Saturday, March 22, 2008

posting training schedule on line

a lot of people post their training schedule online so that they will be force to train up! haha.. perhaps i think i should try also.. here we go

for 24th march to 30th march:

1) mon - trifam swim session
2) tue - run 10km (moderate)
3) wed - run 20km (endurance)
4) thu - yellowfish torture swim session & run 10km (recovery)
5) fri - cycle 42km Tour Of ES (East Singapore)
6) sat - run 10km (slow)
7) sun - run 10km (tempo)

don't have time to clock a longer endurance run.. have to find one day every week soon to run a longer distance.. now it's only at 20km. argh!

and yes i'm getting my Felt S22 next Saturday!!

woohoo!i'm finally able to train on my own tri-bike!

Thursday, March 6, 2008

Anything is possible

Not everyone can be an Ironman. grueling distance with 3.86km open water swim, 180.2km bike and ending with a 42.195km marathon. all in under 17 hours before you can call yourself an Ironman. yeah. more and more challenged themselves to this almost insane distance and they made it. you might have heard stories from ordinary people from all walks of life doing it. blue collar, white collar, students, elders, handicapped, visually impaired and all. these are the true heroes because they have to handle work (to support their family) and also train (gruesome number of hours).

out of all, i'm most touched by the following story:

1989 Ironman World Championship: Dave and Rick Hoyt


Dave


Rick

Rick suffers from cerebral palsy since birth which is why he's not even able to walk and has to rely on a wheel chair. His father, Dave is a 46 years old man who wants to prove to everyone that no matter who you are, you should have the same rights to go to school and also participate in sports.

in 1989, the father and son duo touched the hearts of many by going into Ironman in Kona, Hawaii. a course which even cripples pros and melted thousands with its heat, humidity and strong crosswinds.


Dave has to drag Rick on a rubber float for the swim course. yes 3.86km of swim and that's about 77 lapses in your typical 50m swimming pool. and it's in open water.


Dave carrying Rick to head for their bike segment. after a 2hrs plus swim.


that's them on the bike. under the baking sun and taking in the heat


the 180km bike ride took them from scorching sun to sunset


the 42.195km marathon. not an easy task to even complete on your own. let alone pushing a wheelchair for the whole distance.


dashing for the title of Ironman.. or shld i say.. Ironmen


Nothing is impossible. Dave and Rick Hoyt

in 2006, they attempted the race one more time. one last time. sadly to say, they didn't make the cut off time for the swim and was force to give up the race. however they still completed the same old way they did previously. father pulling his son for the 3.8km swim.. all the way.


scene of pure determination and love for his son.


no matter what, you are still.. an Ironman.. tough in every aspect.



Dave and Rick Hoyt.True champions

remember. if they can do it, why can't you? not only in sports, but also in everything else.

Wednesday, March 5, 2008

Off Season is over!

hello peeps! life is definitely good after ORD (that's of course). Chinese New Year was great (not forgetting the hongbao part!) as i managed to catch up with some friends and had some fun along the way.

to my buddy Zihao, i'm happy that you finally found a job which you like and also doing the things u wanted to (earning $$ at the same time). it's an enriching job but at the same time, i know it is very tiring. do take care and pace yourself out!

and also, congrats to Jiewen for returning back. i believe you'd have fun coming back to work and i believe a lot of the kids miss u.

i also wanna congratulate this someone who managed to sort things out with her boyfriend and set on a happy path again. good to see that u are not so gloomy (no more long faces!) and started to be happy again. i wish the best for both of you! (but that doesn't mean that i will not chase him down in AHM!.. well.. if i can)

and to one friend who has been rather emo lately. pick yourself up! and if u need ,there will always be friends like me and those who are close to you and care around. and also.. start running!

A new year indicates a new beginning. i would say majority of 2008 will be a relaxing period for me because for almost half of the year, i would not be doing anything much except to train (well ok, not that kinda relaxing) and work (flexible part time).in case you dunno, i'm actually working at Running Lab where we sell mostly running shoes, products and triathlon attires. sms me if you wanna get anything!

