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  • JEREMY STERN: Good afternoon and welcome to Talks at Google.

  • I'm Jeremy Stern with Google Fiber.

  • And our guest today is Shaluinn Fullove.

  • Shal's been a Googler for 13 years.

  • She started at Google Search and moved

  • onto a number of other products, and then became a Sloan fellow

  • at the Graduate School of Business at Stanford,

  • returned after her fellowship and worked

  • on apps and business and Gmail, and then came

  • to join Google Fiber about three years ago with me.

  • And when she's not a full time Googler,

  • she is a full time mom and a world class runner

  • and endurance athlete.

  • Let me share with you some examples of her long list

  • of accomplishments in running.

  • Her personal record running a marathon

  • is two hours, 41 minutes, and 57 seconds.

  • Think about that.

  • 26.2 miles in under two hours and 42 minutes.

  • That was her personal record set in December at the California

  • International Marathon, and it was a key race getting her

  • to this day.

  • And so we'll talk more about that.

  • She also ran a 1,500 meter, a mile,

  • in under four minutes and 35 seconds

  • in the US Track and Field Pacific Association

  • Championships a few years ago.

  • She's in Los Angeles today for the US Women's Olympic Track

  • Team Marathon Trials, on the road to Rio in 2016.

  • This is a really big race this Saturday for Shal,

  • and we're really lucky to have her here.

  • Please join me in welcoming Shal to Google Venice Beach.

  • And also her husband Ramsey and daughter Elise and mom Marianne

  • are in the audience with us.

  • So welcome also to Google Venice Beach.

  • Welcome.

  • It's been fun as a Google Fiber teammate of yours

  • to follow your path here.

  • But I'm really excited to have you here

  • and to share with the Google audience and the YouTube

  • audience a little bit more about you and your racing career.

  • So can you tell us a little bit about-- first of all,

  • you're on the Google Fiber project.

  • Tell us a little bit about what Google Fiber is.

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: Google Fiber is high speed internet and TV

  • for your home or small business.

  • And it's a gig, which is a really big deal, right?

  • So it's a lot faster than most of us

  • have unfortunately at our homes.

  • And I've been on the team for about three years,

  • like you mentioned earlier.

  • JEREMY STERN: So over 13 years at Google.

  • What inspired you to move from other projects

  • to come join the Google Fiber team?

  • What was interesting about the opportunity?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: I've worked on a lot of projects and products

  • since I've been here.

  • I think it's maybe more than 12 products,

  • A lot of that is because at the time, at Google,

  • we were launching a lot of new products in early 2000.

  • So lucky to just be able to move on to new products

  • that they were launching,

  • After almost 10 years at Google, if I

  • was going to continue to be here,

  • I wanted to be working on something

  • that was very audacious, and a little bit scary.

  • And launching a new fiber network seemed to kind of fit

  • that description, right?

  • So it's not an easy problem to solve.

  • And we're chipping away at it.

  • So I'm really excited.

  • I've learned a ton about the TV business and internet

  • and fiber.

  • So it's really kept me excited to keep learning all this time.

  • JEREMY STERN: What do you do on the Fiber team?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: I sit on the business development team.

  • And I work in the strategy and operations.

  • I work closely with yourself and Irv

  • and the content licensing team to better understand

  • what we've signed up for on the deal side,

  • and help product and engineering understand

  • how to built a roadmap around those obligations.

  • JEREMY STERN: So you're a full time Googler, a full time mom.

  • How do you find time to be a world-- how in the world

  • do you find time to become a world class marathoner?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: Well it's not certainly not just me.

  • My husband, who's here, who's also

  • a Googler, who's been at Google as long as I have,

  • maybe longer, we're definitely a team effort.

  • There's a ton of people that help us

  • get everything done every day.

  • The schedule is every day a game of Jenga

  • about who's going to work out when,

  • who's going to take Elise to school,

  • what's dinner going to be like.

  • We have help at home too, which is great.

  • But we work together.

  • And it's a lot of working out on the bookends of the day.

  • But I do get a chance to work out at work a lot.

  • There's a great group of mostly guys, the Mountain View Lunch

  • Run Group.

  • They're not watching right now, probably

  • because they're on a run.

  • So sometimes I'm able to get into running

  • during the workday.

  • JEREMY STERN: So the race on Saturday,

  • February 13th, to qualify for the US Olympic team,

  • it's Saturday in Los Angeles.

  • Tell us a little bit about the Olympic qualifying process.

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: Sure.

  • So there's basically two standards that get set.

  • The Olympic standard is set by the International Olympic

  • Committee, and then individual countries

  • have their own standard.

  • So initially, the Olympic standard was 2:43,

  • and for the US, we usually have a time that's

  • equal to the Olympic standard.

  • So if you've met the US standard,

  • then you've automatically met the Olympic standard,

  • so you already have that, at least for the marathon.

  • It's a little bit different in track.

  • So initially the standard was 2:43,

  • and I just missed the standard.

  • I ran 2:43:33 in 2013, so just by like a little

  • over a second in the mile I missed the standard, which

  • was a little bit heartbreaking.

  • But I ran a good race, and I was happy about that.

  • And so then in 2015, I went and ran 2:41

  • and hit the 2:43 standard.

  • And then two days later, my family and I were in Hawaii,

  • and the Olympic committee announced

  • that they'd changed the standard to two minutes slower,

  • so they changed it to 2:45, which

  • is great news for a lot of women,

  • because that meant they just qualified for Olympic trials.

  • Sorry.

  • The Olympic committee changed it to 2:45,

  • and then the US committee a couple days later

  • agreed to change it again to 2:45

  • to meet the Olympic standard.

