I signed up for the Twin Cities Marathon. This will be my third trek up Summit (while the race is 26.2 miles long, it's those last 6 in St. Paul that are burned into my psyche, as if all 26 happen on that last grinding hill) and as I paid my fee and picked my tshirt size, all the malaise of the last two months started to fall away. After last year's half-marathon-every-month (plus one road marathon and one trail marathon), I've struggled to find any joy in running. And I didn't push it. After December's half-marathon I just told myself running was no longer necessary. I still went to the gym but rarely looked at, much less climbed on, the treadmill.
But I still signed up for races. I signed up for the Get Lucky, a half-marathon in less than a month. And I signed up for two trail 15 milers, one in April and one in May. While my body was still rejecting any push to run, my brain had already decided that running would resume, whether my body liked it or not. Some part of me, the part of me that has done 3 marathons, 1 trail marathon, 2 trail half-marathons, 3 trail 15 milers, and about 30 road half-marathons, knew that the running would come back. I've been burned out before. I've reached points before where the thought of running filled me with dread and I just couldn't love it anymore. But those are always relatively short seasons. They always follow the completion of a goal (a marathon, a year of half-marathons). And sometimes they coincide with other life events, work, relationships, particular stresses, whathaveyou. It's as if my running self goes into hibernation, tucked into some corner preparing for a knee-pounding spring.
I signed up for the marathon last Friday and last weekend I started running. Again. I slipped on the ice, bit a chunk out of my tongue, and spit blood back to my apartment. I'll be treadmill-bound for another month, I imagine. But walking back to my apartment with blood pooling in my mouth, a bit banged up on the knees and elbows, I made my way with the bounce I've come to recognize. Within a mile I'd managed to injure myself, but it was enough to remember what running feels like. Not the painful part, or the exhausting part, or the part that makes me hungry. Not the time-consuming part or the part that requires a lot of laundry trips. The part of running that makes everything else a little less daunting, a little less scary. The part that reminds me that today is a gift and I will make my heart beat faster so as to enjoy it properly. The part that holds discomfort like a specimen, turns it around, says, "that isn't so bad, you can push harder." My body finally woke up, stretched, emerged from hibernation, and listened to the voice in my head that began planning said reemergence weeks ago. A little blood in the mouth, a little bruise on the elbow, the pavement has been christened, it's time to roll.
Oct 6th, here I come.
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