Showing posts with label My Life of Running. Show all posts
Showing posts with label My Life of Running. Show all posts

Friday, March 28, 2014

Don't Lead, Run

The snow was everywhere, mixing with the brown slush as we ran around in circles, knowing we'd get back eventually, just not knowing exactly how…or when. Outside on those crunchy white roads, a burning, stiff feeling spread through my feet and hands, and even the pale yellow lights felt cold, contained in little glass balls on tall hallow lamp posts, polluting the air with static brightness. It hadn't been so dark before we left. Eventually we stopped running and debating whether to cut through the massive white field on our right or wait and find a road further down instead.

..

It's okay to get lost. Getting lost doesn't make us incompetent, we make ourselves feel incompetent. 

I once got lost for three hours in a really big city. It was raining and I had a whole bunch of luggage with me. I am an expert in the directionally challenged department. When I was younger, I asked my mom to drop me off five minutes from my house, I wanted to run home. I got lost...five minutes from my house.

It's okay to get lost. It's okay to screw things up, to be terrible at something, to fail miserably, to look stupid, and to blush uncontrollably.

I put a lot of unnecessary pressure on myself to constantly perform exceptionally. Here's the conclusion I've come to: I shouldn't want to be exceptional, to stand out, or to lead. It's better to blend in, accept an anonymous existence, and embrace the fact that I'm such a small part of everything else. Strength comes from weakness (getting lost), or so I'm told.

Like most things, I relate leading to running. It is better to be lost than to lead. I don't want to lead. If I am considered a leader on the cross country team, it's only because I love to run. I don't want to lead, but I can't tell you how much I love running. I don't mean to make running more than it is, running isn't spiritual, but we are. There's more to life than running, but I think running brings more to our lives...

I don't want to lead, but I can't tell you how much I love running.


Leading our team was never about me or my ability to lead us, it was and always has been about running. It's much more than that, but running is fundamentally our action, not an ideology; it's something we put into practice everyday. Years from now, even after I have stopped, our team will continue running season after season and become a group of ladies I'll never meet, practicing the same thing I did everyday.

We could say it's the team that's most important, and it is, but the team would not come together without our ability to run; it will outlive all of us. I love running, but there were days (even seasons) when I really dreaded it. I have come to believe it's only when I actually love to run, when I understand the goodness of even the monotonous, frustrating, impossible days of daily practice, that I should lead. I should lead only because I have loved the daily action. I am not really a leader, I only love to run, and by loving, I invite others to join in and do the same.

Running will teach a lot about living, too. 

..


Sunday, December 15, 2013

Running: Why You Should Love It

Dedicated to Faith Gunderson, a teammate and friend

Faith stretched her legs restlessly, doing a few last-minute stride outs. At the starting line, she joined the other runners wearing their tiny colorful spandex uniforms. They were just as jittery and anxious to get started as she was, but they all tried to look intimidating, pretending to be oblivious to each other, and acting as runners do by shaking, bouncing, stretching, and swinging their arms and legs around. Finally, an anonymous man holding a megaphone announced something, stepped in the side of the track about twenty-five meters ahead of them, raised both arms, and fired the gun. The clock started. She needed to shave off less than a second to reach a qualifying time for the NAIA Championships that year. Two laps around the track, just over two minutes, was all she had. The 800 meter race is brutal punishment on the body, arguably the brutalest. It is just long enough to be considered middle distance, but only just. The distance is more like a sprint: a long, drawn out sprint refined only by raw, gritty endurance.


You might not understand how people can consider running more than merely keeping the body in continual motion for miles (or laps) on end. Yet since the dawn of its popularity in the 1970s, running has inspired a movement that hasn’t stopped sweeping across America. Some seem to truly love going out and abusing their bodies. As you watch them facing the elements from the comfort of your living room window or from behind your windshield wipers, you write them off as clinically insane. In all honesty, you’re right; the art of running (because truly, it is an art) requires a certain level of insanity.


Sometimes waking up is difficult. It was Monday morning; I was groggy and reluctant to peel the sheets off myself, even though my whole body felt incredibly warm from the summer heat wave engulfing my room and the entire west side of Michigan. There was only one driving force that brought me to my feet: hunger. I found my way to the kitchen and began preparing my breakfast. Someone had left two teaspoons of milk in the carton; I sadly watched it drip onto my cereal. Grumbling, I added lukewarm water from the tap. When breakfast was over, I knew what was coming: the two hour countdown began. I sighed, dwelling on how clean I felt and how ridiculously hot it was outside. I seriously considered not going, reminding myself of all the other things I wanted to do. Still, unless I died or severed my limbs before 9:00 am, I knew I would be running.


“You have a gift, I believe in you, you can do this.” Coach Hoffer looked into Faith’s eyes with kind, unshaken confidence. This was her senior year in high school; she was at the UP finals and getting ready to break the record in the 800. Mandy Long, the current record holder, had gone on to the Olympic trials. Faith wondered, What would it feel like to break the record of someone who tried out for the Olympics? She held onto his words. At the starting line, his voice seemed to defend her mind against the barrage of mental weakness and doubt. She didn’t beat the record that day, but she won the race. That race showed her how far she had come from where she had started. After the race was over, she ran and threw her arms around Coach Hoffer. He had believed in her, he had seen her potential.


Originally, running was primarily a competitive sport practiced only on the collegiate or professional level. Non-competitive running didn’t boom in the U.S. until after athletic celebrities like Steve Prefontaine and Joan Benoit broke through the media’s national consciousness. Groups like “Road Runner’s Club of America” were organized, magazines like Sports Illustrated began publishing studies vouching for the physical and psychological benefits of jogging, and runners like William Bowerman and James Fixx began writing and publishing on their own experiences with the rediscovered form of physical recreation. Part of the beauty of running is in its simplicity and accessibility; some would claim you don’t even need shoes.


