If running is going to continue to grow in popularity we must
move with the same mutual purpose and collective effort as the
giant centipede at the Bay to Breakers Race. We must spread the
joy of sweat. We must become the evangelicals of endorphin
enjoyment. We must sermonize about the wonders of stamina and
galvanize others with the actual joy that can be found in
glycogen depletion.
But we first must address a problem within our own ranks. We've
successfully combated imposters like Rosie Ruiz who determined
that crossing the finish line of a marathon is just a tad easier
when you jump into the race at mile 24. Modern ingenuity has
given us everything from computer chip technology to energy bars
with flavor other than burnt cardboard. We've even eliminated
the 40-pound pair of rain soaked cotton sweat pants with the
arrival of waterproof running suits.
But there's a bigger problem beyond the twelve-minute miler
sneaking to the front of the starting line to rub elbows with
the elite and causing a 62-body pileup when the gun goes off.
I'm talking about the thing that does more to deter the
neighborhood "My middle name is Easy Chair" non-exerciser from
joining the ranks of the running converted. It is appearance
that's keeping some folks away. It is not the fear of putting
anchor size thighs in spandex running tights nor is it the panic
that racing singlets are a required accessory. Instead, it is
the appearance of anguish they see from a few of us.
We can preach until we go into oxygen debt about the ability of
running to feel like the lightness of motion without effort. The
fact remains that some non-runners have been erroneously
educated. They have viewed those among us whose running style
would be best entitled the Unbearable Heaviness of Breathing.
Those whose facial grimaces resemble one who has been sucking on
a lemon for six weeks straight while running barefoot on hot
cinders with red ants in their shorts. Suffice it to say these
runners aren't exactly exhibiting a look of genuine joy.
Their grunting and groaning simulates a cross between a wounded
donkey and a hyperventilating hyena--all the while sounding like
they are twelve yards away from full respiratory arrest.
Their running style is to accentuate every step with a less than
delicate earth shattering foot plop and stare at the ground as
though receiving continuous encouragement to keep their feet
moving in a forward direction.
It's not that they enjoy their running any less than others do
or are necessarily in poorer condition than, shall we say, the
more agile and fluid runners. It's just they haven't necessarily
found the groove. The rhythm of the run. The jig of the jog.
We must help them for, unintentionally, they're singing to
others a bad rap. Their minds may be thinking this is "Fun, fun,
fun" but their bodies appear to be saying, "I wish I were done,
done, done." They look as though they are actually plowing
through the pain of stress fractures in every joint below their
navel.
We must loosen them up. Unhunch their shoulders. Uncork their
squinting eyes and furrowed brow. Stifle their bellowing gasps
and lighten their foot plant for we are all united members of
the Pied Pipers of Running Recruitment.
But wait a minute. On the other hand, perhaps we should just
leave them alone. Maybe they are the best procurers of new
runners. That's it. It is reverse running psychology they are
employing. Their running style may be attracting others with its
awkward rhythm as it says, "We welcome one and all." Maybe, they
have indeed found their comfortable cadence and dance to the
beat of a different runner. Hmmm.
I guess we need not try to change the appearance of the gaspers
among us. What's good for the gazelle may not be good for the
plodder. Perhaps the runner's recruiting motto is more
appropriately voiced as:
"Give me your heavy footed, your less than nimble.
Your couch potatoes yearning to be in shape.
The woefully inactive in their reclining chair.
Send these, the apprehensive and uncertain among us.
We'll guide you joyfully into your comfortable running
groove!"
That's it. One person's grinding gait is another's graceful
dance. To each their own. For to thine own sole be true.