You know you are a triathlete when…
- You think it’s normal to wear spandex 24/7.
- You can blow your nose while on the bike without using tissue. (runners call this a snot rocket)
- You know the psi needed for your tires, yet can’t remember the garage door code.
- You have found even more areas to apply body glide you didn’t think were possible.
- You have no problem loaning body glide or chapstick to a triathlete you don’t even know.
- You come to the realization there is justification for public nudity in transition, and you are OK with it.
- You feel that receiving a drafting penalty hurts worse than a tax bill.
- You think swimming through pee is not so bad, and you pee often in your wetsuit and/or in the lake.
- You contemplate how to pee on the bike when riding, and you are a girl.
- You can speed on your bike, eat a gel and yell “on your left” to a pedestrian or other cyclist, all at the same time.
- You put your helmet on backwards leaving transition and don’t want to stop and fix it because it takes too much time.
- You think it’s sexy to have your race number sun burnt into your calf and show it off like a badge of honor.
- You have worse tan lines than a farmer’s tan.
- Your cycling race wheels are worth more than your neighbor’s car….or your car.
- You realize flatulance is pretty funny in a wetsuit and warm on cold swim days.
- You plan for your first Ironman tattoo before you even sign up for the race.
- You press your race bibs with an iron and file or display for future admiration.
- You find yourself yelling “on your left” as you pass other carts in the grocery store.
- You find that a six hour bike ride is a warm up.
- You wash your bike more than you wash the dog.
- You look forward to aging as this will be your only way to stand on the podium in an older age group or qualify for Kona.
- You realize you look like a squid or a sperm in your aero helmet and kinda like it.
- You realize salt tablets on hot race days are like crack for triathletes.
- You conveniently happen to have your race medal on you at work for “show and tell”.
- New tri gear websites make you salivate.
- You’ve been known to check your Training peaks log even more often then your email on your IPhone.
- When you start to think it is normal to go to bed before 9pm and get up at 5am.
- You can’t remember the last time you slept in past 6 am on a Saturday.
- You rationalize that somehow it’s not completely crazy to try the first open water swim of the season when the lake water is only 58 degrees.
- You own at least ten swim suits, five pair of goggles, a dozen bathing caps, swim fins, a pool buoy and at least a wet suit and speed suit if not two.
- You have an entire chest of drawers full of running and biking clothing; but still shop for more practically weekly or even daily.
- You have more pair of athletic socks with “wicking action” then you have pantyhose or dress socks.
- You own more than a dozen pairs of running shoes and can justify why you need each and every one.
- Your inventory of hats and visors equals your running shoes or greater.
- You have at one time documented and tallied everything you eat or put in your mouth, even a tic-tac, in order to evaluate your nutrition even though you are at least 20 pounds under your “ideal weight”.
- You have a plan “A”, plan “B”’, and a “try not to die” race plan.
- You start to think an Ironman is not such an insurmountable challenge and start figuring out how you can qualify for Kona.
- You regularly have to explain that you are not a victim of domestic violence, those are just your “crash bruises”.
- Your biggest fear is skin cancer even though you practically bathe in sunscreen.
- Even your kids start to think they have to swim, bike or run just to spend quality time with Mommy.
- You have more water bottles than wine glasses in your cupboards.
- Your refrigerator has more protein shakes and Gatorade in it than milk or soda.
- You have a following on Facebook that lives vicariously through your training and racing ups and downs.
- You have peeps that you feel like you have known forever through training, but they may not even know your last name (or your first, come to think of it).
- Blisters, chaffing, road rash and sunburn (an the occasional broken toe) are just a minor annoyance.
- You show off your peeling sunburn and chip holder tan line on your ankle with pride on the Monday after a race.
- All of your t-shirts say things like 70.3, 140.6, etc…and you have at least 100+ you can’t part with.
- When you wake up in the morning with every muscle and joint in your entire body hurting and think, “I had a great work out yesterday”.
- When you know the exact distances that make up a sprint, Olympic, Half-Ironman, and Ironman race segments by heart and keep explaining to your friends that they are not all an Ironman and not all in Hawaii.
- When your workouts have taken the pace of any kind of social life.
- When you cross the finish line of your first triathlon.
Smile…..and add to the list!
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