Monday 24 April 2017

Training for Half-Marathon: Part 4 of 5 (finally!!!!)

Week 4 (17 April 2017 – 23 April 2017)

TL;DR: This update (if you’re still following along!) is coming a day late because I was really tired out by last week, which was probably due to Husband having a legal retreat and leaving early and coming home late almost every day and still having to work (poor Husband). It’s different from when he’s actually on work travel, because he doesn’t come back at odd hours, and we are not suddenly awoken by the light being on in the living room or the study, which is all quite not conducive for sleep.

It’s probably also thanks in no small part to Daniel’s eczema flaring up – there is nothing more galling, I can assure you, than a 2.5 year old coming to your bed whining, scratching, and refusing to speak coherently at 3am in the morning.  At least he stopped vomiting after Wednesday, but there are patches of dried blood on all the bedsheets in the house which I have accepted are not coming out.

Having decided to blog every week about this nonsense has made me realise that I’m much better off being an employee and having a stable income, instead of working from home and finding some freelance writing to do (which was something I seriously considered after I had Daniel). I don’t have enough confidence in my non-legal writing anyway, so I think I’ll stick to assessing sticky situations and drafting contracts. Am also coming closer to deciding to close shop because how to have a third child and no live-in helper and still have a full-time office job?

I was also informed by someone close to me that my writing is neither amusing, nor irritating – it’s boring, because it’s more or less always about the same thing. I mean, seriously, how exciting were you expecting parenthood and long-distance running to be?!

Because I’m tired, my confidence is at an all-time low despite my having gotten in some good work-outs the past week. I’m praying for a good taper week and some good nights of sleep, although Husband is in the Philippines again from Monday to Wednesday. But what to do? Nobody said it was easy… And nobody said it would be this hard.  Will I be there at the start?

Monday, 17 April
5 minute warm-up, 8km in 45minutes

Tuesday, 18 April
30 minute swim

Wednesday, 19 April
Last big work-out for this training cycle, and I hope I didn’t over-exhaust myself doing it. I posted about this on Instagram already, but here it is again:

5min warm-up at 6:15/km
6km x 2, average 5:42/km with 5min rest in between sets at 6:30/km
3min+++ cool down, for a total of 14km in about 1h 22min.

As mentioned, this was done on a treadmill so I’m not sure how this translates when running outdoors. But really no choice, and it was a good last effort I think. It will have to do.

This was one of those days where you’re mentally drained and so ready for the day to be over even before you leave the house, so I’m not sure, on retrospect, that it was a good idea to push through with this last work-out because I definitely wasn’t in the right frame of mind for it. From the time we woke up to the time we left the house, there were poos from each of the boys, a vomit and a tantrum from Daniel (the tantrum being more exhausting than cleaning up the poos and the vomit combined). I can’t remember what it was about anymore, but I think it had something to do with wanting to wear a t-shirt underneath his school uniform and/ or wanting to take Duplo into the shower when I washed his bum. Or putting plasters over his eczema sores (I know it’s best to let them air-dry but that is unfortunately where we’re at now). Or something. As you can see, I have already blocked out the awfulness of it all from my memory.

The workout did leave me in a better mood for the rest of the day, so I suppose if I crash and burn on the 30th, this run would not have been in vain.

Thursday, 20 April

Easy running drills and lots of stretching and rolling thereafter with my PT.

Friday, 21 April

Yoga with G, who was covering Joyce. This was fun, because he doesn’t take yoga too seriously (setting intentions, being kind to your body and all that “spiritual” mumbo-jumbo blah, blah – okay I know for lots of people that’s the point but I just want to burst out laughing whenever the instructor says things like that).

Saturday, 22 April

It would have been nice if I could have spent the whole day sleeping, but Husband had IPPT in the morning (Silver, so sad – if we didn’t get food poisoning last week we’re quite sure he could have pushed for Gold, he was only a couple of seconds off in the 2.4) and Daniel kept asking to “Take the bus train with Mummy”, so after Husband came back we braved going to JEM on a weekend because I wanted to get my watch strap fixed. It wasn’t too bad, and thankfully we had the foresight to plan it such that Husband drove there with Andrew whilst I took Daniel there on the bus and train. And we took a long detour on our drive home and caught a glimpse of the port and the cranes, another of Daniel’s favourite things to do.

Sunday, 23 April

Easy run, about 7km. I read somewhere that people find it difficult to slow down during their easy runs, so I consciously made myself do so (honestly, running slowly may actually be harder than running hard) and walked and stopped for a bit whenever I felt tired. It was really humid, which helped in the slowing down process, but also created lots of room for self-doubt. Paced random dude at the end, when it had cooled down considerably and was a lot less humid, so ended the run feeling a bit better about things.