My body naturally prefers the minimal amount of discomfort and exertion yet my mind is always going, constantly reeling thoughts around in my head, and never sleeping; therefore, when I run, two worldsmy body and mindclash. Running is actually a lot like sleeping. Often, especially as a child, I was resistant to sleep; I thought there were so many better, more exciting or useful things to be done. Yet every night I am forced to submit myself to physical rest; my body demands it and there are brutal consequences if I don’t. While I do not need daily intentional physical excursion to survive, the same mentality holds true with my body and running. It’s why running is growing in popularity; being active is the great equalizer to an otherwise quite sedentary life. Sleeping is commonly connected to the predominant paradox of “death” and “rebirth” and so should running since, fundamentally, no one actually loves to run, yet it does transform the body, like sleep. When I go out and run, I forget about what I think I want.


Faith felt a burst of excitement rush through her as she looked up into the woman’s face. “Feed the horses?” She repeated, “You’re going to let me feed the horses?” She had just finished her first lesson at Tree Vine’s Equestrian Stables.
Vicki nodded her head. “Yeah, come on, I’ll introduce you to everyone.” Trying to hide her excitement, Faith followed the woman into the stable and observed her take armfuls of hay and pile them into the feeding troughs. “Your turn! You can feed Bruce.” Vicki indicated to the bale of hay by the door. Faith gathered the biggest stack she could hold and followed Vicki into the next stall, being mindful of the enormous horse, and got on tip-toe to throw the hay in the feeder. After the pile landed successfully, Faith reminded herself to stop tip-toeing and walk out of the stall on her heels. It was hard to remember to walk on her heels.  
She had been introduced to therapeutic horseback riding as a means to loosen her calves. Riding appropriately would force Faith to push all of her weight down on the bottoms of her feet. This, along with her mother’s constant reminders to “walk flat-footed,” eventually would moderate her stride. Faith was born with cerebral palsy, a condition caused by a lack of oxygen to the brain at birth, resulting in disabilitated muscle coordination known as spastic paralysis. There are different levels of severity within cerebral palsy; some are completely unable to walk, while others may have subtly reduced range of motion at various joints in their bodies due to muscle stiffness, or minor challenges in muscle coordination in specific areas. Faith’s disorder affected her legs. As a child, her tight calves forced her onto her toes. The doctors told her parents she would be able to walk, but would never run well. For Faith, a lifetime walking on her tip-toes wasn’t a death sentence. Running didn’t have to be a monumental aspect of her life; nevertheless, since she was young, her parents constantly reinforced that her “disability” should never define her. As a result, she wasn’t afraid to pursue running. She loved being able to do something so many people told her she couldn’t.


The running movement in the U.S. moved Americans to more than merely a new recreational activity. The movement granted the average individual the ability to run for the sheer enjoyment of it. Running is a daily reminder of how undeniably human we are, stuck in the blunt reality of each inauspicious moment, connected to the earth and its seasons, and responsive to (albeit resistant of) self-induced suffering. Running is in fact a gift that is not equally distributed. The psychological demand is just as ominous as the physical, which is why running takes skill (no matter what other athletes will tell you) and a lot of practice. If you've ever heard the phrase "I just love to run" you might’ve felt dismayed. In reality, there doesn’t seem to be anything magical, exhilarating, or life-changing about going out on the road, especially at first. Actually, it has great potential to bore, exhaust, and/or frustrate you, which is why it is understandable that you might have given up on it a long time ago. Beyond boredom and frustration, there could be other reasons you stopped; running is time consuming and it requires access to safe routes and a healthy body. Yet, if you don’t see the value in commitmenting to it daily, if you can’t see past the act of running and realize what running has the potential to become, and without an outside obligation to keep you going, you will undeniably always find a reason not to lace up your shoes.


Two hours later, after much more deliberation, I double-knotted my Mizunos and walked out the front door, embracing the sun’s overbearing, ever-present radiation. I squinted from the sudden brightness and crossed my arms over my chest as I walked down the driveway, resisting the urge to turn on my heels and go back inside. My bitter resistance dissolved moments after my first strides. Despite the soaring temperatures, this was glorious. I could smell freshly cut grass and heard the drone of a lawnmower, provoking moments from my memory I could only equate with summertime and childhood. The neighbor’s horses were in the front yard and looked up from their grazing, studying me curiously. Dogs barked in the distance and the birds were calling to each other and flying overhead. The further I went into my run, the more vivid my surroundings became, and the more responsive and aware I was of my body.
The landscape evened out into hundreds of corn rows, broken up by occasional driveways leading to small farmhouses planted on wide open yards. I was sweating and began to feel the burn in my legs and lungs, but it was good to be a part of the sweeping panorama of bright sky and the dusty ground around me. When I checked my watch after mile two, I reminded myself it was supposed to be an easy run, yet couldn’t help feeling a little disappointed by my pace (it was a bit slow). I felt myself picking up speed, focusing on the horizon. I imagined I was already there, somewhere in the distance; now I was just waiting for my body to catch up. As I ran, I created my own opposition. Essentially, I was the opposition, the competition, which fundamentally distinguishes running from other sports. I had to know when to compete, when to challenge myself, and when to hold back.