  • So it's a little bit unusual this year.

  • Initially, it was 2:43.

  • Now it's 2:45.

  • JEREMY STERN: Does that mean there'll be

  • more women racing on Saturday?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: So I think something

  • like eight new qualifiers were allowed to come into the race

  • after they moved the standard back about two minutes, which

  • is great news all in all.

  • And then on Saturday, the way it works

  • is there's a little less than 200 people in the men's

  • and women's race, and the top three finishers

  • will be the US Olympic team that goes to Rio,

  • and the fourth place finisher will be the alternate.

  • So it's a very democratic process.

  • Yeah.

  • JEREMY STERN: Where is the race taking place on Saturday?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: It is down by LA Live.

  • It's roughly a five-loop course.

  • There's a two-mile loop to begin with,

  • and then we do four by six miles.

  • So it's a very spectator-friendly course.

  • JEREMY STERN: So it's different.

  • The big LA Marathon is Sunday, and that's

  • from Dodger Stadium to the sea.

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: Right.

  • JEREMY STERN: Not a straight line,

  • but A to B. This is a completely different course than that.

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: Yep.

  • It's definitely set up for spectators to see a lot of us,

  • and it's not even like a real loop.

  • It's almost like an out and back.

  • So we'll be able to see a lot of the spectators quite a bit,

  • which is nice for such a long race.

  • JEREMY STERN: So have you studied the course?

  • How do you prepare for a particular race course

  • when you're getting your game set, game mind going?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: They've had a really good interactive maps

  • online.

  • They posted that awhile ago.

  • They didn't finalize the course until not too long ago,

  • and they've had a couple opportunities

  • for you to come down around the course with some officials,

  • and I think I will probably try to do a couple shakeout runs

  • on Thursday and Friday.

  • JEREMY STERN: Step back and tell us about your journey

  • to this incredible day.

  • This isn't your first Olympic trial, right?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: Right.

  • I qualified in 2008.

  • JEREMY STERN: So tell us about your prior efforts.

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: Yeah, so I qualified in 2008,

  • and they were in Boston, which was really special.

  • In 2005, I was diagnosed with thyroid cancer

  • and overcame that.

  • It took about a year, so I had to overtake that,

  • and it went really well.

  • I had great doctors, but personally, I

  • felt like I wanted to prove that I was like the same or better

  • than I was before I got diagnosed

  • with this horrible disease.

  • And I decided I was going to take some audacious goal

  • to prove that I had come back stronger from that,

  • and qualifying for the Olympic trials

  • marathon was what I chose.

  • JEREMY STERN: That's pretty extraordinary.

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: So it was a hard road.

  • I had three attempts, and I qualified just seven weeks

  • before the actual Olympic trials in 2008

  • at the Napa Valley marathon, so I had seven weeks

  • to turn around and come back.

  • And it was a great day, and to have it be in Boston,

  • which is such a marathon mecca-- Joanie Samuelson

  • was in the race that year.

  • I actually ended up running a lot of the race just ahead

  • of her, but Boston went crazy every time she came by.

  • So I felt like I had support the whole time,

  • and every time we came down Boylston,

  • because it was a four-loop course,

  • so we came down Boylston four times,

  • and the crowds were just going crazy.

  • It was the day before the Boston Marathon too,

  • so it was a really great experience.

  • And then I stepped out of 2012, because I was still

  • on maternity leave.

  • I had a little baby, and I decided, well,

  • I wanted to go for it again.

  • So eight years later I decided to tackle it.

  • JEREMY STERN: What inspired you to do it?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: To do 2016?

  • JEREMY STERN: 2016.

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: I think you did it one time,

  • and you kind of want to say, OK, did I just get lucky,

  • or was it just a fluke?

  • Do I still have it?

  • I think the time was three minutes faster,

  • and I was going to be eight years older, and I thought,

  • that seems like a really hard goal.

  • I should just--

  • JEREMY STERN: An audacious goal.

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: Maybe I should just go for it and see.

  • Sure, maybe I wouldn't get it, but maybe I'd get pretty close.

  • And in 2013, I mean, I just missed it by 33 seconds,

  • so I was like, I have to try again.

  • So I was injured in 2014, and I tore my hamstring

  • in early 2015.

  • So there's definitely been some challenges along the way,

  • but I can be bullheaded at times when it's helpful.

  • JEREMY STERN: So the race in December in Sacramento--

  • is that where it was?

  • The California International Marathon.

  • Your personal record, extraordinary result--

  • tell us a little bit about that race and the experience of what

  • it was like for you.

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: Sure.

  • I was really nervous that week.

  • The training had gone really well,

  • but I was really nervous, because the couple

  • years before when I ran it, it was a really hard day.

  • It was 27 degrees, and I had all of this horrible memory

  • of like-- I mean the last mile and a half,

  • I was losing my vision.

  • It was just horrible.

  • So even though I was fit this time,

  • you just think about how much it's

  • going to hurt, that last 5K.

  • But my friends were really supportive

  • and keeping my spirits up.

  • My coach is fantastic.

  • And basically, the gun went off, and you're just kind of

  • out there.

  • In full honesty, I was kind of grumpy the first 10 miles.

  • It was rainy, and it was dark, and I was just like, oh, gosh.

  • It was crowded, and all the water stops

  • are crowded, because we hadn't strung out yet.

  • There were two pace groups, and we were all kind

  • of just one at that time.

  • But I remember at like 10K, I kind of

  • was in a group kind of settling in [INAUDIBLE] in chunks.

  • So after the first 10 miles, like 11 to 15

  • is kind of the roll-y part, and by that time, I'm like, well,

  • I'm out here.