***

And that’s a wrap. There will be some easy runs and RPM in race week, but no more hard workouts (thank God. Can’t wait to go for more yoga again, slack in one corner, and look forward to falling asleep in shavasana… Until it’s time to train for the next race). Given my current physical and emotional state, despite the work I’ve put in, I think I’d be really lucky (is blessed a more correct word?) to hit the timing I want on Sunday, so I’m preparing myself to let it go and enjoy being out in the cold morning air. Running in Singapore at unearthly hours is quite pleasant, if you can get over the mental barriers and out of bed.  And if you aren’t woken up 2 hours before you were due to wake up for the run by your children.

See you at the finish line (unless I am forced to DNS or DNF).

Monday 17 April 2017

Training for Half-Marathon: Part 3 of 5

Week 3 (Monday, 10 April 2017-Sunday, 16 April 2017)

Are you bored yet? When I was doing intervals this week, as much as I enjoyed them, the truth of something Husband said about running (and track and field, and sports events in general I guess) struck me - a lot of it is just doing the same thing over and over and over again. This week's interval workout consisted of 16x400m, which I did on Tuesday, i.e. two days after I was certified properly free of HFMD. Sustained a 5:13-5:20/km pace for each 400m interval, with a one minute rest at 6:00-6:15/km between each, for a total distance of about 12km in 1:09:40. Could have pushed it, but decided not to. 

Monday's workout was a short 20 minute run followed by strength training with my PT, and to ease myself back into cardio workouts, I went for RPM on Wednesday and Thursday at lunchtime. 

Friday, 14 April

This was Good Friday. Normally we'd have gone to church, but there was only one service at 8pm, so we didn't go this year. I took Daniel with me to collect my race pack (if you follow me on Instagram you would have seen the update), and was reminded of why I don't particularly enjoy races in Singapore anymore. They're just too crowded, there are too many freebies in the race pack and at the bazaars accompanying the race pack collection which nobody really uses (which pains me - all that plastic, all those resources which could have been put to better use) and there is this lingering scent of muscle rub in the air. I wonder why I was so onz about entering this giveaway in the first place. I can hear Husband's voice in my head: I told you so!

Daniel is really happy that we took the bus and the train together, though. If only his needs would remain this simple.

Saturday, 15 April 

H was in town for the weekend, so we took her to our favourite cafe near our house for brunch. We ate our usual chicken curry and kaya toast, I had ice lemon tea siu dai and Jon had kopi-c siu dai. All was fine and dandy until after our afternoon naps. 

I woke up to go for a run - it was the perfect evening for it, chilly and cloudy after the afternoon rain, the type of evening where you could really kill a workout. But I woke up feeling extremely nauseous, like first trimester nauseous, and I could feel the brunch churning around in my stomach. I made myself throw up (no, I do not have an eating disorder nor am I pregnant again - Aunt Flo just visited, thank God) and forced myself out to the PCN. Managed 12km or so (wasn't tracking) at a disappointing pace. It was a really discouraging run, given all the training I had put in thus far (and after you have children, do you know how hard it is to come by days with perfect running conditions? In fact, both children were fast asleep when I left the house), but on hindsight, I think the fact that I managed to complete it although I felt like throwing up every single minute of that one and a half hours is commendable. 

I got home, Daniel came bounding to the front door to greet me, and promptly threw up the contents of his brunch at my feet. Soon after, Husband started feeling sick and started throwing up too. He commented that he now knew what vomiting in the first trimester must feel like. (Seriously. As if a MAN would ever understand.)

Husband and Daniel spend the next 2-3 hours throwing up intermittently. Husband makes it to the toilet each time, Daniel doesn't. Andrew, bless his dear little heart (thankfully he is still mostly on formula and not on table food), goes to bed without much fuss. The pile of laundry grows, and there are still Andrew's bottles to be washed. Thankfully, after I spend about an hour wrapped up in a blanket on my bed and shivering, God hears my prayers and I feel well enough to do some laundry and wash the bottles.

We are unable to isolate the cause of our food poisoning, but I think we will have to (sadly) lay off going to our favourite cafe for a while. I won't post its name here, because we really like the place and the owners, and we can't be certain it was their food, but it's easy enough to find out if you Google (also if you know where I stay. Haha). In any event, if it was really their food, it was probably a one-off. We've been eating there for months with no incident. H was fine as well, so it may have been the Dairyworks Edam Cheese Sticks which I got for Daniel as a reward for being so well-behaved at NTUC, but it seems unlikely given that they're vacuum packed. 

Sunday, 16 April

Husband and I wake up feeling a bit weak, but generally okay and looking forward to finally going to church and celebrating Easter Sunday. 

About halfway to church, Daniel does a massive vomit, like the kind you HAVE to go home to clean up. So that is exactly what we do, and throughout the day, he has about three more vomits and I do three loads of laundry and I am so tired and I wonder if I'm going to post a DNS in two weeks' time.

Oh, woe is me, whine whine whine. I am rolling my eyes at myself as I type this, because Welcome To Parenthood, right? And who am I to whine, when I was the one who stubbornly refused to get live-in help???  

