and guts onto that pavement already. Malayo pa ba.....
Panandaliang Ligaya
AJ and Duart were scrambling to get distance projections and to give nearly per kilometer support for us. This was the final stretch. Winning time baby. I had gone through so many up and down cycles that I had lost track already. The term "threshold of pain" has been redefined several times already that I may just end up giving it an altogether different meaning after the whole thing. Quite truly, it takes a different animal to tame this distance. I would whine incessantly, the lack of a clear goal bothering me. AJ kept on trying to explain the projections but nothing was entering my brain. Both me and Abby were at the mercy of the elements, and
right now it wasn't showing that much.
After what seemed like an eternity of pain, the gates of the Capas National Shrine beckoned. Me and Abby were going nuts, the joy was impossible to contain. She kept on telling me that she was proud of me. But wait, there was a catch. To successfully complete the distance, we had to do an extra loop past the monument and back to do a full 100-miler. We were all told of this beforehand. Problem with me was, in my semi-delirious state we thought it was pretty near. I could swear that someone said 5k na lang! Malapit na!
Rule #1 : Don't listen to strangers.
Rule #2 : Never, EVER take "malapit na" at face value.
Rule #3 : " 5k" is relative .
The Final Showdown
Pain. Suffering. Guts. Determination. It's been such an emotional rollercoaster for us and I couldn't stop thanking Abby for willing me to this point. We got news that there have been only been less than twenty finishers, maybe I could even crack the top 20. So all we need to do is cruise, relax, game over. We couldn't have been more mistaken about the entire thing. You know that feeling when you know the race is over and your levels start to normalize? Then all the aches and pains come in? Of course it's normal.
My problem was, it happened to me just a couple of kilometers early.
AJ and Duart were intentionally withholding it at that time, but they knew that the full route was a 4.5 killer uphill and back to cover the missing 9k from the original 151k historic route. Our first inkling was when we saw TPB icon Junrox Roque looking spent, probably the first time I ever saw him him in that state. Argow, OJ, Kelly Lim, I haven't seen them in hours and yet there they were on the homeward journey. Two things. Either they had all slowed down like crazy.... or that final stretch was so far out and difficult that it took them forever to get back. I wasn't about to put my money on the former.
That last 4.5k uphill stretch ranks as probably the greatest physical and mental challenge I have ever faced. After 150 kilometers of running over nearly 27 hours , an extended uphill stretch is the last thing you would ever want to see at that point. Everything was sinking in, my system rejecting everything. I was puking out the gels, and even Gatorade was nauseating. The heat was simply unbearable. I wanted to collapse. Every labored step would elicit a pained yelp from me. If I were to capture a microcosm of the suffering and sacrifice of the actual Death March, I was going through it right there. Abby was compelling me to move forward, but she was in tears as she could see, feel my suffering so near the goal.
My body and mind have both shut down. I have squeezed every last ounce of humanly strength that I could. There is.... nothing more. To the last drop. The uphill climb seems to be endless with no relief in sight. Going up the hill with my eyes closed, I nearly fall over Abby. My battered soul lets a blood curdling yell, a final testament to the flawed limits of human physical endurance. Truly, why did I ever subject myself to this anyway? When will it ever end?
Alas, I refuse to be denied. This is it. This is my moment. When all is gone, the spirit will always remain. I am running on utter fumes and Abby is willing me to that line. Because as one would realize when doing ultramarathons, , this " war" that I've been harping about since the very beginning is not fought on a battlefield with guns or soldiers or generals. It is fought in the inner recesses of your own mind. Drawn out into the outer fringes of your own heart. YOU are your greatest enemy..... and greatest ally at the same time. It is a dichotomy that has no equal, accessible only to the chosen few who dare tread that fine line.
Suck it up. Pain is temporary. Glory is forever.
Everything is just a blur now, unraveling in my head as some high- definition, stop-motion slideshow. That final agony of running downhill. Running into Cebu ultragal Haide Acuna who was going strong as she entered her own final battle. Entering the monument while running at full speed, tears streaming down our cheeks as the magnitude of an accomplishment that couldn't have been farther from reality was slowly sinking in. The unbridled, once-in-a-lifetime joy of finally crossing a finish line 29 hours and 30 minutes after I had left its counterpart a hundred miles away. Hugs from the man who gave me a chance to show my mettle when very few believed I could do it. Hugs from a crew who didn't have to do it, but did anyway for the sake of a friendship that has stood the test of time. Hugs from the best girlfriend in the universe, who gave so much of herself to the endeavor and whose unshakable, iron-clad belief in my ability when even I myself had lost faith proved to be the winning quotient.
