Not running on empty
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“I don’t run,” I told my boyfriend on our first date. “Never have,
never will.”
To put it in context, my paramour-to-be had just told me he likes
to pound his feet on the pavement in a serious way. A 26.2-mile way.
“Don’t worry, I won’t try and convert you,” he said.
So why is it six months later I find myself with not one, but two
pairs of running shoes on my shoe rack in women’s size 8 1/2? Why is
it I actually wear these shoes at a freakily early hour in the
morning, walking and then jogging around my neighborhood?
It’s not his fault. Really. I want to blame him, but I just can’t.
After all, I didn’t even tell him I had taken it up until a month
after I started. Didn’t want to get his hopes up that I might
actually like participating in this thing he’s so crazy about until I
was sure I did.
It’s my curiosity that hooked me after watching him run race after
race. I just had to know why it was that anyone would lace canvas,
foam and rubber to their feet and just go for a mile or two or 26.
Of course, learning that neither bicycling nor swimming -- my two
favorite activities -- do anything to help you gain bone mass pushed
me to lace up a pair of shoes. My mother has severe osteoporosis,
brittle bones, and I’m working to make sure the same cannot be said
of me as I grow older. Impact sports, like running, help make
stronger bones if carefully done.
What I’ve learned is that you can’t just run. You have to work up
to it, just like any sport. I wandered the World Wide Web until I
found a running site that gave a good training regimen for a
beginning runner.
At the moment, I walk 15 minutes, alternate running and walking
for 10 minutes and then walk for five more minutes. On a good day, I
go a mile and a half at this pace. I have a cheap pedometer that
tells me how far I’ve gone based on stride length.
The first time I tried it, my legs felt like rubber walking the
stairs to my apartment. Didn’t help that in that first month, I
didn’t have running shoes. Being fiscally conservative, I didn’t want
to spend the money for good shoes before I knew I wasn’t going to
just drop the whole idea.
So, I ran in my red tennies. They look great and feel awful. But
they didn’t ruin the experience for me.
There’s something about being out and about in your neighborhood
in the quiet hours of the morning that’s almost magical. You meet the
neighbors with dogs that have to be walked. You say hello to the man
going to work early in Los Angeles. You connect.
I spend so much of my time inside, cooped up by four walls,
breathing recycled air that I forget what it’s like to be outdoors.
To watch the sun get ever higher in the sky. To watch the leaves
change color. Running has given that back to me, like a slice of
childhood returned.
And now that I’ve found it, I’m hesitant to give it up. Last
Saturday, I was on a path at the bluffs in Long Beach when I passed
some bicyclers, who asked me why I was running. I said because I like
it. And I do.
Twelve minutes later, I was bit by a leashed dog that probably
smelled my cats as I went past. No worries, the bite is minuscule and
the doctor says my chance of having rabies is pretty low. You would
think this would keep me from lacing up the shoes for a while. But
no, this weekend, I’ll be out there running. And avoiding the dogs.
* JENNIFER K MAHAL is features editor of the Daily Pilot. She can
be reached at (949) 574-4282 or [email protected].
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