***

If you can't already tell, I'm feeling pretty exhausted and disappointed in the week.  It got off to a pretty good start, and I was optimistic about hitting some good running times this long weekend. I managed to get a nice crackly skin on my baked twee bah on Monday quite by accident, and we were all feeling upbeat about our impending release from the scourge of HFMD. It was also a short week, which would end in time of reflection and celebration of our faith... Well, I still had that time of reflection, just that I was lying in my bed at 1.30am feeling too cold and wondering if these things (HFMD, the food poisoning just as Husband's quarantine ended) were perhaps God's way of telling me to trust in Him to provide the strength, patience and grace to get through and still run this (literal) race at the end of these five weeks. I can't help but keep thinking back to the GEWR 2015 and how the haze was literally washed away just in time for it.

It's not like it's a big deal, really. There will be other races when the kids are older, hopefully overseas (better weather, more sane start times). But it would be nice to post a good timing. Husband is right though, as he usually is about these things - I should just enjoy it, as I have before, and as I hope to do so for many more years to come. 

***

Daniel insisted that I be the one to clean him up every single time he vomited or pooed this weekend. Drained as I was, I actually found this rather touching. Andrew, too, insisted that I carry him whenever I had my hands free. I also found this rather touching.

I just checked, and no, I am not running a fever. It is, however, quite late. Here's to Week 4, and if you've made it thus far without thinking Why do I still bother reading this auntie's rambly blog, thank you.

Sunday 9 April 2017

Training for Half-Marathon: Part 2B of 5

Week 2 (3 April 2017 - 9 April 2017)

TL;DR: Spent most of this week recovering from HFMD. It was one of the worst weeks of my life with two children thus far, beating even those weeks Andrew had unexplained diarrhoea which just wouldn't abate, even with Hidrasec and Isomil. For someone used to doing almost everything around the house, often multi-tasking, it was painful both physically and mentally to have to accept the limitations brought on by whatever strain of the Coxsackie virus this was (and there are so many more, woe is us).

But I was thankful for the fact that I didn't have much of a sore throat and that Andrew's symptoms were really mild - maybe one spot on each hand and one on his left big toe, probably a sore throat for about a day and a half - and cleared up within 4 days or so. Daniel seems to have escaped it completely. Husband is now on Day 5 and his sores are drying up nicely. His symptoms started the night before he was to fly to Jakarta for business, so he was in time to cancel his trip and not spread HFMD to a plane full of unsuspecting people.

As before, if you can't be arsed to read this in totality, scroll down and look out for what is in bold and underlined.

Monday, 3 April - Thursday, 6 April

See "TL;DR" section above. A notable highlight of this period is Daniel being quarantined at my parents' for two days - the two most painful days for me, Day 3 and Day 4 (Monday and Tuesday) - and not pooing, then arriving home on Wednesday and doing a huge poo within 10 minutes of his arrival. My mother messaged me around the same time he accomplished this feat, telling me she was worried he was constipated. I told her, after I cleaned him up, that his poo-dar was just very advanced i.e. poos are to take place only when Mummy is around.

These four days were the sort of days which made me seriously question if I was cut out to be a mother - I was mostly short-tempered and yell-ey, unable to keep my frustration at not being my usual overachieving self (sniggers) in check, and picking on Daniel when I knew I should have shown more patience and grace. The gnawing hunger I generally experienced was compounded by a lack of appetite and inability to eat very much, and ironically, although I am at my lightest since that awful first trimester with Andrew, it's not a good time to be losing weight and muscle and I have been trying to make up for it as best I can.

It wasn't all bad, though. Some things we had fun doing included playing the game Let's Make Didi Laugh! (I beat Daniel by a mile), watching Dinotrux, and having Husband finally explain its basic premise to me.

Despite all that, I had way too much time to think about Things. Sleep didn't come easily due to the itch in my hands, my general irritation at being stuck at home, and my worrying about how much fitness I would potentially lose. Something which nagged at me in particular was what I have to prove by doing this and blogging about it and sharing my thoughts with everyone. Instagram is filled (okay, the algorithm is biased) with #motherrunners posting daily and weekly mileage, new personal records and the like; the "gold standard" seems to be having 3 kids and/ or a sub-4 hour marathon timing at the very least, and the sooner you achieve a personal best after having your last child, the better. Kudos to you, too, for having a full-time job, making breakfast, packing lunches, making dinner, and following your usually very demanding training schedule. 

Running apps have made it too easy to obsess over yours and others' training progress. Even though I make an effort not to Runkeeper my runs and do not own a GPS watch (shocking, I know), it's come to a point where I am perhaps just a bit too mindful of the distance markings on the PCN, and monitoring the time elapsed whenever I'm out running. And tracking improvements or lack thereof and haolianning about them or berating yourself (respectively) is what this kind of irritating blog and social media posts are about, RIGHT? Last weekend, Husband acceded to my request to drive down my running route so we could track the distance I covered on my long run (the one before I succumbed to HFMD. It turned out to be more than 16km). 