  • So we're just going to be out here and see what happens.

  • And 16 to 20, you get a nice little downhill,

  • and I was feeling good at that point.

  • I just remember my coach saying, get to 20 under control,

  • because you can really open up that last 10K if you feel good.

  • And after 20, I just kept waiting for the wall.

  • I kept thinking about two years before, where I just was

  • like dying and like losing my vision.

  • But it never came, and I couldn't believe it.

  • And actually my fastest mile was mile 26.

  • I ran a 5:54 last mile, and I just was gunning it for home.

  • And at mile 26, one of my best training partner friends was

  • like, you've got to go now.

  • And I had my Garmin on, and I knew

  • I was averaging like 6:10, 6:11, and I

  • was like, I think I got it.

  • But I needed to run 6:13s or 6:12s,

  • so we were at like 6:10 or 6:11 the whole time,

  • and I had picked it up the last three miles.

  • But she was screaming at me like I didn't have it,

  • and I had to run 400 meters.

  • So I just started running as hard

  • as I could, which was great because I dipped right

  • under 2:42, which was great.

  • JEREMY STERN: That's extraordinary.

  • So to get to that level of being able to run at a 6:10, 6:11

  • pace for 26 miles, there's a lot of endurance athletes

  • in this office and across Google.

  • Tell us a little bit about your training regimen.

  • What was it like and how did you set your training regimen up

  • to hit that goal?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: My coach is fantastic.

  • He's really a marathon specialist.

  • His name's Michael McKeeman, and I've

  • been training with him for about three years.

  • And his training is very different than any training

  • I did before.

  • So in college, I was middle distance.

  • I loved the track.

  • I loved my 400s, maybe some I'll repeat.

  • His training is nothing like that.

  • His training is a lot of tempo work, a lot of grindy,

  • sit in it race simulations.

  • So we do a ton of tempo.

  • All of my long runs have marathon pace integrated

  • into it, so the hardest long run I'll do is 22 miles,

  • and the last eight to 10 are at marathon pace.

  • So we do a lot of that work, so when the race comes,

  • you feel very familiar with what is going on.

  • And you're tapered, so you feel great.

  • JEREMY STERN: So do you start out--

  • I mean, how many miles a week-- You're

  • six months out from the race.

  • How many miles a week do you run?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: I'm actually relatively low mileage

  • for a marathoner.

  • I never go over 75 miles a week, but all the work

  • we do during the week is very high quality.

  • So I don't do a lot of double days.

  • I do one double day a week, and it's only three miles.

  • But I do a lot of tempo work.

  • But all the work is a progression.

  • JEREMY STERN: I'm just doing the math in my mind.

  • That's more than 10 miles a day.

  • I get tired thinking about that.

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: Well, a lot of women that'll be racing

  • is on Saturday.

  • They run 100 to 140-mile weeks.

  • I mean, their full time job is to run.

  • But I find that at 75 miles, things

  • start to get a little frayed on the edges,

  • and I don't feel-- you start to risk injury.

  • We do a lot of high quality tempo work.

  • I told him after this race, whatever

  • the next race we do, it has to require a lot of 400 repeats,

  • because I don't want to do a lot of tempo work for awhile.

  • But it's always a progression, so I

  • don't start trying at 22 miles and every other week we

  • alternate.

  • So if it's not a tempo long run, we'll

  • do it so that the last half is alternating like an easy mile,

  • a race pace mile.

  • Those are his easy long runs.

  • JEREMY STERN: What else besides running?

  • Do you add any other fitness into your program?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: I do a little bit of yoga and Pilates.

  • I have recently learned that my core needs a lot more work,

  • so I've been trying to integrate a little bit more of that,

  • especially after having a kid and just

  • being a little bit older.

  • You really need to focus on that strong core.

  • JEREMY STERN: So what about diet?

  • Do you have a program for maintaining your metabolism

  • and your physiology for maximum race performance?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: The one thing about marathon training

  • is carbs.

  • You have to have a lot of carbs, so--

  • JEREMY STERN: There are good carbs and bad carbs.

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: Yeah, when you're

  • marathon training though, it's just kind of all carbs.

  • You can eat all the stuff that they usually

  • tell you not to eat, because you're going to burn it up,

  • and your body uses that fuel.

  • So I don't spend a ton of time like measuring food,

  • but I just try to think generally

  • to make sure I'm getting that protein.

  • I do think a lot about what I eat immediately after the runs.

  • I found that if after a really long hard workout or long run,

  • if I am able to get a protein shake within 30

  • minutes of finishing, it goes a long way to helping me recover.

  • JEREMY STERN: So what are some of the sacrifices

  • along the way?

  • I mean, it's a marathon.

  • It's a long preparation course.

  • What are some of the sacrifices that you have?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: Probably a better question for my family,

  • since they have to put up with every weekend being

  • a long run, and my husband bikes with me,

  • and he pulls the buggy with a leash,

  • and they laid at the three-mile mark with my water,

  • so their weekends are kind of taken up with Mommy's running.

  • But I don't really see the sacrifices.

  • I'm really focused on the goal.

  • I had my 15-year Stanford reunion during the buildup,

  • so I had to miss a couple of the things there.

  • But my roommates on the team, they definitely understand.

  • They're so supportive.

  • I don't really think about sacrifices.

  • I just think these are the things

  • you have to do if you're going to get your goal.

  • JEREMY STERN: One of the things you're

  • mentioned in one of your races like almost losing

  • your vision at the end, is there's an extraordinary amount

  • of suffering and endurance racing,

  • whether it's open water swimming or running or biking

  • or triathlon.