Everything experienced in the non-competitive running is magnified to overwhelming proportions in collegiate competition. As Faith come around the bend to the straight away, color fringed her face; she was determined, fixed on the line as her arms and legs propelled her forward in long, smooth strides. She crossed the line just a hair’s breadth behind the runner from Azusa Pacific. She had smoked the qualifying time by four seconds. Giddy excitement stirred up tears in her eyes as her whole team ran to embrace her. She felt the warm breath and bodies of her teammates all around, forgetting everyone else in on the track. With tears brimming, she hugged everyone at once. Coach Bippes put on his sunglasses, hiding the fact he was also moved to tears. Before the high had completely settled down, she threw off her spikes and ran into the stands towards her parents. When she reached them, she looked into their faces, tears still flooding her face. She hugged her mom and continued crying. After a moment, her mom pulled back and asked, “Are you upset because you came in second?” Faith shook her head, “No, I’m crying because I ran so well!”


At seven years old, she ran her first race. It was 5k memorial run; Faith placed first and set the record in her age group. From that time on, running became a driving force in her life. She ran cross country in middle school and discovered track in high school. Initially, Faith wasn’t planning on running in college. She was looking into Michigan State to become a veterinarian, but a change in heart and circumstances brought her to Spring Arbor University, where she competed on the track and cross country course. Currently, Faith is ranked second in the top ten list of fastest girls to race the 800 in Spring Arbor University’s history. Over her collegiate career, she has qualified in multiple events in every indoor and outdoor NAIA Championship since her freshman year.


As a runner, I have found there are psychological stages runners go through, including the apathy and/or resentment toward it that you can probably relate with. The fundamental question to ask is why you wanted to run in the first place. Did you want to lose weight or get back in shape? These reasons are valid, but perhaps limited. You will reach a point when physical fitness or appearance just aren’t enough to get you out the door anymore; too often it feels much more preferable to remain still and comfortable inside than face the physical excursion that comes with running outside in the elements. You’ll reach a point when you’ll have to be honest with yourself: do you really even want to start running or is it a popular idea you felt drawn to? Running cannot be a fashionable trend; trends die too quickly. A love for running begins with the hope of improving not only the body, but the mind…for the mystical “runner’s high” we all hear rumors of.


As I was moving, it felt like there was kinetic energy in my brain propelling me forward. I didn't have to think about moving forward as much as I had to think about stopping. My body accepted the motion and continued to be in motion until I decided to stop. It was my mind, not my body, that was carrying me; not merely my mind, but a subconscious part of my mind I had stopped controlling. During every run like this, I was reminded that I was not in absolute control; I was forced to acknowledge not only my body’s power and weakness, but my rudimentary connection with it. Eventually, as the “kinetic energy” in my brain continued moving my body, my mind was freed up and entered into a dream-like state where I forgot where I was and what I was doing.


The secret to staying motivated to run, and maybe even loving it, actually has very little to do with the act of running. In essence, it is the perception of yourself in relation to running that must change. Running cannot be about you. It cannot be about how fast you can go, or how long, or what it makes you feel. Running must be about daily practice, about understanding the value of self-denial before and during each run, which is similar to the nightly submission of sleep: from “death” to “rebirth.” The value of running is in its consistency. When you consistently practice running, it becomes an art. This is why you should love running: you should love it precisely because, in all rationality, you should not love it. You should want to run because everyone (including yourself) tells you that you can’t. It is insanity, it is self-inflicted suffering, and this is what makes it so rewarding. There is a voice inside your head that will get in your way (that already has gotten in your way) even before you take your first step out the door, saying, "I'm too tired," or "I don’t want to," or "I can’t." That’s good. Recognize that voice, then go ahead and run anyway. During the run your brain begins demanding that you stop, that you give up, that truly you just can’t do it. This is your great disabler, your very real disability: you are afraid to see past your love for comfort; you are intimidated by the true meaning of bodily discipline. Yet if you’re honest with yourself, you love that you can making that voice squeal. It gives you no small sense of satisfaction to see that you in fact revel in the submission, that it frees you rather than binds you, into a higher state of being. You would begin to see that that voice is a lower, baseless shadow of who you really are, who you actually have the potential to become.


In the distance, I could see my little white and yellow mailboxes poking out of the side of the road. As I closed in the space, I gradually continued gaining speed, reaching the driveway in nearly an all-out sprint. Passing the mailboxes, I stopped immediately, experiencing an infiltration of calmness and clarity as I slowly walked back up my driveway; the Zen-like “one with the body” and “one with nature” awareness was coursing steadily through my brain. The name for this feeling was prescribed in the 1970s: endorphins. Endorphins are chemicals released from the brain after exercise, connected to positive mood change. The more endorphins released by the brain, the more euphoric the experience, known as the “runner’s high.” For the majority of running history, the “high” remained only a hypothesis based on runners’ claims. Finally, in 2008, advancements in neuroscience enabled researchers in Germany to report that the hypothesis is true. Their publication in the journal Cerebral Cortex confirms that a flood of endorphins is triggered in the brain after a run. Yet somehow, even getting high (or the propensity to get high) on running is often not enough motivation to keep me going out and doing it. After I graduate from college, without an obligation to a team or sponsor, as a non-competitive runner, I will soon face questions: why continue running? For what purpose am I dedicating so much time and to what end?