But to what end? What is it I have to prove? Why do I force myself to wake up after too little sleep, give up lunches and human interaction, sometimes go the entire day without saying anything to anyone else other than my family members despite having a full-time job and colleagues? I really don't think bragging rights can be the main motivating factor, and if you want to be skinny and fairly fit, you don't actually have to put yourself through such punishment. (The key is to eat less, drink mostly water and maybe one or two teas a day with less or no sugar, and a moderate amount of exercise about three to four times a week. Some running, some yoga, maybe a spin class or two if that's your thing, and you're set.)

I concluded, during a night where sleep eluded me, that there is value in having personal goals which are my own, and not tied to my identity as a mother and a wife, and a lawyer. Some days, I feel like I'm losing myself because of what's expected of me (self-imposed expectations or otherwise), and the knowledge that I am working towards running faster, running better, keeps me plodding away through life; the runs and workouts themselves are precious minutes and hours which ground me, and help me to remember that I am at once more, and less than that - I am just another human being God created, a speck in the universe, as anonymous to whoever I pass on the road and running track as they are to me.

There is value in being so alone, if only for a while.

The less emo, less moody, and more rational explanation is that I just like running. In addition to how I feel during the runs themselves, there is something very shiok about drinking ice cold ice lemon tea siu dai and eating siu yoke rice from my favourite coffeeshop after a long run, and that ever so slight feeling of smugness that comes with the pleasant soreness in my muscles.*

*There is nothing shiok, however, about having to rock my fat baby to sleep and having to give in to Daniel's demands to be carried when we're out walking and he's tired.

Friday, 7 April

My hands have more or less stopped itching. The fog and frustration lifts, and there is a palpable shift in my mood. I stop being so emo and moody and over-thinking this stupid running thing, because this is Day 7 and I am technically sort of not-contagious anymore (okay, I probably still am, but I am going to head out to the doctor's to try and get myself certified fit for work come Monday!)!

The doctor says I am probably still a public health hazard, and finds one spot at the back of Daniel's mouth. I try to convince her that it's toothbrush trauma, but she doesn't certify us fit for work and school. Andrew, however, is. She tells me to come back on Sunday. (It's covered by Husband's company insurance anyway, so why not?)

At 6.40pm, I make it out for a run. Just under 6km at a comfortable pace, with some strides. Pushed it a little because I'm irritating that way.

Saturday, 8 April 

Husband's condition is somewhat improved, and he grudgingly allows me to go out for another run. Because I don't know how to take things easy, I decide to do a tempo run, but maintain a slower pace for the tempo part. This run consisted of:

  • Warm-up of about 5.6km in just under 33 minutes 
  • Tempo run of about 4.2km in just under 22 minutes, so about 5:15/km (but it may be slower. I don't know, and am trying not to care (see above))
for a total of 55 minutes ++ of running. The tempo part was really painful, but as Husband pointed out, what was I expecting?

Sunday, 9 April 

Daniel and I are certified fit for work and school. I sacrifice a nap to write this update.

***

As promised, I now leave you with tips for training for a long-distance race (probably not applicable if you are already at some very high level of fitness, or were at a very high level of fitness before having children, or are a male, or don't have children, so you can ignore me if you fall into any one of those categories):
  1. Do it before you have children. I was actually going to say "Don't have children", but I figured that would have been insensitive - and anyway, EVERYONE wants children, right? Those cute, charming, lovely little bundles of joy. And germs. Who occasionally exhibit sociopathic behaviour, and need EVERYTHING to be done for them. Even after they start walking and talking.
  2. If you have children, wait until they're older, i.e. when their sleep is more predictable. Or maybe you have a magic baby who, from birth, put him or herself to sleep and slept 12 hours every single night despite the occasional sniffles and scourge known as Teething! If so, lucky you! If not, and if you, like me, for some reason decide that you want to do something like this when you are less than a year post-partum (which is usually when their sleep becomes a bit more predictable), see the next tip.
  3. Farm the child/ children out as much as possible. To your live-in domestic help, grandparents, husband, anyone who is a capable caregiver. Unless you, like me, have decided to go at parenthood without the first, have an overactive conscience and sense of duty which prevents you from imposing too much on the second, and have a husband who also needs time alone to do his own workouts - all the best. It can be done, because women and mothers are a tough species, but I have absolutely no idea what to expect from race day itself and neither will you.
For actual, helpful tips, please ask Google. And if you're here because you Googled "Can I exercise when I have HFMD?", the answer is "Yes, I tried and got decent workouts in on Days 2, 7 and 8". I caveat that your HFMD timeline and symptoms may differ from mine, and if your fever persists or you feel like absolute crap, give it a while more. 

Tuesday 4 April 2017

Training for Half-Marathon: Part 2A of 5 (brought to you by the letters H, F, M and D)

Day 4 of HFMD and I am bored. Husband took leave today and is out with Daniel (my mum kindly let him stay over last night, and the three of them are still showing no symptoms, thankfully). Andrew probably watched too much TV yesterday, and my hands hurt still (though my sore throat is more or less gone) so I am going to try and make this quick. 