  • How do you prepare your mind for that?

  • I mean, a lot of endurance athletes

  • that have written or spoken about the subject

  • say there's a huge part of the mind

  • game in terms of preparing.

  • So tell us about that, both in training and racing.

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: Yep.

  • The mental game is huge, definitely,

  • especially when you're putting your body,

  • pushing your body to its max.

  • And I think one of the reasons why

  • I was able to improve so much in the marathon

  • over the last three years is the training that I was doing,

  • not only physically where we're obviously stimulating

  • the right system in those long runs and those tempo efforts,

  • but you're really getting your mind into that hurt zone, where

  • you're like, how am I going to deal with this?

  • And there were definitely-- the night before these long runs,

  • I'm emailing my coach.

  • I'm like, oh, I don't know.

  • And after three weeks in a row of that,

  • you're kind of like, god, I feel kind of burned out.

  • But I think mentally it's training that mental muscle

  • to get prepared for that.

  • And I think sometimes you break it into smaller chunks.

  • So like I did this year at CIM.

  • It was like the first 10 miles and 11 to 15, and 16 to 20,

  • so it was little baby steps to get there.

  • I think on Saturday, having it be a loop course,

  • I'll be doing a lot of that, so like,

  • can I get the two-mile loop?

  • Can I get the first six-mile loop?

  • And I'm just taking it one step at a time

  • and really not trying to consume the whole 26 miles at once.

  • I think also having teammates and training

  • partners is critical.

  • Some of these workouts are almost

  • impossible to do by yourself, but I've

  • been really fortunate to loop in some Googlers,

  • some of the guys on the MV lunch run,

  • and some old teammates of mine from Stanford

  • have been able to come out and help.

  • So it's not one silver bullet.

  • It's a lock in the mental game.

  • But I actually read the book, "Flow," this buildup

  • of the CIM, which is really helpful to think about how

  • to get in this flow state, where you're effortlessly

  • losing yourself in the moment and thinking about not

  • pushing too hard but trying to find some flow, fluidity.

  • JEREMY STERN: So have you ever felt that flow in a race?

  • I mean, because clearly, there are

  • barriers, physical and mental and weather.

  • Have you felt that flow, and how do you keep yourself there?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: Yeah, I think sometimes it comes in spurts,

  • especially in the marathon.

  • I wasn't feeling any flow the first 10K to 10 miles at CIM.

  • I was like, I'd rather be doing almost anything else right now

  • than doing these first 10 miles.

  • But yeah, kind of in the middle, you

  • start to kind of-- your body starts to remember.

  • You realize you're here.

  • You're working with people.

  • You realize you're getting closer.

  • I was holding back a little bit that last 10K,

  • because I was bracing myself for the wall to hit me pretty hard.

  • But then with the last 5K, I realized it wasn't coming,

  • and I really just needed to go for it,

  • so I started to embrace it and really push.

  • But the truth is there are more races where you don't feel flow

  • than when you do.

  • So when you feel it, you really embrace it and try to enjoy it.

  • But more times than not, you're grinding.

  • It's hard.

  • It's going to hurt.

  • JEREMY STERN: So I guess the opposite of flow is suffer.

  • How do you-- you're suffering at mile 15.

  • What inspires you, and how do you-- because it's not

  • just your legs and arms moving.

  • It's your mind, again, taking it back to the mental game.

  • How do you pull yourself out of that?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: You've got to stay positive.

  • In the marathon, it's going to ebb and flow.

  • Mile 15 could feel horrible, and then mile 16 and 17,

  • you could feel like a million bucks.

  • So I think you just really have to tell yourself

  • this is going to pass.

  • One of the things we do in yoga is

  • you notice when you're uncomfortable and acknowledge

  • that I don't feel great, and I'm going to let go of it,

  • and I'm going to keep moving forward.

  • You just have to keep pressing and believing that.

  • You've train for this.

  • Other people are suffering.

  • We're working together.

  • Just keep getting to the next mile and next mile.

  • But the reality is the running, it hurts.

  • Racing hurts, and it's not hurting,

  • you're probably not doing it right, so you kind of just

  • have to accept that it's going to hurt.

  • Admit to it.

  • You can't run away from it.

  • If you don't want to hurt, you probably shouldn't try to race

  • or do running.

  • You should probably do something else.

  • I coach a high school team in Palo Alto,

  • and we talk a lot about the pain cave.

  • JEREMY STERN: What is--

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: The pain cave, it's

  • like how the deeper you go in the pain cave, that's

  • how you reintroduce yourself to like new stimulus

  • and new pain, and throughout the course of the season,

  • we talk about how we've already gotten this far into the pain

  • cave, so now this time, we're going to try to go further,

  • and by the time we get to the championship,

  • we're going to commit ourselves to going the deepest we've ever

  • been into that pain cave.

  • So it works for the high school girls [INAUDIBLE].

  • They like it.

  • JEREMY STERN: What has been the most challenging part

  • of maintaining this level of performance for so long?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: I think I've been fortunate

  • that if you mapped it in broad strokes,

  • it's been a really nice progression.

  • So I came out of college being a middle distance runner.

  • My coach, my marathon coach initially, we

  • did a ton of track work, so that felt

  • like a natural progression.

  • And now I'm with a new coach who does a lot

  • of marathon-specific training.

  • I don't think right out of college

  • I could have jumped right into the training

  • that I'm doing now, and I've been fortunate enough

  • to not have many injuries along the way.

  • I've had a couple just in the last two years,

  • but I've been able to overcome those as well.

  • So it's been a natural progression.

  • I love it.

  • I have a ton of friends that do it.

