Why Do I Run?
Why do I run?
I have written over the years of the benefits I receive from running.
Enumerated the physical and mental changes. Listed the emotional
and spiritual gains. Charted the improvement that has taken place
in my person and my life. What I have not emphasized is how transient
these values and virtues are.
With
just a little thought, however, it should be evident that physical
laws parallel those of the mind and the spirit. We know that the
effects of training are temporary. I cannot put fitness in the
bank. If inactive, I will detrain in even less time than it took
me to get in shape. And since my entire persona is influenced
by my running program, I must be constantly in training. Otherwise
the sedentary life will inexorably reduce my mental and emotional
well-being.
So,
I run each day to preserve the self I attained the day before.
And coupled with this is the desire to secure the self yet to
be. There can be no let up. If I do not run I will eventually
lose all I have gained-and my future with it.
Maintenance
was a favorite topic of Eric Hoffer. It made the difference, said
the former longshoreman, between a country that was successful
and one that failed. However magnificent the achievement, without
constant care the result was decay.
I
know the experience intimately. There is nothing more brief than
a laurel. Victory is of the moment. It must be followed by another
victory and then another. I have to run just to stay in place.
Excellence
is not something attained and put in a trophy case. It is not
sought after, achieved and, thereafter, a steady state. It is
a momentary phenomenon, a rare conjunction of body, mind, and
spirit at one's peak. Should I come to that peak I cannot stay
there. I must start each day at the bottom and climb to the top.
And then beyond that peak to another and yet another.
Through
running I have learned what I can be and do. My body is now sensitive
to the slightest change. It is particularly aware of any decline
or decay. I can feel this lessening of the "me" that
I have come to think of myself.
Running
has made this new me. Taken the raw material and honed it and
delivered it back ready to do the work of a human being. I run
so I do not lose the me I was yesterday and the me I might become
tomorrow.
Excerpt: Going The Distance