Faith sat down on a bale of hay next to the little girl’s wheelchair. The stable had been swept clean and the familiar smell of hay and horse manure hung over them. Savannah’s eyes averted Faith’s, yet she couldn’t hold back the admiration in her voice, “Some day I will run, just like you.” Savannah eyes glanced at Faith for a moment, then quickly back at the floor. “I want to be just like you.”
Faith nodded. She studied Savannah a moment, who had turned her head disjointedly to face the door, waiting for her mother to arrive. The girl’s body remained motionless, buckled in her wheelchair. Her head rested on the cushioned back of the seat; the rubber and metal wheels and black leather seat contrasted sharply with the old, weathered wood and bits of straw surrounding her. In between college semesters, Faith had returned to work at the therapeutic horseback riding camp she had taken lessons from when she was young. She had just finished helping Savanna with a riding lesson. The little eight-year-old’s cerebral palsy affect her muscle coordination from her neck down, and getting on and off the horse proved difficult.
“Savanna,” Faith waited until the little girl unsteadily turned her head back and made eye contact, “I enjoyed my lessons just as much as you did. Keep up the hard work, you’re doing so well.” The girl looked at Faith with her large, brown eyes and timidly returned a smile.
Savannah's mom arrived to take her home. As Faith watched the girl being pushed out of the stable in her wheelchair, the realization struck her: that could’ve been me. The image of the girl’s tiny uncoordinated body burned into her mind. I’m not supposed to be here. She thought. I’m not supposed to be able to run.

...

Faith Gunderson 

Sunday, November 24, 2013

Closure: Leaving the Course for the Last Time

Cross Country season is over...all too soon. I am honestly so thankful I still have track to look forward to. Getting ready to qualify in the marathon!!! (say WHAAAT???)

The Crossroads League Championships (conference race) was two weeks ago; that was a memorable day. It reminded me why running all those miles last summer was worth it. The Spring Arbor University Track and Field men's and women's teams both came out to support us; there's not doubt SAU had the best represented (and loudest) fan base that day. It was pretty incredible to be a part of it all. 

Kyle Anderson and I both took first in the conference!!! I'm not sure, but historically I think that's pretty rare. Shout out to Noah Hoverdink and Nathan Anderson as well, both finished in the top fifteen (all conference). 





Finishing in the top five at conference landed me the opportunity to race in Lawrence Kansas on the Rim Rock Farm course at the NAIA National Championship race.

Let me tell you...

I loved every minute of it.


The course itself was a beast. Seriously, the most brutal 3.1 miles of my life. Hills. Hills. Hills and hills, especially in the third mile. I crossed the line at 18:35 and placed 33rd (6 seconds away from being an All-American! Ah...so close). Teammate Elley Hinkel flew out with me for moral support; I definitely could hear her screaming for me. She's hoping to make it out to the NAIA meet next year. I know she's absolutely capable. I'm excited for her season.


I wish I could devote more time sharing all the details, but to be honest the trip has put me majorly behind with homework and such...

So I will leave you with and article from the SAU Athletics website: www.saucougars.com/article/

Also, if you're a senior in high school (runner or not), and trying to decide where to go to school, come to Spring Arbor University. Over the course of these four years, this place has challenged my thinking and general understanding of life, enabling opportunities to live in community with some pretty incredible individuals, and (hopefully) set me well on my way to life beyond college and the cross country course.

SAU has become more than just some obscure college to which I randomly (and completely last-minute) decided to commit. The people I've met here and knowledge and experience I've been given will stay with me the rest of my life.

I feel ready for what's next (whatever that is), but I'm also thankful for the time here.

..
{dm}

Saturday, October 26, 2013

R A C E D A Y

When I was sitting on the grass, lacing up my spikes yesterday, the reality that I was about to run one of the last collegiate cross country races of my life finally hit me. 

It was so cold as I stepped to the line with my teammates; we were all wearing our tiny little spandex uniforms. I wanted to jump around and do my stride outs just to get my mind off the fact that my blood felt like it was chilling in a refrigerator and I had lost feeling in my right big toe. I loved the beginning of every race though. We were all together, every team from all the colleges I never managed to keep track of. They were just as cold and jittery as we were, but we all tried to look intimidating, pretending to be oblivious to each other, and acting as runners do by shaking, bouncing, stretching, and swinging our arms and legs around.    

Then, an anonymous man bundled in five layers of clothing holding a megaphone announced something, stepped in the middle of the course about one hundred meters ahead of us, raised both arms, and fired the gun. 

The clock started. I didn't think about what I had for breakfast that morning, or the hours of homework I had done and had yet to do, or what the heck I was supposed to do with my life after I graduated in the spring. 

The herd was set in motion and we were moving fast. I felt like an animal, like a deer maybe. The course took us down a dirt path through the woods, away from the spectators. As we stretched and thinned, space opened, ebbing and flowing like water, providing room to cut the tangents. Sounds of heavy breathing and pounding feet surrounded me.
  
I just ran; not away from anything or after anything either. I had no idea where I was going; we came to a fork and the leaders hesitated, pranced around for a second and made panicked, questioning eye contact with the runners coming up behind them. We wordlessly decided to take the left path, and the leaders took off again. 

The first two miles were a blur. We looped around the course twice (or was it three times?), bounding over roots, leaves, and soft, black dirt. I suppose the trees were beautiful in all their glorious climactic grandeur of color, but I didn't really see them. By the third mile, I went numb; not from the cold, but just because that is what happens. It's difficult to think, and feel, and navigate, and run simultaneously. The finishing stretch was the longest and most painful. At that point, it didn't seem to matter how in shape I was, it came down to how uncomfortable I determined to make myself, and how conscious I still was to decide. 

When I crossed the finish line, all I could do was slap both hands over my forehead and say, "Oh my GOD, oh my GOD..." My brain was buzzing on a high of endorphins and my legs were rubbery and wiggled unsteadily at the knees. Behind me, someone droned, "Stay in a line, stay in a line...just keep walking." We were led down a flagged corral like cattle. I concentrated on breathing and rationalizing and walking in a straight line. Somehow I couldn't stop repeating "Oh wow..." and "Oh my GOD..." (a phrase I never otherwise used).  