  • Stanford actually has upwards of nine

  • or 10 athletes that are going to be competing on Saturday,

  • so it's been really great just after all this time to still

  • have that camaraderie from the Stanford team.

  • JEREMY STERN: Do you have any words

  • of wisdom for the endurance athletes here in this audience

  • and in our TV audience on how to keep going,

  • how to keep inspired?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: I don't know if I

  • have a lot of words of wisdom or inspiration to share.

  • But I think for me, being surrounded by teammates

  • and training partners is like the number one thing.

  • I run for an all women's team.

  • They're actually an apparel brand named Oiselle.

  • We have the most women at the trials on Saturday.

  • We have 18 women who qualify, and being

  • a part of that community has pushed me

  • and helped me reignite a fire for this sport

  • that I've been doing since I was-- I've been competing

  • since I was five years old.

  • But it's been so amazing to be surrounded by so many women who

  • are-- we have at least woman who has a really good chance

  • to make the team.

  • She made the team in 2012-- to women

  • who just run on the weekend, and we all on social or at meetups

  • support each other equally, which is fantastic.

  • For me personally, having a coach is critical.

  • There is no way I could write a training plan

  • and be a mom and work, so having a coach that I can really

  • trust who's invested in me and who I can just fully trust

  • the process with is important.

  • JEREMY STERN: What are qualities that you

  • look for in your coach?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: It's funny.

  • So I was friends with friend with-- Michael McKeeman

  • is my coach.

  • I was friends with him from another training partner

  • of mine, and I literally was wishing him happy birthday

  • on Facebook on his wall, and then realized

  • that he was also coaching.

  • And I just said, will you coach me?

  • And he was like, sure.

  • But he has amazing experience.

  • He actually was Deena Kastor's training partner

  • for many years up in Mammoth.

  • She's an American record holder, so we spent a ton of time

  • learning from some of the best marathon coaches in the US.

  • So someone who just has a ton of experience,

  • someone who understands me as a whole person, not just

  • an athlete.

  • I think sometimes it's easy for coaches

  • to just think about you as an athlete,

  • but he respects that I work full time,

  • that I have parental duties, but he doesn't let me back down

  • from trying to go for these really big audacious goals.

  • So he doesn't pull back my workouts just because I work

  • and be a mom, which is great.

  • JEREMY STERN: What's your favorite workout?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: I love porters,

  • which I don't have to do very much when

  • I'm doing marathon training.

  • But the best workout leading into the marathon,

  • we build up to a 12-mile tempo run, where

  • the first 400 of every mile is at about 10K pace,

  • and the last 1,200 is at marathon pace.

  • And what's awesome about that is it breaks it up,

  • so you kind of start to think about, oh,

  • I'm just doing 400s with a 1,200-meter recovery,

  • but you end up running 12 miles.

  • I think I did this two weeks before the race,

  • and I did 12 miles at 6:05 pace in practice,

  • which we did it at Google with Matt Cook, who's

  • a fellow Googler.

  • And when you nail that workout, you feel really good.

  • I emailed my coaches.

  • I can't believe I just did that workout.

  • You know you're ready to race.

  • JEREMY STERN: Before I open the floor up

  • for questions from the audience, let

  • me ask you some fun questions.

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: OK.

  • JEREMY STERN: So we talked a little bit about diet.

  • Sounds kind of flexible, but did you ever

  • cheat on your diet in the lead-up to this big race?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: I think around Thanksgiving and my birthday,

  • I think we went up to Napa to celebrate,

  • and I think maybe I had a little more wine

  • than I normally would.

  • You've got to stay hydrated, so I

  • try not to drink too much wine while I'm building up.

  • But I'm a big believer in treating yourself,

  • so after big workouts-- like every weekend,

  • I go to the same restaurant and get a big stack of pancakes

  • and butter and syrup and all that stuff.

  • But yeah, I don't cheat too much.

  • JEREMY STERN: So what's your favorite food

  • after finishing the race?

  • Where are you going to go after this race?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: That's a popular question.

  • So one of my favorite restaurants in LA

  • is Rustic Canyon, and they have--

  • or they at least used to have a great burger.

  • It's not on the menu.

  • If you ask for it, they have it, and it's delicious.

  • And I booked that reservation like the day after I qualified,

  • so we're going to Rustic Canyon on Saturday night.

  • JEREMY STERN: Tell us about your funniest race or training

  • experience, if there can be a funny race or training

  • experience in a marathon.

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: I don't know it's funny,

  • but in 2008-- I mentioned this a little bit earlier-- in Boston

  • at the trials, I was running basically

  • just a couple meters ahead of Joanie Samuelson the whole way.

  • And I thought, oh, maybe-- I don't know what I was thinking.

  • Of course, she's going to just be as strong as nails

  • and be there the whole time.

  • But she just kept being there, and it came down

  • to like the last 400 meters, and we're on Boylston,

  • and the crowd is going crazy.

  • There's a giant screen on the road, and I look up,

  • and I can see her like behind me,

  • and she is just crushing like the last 200 meters.

  • I had to run a 38-second last 200 meters just to not

  • get caught by Joanie, who I think broke the 50-year-old age

  • group record that day.

  • So I remember just running for my life trying

  • to not-- in my mind, I'm like, I'm

  • going to be a gold medalist in the marathon.

  • But obviously, that was not real.

  • That really did happen.

  • I have awesome photos from the Jumbotron on Boylston of that.

  • JEREMY STERN: That's pretty cool.

  • So let me turn it over to the audience.

  • Anybody have any questions for Shal?

  • Please join us at the microphone.

  • AUDIENCE: [INAUDIBLE] do a race, what do you do?

