Biography
Dr. George Sheehan
died four days short of his 75th birthday on November 1, 1993.
He used to say humans come with a 75-year warranty, but it was
not age with which he was concerned. It was life in the present.
"Don't be concerned if running or exercise will add years
to your life," he would say, "be concerned with adding
life to your years." He liked to quote William James, who
said, "The strenuous life tastes better."
George
Sheehan lived a strenuous life. He renewed his life at the age
of 45 and turned it inside out. He returned to his body, and to
running, and he shared with his readers all of his experiences
in this new world of exercise and play, of sweat and competition,
of physical, mental and spiritual challenge.
He
was born in Brooklyn in 1918, the oldest of a doctor's 14 children.
An outstanding student, he was also a track star at Manhattan
College. He became a cardiologist like his father. After medical
school he served in the Navy in the South Pacific during World
War II as a doctor on the battleship USS Daly. Just before leaving
for active service he married "the most beautiful woman on
the Jersey Shore," Mary Jane Fleming, and together they subsequently
raised a dozen children.
But
success and security in the suburbs were not enough for him. He
became "bored" with medicine, with getting "bombed
out" every weekend, with falling asleep in front of the TV.
He went back to reading philosophy. He read The Greeks, Emerson,
Thoreau, Ortega, and James. Then he read Ireneus, one of the early
church fathers, who wrote, "The glory of God is man fully
functioning." George Sheehan knew he wasn't fully functioning.
He started to run.
He
began in his back yard (26 loops to a mile) and then became something
of an oddity in Rumson, NJ running along the river road during
his lunch hour wearing his white long-johns and a ski mask. His
new life had begun and its message was soon clear-"Man at
any age is still the marvel of the universe." Five years
later, he ran a 4:47 mile, which was the world's first sub-five-minute
time by a 50-year-old.
He
began writing a weekly column in the local paper. In short time,
the running world was listening. This self-described loner from
Red Bank, NJ became one of the most sought out experts on health
and fitness. And his door was always open.
He
continued the column for twenty five years. Many of these years
were served as the medical editor for Runner's World magazine.
He wrote eight books and lectured around the world. "Listen
to your body," was his slogan. "We are each an experiment
of one." One critic referred to his talks as "the running
community's equivalent of a Bruce Springsteen concert, though
listening to him was more like taking off with John Coltrane on
some improvised solo."
Dr.
Sheehan was diagnosed with prostate cancer in 1986. By the time
it was discovered it had spread to his bones. For seven years
he lived with the cancer, and "made every day count."
He was a runner to the core and he would not let the cancer change
that. He ran until his legs could no longer carry him. Through
it all, he remained true to himself, continuing to write about
his experiences. This time it wasn't about running, it was about
dying. Going the Distance was his last book. It was published
shortly after his death.
George
Sheehan never stopped searching for the truths of his life. "We
are all unique, never-to-be-repeated events," he said. His
goal was to be the best George Sheehan possible. He was fond of
quoting Robert Frost's line, "I am no longer concerned with
good and evil. What concerns me is whether my offering will be
acceptable."