I said it once, I'll say it again - BDM is not for the faint of heart. But for those who dare, it will provide that introspective journey that life in general is largely bereft of . It affects you. It changes your emotional blueprint, and shakes the very foundations of your self-belief at its most visceral level. It's a life's experience's life experience, providing you with tall tales of glory and determination meant to be passed down from this generation to the next.
To those who are wondering if I will ever subject myself to the same, er, unique experience in the future, the answer is a big resounding NO. Never. Never ever.
But then again, wasn't that the exact same thing I said last year?




































LOL. Ang haba nga. I'll continue reading @ home. Baka maboljak ako sa opis. :)
Congrats GBM!
Haha thanks CJ, mahaba din ang race eh :P
Awesome! Awesome piece! 160km worth the wait!:) I am ever so proud of you and Abbylicious. Both of you continue to inspire me to run and love the way you love each other. Mwah!!!
congrats Gingerbread man!
Congratulations Gingerbread man you are one of the few the proud to make history on Philippine Ultrarunning. Joma Galauran
'Lang hiya ka, Luis! I spent the entire morning reading your post! I even cancelled a telecon with my region --- which I myself scheduled!!!
But seriously, thanks for the post, bud. It felt like a test run, really. VERY educational. Reading it confirmed what my gut already knew after I did 102 last week: I will probably need at least one more 102 finish before I even considering trying 160.
You guys are unbelievable. Congratulations, buddy. Well done!
ang ikli brader! hehehe! congrats!!! woohoo!!! as for me, bawi next year. pamahal ng pamahal yang silver buckle na yan! x_X
Alas, after spending my Monday morning multi-tasking between Outlook and this blogpost (did a quick lunch break too to refresh my eyes as I'm a slow slow reader), I have finished it. It was truly, a remarkable telling of a very challenging race. A 100-miler is no joke. And I take my hat off to you and to the rest of the BDM 160 (and 102!) finishers.
Btw, I hope you put a helmet on Abby coz she's a keeper. She and the rest of your support team deserve a big "Congrats!" too. :)
Congrats Luis! See u at the races!
--Roelle
http://daytripped-running.blogspot.com
Ang haba luis. sige promise, basahin ko ito.
Hay, ako hirap ako gumawa ng ganito.
wala oras, kapos na ako sa English! haha!
Congrats Luis.
Awesome! Galing natin! hehe!
Luis,
Nakakaiyak and nakakatawa at the same time, but mostly nakakiyak. the road from 102 all the way to Mabalacat was really difficult lahat nakakatakot. Marami din palang robbers dun aside from the dogs and speeding trucks and buses dun. You probably did your tempo in Bamban (bridge and quarry beside it).
You really are made of steel, Luis. You ran the hellish last 12K without any recon run and still made it. I ran that Capas stretch 5 times during Christmas and knew every rise but still couldn't get the endgame right hehe. =)
Malaki talaga utang mo sa crew lalo na kay Abby. pang lifetime na ang kanyang BDM card.
Congratulations again!
Nice recap here luis. Complete with all the internal musings of a nearly-deranged ultra-runner. LOL!
After all that pain and suffering, ain't it sweet to look at that coveted buckle?
Congratulations GBM! Next year ulit. :P
Congrats bruh! you're truly an inspiration! : )
What can i say? You do what you gotta do to get that buckle eh :p
I remember TEAM Endure checking up on you via bbm. i would say 'mukang sane pa naman. nilalandi pa naman ako :p' Jeez, even in your pseudo demented state you still manage to reminisce on bdm last year :p as you would put it ' this is where we solidified our relationship'----*Covers Face*!
In my head, i cant believe ur still doing this kalandian thing at this important of a race?!?!!!!!!
I find it quite amusing how we have different approaches in ultra. im the masungit-run-on-my-own. Well you...youre the complete opposite! HIHI!
i constantly reminded myself i cant be masungit :P
only Good Cop, Bad Cop and Sweet Cop :p hihi
now not only do i have the GF Card but the BDM 160 CARD! Bwahahaha!
But this i tell you, I will never support you in an ULTRA again!
I realized supporting someone you love in this crazy race is even more stressful than running the race itself!
Many times i wanted to cry when i felt na nagddelirio ka na!
Many times i wanted to get mad at you for not going to the test runs, and completely entrusting your gf who has no sense of direction to navigate you through 102-160 , a route w/ no freakin markers.if it were any other day i would have thrown a tantrum! WTH!!! LOL.
I would constantly tell myself(and remind him)...'naku! buti nalang ultramarathoner gf mo! " to fully understand the enormity of the whole thing!