  • What's your schedule like, and long

  • does it take to recover and everything?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: I usually take about a month

  • where I'm doing just almost nothing

  • of very unstructured work.

  • I usually like to go to Hawaii right after marathons.

  • I don't like to run in Hawaii, so I like to go like the week

  • afterwards, and we just kind of veg out.

  • So we actually did that after CIM this year.

  • We went for a week and just hung out on the beach.

  • And then the next three weeks is just very unstructured,

  • staying loose.

  • And then it's a very gradual buildup again.

  • We don't hit it very hard probably for another few weeks.

  • This time was a little bit different and for '08 too,

  • because I had seven weeks between '08 and the trials,

  • and this time I had 10.

  • So we didn't have as much downtime as we wanted to.

  • AUDIENCE: So you mentioned that some of the Olympics trials

  • seemed to take place the day before one

  • of the large marathons, so is there some reason why they've

  • been avoiding the crowds that just

  • don't do the trials on the regular course?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: I think that it's just

  • more spectator-friendly to have the loops.

  • There may be a rule, some kind of international standard rule

  • that they do it that way for some reason.

  • But I think having it the day before a big race like Boston

  • or LA, it helps bring a lot of the fanbase out. [INAUDIBLE]

  • get huge support.

  • I suppose they could, but those races are quite large.

  • We're talking like 30,000 to 50,000 people,

  • and there's only going to be 200 people in this race.

  • So it's nice that they kind of create it

  • as a special kind of celebration for people

  • going for the Olympic team.

  • AUDIENCE: Hi.

  • Do you have a story of how your training

  • or how running the marathons has helped

  • you develop professionally?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: Sure.

  • Let me think about that for a second.

  • I think a lot of the qualities that you

  • develop as an athlete, especially

  • being an athlete your whole life,

  • are things that transfer well into other parts of your life.

  • So even before I was a working professional

  • being a student athlete, your dedication, your ability

  • to stay focused on the goal, even when things aren't going

  • perfectly, or you're in that midspot where

  • it's kind of grindy, and it's not always the most fun.

  • I think also being an athlete, every time you race,

  • there's an opportunity to win, but there's also

  • an opportunity to lose.

  • And how do you deal with failure and learn from that

  • and get up again and go?

  • And so I think with Google, we push really hard.

  • We want to fail fast, learn, iterate,

  • and I think being an athlete, that transfers over.

  • That's very relatable to me.

  • It wasn't something that was new to me when I came to Google.

  • I'd been doing that since I was five years old.

  • So I think those elements of being

  • an athlete transfer really well into your professional life.

  • JEREMY STERN: Please.

  • AUDIENCE: Thanks.

  • More than one question.

  • Do you have a favorite marathon course?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: I think I've run six marathons.

  • I haven't run that many.

  • I guess I've run Cal International the most,

  • and it's been the most friendly to me,

  • so I think that's probably my favorite right now.

  • It's close to my house, and it's fast,

  • and they do a great job organizing it.

  • But I haven't run that many, so I run it the most,

  • so I guess I would go with Cal International.

  • But anyway, if you're thinking about doing a marathon,

  • it's a fantastic marathon.

  • They do a great job.

  • It's small, well-organized, and it's fast.

  • AUDIENCE: Do you have any advice for people who have never

  • done any exercise in their life but started

  • doing some running in their 30s or 40s for the first time?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: Yeah, absolutely.

  • I would recommend getting together with a group.

  • It doesn't have to be someone who has a dedicated coach

  • or anything, but there are so many good running communities

  • to just motivate you and help you and help

  • you to learn so that you can kind of go at your own pace

  • and have fun with it.

  • I think if it's not fun, you won't stick with it.

  • And the pain part isn't so much fun all the time,

  • but it is often the most rewarding,

  • so you'll have a team around you to help you get through that

  • and push.

  • So I would recommend trying to find a local community group

  • or even just weekly runs at shoe stores

  • often are very helpful ways to get started.

  • Hi, Herb.

  • AUDIENCE: Did you race any other distances

  • competitively, and then what made

  • you transition to start doing the marathon piece side of it?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: Yeah, I started

  • running middle distance.

  • JEREMY STERN: What is middle distance?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: A middle distance

  • is-- so when I was in college, it was the 1,500 and 3K.

  • That was before they had the 3K steeple for women.

  • So now they have a 3K steeple, and then there's the 1,500,

  • and the 5K is typically middle distance.

  • I think I always really wanted to be a miler.

  • A mile is such a great distance.

  • But I think when I ran my first marathon,

  • I just wanted to tackle something

  • that I hadn't done before, so there was no precedent,

  • no comparison point.

  • The marathon seemed big.

  • If you can do that, you feel like even

  • if it wasn't like an awesome time, you ran a full marathon,

  • so that's great.

  • I think if you watch a lot of the people who

  • are racing on Saturday, eventually,

  • everyone arrives at the marathon.

  • Eventually, they just keep moving up in distance.

  • If you're a 400-meter runner in high school,

  • you're going to run the eight and 15 in college,

  • and after college, you're going to run the five and 10.

  • So in some ways, you kind of always end up in the marathon,

  • but for me, it was just more of like, can I really do this?

  • My training for the first marathon

  • was definitely more middle distance training.

  • I thought three by a mile was like the big workout.

  • So I survived that marathon, but I learned that that really

  • wasn't marathon raining.

  • JEREMY STERN: When you were-- what's your fastest mile time

  • ever when you were doing--

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: I think I run the equivalent of like 4:52,

  • which isn't-- for a miler is not amazing, but for me,

  • it was the best I could do.

