Yes, runners can get a bad rap for bragging
about their training and their races be it at parties, on social media,
to the cashier at the grocery store or to the homeless man on the
corner. Let’s face it – when you cover 26.2 miles
you’ve gone on a journey of sweat, puke, shit, spit, tears, smiles and
delirium. So, naturally you want to tell the world how you suffered, how
you persevered. But, does the world really care?
Probably not so much.
This hijacking leads to another phenomenon – tunnel vision. We runners get a bit obsessed and focused on the training-on the goal.
- We schedule our lives around our long runs – uh, yeah, I can’t go out Friday because my long run is Saturday and I need to eat the right foods so my colon doesn’t blow up and if I go to a restaurant I might not do that and I can’t go out Saturday because I’ll be recovering from my long run and I need to refuel and rehydrate with the right carb to protein ratio and well I might just need to go to bed.
- We get astonished and put-out when someone asks how far a marathon is – oh and next you’re going to ask me how far a half marathon is. NICE!
- We become meteorologists – okay so my long run is on Saturday, it’s going to be breezy with intermittent rain showers and a high of 49 degrees. There will be light cloud cover later in the day with winds out of the north-northwest.
- We count grams of carbs and protein – it’s true I used to just know that beer had a lot of carbs and that’s why I did keg stands in college, but now I am basically a nutritionist and dietician, or I think I am.
- We think we’re sick and dying and injured when we taper - okay I’m feeling this ache in my foot it wasn’t there yesterday I am sure it is a tumor or a stress fracture. Oh and I swear I’m getting a head cold which is probably pneumonia and I wont be able to breathe and then I’ll DNF and oh my god this is the worst week of my life.
Basically, we are consumed! Bitch-slapped by the marathon herself!
So,
it’s only natural that when race day comes and we actually FINISH this
mother task of completing 26.2 miles without an engine or a set of
wheels, we are proud and accomplished. But, is there such a thing as over-sharing when people don’t really give a crap?
Nowadays my friends and family know I train and run races. I talk
about it when they ask (unless they are runners then that is pretty much
all we talk about). I don’t expect people to love running like I do and
I respect the fact (although it’s appalling and unnecessary) that some
people hate to run or are totally bored by the subject. In other words,
I try to contain it somewhat. Maybe that’s why I have a blog!
Different
strokes for different folks – I mean I would die if you asked me to
watch a golf tournament all day (unless there was a lot of beer, pizza
and sunshine or I could run around the course and set a PR).
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