I got a call from the boys' childcare yesterday afternoon, it was the manager checking in. There's been a mini-outbreak (about 6 kids?) at the infant care, but the kids have done well. She ended off her call by saying perhaps this was a good time for a break from everything for me - I wryly replied that I didn't think so, but after she hung up, I had a think about what she said and I realised she was right. This is the first time since going back to work that I have truly had a break, where I am not doing anything at all but sitting at home watching TV and lazing around in bed (vs heading out for a run or to the gym or NTUC). Although I forced myself to cook some porridge and do laundry yesterday despite the pain in my hands - you can give a mum HFMD but you can't take the mum out of her, huh. And there's still Andrew to look after but he can still be confined to his cot, no matter how unhappy he is about it.

I suppose it was inevitable, given the extent to which I was pushing myself in general, that I would succumb to this or some other horrible virus at some point. Husband says it could stand for HufFy Mummy Disease, or High-Functioning Mummy Disease. Not an inaccurate description, I think; I was super sian upon hearing that I was quarantined, and I'm probably down with it because of a lack of rest and doing too many things.

In any event: although this has derailed this week's training plan, I am thankful for the enforced break. I actually went for a short run, just over 5km, on Sunday evening - so that was a solid Week 1 of this training cycle, and I believe it has helped in the recovery (I usually go for a light workout when I'm at the beginning stages of fighting off a virus anyway). Also, and this isn't something I have wanted to share, I have been feeling the beginnings of plantar fasciitis in my right foot for a while, and although it's gotten better due to the yoga and stretching I've been making myself  do, I think it's good that I've been forced to lay off running. 

I don't actually doubt, despite the discomfort I am experiencing now, that I will be at the starting line come 30 April. Back in 2015 - if you remember, the haze went on and on and people were complaining left right centre about all the cancelled runs - I prayed that God would clear the haze for the Great Eastern Women's Run, which I had trained for through my year at home with Daniel. Up until the day before the run, the PSI was still in the 100s - but on the day of the run itself, it was 66, and the run went on. That experience showed me how much He cares about all the small details of our lives, even the trivial and vain ones. 

My current plan is to do a short run on Friday or Saturday, depending on how my hands and feet - my feet aren't that painful, but a bit tender - are doing. If you see me around, I look like I have had a really bad breakout on my face. But as I keep telling myself, things could be worse, so keep calm and give thanks. And watch Man Fire Food. 

Sunday 2 April 2017

Training for Half-Marathon: Part 1 of 5

TL;DR: I won a giveaway for a race entry to the NTUC Income Eco Run (NTUC must be my favourite local entity) on 30 April 2017, and to amuse myself*, I have decided to keep a training log for the five weeks leading up to the race  (I signed up for the half-marathon, not sure why).

*With reference to my previous post, I may find my work meaningful in general but that doesn’t mean I don’t feel weary from some of the more tedious and uninteresting matters, especially where I feel Legal is just being made use of.

Because I belong to the generation that overshares and generally enjoys kaypohing in other peoples’ business, here is Part 1 of 5, which covers almost all of Week 1 (Monday to part of Sunday).  You don’t need to read it, or even any of the subsequent parts, but if you’re bored and spend too much time on Facebook reading random stuff anyway, you can just skim this and look out for what I have underlined and made bold in the text. And of course, I will be sure to #haolian about this achievement which will take place #9monthspostpartum, regardless of how I perform.

P/S I am not very fast, sorry to disappoint.

Some more background: The week beginning 20 March, i.e. the week I entered the giveaway, started off really painfully. I figured I was burnt out from being a mum – when all you want is just 20 quiet minutes for a power nap and your toddler insists on marching around you as you lie on his bed, lustily singing THE ANTS GO MARCHING ONE BY ONE HURRAH! HURRAH!, then refuses to sleep unless he is curled into the crook of your back just so and you no longer find it endearing but have to resist the urge to shake him then give him a good spanking, something’s up. Plus I was a bit sick, and generally feeling that I wanted to get away from both Husband and the kids even though we had just had a wonderful family staycation together, to celebrate our fifth wedding anniversary! **

**Sarcastic tone.

So these five weeks of training, come what may, are my gift to myself. I’d already been training with a Ministry 10k in May in mind, maybe doing a half-marathon towards the end of the year, but since this came up – why not?

“Them” collectively refers to Daniel and Andrew.  

Week 1 (27 March 2017 – 2 April 2017)

27 March, Monday

Rest day. This is also the day I am informed that I won one of three race entries from @mokyingren’s giveaway for the Income Eco Run (so shiok that training starts on a rest day, hor?). I usually go for RPM on Mondays at lunch, but had to take a break today (see next paragraph). Also, I went for a stroller run the day before. Was, however, all haolianned-out from all the Instagram action and couldn’t bring myself to post about it. I think it was a good ~5k run at a good pace, considering that it was really humid and the stroller fan battery gave out about half-way through (it had already been used earlier in the day during the very long journey to and from church). Did 5x slope repeats at a not very steep slope (I hesitate to call it a “hill”) near my block after, and some small boys kicking a ball around peered curiously at my thankfully asleep baby in the stroller. Daniel also slept whilst we were out for the run, lucky Husband. 