I was smiling like an idiot. The park had suddenly become an incredibly warm and euphoric place. Colors were popping from the trees, the cars were clean and artistic in the orderly parking lots, the spectator's faces were glassed over with a shared, kindred happiness. Carissa was there, looking just great, saying something so nice I couldn't quite interpret it. My parents were there, too. My mom was even jumping, clapping her hands together. I could've hugged the man writing down our numbers. I could've walked around offering to shake everyone's hand, giving out high fives, slapping people merrily on the back, and repeating, "Oh wow..." with one or both hands slapped across my forehead. 

Just when I thought the high was settling down, I looked up and saw Leah running down to the finish; the first finish of her collegiate carrier. Color fringed her face; she was determined, fixed on the line as her arms and legs propelled her forward. Giddy excitement stirred up tears in my eyes as our whole team ran to circle around her even before she could walk out of the corral. I felt the warm breath and bodies of my teammate all around. We forgot everyone else in the park. With tears brimming, she looked at me. I'll never forget her eyes in that moment. The clock stopped, and I can only remember feeling completely filled.     

..

October 25, 2013
Can I even express how thankful I am for this team?
I'm so glad to know them; to grow, cry, laugh, and run with them. 

..
{dm}

Sunday, July 14, 2013

All In a Day's Run

Since coming home from Asia, running has been my escape. The art of running is challenging and (contrary to popular belief) enjoyable to me. I run to push my physical limitations. I suppose that sounds trite and romantic, I suppose it rather is.

Today I ran farther than I ever have in my collegiate career. I'm becoming an addict of longer distances. This run was a long, long stretch; plenty long for me anyway.

The route I chose took me into town. Somewhere between mile seven and eight I came upon a mother and her son biking from the library. As I was catching up to them, I noticed they stopped at an intersecting road off the main drag. There was no stop sign or approaching car in sight.  

In the state I'm in, restless, craving adventure, wanting to get away, feeling very uninspired, I thought what a shame this was, those two, stopping for invisible traffic. I looked past them at all the other intersecting roads ahead and wondered if they would stop for every single one. Really, how ridiculous.

I began to catch up to them (they were, after all, stopping at all the little intersections). As I passed them, I nodded and smiled, doing my best not to rub in the obvious fact. The little boy, upon seeing me in his periphery, exploded into vigorous pedaling. We were side by side for a couple of seconds, but not long enough for me to think of anything to say. We came upon another little intersection and without hesitation the boy breezed through it.

Yet, only seconds later, he looked over his shoulder toward his mom and slowed down. Being passed by a runner is a blow to anyone's self-esteem, especially atop a bike (with only two wheels nonetheless), but his mother hadn't picked up her speed. She might've even stopped at the intersection.

He disappeared behind me.

I felt a bit sorry for him. Yet, in a lot of ways I could relate to him.

I have (with forced patience) been complying to the expectations set for me. Go to college. Be a good student. Get a degree. And like little intersections off the highway, I can see the expectations ahead: Get a good job. Find the right husband. Have kids...then forget about the job. Be a good Christian (what does that mean, by the way?).

Like that six or seven year-old kid, I'm young. I have a lot to learn. He might have questioned the necessity of stopping, but if one's mother thought one must stop at all the crossings, then that is exactly what one must do. For all these years I've been doing the same. Still, there is a point when you can accept control over your own life, you don't need to keep stopping.

Society's pressure is like a mother with good intentions. "Do this to be safe. Protect yourself. Always be cautious. You need this." I've been questioning the validity of that message. I question the American circle of life. Many others do as well.

We might question it, but we go along with it because we can't see any other workable plan. Even though there might not be anything wrong with this cycle, I just don't think it's a one-size-fits-all type of deal. Just because I'm an American, doesn't necessarily mean I want to meet all the American expectations.

Whatever it is that will finally set me over the edge, I hope I'll have enough conviction of mind to keep going with it, to keep breaking societies rules (when the time is right), and not slow down.


..
{dm}

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

This is Not a Post About Halloween


This is about running...or is it?

This is about my teammates. A battle is waiting for us. We can call it the last race of the season, but we all hope it is not.

Something big is at stake. We want to race again, we want to fly across the country and run next to the fastest girls in the nation. We want this. But do we really want this?

What do we really want?

I know what I want.

But first, I need to accept my failure. I need to embrace the idea that no, I will not race well. I will not walk away from that course satisfied. I need to come to terms with this fear, let it burn in my stomach, ache in my heart.

Teammates, we cannot shove our fear of failure somewhere deep down inside of us, and not expect it to roar up like an ugly monster in the last 800 meters of the race.

Accept the fear.

You will fail.

How does that settle inside of you?

We have done nothing but try to pump ourselves up and fill ourselves with positive thoughts. We have trained since the beginning of June. We have lifted two or three times each and every week, we have done workout after workout after workout. From an outside perspective, we have done everything necessary. Yet, regardless, deep within, we find the anxiety. It's waiting for us. It's trying to latch on.

You do not have it in you. You will not finish well.

Teammates, I dare you to say those words out loud. I dare you to let them into your conscious stream of thought. What does it leave you with?

They are a bitter taste in my mouth.

Yet, you cannot move on from here until you face your greatest fears. Because the reality is...

...this is not about you.

When you forget about yourself, you forget the fear within you. You forget about the twisted way your mind can slow you down. You cannot run for yourself. You must not think about yourself at all because your "self" in the race is not longer relevant. We all know coach's familiar phrase, "Run for God, run for your teammates." I believe this phrase goes far deeper than we realize.