  • Maybe that was also a reason why I decided

  • to go back to the marathon.

  • I realized the mile really wasn't working out for me.

  • It really wasn't.

  • It didn't have that turnover.

  • As much as I loved the work training for it,

  • it really wasn't working out.

  • JEREMY STERN: So I remember us talking

  • about this in terms of motivation, getting ready,

  • and you said to me once that there's

  • nothing like putting a race on a calendar

  • to get you motivated to train.

  • So when you decided to go for it in 2016,

  • what were the key dates for your thinking?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: So I had an injury in April and May.

  • I actually had a torn hamstring, which

  • is one of the worst runner injuries you could probably

  • ask for.

  • So we had that as a starting point.

  • I actually had PRP to help that repair,

  • and so we knew that that was going

  • to be eight to 12 weeks until I could start training again,

  • and then we needed X amount of time for buildup,

  • so we're looking at a fall marathon.

  • So there were maybe three marathons that we looked at.

  • We thought about Chicago, which was kind of early, maybe

  • Philadelphia, which is really close to CIM,

  • and we just thought, give us a little bit

  • of extra time in case we missed a couple weeks of training.

  • And CIM is so close to my house, so it was actually

  • pretty straightforward to try to figure out,

  • because we had some pretty locked

  • in time frames based on the injury

  • that we had to work with.

  • AUDIENCE: Question.

  • Thanks for the celebration in Hawaii and Rustic Canyon.

  • But what are some of the rituals that you

  • go through the morning of?

  • It's game day or right in the moments

  • before you start, what are some of the things

  • that you need to do to get you in that mindset?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: This time around,

  • I spent a lot of time journaling.

  • I record a lot of my training on Strava online,

  • which is great for visual.

  • But I've been spending a lot of time in my Believe journal,

  • where I write down a lot of the qualitative aspects

  • and write letters to myself.

  • And I was really nervous going into CIM,

  • because I have a couple page letter,

  • where I was just like talking to myself,

  • telling myself to believe.

  • I spent a lot of time going back and looking at the workouts

  • that I've done to just remember all the work that you've done

  • and that you've actually prepared for this moment

  • and you're ready.

  • Other than that, there's a lot of carbo loading,

  • especially as you get closer to three days out,

  • which is fun, so I try to like constantly

  • be eating carbs to the point where you get to race day,

  • and you're like, I don't want any more carbs.

  • I don't want anything that looks like a carb or tastes

  • chewy or anything.

  • But the journaling and the reflection and that piece

  • is a really important part.

  • That's just the mental game.

  • There's nothing else to do physically.

  • You can only do harm at that point.

  • JEREMY STERN: So on race day, Saturday, you wake up.

  • What time is the race by the way?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: The women's race I think is at 10:22.

  • It's a little bit later than you would normally

  • have for a marathon, and you guys

  • are having some hot weather right now.

  • I think the men go at 10:00 and the women go at 10:22,

  • so at least I get to sleep in and like wake up

  • at a decent hour and have some breakfast and digestion and all

  • that.

  • JEREMY STERN: Please.

  • Any other questions for Shal?

  • AUDIENCE: I have a question.

  • Since your mom is here, I want to know

  • that you run really fast.

  • I cannot even think about running one mile at four

  • minutes.

  • I want to know, where do you think this is coming from?

  • Genes or this is coming from-- your mom run marathons too?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: I come from a very athletic family,

  • but almost everyone in my family were basketball players.

  • Both my parents played basketball in college.

  • My brother was a very successful basketball player at UCSD.

  • I think my mom started to run track in college a little bit.

  • She ran a bunch after when I was growing up,

  • which was hugely influential.

  • I actually thought a long jump pit

  • was a sandbox for the kids whose parents were running

  • on the track. [INAUDIBLE], and I went to the track,

  • and I would just go sit in the long jump pit and play.

  • So certainly, I think genetics for sure, definitely.

  • AUDIENCE: So besides marathons, do

  • you run other professional sports like, as you said,

  • middle distance, 5K, 10K?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: The last couple years

  • I've been focused on the marathon,

  • but I'm looking forward to running

  • some personal bests and some shorter distances

  • like the 5K and the 10K.

  • I've dabbled in track a little bit,

  • but all the track races right now are college,

  • and I just feel like an old lady out there with those college

  • athletes.

  • So I don't know.

  • I'm going to probably stick to the roads.

  • AUDIENCE: [INAUDIBLE].

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: Oh, before?

  • AUDIENCE: [INAUDIBLE]?

  • So I'm saying when you were in college, high school,

  • did you run other professional sports like [INAUDIBLE]?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: I did grow up playing different sports.

  • I dabbled in soccer a little bit.

  • That didn't last super long.

  • I played basketball in high school for a couple of years.

  • I swam my age group when I was really little,

  • kind of before high school.

  • But I've done running most consistently.

  • I put on my first uniform when I was five or six years old.

  • JEREMY STERN: Suzanna.

  • AUDIENCE: I have a longstanding prejudice.

  • Whenever I hear a marathoner, I think that person is crazy.

  • So far, you have gone quite a ways to dispel that notion,

  • but I'm still a little bit suspicious.

  • Can you please explain it to me?

  • How are you not crazy/

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: I never said I wasn't crazy.

  • I actually just had this conversation with somebody

  • in the last couple weeks.

  • My crazy comes out the closer we get to the face.

  • You can talk to my husband maybe after the talk.

  • See how crazy I get.

  • It took me about a zillion hours to pack last night,

  • to think about all the things we had to do.

  • So yeah, I mean there definitely is

  • a bandwidth of crazy probably amongst all of us runners.