NUS Biathlon 2008 (17th Feb 2008)

well shortly after CNY, i went for my first ever biathlon (swim and run). it was a 750m swim and 5km sprint distance. it's actually a build up for a bigger race in 2 weeks' time (Singapore Biathlon). i was very nervous before the race because i didn't know what to expect. i also heard a lot of people saying that sea swim is not like swimming in a pool and at the start, there will be a lot of brawling, tugging and pulling.

luckily, i was with two of my colleagues/friends (Sham and Evan) who have been in biathlons and triathlons. so their presence makes it easier. Wei yang was with me. he, too, is on his first biathlon! on the way to meet sham and evan, he was telling me why are we so dumb paying money to wake up so early and torture ourselves. haha. actually it's true to a certain extent but the joy of completing what you have not done before is something that is very hard to explain.

we reached ECP quite late and had to rush to register and put our things at the transition quickly. after that, we slipped on our shoes for a warm up run.

just minutes into our run, i heard the commentator asking people wearing blue caps. it took me a while to realise that i was in THAT wave! i quickly scramble to my transition, take off my shoes, picked up my swim cap and goggles and rush to the start line. just then, they flagged off! i haven't even catch my breath!! i was thinking "aiya.. just heck it and go in to swim la!"

indeed, if you have not try an open water swim before, you'd definitely be shocked at the brawling inside. haha. i swear somebody touched my butt. i think i got elbowed several times. nono, i WAS elbowed several times. the water was murky and salty. to make things worse, there were sea bugs which stung me all over during the swim (super itch la!). against the current, every stroke didn't seem to be properlling me forward. there was a time where i seriously think that i wasn't moving at all! in the open water, you can't see (except the buoy), hear (except waves and your own breath sounds) and smell (except sea water) anything.

i sighted the beach and swam hard towards it. surfaced and ran towards my transition area (which is good because it's on the edge of the whole transit area). Weeling was there! and boy, it feels good to see a familiar face after the gruesome swim! slipped on my shoes, took my number tag and water bottle and ran. 5km to go.

my run was slow. didn't want to push myself too hard after all it's my first biathlon. sun was coming down on us and the water evaporated and perspiration took over. then i saw the finish line. Sweet!

total time:
750m open water swim: 18 minutes 18 sec
5km run: 28 minutes 7 sec
total: 46 minutes 25 sec

not too bad a result for myself =) it's a build up for the big O in two weeks time

here's some pictures to share!


that's my backview when running towards the finish line!


an all time classsic! evan chasing down sham.. when sham overtook near the finish!


that's us! evan,sham, me and weiyang!


that's our numbers! (nice photo right)


Team Running Lab (with the photograper who was late, Weeling!)

Singapore Biathlon (1st Mar 2008)

The Big race which i had been preparing for the past 3 months. a 1.5km swim, 10km run event (yes,twice of the distance for NUS Biathlon!). this time around, i'm more prepared and felt stronger. reached there early to avoid the same frantic moments i had at the NUS Bi. studied the current and route. did a light warm up run. saw two waves before me.

It was this lady (national swimmer Crystal Feng) who came out of the water first at close to 23 minutes if i am not wrong (super fast!). at the last stretch (from last buoy to shore), she looks like a torpedo and i don't recalling her coming up to breathe at all! after that, the fastest swimmers came on and i saw my coach David (a.k.a Yellowfish). he still take a peek back before moving on (prob to see where the other competing "fishes" are). second wave flagged off and it's my turn to move to the start line. Weeling and Fana were there to support (and i really wanna thank them because it was very early and the weather was quite bad! thank you girls!).

at the start line, i was re-enacting my whole race from swim start to transition to run and to finish (that's why later there is this zonk-out look photo of me). last good luck wishes from the two girls and off i go!

no amount of preparation will prepare you for the swim start (unless you got into a 200 people brawling session before!). the roughness of this race was even worse. i almost drowned and before i reach the first buoy which was like 200m out, i was already exhausted and panting. after the first buoy, things smoothen out and i regain my momentum. as the starting out direction was with the current, my first half was fast (for my own standard) at 15minutes. after that, it was a U-turn and it was battling with the current. i still feel strong but had to conserve for the run. touched down on shore at approx 36minutes. transition took me about 1-2 minutes. same thing. took my belt, power gel and water. weather was super cooling and slight drizzle. perfect weather for a run.

i pace myself at a moderate 5 minutes per km. at every km, a time check ensures i'm right with my target pace and at the 9km part, still feeling good, i ran faster. finish line was in sight and boy, it was nice. wonderful feeling to finish within my target time of 1hr 30 minutes.