When we stop worrying about ourselves, how we feel, our fear of failure, the dread of the unknown, we are free. Our mind begins to wrap around the race in a completely coherent, focused way. We stay in the race, our minds are capable of reaching forward, seeing the next girl ahead of us, and chasing after her. We don't falter and debate whether we have it in us. We have forgotten about us, we're just running.

We run.

Free.

Do you doubt this? Are you wondering how it is possible to run without thinking of yourself? Of course you must think of yourself, it's impossible not to. I would argue that it is possible. You can think only of the race, and pushing your body forward.

This is my hope for us all. A race is never easy. A race should never be easy. Yet, when you sacrifice yourself, forget about your comfort, and think only of the simple act of running, of moving forward--faster, never slower--you cannot be met by failure at the end.

Even if your final time wouldn't reflect it, at the end of the race, when you know that you did not run for yourself, that you sacrificed your comfort, left behind your fear, how can you walk away disappointed? How can you not be satisfied with the glory you surrendered to God? This is biblical stuff, teammates. Running a race is not a joke.

Run for yourself and you will inevitably fail.

Abandon yourself and in the end, you will find victory.

Do not run aimlessly.

It is about running...or is it?

Sincerely,
{dm}

Sunday, September 23, 2012

Breathing In the Sky

My mind is breathing. It swallows
the sky, transforms it, exhales it.
In, step, step. Out, step, step. In...
My heart is pounding to the rhythm,
like a gnashing cymbal inside my ribs.
My ears feel it vibrating, reaching out,
setting my feet to the reckless beat.
A thousand metronomes
are tap, tap, tapping their own
cadence on the ground. This is
everything. This is nothing.
This is deliverance flooding through
my body. This is exile. I know at once
that I am home. I am Adam.
Dead. Reborn. Dying. Living. Waking.
Sleeping. I am no one. I am
everyone. My body is the eye
of a storm. I do not think. Yet I am
moving forward. Always moving.
In, step, step. Out, step, step. In...
This is my body. Breaking. This is my
breath. In. This is my blood. Flowing.
This is my breath. Out. No room
for weakness in this place, nor fear,
nor doubt. Just pain. Drink the cup. 
I falter. I sense the bitter taste.
Drink the cup. Drink it. Drink it. The pain,
it whispers. The metronome
is tap, tap tapping. I breathe pain in,
I breathe it out. I find the cup pressed
to my lips. I bear it to my body. I taste
the bitterness in my lungs, my legs, my
self. Time stops. There is only movement.
Movement forward. Never slower.
Always slower. The cup is a choice,
I dare believe it; believe that I am more
than the rocks underneath me,
than the mud splattered down my legs.
I am more than every goddamned day
of sweating, pushing, pounding
on the ground. I am more than blurry
thoughts forgetting. More than the iron
in the pill, in the field house, in my feet.
I bear it to my body. I taste its bitterness.
Time. Movement. Choices. Me.

The finish line.

I am on my knees. Too much to stand.
Too much not to prostrate here. This day
I lived my entire life and died. This moment
I find myself in paradise.
Sweat overcomes my tears.
It is finished.
How can I stand? This place I kneel
is holy. This moment is holy.
My broken body, my pain, the dirt, all holy.
And finally I sense it.
Among all voices
whisper
Well done. 
--
{dm}

Monday, August 13, 2012

What it Takes

What it Takes

It was Monday. Sometimes waking up is hard. I was groggy, reluctant. There was only one driving force that brought me to my feet: food. Good lord, I was so hungry.

It was Monday. Someone left 2 teaspoons of milk in the carton. I let it drip onto my cereal. I added water from the tap. Gross. Mondays are hard sometimes. No, they're just like any other day. It's in my head. 

The best part of the day was over. Breakfast was done. 

Now the gears were shifting. I knew what was coming. I had two hours. The countdown began. But I felt so clean. It was so hot outside. I had a lot of other things I wanted to do. No, I just didn't want to run. 

But I must. Unless I died or severed my limbs before 9:00am, I would be running. 

I checked my training schedule. It was circuit day. The schedule read: 

800m run (3 min bike)

40 squats 

30 sit ups

20 pushups

Oh that wasn't so bad. I could do that, anyone could do that. But then...

20 pull ups. 

Repeat in reverse order. 

Dang it. 20 pull ups? Who were these Crossfit people anyway? Who came up with these workouts? Normal people would not, in fact could not lift the girth of their entire bodies into the air not once, not twice, but twenty times by the sheer strength of their arms and back. Madness. Utter madness. 

I also checked my milage for the day. Only four miles. Good. That was do-able. That, I could do. 

Fast forward two hours. It was time to go. I gathered my things, preparing for the gym. I opened the door. The air felt thick, almost sticky. I sighed, looked up...

No car. 

My older brother must have taken it. Oh. Too bad. I could't go. Bummer. 

I went back inside. I started taking my shoes off. My sister was home. I pretended to be upset. 

"Nate took the car, I can't go workout."

She didn't flinch. "Take the truck."  

Take the truck? "Take the truck" is basically synonymous to, "Go kill yourself." 

"The truck" was an enormous, precariously threatening piece of machinery. I didn't drive the truck. Ever. I was not a dangerous person. The truck was not necessarily dangerous either, but combined? We were deadly. 

So I took the truck. 

I made it out of the driveway. Miraculous. I was so adept. I was James Bond. I was a master at the wheel. The road looked so strange. So tiny. The truck seemed to swallow it. I winced every time cars whizzed by, convinced they were going to side-swipe me. 

At four-way stops I was completely composed. In charge. I made eye contact with other drivers. "Yes," I said with my eyes, "this is my truck, fear it."

I parked the truck successfully at the gym. Another miracle. A guy pulled up next to me in a tiny little car. Sucker. I thought.

