Divine Timing

Let me start by offering a disclaimer, which might arguably be the worst way to start a blog post: I am not (necessarily) endorsing the actions I took this past weekend, but desperate times call for desperate measures. You’ll see what I mean in a minute.

My roommate Sarah and I made somewhat last-minute plans to hike part of Mt. Olympus last weekend. Sarah is a fellow DU student and was missing the mountains as much as I was, so we put together a trip for the two of us to stay in the town of Litochoro at the base of Olympus National Park. Trains aren’t a reliable mode of transportation here as they are in most of Europe, so we decided to take the bus. To ensure we were purchasing the right tickets, I picked out everything with our ISA program advisor Eugenia, who is Greek. She called the bus company for me to verify that once we arrived in Litochoro Friday night, we’d be dropped off somewhere in town near the bus company’s local branch. Sarah and I got out tickets, booked an Airbnb with a view of the ocean, and packed to see the home of the Gods.

The ride from Athens to Litochoro is close to five hours long. Once we finally got close to the town after what felt like eons on the bus, it was pitch black outside and we were ready for bed. As the driver announced our stop, we packed up and walked off the bus with only one other passenger. In the time it took to get our backpacks on, the bus had pulled away and was heading to its final destination. This is when we realized that we hadn’t been dropped off in the town center, but at a tiny bus stop on the side of the highway. The only thing we could see was a gas station glowing faintly in the distance.

No need to panic yet, I had phone service and plenty of battery! I opened the FreeNow app, which is how you can get a taxi in Greece, and a message read: “Service unavailable in this area!” I open the Uber app, which is slightly less reliable but still worth a shot, and the same message pops up. At this point, it is almost 9:30pm. Our last resort is to check public transportation thinking there is a local bus route still running at this time of night. No such luck. The town center is close to a two-hour walk away uphill from our location. We are stranded in the mountains of Northern Greece.

As soon as this realization hits, we start calling Tess and Eugenia, our ISA advisors here in Athens. Eugenia is (we learn later) in class, so she doesn’t pick up my call. Luckily, Tess answers her phone, and I explain the situation to her while Sarah, understandably, sits on the bench motionless, nearly in tears. Tess is just about as lost on solutions as we are because, honestly, there are no good answers to our problems. As her and I brainstorm, a car pulls off the highway towards us.

“Do you two need a ride to Litochoro? Into town?”

Well, yes, I think to myself. But also, not like this.

We get closer to the car and see a middle-aged Greek woman driving by herself. She asked us again and said she could see we looked lost, which was the understatement of the century. Meanwhile, I’m relaying all of this back to Tess and asking her what to do. After a minute, Tess sighs and gives us the ‘ok’ to get in the car. I share our live location and the license plate number with Tess and hang up the phone, praying Sarah and I are not buckling straight into a slasher film.

The woman could tell we were hesitant and told us that she had two kids of her own, a son and a daughter around our age. She explained that she lived in town with her husband and had an Airbnb that she ran for tourists like us. We learned about where she attended university and where she got her master’s degree, and by this point, we had figured that we were probably more safe than not. When we finally got into town, we drove down a quiet street where we were shown her house, met her husband, George, and got to see her dog. She then proceeded to drive us around for another 15 minutes when we couldn’t find our Airbnb and the host wasn’t picking up my phone calls. When we finally found the correct building and tried to give her a few Euro as a ‘thank-you’, she refused and instead met us both with warm hugs, telling us to come knock on her door if we needed anything else that weekend. After that, she went home to George and we called Tess to let her know we had survived hitchhiking for the first time!

The next day, Sarah and I hiked about 8 miles of Mt. Olympus. It was a surreal experience that I will never forget. I felt more connected to nature and humanity than I have in many other places I have traveled to. When we were finished and went back into town for dinner that night, after verifying the bus schedule and pickup location for the next morning, we talked about how bad we felt that we never got the woman from the previous’ nights name. No sooner had we said that I spotted a small dog with two owners across the small square. It was her! We waved her over to our table and exchanged hugs. She asked how Olympus was, and we thanked her again no less than fifty times. I asked if she could write down her name and address, just in case we ever needed it again. Αρετή (pronounced A-ret-ie) also gave us her phone number, telling us to call or text her if we needed “absolutely anything” while in Greece. She told us that next time we came back to Litochoro that we could stay with her. She was the definition of “the people make the place.”