I take half a day’s leave because my mum, our beloved PP, who is on Monday Them Duty, had a terrible bout of stomach flu over the weekend and although she was recovered, felt she might have needed some help. I contemplate doing an easy shake-out run, because how rare is it for my mum AND me to both be around with Them on a weekday evening?!  But I decide instead to have a nap, take my time making dinner, and iron Husband’s formal pants (he’s able to be mostly in polo shirts and jeans at work, thank God) because he is flying to the Philippines for business tomorrow night.

During my bedtime prayer with Daniel, we give thanks for my winning the giveaway. I finally acknowledge the thought that has been nagging at me the entire day, namely that I have absolutely no idea how training for this is going to go, because the quality of the training depends a lot on the boys’ health and sleep, but I know that this is entirely in God’s hands so I try to stop worrying about it.

I go to sleep at around 11pm, excited to do some intervals tomorrow (as I have been doing on Tuesdays since mid-January) with a goal in mind.

Note: The late hour was due to the fact that I spent some time drafting a snarky email to HPB highlighting to them Regulation 11(2) of the Infectious Diseases (Diptheria and Measles Vaccinations) Regulations, and undertaking to take Daniel for his second MMRV booster shot before he turns three, as he had his first MMRV shot after he turned a year old (our PD recommended delaying the second jab so as not to exacerbate his asthmatic tendencies whilst they were being treated. It has been about 9 months of Singulair so far. It is cheaper, and available OTC in Malaysia. FYIP).

My drafting of said email was hampered to some extent by Husband, who kept coming up to me in 10- minute intervals to tell me that I was abusing my legal training, and reminding me that I was responding to a computer-generated letter which I told him I felt insulted by because I felt it insinuated that I: (i) did not want to vaccinate my child against measles because it causes autism; and (ii) had broken the law by not doing so. He disagreed with my reading of it, pointing out that it was computer-generated and that we had in any event complied with the law. I ignored him, but because he distracted me, I later found two errors in my email, which annoyed me further. Want to be snarky and take moral high ground must be grammatically and factually correct, correct?  

28 March, Tuesday

2am: Daniel wakes up because he wet the bed (despite the fact that he was wearing a diaper). After cleaning him up, we give him some milk and cajole him back to sleep.

4am: Daniel wakes up and comes to our bed. He nudges into Andrew whilst he is worming his way up the bed to lie down next to me, waking him, and they both ask for milk. Or rather, Daniel asks for milk in the Most Whiny Way Possible, and Andrew just makes a heckuva lot of noise so we make him a milk to keep him quiet.  It works. They both go back to sleep.

6am: Andrew wakes up, and to get him to go back to sleep, we make him another milk. After finishing the milk, because we are derelict parents and it’s like 6am and I can wake up earlier than that for a run but not to burp my baby, we do not make him sit up so he can burp. He tries unsuccessfully to sit up but Daniel and Husband are blocking his way. He coughs a few times, and regurgitates most of his milk onto the k’Tan carrier I decided to leave on our bed for convenience. A good part of it lands on our bed anyway.

I get a towel and wet wipes, we wipe Andrew’s face, place the towel over the wet patch, calm an excited Daniel down (“Didi votited!”), and go back to sleep. To avoid getting kicked in the ribs, I shift myself to the foot of the bed, where my head is at Husband’s feet and I have to curl up, but in a not uncomfortable position.

8am: Everyone except Andrew wakes up. After I do last night’s dishes, I clean Daniel up because he has pooed, and hustle Husband out of the bathroom so I can take a shower. Whilst I am showering, I hear a thud, followed by a cry. I hope against hope, but it turns out that Andrew has rolled off our bed (again) (I told you we were derelict parents).

8.40am: Jon has carted Daniel off to his parents’ place, and although I am already late for work, my mum has not yet arrived, so I take the time to play with Andrew. He is pleased. After a while I smell poo, so I take him to the bathroom to wash him up. I take off his diaper, and note that there isn’t very much poo.

As I am preparing to wash his bum, he poos in the shower.

There is a lot of poo.

I manage, through sheer force of will and what I think is laudable acrobatic ability, to get the roll of toilet paper off the top of the cistern whilst holding on to my squirming baby. I manage to tear off a length of toilet paper, and proceed to pick up the poo. I pick most of it up, but when I try to toss the poo-filled toilet paper package into the toilet bowl, I miss. It lands on the toilet seat, and due to the semi-liquid nature of the poo, some spatters on the wall. The next bit of poo I scoop up and try to toss into the toilet bowl also misses and lands on the floor next to the toilet.

I momentarily lose my grip on Andrew and he slides onto his back in the shower. Some poo gets on the sleeve of his romper. He cries unhappily.