  • But I don't know.

  • There's a little crazy.

  • There's a little crazy to go out there and try to do this,

  • and to put yourself through so much pain.

  • But I've been in this sport a really long time.

  • I'm very fortunate for that, and I

  • think you learn to enjoy the ups and downs,

  • and you really do focus on the long.

  • I want to be running well beyond Saturday.

  • I want to be running when I'm much older.

  • I want to set a good example for the athletes that I coach.

  • So you think about all those things, and my daughter,

  • she's going to be out there.

  • I want to set a good example for that.

  • So that helps make sure that you kind of check yourself

  • on how you're approaching things,

  • and I also have a great group around me--

  • coaches and doctors and teammates, who

  • I can use as a sounding board.

  • AUDIENCE: Yeah, so you said that when

  • you ran your first marathon that it maybe

  • didn't go quite as well as you had hoped,

  • and at least my experience when you

  • start getting into different sports

  • or into a different aspect of that sport

  • is you meet people who are much better.

  • And so how did you go from like, oh, I did this,

  • and I didn't quite do as well as I

  • wanted to really being at the elite level

  • that you're at right now?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: I've been lucky to-- some of my teammates

  • now, we've been teammates since we were-- gosh,

  • almost 20 years.

  • And I've been lucky to be [INAUDIBLE] a long time.

  • So I think any time you try a new distance,

  • you're going to open yourself up to a lot of learning.

  • We'll call it learning.

  • But I think you learn from that, and then

  • you meet people like you said, and you talk to them,

  • and you try to learn about that new distance or that new part

  • of the sport that you're trying to get after.

  • But I've been really lucky to be in the sport

  • with some of the best for a very long time.

  • Like my time at Stanford, I'm just

  • so honored to be included in that list of alumni.

  • AUDIENCE: You've spent a lot of time preparing

  • for the marathon, and this time around, the weather

  • isn't the most optimal, shall we say,

  • for running a marathon, or some time or another,

  • maybe you're not feeling well.

  • How do you adjust your expectations

  • after months of training for an exceptional goal,

  • and then maybe everything isn't as conducive as you

  • might want it to be otherwise?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: The weather is always

  • a factor in the marathon, and it's always something

  • we have zero control on.

  • So we try not to think too much about it,

  • and then we just try to deal with the circumstances that

  • were given.

  • This time around for Saturday for me,

  • it's been a bit of an unconventional buildup,

  • because we've had a short buildup.

  • It's only been 10 weeks since my last marathon.

  • I've had a small injury that's come up the last three

  • weeks that we've had to really change the training around

  • to accommodate.

  • And then we have this big wrinkle

  • that it's going to be in the 80s on Saturday.

  • So we've done a lot of recalibrating,

  • and at some point, you can have a game plan.

  • You can have your A, B, and C goals, but in the day

  • you get out there, you have to trust yourself.

  • That was the advice my coach gave me.

  • We were just talking yesterday about why we

  • do a lot of unstructured runs.

  • You have to know how your body feels and trusts,

  • and you know what you can do, and just

  • to run within yourself.

  • AUDIENCE: How have you felt in all this preparation,

  • and how far has it taken you away

  • from your normal routine with your family?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: There 's definitely been moments.

  • I've been really lucky to be able to do a lot of racing

  • close to home and to have such great, great, great training

  • grounds really close to my house,

  • and some of the best doctors and physios

  • are in our neighborhood, so that's been awesome.

  • Google actually has been really supportive,

  • so the last couple summers, we've

  • actually been able to go to the Boulder office

  • for an extended stay and work a little bit from the Boulder

  • office and train at altitude.

  • So I've been really fortunate to be able to take my family.

  • Elise is not quite school age yet,

  • so we're able to spend a lot of time not having to work

  • around a school schedule.

  • So that's been fantastic.

  • I did have this injury come up a little bit in the last three

  • weeks, so I've had to do a little bit more travel

  • to go see some specialists about that.

  • And luckily, they've just been extremely supportive,

  • and we just try to make it as efficient as possible

  • to go down there and do the work and come back.

  • Work's been extremely accommodating as well.

  • JEREMY STERN: One of the things you

  • learn both in work and athletics is envisioning an outcome.

  • What do you envision on Saturday at the finish line?

  • Are you thinking about it?

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: I am thinking about it.

  • I feel a little bit like I need to crystallize

  • that over the next 72 hours definitely, maybe 48 hours.

  • It's been an unconventional buildup.

  • This injury's been a little bit of a wrinkle.

  • The heat's going to be a factor.

  • I think ultimately, where I'll land

  • is I'm going to try not to overthink it.

  • I'm going to get out there and run really smart,

  • and not forget to enjoy it, because this

  • is quite a moment that won't come again until-- maybe never

  • again, but it's not going to come

  • before four years from now.

  • So I need to spend some time in my journal

  • and around my teammates, who all get into town tomorrow,

  • and that'll probably help me start to think about it

  • and feel good about it.

  • JEREMY STERN: Well, Shal, on behalf of everyone at Google,

  • we wish you the best of luck in this race.

  • It's an extraordinary opportunity on the road to Rio,

  • and thank you so much for joining us on Talks at Google,

  • and wishing you the best of luck.

  • So thank you so much.

  • SHALUINN FULLOVE: Thank you.

  • JEREMY STERN: Very exciting.

  • [APPLAUSE]

JEREMY STERN: Good afternoon and welcome to Talks at Google.

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シャルイン・フルーブ"アメリカ女子オリンピックマラソン大会" |Googleで語る (Shaluinn Fullove: "U. S. Women's Olympic Marathon Trials" | Talks at Google)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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