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Zen Trail Running
By Christopher D. Benner For the Washington Running Report
Watch that rock! Step over that root! Get ready to jump that
stream! Watch the muddy landing! All these thoughts rush through
my head as I dash down the single track dirt trail. With only
one inch of synthetic rubber separating my body from the ground,
it is imperative that my mind and spirit are one in sensing and
responding to my surroundings. Before I even realize it, my mind
has already examined the peripheral environment and decided on a
course of action. When I come upon that muddy bog ahead, I must
adjust my footing. When that low-hanging branch approaches, I
must duck. When I reach that log, I will jump over it. Trail running is nothing like road running. Running on a road I
take a good glance at the awaiting asphalt, notice any
imperfections in it, and memorize them. Then I let my mind
wander as my legs do the work. Running on a trail is
distinctively different. There is no time to let my mind wander when I have to
concentrate on slippery leaves and uneven terrain. Every step I
take is a small adventure. What looked like a dry rock twenty
feet away has now turned into a slippery boulder with jagged
edges. Instead of my feet moving forward, one foot slides
laterally off the edge while the other twists into painful
contractions. Yet just as quickly as it starts, it ends. Instead
of falling off the boulder into the water, my hand breaks my
fall. Instead of limping home, my body redistributes its weight
so that I may run away unscathed. I love every minute of it. If my body is not on the trail, my
mind is. No run through the woods is ever the same. The giant
oak tree that welcomed me to the trail every day is now laying
to rest from yesterday's storm. The groomed trail that once
brought me down to the rushing creek has now been manicured by
millions of droplets of water into sediment-filled crevasses.
The putrid smell of a decaying deer is now gone thanks to the
local scavengers. Nevertheless, for all the time I spend
concentrating on the ground in front of me, wondering where my
foot will go next, I always remind myself to stop, look around
and reflect, for the trail has taught me many things. Flexibility. While it is imperative that my muscles are limber
enough to handle an occasional twisted ankle, having an open and
flexible mind is much more important. In an environment covered
with twigs and leaves, the trail can be lost in an instant. I
remember running on what I thought was the trail, but later
turned out to be nothing more than a rain runoff area. I was not
upset, however, because what I discovered was more beautiful and
more challenging than what "the" trail could have offered. By
trusting my instincts I have found places never seen by humans.
The simple act of letting my body roll with the terrain has
taken me to adventures never imagined. Humility. From a scenic overlook a forest appears enticing and
pacific. Once immersed in it, however, one realizes how humbling
a place it is. Looking up and noticing that my already
challenging trail now blazed a path straight up a jagged
landscape of gray granite, I scoffed. Although it appeared
difficult, it seemed possible, for this was a popular trail
hiked by hundreds every year. Bouncing freely from rock to rock
up the cliff, my cadence painfully slowed as my heart rate
nervously quickened. Suddenly my running shoes felt like roller
skates as my legs filled with lactic acid and my footing
slipped. Instead of a jackrabbit I now felt like a clumsy sloth
clawing at knife and ball-bearing-covered ground. When I finally
reached the summit of my Mt. Everest I gasped for oxygen and
thirsted for water. Looking down at where I came from I noticed
how difficult a climb it really was. While standing at the
bottom of the cliff before my trek, my vision was clouded by
gallons of endorphins. I failed to realize that in the life of
this granite mountain my presence occupied less than a tenth of
a nanosecond, and if I wanted to having a working relationship
with it I had to show it the respect an elder deserves. The granite beat me hard that day. Ten hours later, I was still
sore. Tomorrow, however, I will be back. Although I will never
be able to conquer it, maybe by visiting it frequently, studying
its lines and cracks, and understanding its past, it will cut me
some slack someday. Order in a seemingly chaotic environment. Most of my runs start
in a parking lot. I drive on nicely paved roads to a neatly
lined parking lot and then squeeze my car between the two lines
that mark "my" spot. As I first step onto the trail and look
around I am awe struck with the beauty that awaits me. Millions
of trees stand at attention, their branches jutting out in
freakish directions. It all looks so pretty, yet so confusing
and convoluted from afar. As I run through this sea of chaos, I
stop to retie my shoe. Bending over I notice the ground beneath
me for the first time. Under my feet and all around me are
hundreds of crushed leaves and twigs. Next to them are worms and
ladybugs and trillions of bacteria and viruses. Inside them
there is at least one cell. Inside this cell there is a nucleus.
Inside this nucleus there are millions of atoms, and around each
atom are multiple electrons, protons and neutrons. Inside the
atom is no man's land. Although several theories persist, no
empirical research exists on the atom's contents. Yet it all
works. For more than five billion years it has worked, and we
still cannot explain precisely how almost one hundred elements
existing freely in nature combine to form an animated organic
being. As I continue to stare at this patch of life, I remain
baffled. With so many moving parts, each acting independently,
yet still dependent on the others for survival, it is amazing
that I am standing here at all. Nothing ever created by humans
has matched the complexity of us. People seem baffled when their
personal computer plays them in chess, yet simultaneously
figures out their tax return. What a joke! Even the most
elementary of minds can outshine the most powerful computer. Can
a computer spit out the square root of 65623 quicker than I can?
Definitely. Yet can a computer survive extremes of cold and heat
and still perform the same? When I log on to the Internet and
read that hundreds of people died in a plane crash, does my
computer feel the agony I do? No, and it never will. Humans are
always trying to make machines better than themselves. It will
never happen. Try as we may, a synthetic machine will always
lack the intangible qualities that make a living being living. Running the trail is more than a healthy physical workout. It
is a spiritual journey. I love trail running not just because of
the occasional deer I see or because I get all muddy and sweaty,
but because it has allowed me to see things unrealizable in a
concrete jungle. I have learned the value of living, the
importance of challenge, the beauty in all levels of life and
much more. Most important, however, I have learned that what was
taught to me on the trail is not exclusive to the trail.
Nature's lessons are universal truths. The trail is not something I follow, but something I create. The
challenge of the trail lies in its ambiguity, for I do not
follow a trail, I blaze my own.
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