The following sequence of events are flash backs from the gym, as I complete my workout, to the road, as I run. 

First, I'm in the gym. The workout has begun. 

Biking first. I can't figure out how to adjust the seat. It's too high, I can't reach the pedals. So I just float, bobbing up and down as my legs go to work. The handle bars seem low, I have to bend over really far. My back is to the giant mirror lining the wall. I glance over once, the reflection of my butt looks huge, like I'm trying to stick it out really far. I'm not. This is ridiculous. I think. 
--
Second, I'm running. The beginning of every run is the same. I am fresh, clean, poised. I imagine I could be on the front of Runner's World magazine. Movement is effortless. I am invincible. Also, I am running on a sidewalk! Ah! The glorious sidewalk! A perfectly paved road, just my size. Just for me. No cars, no dirt or mud, just beautiful, flawless pavement.  
--
In the gym, the biking is done, thank God. I dismount. My legs feel unstable. Onto squats. Squats are fine. I add 30 pounds extra weight. I think maybe I should add more but I don't. I notice there are a lot of men on this side of the gym. Women do the cardio machines, men lift the weights. It's an unspoken rule here. I decide that I won't feel weird squatting in front of these men, but I feel a little weird anyway.  
-- 
Back to running. My body already feels disjointed from the Crossfit workout, my muscles are uncoordinated. Up ahead are two runners. I will pass them. There is no question in this matter. 

They are both girls, maybe my age. They have noticeably long, blond pony-tails that swing back and forth. They are tall, slender, with colorful outfits. I think they remind me of prancing ponies maybe. Yes, definitely like horses, with blonde tails. Their arms are tucked close to their bodies, with their hands almost inside their armpits. Their arms look like wings, yes, little wings that sway back and forth across their body. Horses with wings. I think there's a name for that. I can't remember. They're talking. They don't seem to hear me coming closer. They take up my entire sidewalk. I also notice there is long grass on either side of my sidewalk. I cannot slow down. I have no choice, I make the plunge. 

They hear me now, directly behind them, bounding through the long grass. They stop talking. They look a little startled. I smile and manage a "hi" before passing them. I did enjoy passing them. I really do enjoy passing.   
--
In the gym, squats are over. Sit ups are easy. I decide to come back to the pushups later and go straight to the pull ups. Oh, these dreaded things! The inhumane, impossible standard I will undoubtedly, unquestionably fail to reach! I cave. I cheat. I use the fancy little foot thing that helps me weigh less. Oh, the humility of it. One day. I tell myself. One day I will not use this crutch. Now thirty pounds lighter, twenty pull ups still hurt. I try to muffle my groans. Nobody in a gym ever wants to sound constipated. Yet, somehow, often we do. Maybe it's a good sign, maybe it's because we're trying so hard. Good or bad, I definitely sounded constipated by pull up number fourteen. 
--
Still running, with the pony-tail runners left far behind, the glamorous Runner's World cover image is now forgotten. My facial features are distorted. I am hot. My form is breaking down. I am disgusting. I am sweating. I sweat too much. If "sweat is fat crying," as inspirational Pinterest quotes would have me believe, the fat in my body screams bloody murder. It wails uncontrollably. It nearly drowns me with its tears. 
--
The first set of pull ups are done. Now my favorite: pushups. I love them, only because I am good at them, and because they don't make me sound constipated. I count them off in my head, 5, 10, 15, 20.... I think maybe I should do more but I don't. I tell myself I could do more if I wanted to, that satisfies my conscience. Great. My first set is done. Now I just have to do everything all over again. 
--
It was supposed to be an easy run. I remind myself of this as I plod up a hill. However, I've always believed "easy" to be subjective. I don't really go easy. I could see the top of the hill. I was already there. I could feel it. Everything inside me, my mind, my spirit, my very soul were on the top of that hill. Now, I was just waiting for my body to catch up. 

Running is not like flying. When you fly, you glide through the air. When you run, your legs pound on the ground. There is no similarity. Now over half way done, my brain has sort of shut down--or zoned out. I think most of the oxygen is going to other parts of my body. I now only think about two things: 

One: Keep moving. 

And 

Two: It will be done soon. 

--

Don't let anyone tell you running is glamorous. It is not. It is hard. Even if you're an Olympian, it's always hard. Yet, it is beautiful, and this is why: 

Running is freeing. With patience, your mind overcomes your body. 

Your body forever desires to be still. To be at rest. To be comfortable. When you are running, you are none of those things. 

Your mind is always going. Always working. It never sleeps. 

Two worlds--your body and your mind--are always at war within you. When you run, your body submits. Your mind becomes master. The two merge together, they work together, and it's beautiful. When you stick to it long enough, your body not only endures, but engages, it performs. Your body is able to do something impressive. 

In the middle of a run, obviously, you are moving. It's almost as if kinetic energy in your brain propels you forward. You don't have to think about moving forward as much as you have to think about stopping. Your body has accepted the motion, and will continue to be in motion, until you decide to stop. It is your mind, not your body, that carries you. When I am healthy, when there is no pain or sickness to slow me down, there is no other feeling I find quite as freeing as running. 

Wow. This was a really long post.

Happy Monday to everyone! 

Sincerely, 
{dm} 

Monday, July 16, 2012

Motivation for Monday

As a health fanatic/running athlete, I've learned a lot about being healthy over the years. On Mondays I'll share what I know about running and give what advice I can about making good choices and living strong. Again, this isn't textbook-official, just me speaking from my experiences over the years as a runner.

Here's a common question people ask: How do I lose weight?