total time:
1.5km wim: 00:36:14
10km run: 00:51:04 (counting in transition)
total: 1hr 27 minutes 17 sec

it feels great and i really feel hooked on to this multi-sports field. can't wait for my next race in April: Tribob Sprint Series!

here's some photo again! this time taken with Weeling's Sony SLR!


that's her! crystal feng. first lady (or first person) out of the water!


the "ducks" as Fana and Weeling called. because they wear boots with yellow top and shorts! haha.


the banner every participants wanna see (or not because it signifies 10 more km!)


the "nua" photo! they say i look blur at the start line. i was re-enacting the process in my mind k!


the start line. white caps. my wave. i'm behind there somewhere!


the flag off! ALLEZ!


that's me out of the water!


that's me running and washing my mouth to get rid of the salty taste!


Fana waiting patiently! or not? haha


just keep running, just keep running, running running..


the pain, the suffering, hang on!


i'm running in! woohoo!


shag face (pose one la!)


the finisher medal!


fana in Oakley Radar! but there's no sun


the camera girl weeling!


testing whether the medal is real or not..

haha. yup. that's my two races in these two months. more to come! confirmed list below:

20th Apr - Tribob Sprint Biathlon (750m swim, 10km run)
15th May - New Balance Pacesetters (15km)
31st May - adidas Sundown Marathon (42.195km)
8th Jun - Saucony Passion Run (10km)

today ran 20km from home to Novena. zonked out on the way back and also at home. haha. going to zonk out soon.

will update soon! good luck and happy wishes to all of ya!

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

from CFC Eugene (the NSF) to CFC(NS) Eugene (the Nsmen)

thousands went through it. thousands completed it. But it's my time now! my ORD!! no more thinking and talking bout NS. i finally got my life back after 22 months!

here are some pictures to share!



notice the blurred "Nsman"!!



front profile of me *(with my pink IC)



right profile of me *(with my pink IC)



left profile of me *(with my pink IC)



back profile of me *(with my pink IC)

Following are just some pictures of my personal belongings (do notice fine details in particular to pink item!):



my Mac



part of the transition to a civilian: Samsung U700!



my crumpler bag



finisher tee

good luck to those who are still serving or yet to serve. prepare yourself and word of advice:

Serve And F**koff (note the acronym of the phrase)

Thursday, January 17, 2008

world of tri

as some of you may know, i actually embarked on my journey to become an endurance athlete not too long ago. started running perhaps.. 6 months ago. done a few races and my last marathon in dec 07. coming up is March's Singapore Biathlon. did the trial, got past it and training up now for the actual day.

it's not easy being a triathlete (or a training-to-be triathele). you need to spend lots of time, money, effort and brain power into the disciplines. afterall, while others are training in one discipline, you are training in the three sports consisting of swimming, cycling and running. it's definitely not for the fainted hearted.there are mainly four different distances for triathlons.

Sprint
swim - 750m
bike - 20km
run - 5km

Olympic
swim - 1.5km
bike - 40km
run - 10km

Half Ironman
swim - 1.9km
bike - 90km
run - 21km

Full Ironman
swim - 3.8km
bike - 179.2km
run - 42km

before you can actually start training ,you will probably need to get the proper gears, equipment and apparels. due to the long hours of endurance training, insufficient or wrong preparation will leave you stranded with injuries, forcing you out of the entire picture.


Swimming

- probably the least injury prone discipline. However there are in fact a lot of techniques to learn to swim faster, fully utilizing the buoyancy of the water to propel youself. you need to keep your body straight which means keep it as parallel to the bottom of the pool as much as you can. make sure you rotate your hips and stretch out your hands to the max when "crawling" forward. paddling is only a minor part of the overall effort so focus is not so much on your legs but actually your core muscles.

its' even more difficult to swim in open water and with a lot of zealous competitors making splashes beside you. you would have to glup down lots of saltwater, probably face the fate of steering off course, getting lots of bruises on different parts of your body and coming out of the water shagged out with two full disciplines waiting for you.

a triathlete will have to master how to draft (swimming behind someone so as to cut down on energy use to break waves), swim and scout at the same time to make sure you are on course, able to breathe on both left and right side and pace yourself (without the aid of any other equipment except probably a watch) to conserve enough energy for the bike and run.

after the swim comes Transition 1 (T1) where a triathlete will mount his bike and go on a high speed chase.



