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I found this posting about pulmonary edema and swimming, found it quite too familiar to what I experienced tonight. Very scarey that it can get as bad as described here. Maybe this wasn't it, but the symptoms are eerily similar... the wet wet wet coughing that continued until just a bit ago. All through dinner I kept coughing up liquid. I'd not heard of this before.
My friend had this happen to hear at Ironman Arizona this year! Because of it, she had to DNF the race... and even when I saw her an hour later, when she took a breath you could HEAR fluid in her lungs.
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I am still debating whether to do an actual race report, but the short story is...
I felt GREAT leading up to the race. I think it was the first time I did not have to run to the port-a-potty 10 times before the start.
As soon as I jumped into the water, I knew things were not right. At that point, I chalked it up to nerves. As I swam out to the starting point, I felt it getting harder and harder to breathe. I tried to just float and take deep breaths. When the cannon went off, I started swimming and felt OK for the first 100 or so. Then, the wheels fell off.
No matter what I did, I could not catch my breath. I tried breast stroke, back stroke, side stroke and nothing helped. That was the first time I hung on to kayak. After about 30 seconds, I swam a little more with the same results. Again, hung on to a kayak. This pattern continued until about 300 or so so yards before the Rural bridge.
The last time I was on a kayak (and I have to say that the support I got in the water was incredible), I knew it was over. My breathins sounded like I was a 90 year old emphasyma patient. There was so much junk in my lungs that my breathing rattled. I had no chest congestion prior to getting in the water.
Making the decision to get in that boat was hard, but I value my life and my health more than anything. It was the right decision at the time, and even 3 days later I have no regrets.
Expanding on that thought, I have no regreats about anything. OK, I'm not an Ironman, but I am still a triathlete, a wife, a friend and (I think) a good person. I am physically in the best shape of my life, and am more motivated than ever to keep training and improving.