I take off his romper, give him a bath, douse the affected areas of the bathroom floor and toilet with Dettol (neat), and hope for the best in terms of the spreading of poo germs.

Haolian of the day: I manage not to get any poo, and only a minimal amount of water, on my work clothes.

12.30pm: After a painful morning of reading some very long comments (why does Microsoft Word keep collapsing them?!) and drafting, I finally head off with some excitement to the gym for the first interval workout of this admittedly very short training cycle. Today’s workout consisted of:
  • 20 minute warm-up at 6:00/km (~3+km)
  • 8x800m at 5:15-5:21/km, for an average speed of 5:19/km in effort. Took 1 minute breaks in between, at 6:00-6:19/km, and after each interval from 5-7 I had to hit pause for about 40 seconds each time. But who cares, I managed to finish all 8 intervals.
  • 1 minute rest at 9km/h

-          Total distance – 10.98km (let’s call it 11), in 1:02:24.

After I am done, I feel a little like vomiting, and I remember why I set myself a measly sub-55 10k goal 1 year post Andrew. But what to do, won race entry and signed up for half-marathon already.

3.43pm: I am typing this at my desk and trying not to fall asleep.

4.08pm: I decide to get an overpriced ice lemon tea from FunToast at Star Vista. It’s not bad, at least it tastes like they bothered to extract the juice from the lemon instead of just sticking some slices of lemon into a cup of teh-o-bing siu dai.

6.40pm: I arrive home, buzzing from my second caffeine high of the day, and find that Andrew is slightly feverish. I give thanks for the extra caffeine boost, because I know I’ll be needing it.

29 March, Wednesday

Last night’s sleep could have been better – but sleep with two little kids, especially one fighting a mild fever, can always be better. It was as good as it gets in the circumstances.

I went for RPM at lunchtime with my favourite instructor, G. I have a soft spot for this class because I attended it religiously throughout the year off I had after Daniel was born. It played no small part in helping to keep me sane, and I formed friendships (well, acquaintance-ships may be a more accurate description) with people I would otherwise never have gotten to know.

7.36pm: I heat up leftover chicken macaroni soup, and sit down with the boys in front of yet another episode of Dinotrux (we’re repeating them already) to eat.  By 9.30pm, we’re ready for bed. Except that sleep is for the weak, and for those who are not teething. Or fighting off another virus. Or teething, I’m sure it’s teething this time. I hope those dratted two lower front teeth make an appearance ASAP.

30 March, Thursday

I suppose last night could have gone a lot worse in that I could have not gotten any sleep AT ALL, but what transpired (as I posted on Facebook: many times extended puppy pose, rolling around my bed whining and refusing to be carried, me praying that the boys wouldn’t wake each other up) was enough to make me remember why I decided that my 1-year goal post Andrew was simply to do a faster 10k, then work towards a solid sub-2 half marathon the year after (current best time – 1:57:13). You just can’t predict how the nights are going to go. I still intend to go for a long run tomorrow, but it may have to be shortened somewhat if tonight is like last night. Husband is back from the Philippines tonight, so he will need to get some rest too.

There’s been a Buddhist (Taoist?) wake at our void deck for the past 3 nights, and while I am all for religious harmony and really proud of Singapore for its stance on racial and religious tolerance, last night I really wondered whether the authority issuing the permits thinks about how many young children there may be in an HDB block who would be affected by the noise at night. I was so annoyed that I brought the boys downstairs and stood some distance away looking balefully at the entire proceedings. But what to do? Like that lor. I am not proud of how I reacted; I was very irritated and shouted a bit in our house (no one could have heard me over the din, and anyway the windows were closed), and I thought I was a very bad example to Daniel, who first “sang along” with the funeral band and went “dong dong chiang” whilst hitting an imaginary drum, then kept an uncertain quiet after I shouted and after asking me “Mummy, who shout?!”

This morning, when the funeral band played 世上只有妈妈好 – a surprisingly pleasant rendition, given the instruments used – I took the chance to tell Daniel that I had been “naughty” last night because didi wasn’t doing too good, and he had to always show respect to other religions. I hope I haven’t turned my child into a Christian snob.

Haolian of the day: Managing to leave the house not looking like a total train wreck (thank you, Love Bonito) after marinating some minced pork for tonight’s dinner, and turning into the office carpark just before 9.45am, despite having only left the house at 9.09am to drop Them off at childcare (“Mummy! I don’t want to go to school! I want to SLEEP!” You and me both, Daniel, but unfortunately, you can’t always have your way.)

 I usually do strength training on Thursdays with a PT (a relic of my second pregnancy), but I have an offsite meeting (which just means I will be away from my car) that’s expected to extend over lunch, so I plan to come back to the office and take a nap with whatever time there is left remaining of the lunch hour(s).