It truly was an emotional/mental/physical rollercoaster w/ the best twist at the end of the race!:)Kudos to the RD! :)
But seriously,I'm very proud of you babe, as we all are! and there never was a second i doubted you could finish :)
( as Joni would put it " DONT EMBARRASS ME!NO ONE DNF's in MY WATCH! hahahhahaha, Tough Love :p)
xoxo
your partner in crime :P
PS
Thanks for the free 50K Ultra :p
Marga dear, thank you for the eternal support that you have given us and for constantly checking up on me :) I'm so happy you like it :D Hihi
Thank you Mr./Ms. Life-A-Musing, you're profile is hidden so I can't thank you by name :)
Joms, thanks my friend. That was one heck of a ride that we went through there, and you were one of the very few runners that I got to hang with from the very beginning to the very end. That was something special out there, let's savor it :)
Thanks Julius, haha I apologize to your company for any lack of productivity :) That was a damn fine race you ran there in spite of injury. You should be proud! 160 na next year! If you believe you can do it, you can :P
Hehe lol Rod :P Congrats pa din pare, you fought the good fight. Nga eh, ipon na ngayon pa lang! There is no doubt in my mind you will get that silver buckle next year!
Hehe thanks Roelle, I didn't want to chop it up into parts to somehow give the readers an idea of just how "epic" the whole thing was. If it was so long to read, what more being there right? :) Thanks again, any BDM 102 plans next year?
Haha basahin mo nga Argow! Lakas mo talaga idol, you passed me at more or less the same spot as last year. Coincidence? Isa kang alamat, tara bike na lang tayo lol :P Proud of you bro.
Brilliant blog Luis, transcending even you normal excellent ones. But then this just happens to be an absolutely transcendental race. I doubt if any other race in the near future (in the Philippines at least) will gather as many memories of blood, guts, heartbreak, tears, and at the very very end, glory.
Unless it's the 232km Baguio run of Jonel's :-P. But that's another story...
See you next year!
Ang lupit ng account. Blow by blow. Dramatic and all.
Congatulations again. :) It was a real tough challenge.
NEver again...will you say never. :)
my boss caught me reading the blog @ work:
boss ko: ay.. sino yan?
me: si gingerbreadman mam. lol
boss ko: kasama ba sya dun sa mga nakashort shorts na pink?
me: yes mam.
nyahahaha.
di ko tuloy natapos basahin. maya ulet. :)
Haide, it was a total shock for me, I wasn't expecting it to be that hard. At that point, it couldn't have been any worse. I was lucky Abby didn't give up on me. It was so pleasant to see you going strong entering that stretch, you even offered me water. Congratulations on being the only Filipina finisher of the inaugural BDM 160k, that will go down in the record books. What an experience!
Hehe it was nice seeing you there Pep :) Deranged is an understatement! And yes, it's on my work table at home, I look at it with pride every day :P
Thanks Sid! Any plans for an Ultra soon? :P
Lol Babe natawa ako sa post mo :P Eh what can I do, it's fun to make you landi. Didn't you pull your BDM card with that fancy peacock fan I got you?
Seriously though, and I can't say this enough, no way I could have finished that race if you weren't there. Nu-uh. Zilch. You pulled me through when I was ready to give up.
I still think you have a fun sense of direction :P
Thanks Doc Art for the kind words, I'm glad you liked it. For the life of me, I still can't fathom how you could gather yourself for a 102 after what we did. That is truly a spectacular feat, and if ever there were a 232k race, I'm sure you would be first in line there :) Congratulations on a wonderful race, it's a life changer no doubt about it.
Thanks Poj, crazy crazy battle we had out there. I still remember sometime two years ago when we ran from Roxas Blvd. to Antipolo, you were the one who first broached the idea to me of joining BDM. At that time, it was such a lofty, unrealistic goal, but look at where it got us.Congratulations to you for completing the race on sheer guts, we made history my friend!
Never say never - I know :P
Haha Pink shorts? LOL. Lagi ka nagpapahuli CJ mabagal ka mag alt + tab :P
great read!!!
it was a very memorable 2 day event talaga!!! IDOLS ko talaga kayong lahat!!! everyone has a unique story to tell!!!
God bless and thanks for the inspiration!!!
Chief, ngayon ko lang 'to nabasa given that I was out of town for the last 36 hours. Will still need time to digest the contents.
Hehe, Ok binasa ko na! haha!
Re: The same spot, you could be right... hehe!
Bike: Uhmmm, I dont think I can do it this year; but I'd love to.
Salamat salamat!
Thanks Bave glad you liked it and it was nice to have seen you there as well :) Everytime I bumped into someone I knew it helped out a lot. :) Heck of an experience we had there.
Hey Don, you actually read it! How are you bro and your how's the master's thesis going?
