At the start line with Wrath of the Tetons for the Grand Teton Relay |
Anyone who has ever been sidelined by injury probably
understands the new perspective you gain after a forced hiatus from an activity
you love. You realize how much you took for granted, and you long for just a
few minutes back out on the track (or the field) doing what you love. So when I
was given the go-ahead to run again after six months on the bench, I promised
myself—no more excuses. There wasn’t going to be a day too rainy or windy or cold to put my
feet on the pavement.
As a direct result, 2013 has been a big running year for me.
And no, I didn’t PR. In fact, ever since I suffered a stress fracture last
year, my running times just haven’t been the same. And considering I am a
Corral K girl to begin with, that fact has been more than a little
discouraging.
But it has been a
year of several “firsts.” My first time fundraising and mentoring with Team in
Training, my first 25K, my first midnight race, and my first 180-mile relay. Then
last month, in Monterey, California, I completed my tenth half marathon. It was
my second time running Big Sur, and it remains my favorite race to date.
Midway through the Big Sur half in November |
Those of you who read my Why I Run: A Novice Runner’s Manifesto back in 2010, may remember
that I have only been running since 2009. When I completed my first half, the
Rock n Roll Mardi Gras, in 2010, I barely limped across the finish line and
swore never to do it again. But then something happened, and for some unknown
reason, I kept running.
It took me a long time before I was even comfortable calling
myself a runner. Whenever my newfound hobby came up in conversation, and
friends would tell me how much they hate running, I would say, “Oh I do too,
but....”
But what? But when I ran, I felt stronger.
First it was just one mile and then one loop around the park and then five
miles and ten. And then I believed I could take on other insurmountable things
in my life. I turned myself from an undisciplined, nonathletic non-runner into
an undisciplined, nonathletic runner. And it felt great.
So last week, when the words “burnout” passed my lips, I
felt ashamed. The idea that I don’t want to run seemed impossible to me after
this year. In fact, any year but this year makes more sense. And yet, there it
is. I have lost my desire to run, which is very inconvenient, since I am
supposed to be running the Aramco Houston Half for the fourth time in less than
five weeks.
Back in August, during the second leg of the Grand Teton
Relay, I had a crisis of faith. I had expected to start later in the day, and
so I shivered in the cold, predawn in my shorts and t-shirt waiting for our
teammate at the transition point. I had only about an hour of sleep, and the
sun was just peaking out over the mountains ahead. My dead Texas legs were
going to have to carry me a 1,000 feet up to the Targhee Outlook (elevation
7961’), but I didn’t know how.
I cursed my decision to run the relay, and the person who
decided the only girl and the only Texan should complete this monster climb,
and then I cursed my decision to run at all, and probably at some point, my
very existence. I was, in no uncertain terms, completely unprepared for that
moment and for the existential angst that came with it. But eventually I
sputtered and cursed my way to the top and to one of the most spectacular
sunrise views I have ever seen … fueled by my own anger and stubbornness.
With my husband and uncle at Targhee Overlook |
The questions from that climb are still hanging on me. Why
do I run? I am not in better shape or faster than I was a year ago, so what am
I doing? Is it just self-punishment or some sort of perverse willfulness? And
is it possible for me to reconnect to the joy of that first sunny seven-mile
run around Audubon Park where running and I first began our love affair?
Last year, my husband Richard bought me a necklace for my
first Big Sur half. “Run” it says simply, and on the back is etched “Try Easy.” Try
Easy is a mantra I adopted from a yoga teacher several years ago. It’s a
reminder to embrace what is instead of fighting. Trying hard is hard work—it’s
forced effort. Instead, why not adopt an attitude of ease and flow instead of
wasting energy on forcing a result? The tap of the necklace on my chest as I
run says, try easy, try easy, try easy.
Maybe that advice is just as valuable right now, with the
necklace resting quietly with me in this moment of stillness.
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