11.25am: Just before my meeting is supposed to start, I receive a call from childcare telling me that some spots have developed near Andrew’s mouth (and over the rest of his body), and I need to come and take him to the doctor to be certified HFMD-free***. Since the car is not with me, and I think my boss needs support at the meeting, I ask if I can come in about one and a half hours or so, and the teachers thankfully agree.

***ZOMG

1.15pm: With some effort, I make it to the end of the meeting. I have asked my parents to go over to the childcare first… And after I make it back to my car and fly over to the childcare, I end up meeting them carrying Andrew to the car – and he doesn’t look particularly spotty to me. Because I am not convinced it’s HFMD, I take him to the cheap and lousy GP instead of our usual nice and expensive PD, which turns out to be a mistake because the cheap and lousy GP is cursory in his examination (though he finds no spots IN Andrew’s mouth nor are there any on his hands and feet), and he also decides to swab Andrew’s mouth, just in case. That’s fine, but the swab will go to the National Swab Lab (or whatever it’s called, haha) which is FREE so it will take some time for the results to come. In the meantime, Andrew can’t go to childcare. If I’d gone to my usual PD I suppose the results would have come back more quickly. But it’s too late, I’m too tired to bring him for another doctor’s appointment, and anyway they are closed.

This may reinforce the idea that I am a derelict parent, but one of my foremost thoughts is whether I will be able to make it out of the house for a run tomorrow morning at 5.30am.

Andrew is very pleased to be at home alone with me on a weekday, and proceeds to try to get me to play with him once we get home.

8.40pm: I get home from dinner at my parents’, hurriedly clean everyone up (there are 2x poos), and hustle us all to bed. Andrew, surprisingly, falls asleep pretty easily after drinking a good 240ml of milk (leading to more doubts about whether he has HFMD). I fall asleep around 10.30pm. Part of my bedtime prayer today is that I will be able to go for my long run tomorrow morning.

31 March, Friday

Sometime in the wee hours of the morning: Husband is home!

1.30am: Andrew wakes up, and falls asleep after guzzling a bottle of milk.

4.45am: Just before my alarm goes off, Daniel stirs and I wake up with him. After making him a milk, I surreptitiously change into my running gear. Andrew stirs and gives a small cry, so I carry him and successfully get him back to sleep.

5.45am: I actually leave the house!

I contemplated Runkeepering the run, but I’ve been thinking a lot about why I run and eventually decided not to. When I took the picture for the giveaway, Husband kept asking me why it meant so much to me. Being competitive and obsessed with my body image is one thing (and I don’t deny that I am both), but I don’t think that alone can be sufficient motivation to spend practically all my weekday lunches more or less isolated (except for when I’m at a class or working with my PT) and committing to training despite not being guaranteed a good night’s sleep. I thought back to when I did my first sub-2hr half-marathon in 2013 (at the postponed 2XU one, an AGC colleague gave me her slot!), and I remembered that I didn’t care about achieving a good time or anything – I just wanted to enjoy racing. Of late, being overly concerned about distances and times has started to kill the enjoyment for me, especially with all the stuff I see on Instagram. So I left my phone at home and headed out with only a standard army-issue black Casio watch (Jon’s).

This is my first long distance early morning run in a while; my favourite part of it is the stretch past Dempsey to the Botanic Gardens. Just for that less than one kilometer, waking up at such a horribly early hour is worth it. Mist hangs from the trees, and there’s barely anyone else out running. There’s something about being up and about in these hours, racing down roads which are usually teeming with people, enjoying the sound of your own breath in the morning quiet before the sun rises, feeling your perspiration flick off your skin. When I was still at AGC, running to work in the morning was one of my favourite things to do.

Distance covered: At least 15-16km, but I’m not sure. I went down one side of the Ulu Pandan PCN from my house, down Holland Road, past Holland Village and down past Dempsey. Turned left at the Gleneagles junction, ran down past CCAB to Dunearn Road, ran down Dunearn Road, turned to go past Ngee Ann Polytechnic and Maju Camp, and back to my house.
Time: 1:43:17. I don’t think I ran THAT slowly either, hence my estimate of the distance covered.

Husband and I finally have a date night sans children (thank you, beloved PP!), and we join our friends to celebrate DMC’s birthday. I have a Mojito, a tequila shot, and about half a glass of frozen Margarita. I am buzzing pleasantly.

Update on Andrew’s health: He has a grand total of one pimple-like spot on each of his hands, but has been steadily guzzling milk. HFMD? What gives, man?

1 April, Saturday

There are only two things I have to say about Saturday:
  1.  I had a hangover. Going for a quick swim didn’t help.
  2.  It is irresponsible to overestimate your alcohol tolerance when you have young children to look after.
I hope I don’t have HFMD. The hangover is not helped by the slight fever I have.

2 April 2017, Sunday

I wake up with a slight sore throat and a grand total of three small pimple like spots on my left hand and one on my right, so whatever Andrew has, he passed to me. (HFMD??) I feel much better, though I think I’m going to call it a rest day instead of going for a short run. We’ll see.

Someone remind me again why I am doing this?