Bike

- the most technical part of the whole event and the main bulk of the distance is covered here. most dangerous because one can reach speed of 40km/h and more. basically, you can use any type of bike here. mountain bike, those with 1, 3 or 4 wheels and those with pink ribbons at the handlebars. however, you would probably see a lot of thin and sleek road bikes (a.k.a racers) from all the different brands such as Trek, Scott, Cervelo and more.

you need a computer to tell you how hard you are paddling and pace yourself out. the cadence (rpm), watts you are generating, speed and also a heart rate monitor to see whether you are pushing too hard. mastering gear shifting, maneuvering while in aerodynamic position, techniques of turning, drafting (yeah.. riding too.. has drafting). as much as the kind of bike and its accessories matter, your technique is the most important in this stage of the rest.


Running
- last stage of a triathlon. you would probably be exhausted here due to the two previous disciplines. the constant pounding on the floor and its pounding back on you . similarity you would need a heart rate monitor to monitor how much you are pushing yourself. a shoe that is right for you. one that corrects your running deficiency if you have any. one which can accurately absorb all the shock you are experiencing. one that will propel you to the finishing line.


Training for a triathlon

you cannot be lazy because you need to train in 3 disciplines. a triathlete (or training one) has to wake up in the morning for a 40 lap swim and proceed on to a 5 - 10km run. have breakfast and go to work. come back from work and go for a 20-30km bike trail. sometimes you would have to throw in gym sessions to train your core muscles and cut down fat level (crucial because a lighter and lean triathlete will definitely be better than a heavier one). on weekends, it intensifies to an open water swim of 2 hours, run of 15km and above and bike of up to 40km.

in this case, you would need lots of food and supplement to recuperate what you've lost. electrolyte drinks would become your best friend along with bread, pasta, white meat, red meat, protein drinks and powerbars/gels. you would probably forget how mac's fries and KFC crispy chicken taste like due to the require low fat and calories intake.


you would also have to spend a fortune getting the

running shoes (prob $100-$200 for one pair and you will need 2-3 pairs to rotate because shoes need to "rest" too so as to allow the cushioning to return to its original form)

a bike (probably $1000 + for entry level and you can go ever higher after that.. probably.. 4 -5k for a higher end one), helmet (safety first, could cause you around $80 for low end and $500 for high end), bike computer,bike shoes, seats, aero bars for more advance level which might end on a few hundreds.

apparels such as running tights, tri suits, trunks. they are made from special material for performance, lightweight and wicking.

countless of lessons paid to improve your performance. swim camp, swim lessons, bike maintenance, bike fitting. and also health checkup to make sure you are physically ok.

the money needed for nutrition such as protein powder, multi vitamins and supplements, powerbar/gels and healthy food are always more expensive.

entering races. these races ain't cheap, ranging from $30 and over.

constant need to find inspiration and motivation to push on such as overseas training, race dvds and books to read up.

- simply put, it is a big financial and physical strain, but in the world of tri, we never say die, never!-

there is this constant target ahead and one which you will never get sick of. you will never be satisfied with how you are performing and that is the motor behind every endurance athlete. you will always be thinking "if someone else can do it, why can't i?".. you will be spurred on and eventually perform in an outstanding and of course, stylish manner.

Monday, January 7, 2008

it's the new year! 2008

ok. this is the year which i am gonna turn 21 (full fledge adult, in terms of age). a year which i will no longer be affected by people who stand between me and R21 movies, a year which i am going to enter university and commence on a 4 year long and gruesome Economics degree course in SMU, a year which i swear i will be better to all my friends (try la, ok? haha), a year which i will try to bring my performance in sports to a higher level.

i have a request for those who actually bothers to come to my blog (if there is any due to the super lack of updates!!).. please share with me your new year resolution(s) because i think it would really be fun to hear what you guys have in mind!

i still got 1 month to ORD!! please, come on, make it come faster. i just can't wait. the wait is killing me. let me smell the pink IC!!!

hmm.. anyway, speaking of wait, i kind of caught "The Lake House" again on HBO. It's actually a good movie which u will only come to appreciate after you watched it more than once (like me!) It's about a couple (Sandra Bullocks and Keanu Reeves) who actually fell in love by writing to each other. However the catch here is that they are living 2 years apart (Sandra in 2006 and Keanu in 2004). Their only way of communicating with each other is through a "magical" mailbox by a Lake House (the house is really amazing and just gives me a feeling that is out-of-the-world when i see it). Just catch it. if not u can borrow the DVD from me =)


nice pic ain't it?