Personally, I don't think that's the right question. Healthy isn't about weighing less. It's about being stronger and feeling better. The wrong opproach to dieting and exercise has the opposite effect on us.

It's about changing the way you approach your lifestyle. 

Running won't make you skinny.
It's true! If you must lose weight, most of it will happen in the kitchen (eating the right food at the right time). Also, everyone has a different body type, therefore, everyone's body responds to running differently. For example, there are over twenty girls on my cross-country team. We all run the same amount of miles and do the same workouts, yet our body shapes and weight are all different, even though no one is over weight. That's the key. Don't compare yourself. Your goal should be to get in shape, not be skinny.

Lifting makes you strong. 
(Duh) Lifting helps runners and non-runners. Lifting has the capacity to transform your body (I'll post my lifting routine next Monday). You don't need a gym membership, just motivation and determination that lasts long enough to feel yourself improve. Building muscle also speeds up your metabolism, which is beneficial for your overall health. There's nothing like noticing how your body is capable of doing things you never thought possible. LIVE STRONG.

You can't spot reduce.    
Have you ever tried doing 100 sit-ups every day and then became discouraged when your abs didn't look any different? Well...maybe not. However, if you did, they probably wouldn't change much. Focusing on one muscle group, like for instance, your obliques (where love-handles appear) isn't going to take extra weight away, but eating right will.

It all comes down to food choices and portions.
I'll get into food choices more on another Monday. Regrettably, there isn't one magical diet plan that will give you a perfectly healthy body. Lots of people have different opinions on food and what's acceptable and what's not. However, we all have a basic understanding of what's good for us (didn't your mom always tell you to eat your veggies?). It's a matter of choosing healthy that is more challenging. BUT WORTH IT!

Have a motivated Monday!


If you run, don't run just for exercise. 
Run for the way it makes you feel when you finish.
Run for the challenge, for what it costs you.
Run for the reward of your perseverance.  
Run for the therapy of your mind and body, 
Because one day you won't be able to. 


{dm}

Friday, July 13, 2012

The Truth About Running

You've all seen them before: pictures, magazines, websites, all trying to motivate you to run.

This isn't my goal here.

As a cross-country and track athlete at my university, my goal is to tell you the truth about running. Whether you're into it or secretly resent it, this is worth reading.

First off, let me tell you I'm a credible source. Besides the last 3 weeks in May and a couple weeks in December, I run all year around. Six days a week. I have to, I'm on scholarship! It's getting me through school. Here's an article for validation: Lady Cougars.

I'm not a professional runner, just a normal person who happens to run every day. Let me share what I have learned. Note, this is my opinion based on my experience. None of this is textbook-approved, just real life lessons from a girl who would know.

Rules to Run By:  

1. Running is pointless unless you compete with yourself.
It doesn't matter why you want to run, whether it's to lose weight, stay in shape, or impress people driving down the road. If you don't compete for a better time than you had yesterday, or a longer distance, or better form, you're going to be board out of your mind. Literally. Running will be the most pointless waste of time you've ever experienced.

2. Don't compare your ability. 
There's always going to be someone out there better and faster than you. Who cares? Remember rule #1, you're competing with yourself. No one else.

3. Learn to love it. 
What's the difference between avid runners and those people who can't seem to be consistent? The love. If you don't enjoy it, you're not going to do it. That's reality. You can only force yourself to do something you hate for so long before you give in. Granted, you may have to force yourself at first (give it 4 weeks), but you'll begin to crave it if you stick with your goals.

So now you're wondering, how do you love running? 
You have to be competitive.
You have to want to be better than you were yesterday.
And when you are (because you will be), relish your achievement.

That's not trying to be motivational, that's telling the truth.  

4. You have the time.
If you want it bad enough, it can happen. No excuses. This is coming from a college student.

5. Your brain is a liar.  
Your head will get in the way even before you take your first step. Your brain will tell you, "I'm too tired," or "too stressed," or "I don't want to." Don't listen! I found the days I felt too tired or busy to run were the days I needed to run the most. It's stress relieving and wakes you up!

Also, during the run your brain can sometimes be a broken record: "Stop. Stop. Stop. I'm tired. Stop Stop. Stop." Use discipline! Tell your brain you are stronger than you think. Remember, compete
6. Build a relationship with your body.
It's hard to listen to your body when your head is screaming, "I HATE THIS!" There's two voices inside you, one from your brain, one from your body. Usually, the brain is fussy, wimpy, and obnoxious. But you can learn to control it. With some mental discipline, it will be on your side. The body on the other hand, speaks more subtly...unless there's pain. Learn to differentiate between mind and body. That sounds kind of Yoga-zen-ish, but I'm dead serious! The body will tell you when you can push harder, listen!


7. Shoes matter.   
You know those sneakers you found at a garage sale in eighth grade that still fit? Don't you dare touch them. If you're planning on running even just a couple days a week, buy real running shoes! Bad shoes lead to serious injury. I recommend Asic, Brooks, or personally, I use Mizuno. I wouldn't recommend the Nike Frees. They look sick, but no matter what they may claim, I don't believe they're a running shoe.

8. Finish strong.
At the end of every run, no matter how tired you feel, try to really push it! Do the last 0.2 miles faster! You'll feel amazing after you stop.

9. Food matters. 
Have you ever thought "I went for a run today, I can have this {fill in an unhealthy sweet/snack}?" It's not true. In fact, when you're running you should be more careful. It doesn't matter if you're not trying to lose weight. Runners need fuel. Think of the food that you are putting in your mouth as fuel. Better fuel makes a better running machine. I'll let you do the math.

10. DRINK!! 
I shoot for as much as possible: 10 8oz. glasses of water a day or more.