That is, of course, until she ran back up to Sarah and I ten minutes later with two small gift bags from a shop on the town square. Inside the bags were body lotions made with herbs from Mt. Olympus. “Gifts for you girls,” she said as she stood up with us to take a picture. We tried to tell her that it was too much, that WE should be getting HER a gift, but she wouldn’t have it. The three of us took a photo and said goodbye. We waved at her husband George as they walked home and finished our delicious meal, and left Litochoro on time from the town center the next morning.

Hiking Mt. Olympus is a bucket list activity that I have dreamed of doing since I was a kid. Hitchhiking and connecting with a middle-aged Greek mother, however, was not. I’m pretty sure the second one has become more important to me. If there’s anything I’ve learned over the past month and a half, it’s that maybe the Ancient Greeks were onto something. You might be stranded on the side of the highway, looking painfully American, with your roommate in emotional shambles, debating if you should get in a strangers car, but if you’ve made the long journey to see the Gods, they will reward you. You just have to have a little faith in the divine. (And the kindness of strangers)

Sarah, Αρετή, and I at dinner

2024 Dunedin Emerson’s Half Marathon

Running the half marathon in New Zealand • 15 September 2024

Before arriving in Dunedin I knew that it was going to be a unique period of trying new things and pushing myself to new limits. The day I arrived I searched for “half marathons near me” and was immediately met with a link to one of Dunedin’s biggest events of the year, the Dunedin Emerson’s Marathon! I signed up on July 6 for the half marathon, something that didn’t seem too daunting considering it was over two months away…

the weeks PRECEDING the race

I will be candid when I say that I did not train nearly as much as I had hoped for this race. The combination of adapting to a new lifestyle, education, social life, weekend trips, being in the gym, and time for self meant my training was rather sporadic and did not stick to a proper regiment. I have never run a race in my life so as race day approached I started to accept the fact that it was going to be an extreme challenge and learning curve for the entirety of the race. I have never taken on a physical challenge like this before which also created a certain degree of nervousness given I haven’t met my physical limit in this manner before. I signed up for this race under the presumption that I’d be doing it alone, however the week of the race I was happy to find out other friends and acquaintances would also be racing. My friends and I put together a massive carb load dinner the night before and I ended the evening with a solid stretch.

Race day

The nerves weren’t as high as I thought they’d be, however it was quite a unique feeling waking up knowing I’d go to sleep having run a half marathon. I had a decently sized breakfast and my friends whom were also racing with me came to my flat before the race, (the starting point happened to be right in front of my flat).

Some last second stressing and before I knew it the race had begun! My thoughts were as follows:
Mile 1: THERE ARE SO MANY PEOPLE. I AM RUNNING TOO FAST. MY LEGS ARE ALREADY HURTING.
Mile 2: I am still running too fast and my legs hurt more than they should.
Mile 3: I am almost to the first water station, after that I will magically be healed. I am sneakily following these two girls, I like their pace.
Mile 4: Maybe I should eat my first snack.
Mile 5: I am still running too fast but I seem to be doing fine. I think I’m ready to pass these girls.
Mile 6: I passed the girls, time to find somebody else to follow. Wow, I’m almost halfway done. I’m definitely drinking gatorade at the next station instead of water.
Mile 7: I’m over the halfway point! I found somebody new to follow.
Mile 8: This feels too good! I don’t know how I’d be able to do this without music. Time to eat my gel.
Mile 9: Almost to the water station again, should I even stop?
Mile 10: I stopped for water.
Mile 11: I am getting so close. I feel great, I think I’m really going to pick up the pace now.
Mile 12: Some of my favorite songs are playing and I’m starting to get the chills.
Mile 13.1: I’m gonna do it! I cross the finish line as Paradise by Coldplay is blasting in my ears.

The last three miles I was filled with energy, profound thoughts of proudness and accomplishment, and most importantly I was having the time of my life. Gliding through the streets of Dunedin as people cheered me on, some fans holding signs that said “Hit me for turbo” and hitting them maybe a little too hard. Listening to some of my most influential songs whilst accomplishing a new physical feat. Life was at such a high! I truly had a phenomenal time and completing a race is one of those things you have to do in order to feel the energy in that way.

I ended with a 1:43:45 time at 7:55 per mile. I was super proud of this time! The runner’s high is so real! I felt like I was on another planet for the last portion of the race and at different parts for the remainder of the day.

to be human!

Humans can do such amazing things! The amount of energy, ambition, desire, and appreciation for accomplishing an adventure like this is something I will truly cherish to have been a part of. One aspect that running the half marathon has taught me is that pushing myself to new limits isn’t something that I hope to do a couple more times throughout my life, but so many more. Here’s to a life full of redefining the limit!

Find photos below, they aren’t too flattering!