What’s
the most natural thing to do when you have a new baby in the house that never
sleeps and a toddler entering the troublesome threes? Run a half-marathon of
course!
Let
me explain. First off, I’m not really a runner by nature. I love sports––I’ve played
and coached tennis throughout my life, and I spend way too much time watching
any contest on TV that involves a ball––but I’ve never been passionately into
running the way some people are. I do run periodically to stay fit and even
tried a 5K once––which resulted in me being unable to walk properly for a few
weeks afterwards because of a knee injury likely caused by the combination of
maniacal competitiveness and total lack of preparation––but there is nothing on
my athletic resume to suggest that half-marathon was the logical next step.
Especially at a time when my mental state could be described as tenuous (at
best) and constantly on the brink of full-fledged breakdown (at worst).
What
made me decide to dive head first into the world of running? Besides, of
course, the constant and burning desire to get out of the freaking house and
wallow in aloneness? I’ve thought about this quite a bit the last couple
months. After all, one thing half-marathon training affords is a lot of free
time to think about and dissect your most unimportant thoughts and feelings.
The explanation I’ve settled on is that the training and the eventual race fills
a gap in my life (I mean…of course it does, right?). Specifically, I have been,
entirely or mostly, a stay-at-home dad for the past three years. I started back
to work part-time earlier this year, but fatherhood remains my day-to-day
focus. And while it’s an extremely important undertaking, it is certainly an
adjustment. Gone are the external metrics one uses to measure self-worth, from
grades in school to salaries and promotions at work to wins and losses on the
tennis court. What replaces them is hours and days of sameness and repetitive
tasks punctuated with fleeting moments of inspiration and heart breaking joy. And
as any parent can attest, in a pretty routine 15 minute span, it’s not unusual
to go from feeling okay about your parenting prowess to feeling like a total
disaster. Even more, you quickly realize, you’ll never really know which
feeling is most accurate.
So,
what do I do in an attempt to measure myself at a time when it often feels like
my self is fading away, absorbed
within the collective unit of a family or replaced by a blurry shadow defined
by its relationships more than its individuality? What do I do to keep me the
worries and doubts about my children and their futures and our futures at bay?
I run. And I run. And I walk sometimes. And I run some more. I run at 6 in the
morning or 10 at night. I run when I feel more tired than I’ve ever felt in my life.
I run in the smothering Florida humidity and the refreshingly cool autumn
evenings. I run on wet nights when reflections from the passing headlights and
street lights create halos in front of my eyes that make it feel like I’m
running in a cloud, separated from the surrounding world. I run for so long
that the same Mumford and Sons album loops through twice or I burn through
three episodes of Serial on my iPod. I see my distances increase, from 2 to 4
to 10 miles, and my times come down and I feel accomplished. I ice my aching
knee, ankle, and back and waste away late night hours researching the best
energy gels and running socks. I’m completely ambivalent about the whole thing,
but yet, it fuels me.
In
the end, I think the finish is going to be anti-climactic. I’ll suffer through
13.1 miles on race day, cross the finish line, and nothing will be different. I
will either meet my arbitrarily determined time goal or I won’t. I won’t win
any prizes and no one will care really, not even me for very long. Just like a
lot of things we do in life, running a half-marathon is completely
insignificant, but somehow at the same time, can seem very important. So I keep
going.
This post originally appeared on the Huffington Post Blog:
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