Argow, same spot yun! Pramis! Thanks for taking the time to read it hehe.
ang hhhaaaabbbbbbbbaaaaaaaaaaaaaa!!!! 100 miles din, hehehe!
Kowts Luis, while you're in delirious state, sumagi ba sa utak mo na.... ung parang... wala ka nang masisilayang araw? :D
katakot! lalong naging ayoko mag-Ultra!
ang haba, salamat sa journal ngayon alam ko na. di ko kayo gagayahin mga adik sa mahahabang takbo... congrats bro - erick
I spent 3 gatorade bottles reading this entry. Felt exhausted by how vivid the details were. I was actually looking for the same humor you had on your last year's 102 post, to go with my popcorn. All I got was drama. Drama that moves. Inspires. Jerks tear ducts (kind of. really). And, well, makes you wish Abby Jocson was your girlfried too (eventhough she endangers motorists like that :D ).
You are The Storyteller. The only, uh, work THIS LONG worth reading is The Catcher In The Rye. For me at least.
You should give buckles too, you know, to people who finished this entry. :D
Your entries never fail, like you do.
Pedz, masaklap na talaga ang tama sa akin :P Wild eh. Hehe salamat for hanging on and reading it :D Next year 102 na!
Hehe Rick, feeling ko kung nag 160 ka nasa top ka din like last year nung nag BDM ka :)Salamat sa pagbasa! Recovery na!
Haha thanks for making it to the end Ely. More than anything, I didn't want to chop it up into two parts like what I did last year. From an "artistic" sense, I somehow wanted to give the race justice but giving life to practically all salient nuances that came about. Thanks for the kind words, I'm happy she's my girlfriend too haha.
And as much as I'm a Salinger fan, he never ran a 100 miles :P
Thanks for the support bro, I'll work on the buckle next time.
Naiyak ako.... sa haba hihihi.
Pag nahihirapan akong tapusin ang 3k, I will always remember how you struggled through adversity. Pahiram ng support group mo sa 3k run ko! :-)
buti walang gatas at hindi natunaw si gingerbread! =) good job sir errr great gob! Congrats!
Haha lol RJ, heavy drama ba? Thanks bro, bakit naman 3k kayang kaya mo yun!
Haha buti na lang! Thanks to my nonamer.
You are forever changed. Good job on keeping your foot in front of the other. Cheers.
Finally, I've finished reading your entry. Good job on the 160 and on this blow by blow account of everything, complete with the drama, comedy and action in it. Ironman, up next?
Finally, natapos ko din. :)
Mahusay! It was like i'm watching a movie. LOL @ the schizo part. :)
Ikaw na talaga ang idol, sa running & blogging. Congrats GBM!
Thank you for the kind words Atty. Jon, you are always an inspiration with your grit and determination. At one point, that was all it was coming down to, one foot in front of the other. Such a rudimentary philosophy but it was what got me through. Congratulations on a spectacular runner up finish,incredible feat!
Thanks Tin and congratulations on your 2nd-runner up finish! Mad speed on your debut gig! Yes, I am trying to pull that off this year, both BDM 160 and Ironman, I hope it works out well! :)
the hubby (Chips) pointed me to the direction of your blog. totally love reading it. congratulations on finishing!
i never thought of pulling the "BDM card" ever, until i read that bit on your support crew. hmmm. gives me an idea...
The novelette that is BDM is your best blog post so far. Classic GBM - crisp language, humor, drama, self-effacement. Congratulations on your formidable feat.
maam este sir! hahaha natapos mo? lalakeng lalake dating mo ah dati gurl na gurl ka hahaha,galing mung mag kwento totoo lahat? pasalamat ka sa gf mung mas malakas pa sayo cgurado hahaha ,ulitin mo nga? tsamba lang 160 kung wala gf mo negativ mung matapos sa kwento pa lang hahaha goodluck wish ko lang maulet mo hahaha,at 30hours cut off masyadong mahaba hahaha.... sir magpakatotoo ka hahahaha.....,sa mga finisher ng 160 ulitin nyo patunayan nyo kaya nyo.....sabihin mo kay general gawin 25 hours pag 30 possible matapos hahaha
Try to join 160 whoever you are....ultrarunner??? u mean luis is ??? i heard humors about that i think from your of takbo ph friend and to pagong join 160 ... you loser... longlive ultragays....... member luis?
Haha too funny, I am in a state of semi-retirement and for the first time in a long time we have fun hate mail. To my anonymous friend, talk to me again when you have done it yourself. Anything less does not merit my attention.
Oh and thanks to my no-namer defender. God bless and thanks for the support.
It was a pleasure reading and re-living your ordeal, Luis. Great work! Gives us enough notes and inspiration when we take Bataan next year...and hopefully, survive to tell our own stories. Cheers!