July 2010

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Lately I’ve been dealing with some respiratory issues which have been limiting my ability to run either very hard or for very long. It’s been frustrating, especially since I just recovered from an issue with my iliotibial band and was hoping to get back into running more frequently and for longer distances. I’m lucky if I get in 15 miles a week, which for some runners would not be nearly enough. Luckily I do not equate a high-mileage week with running success. I am one of those people who do a little or a lot and I’m just as happy either way. I’ve got more than enough to keep me busy otherwise so it is a testament to how much I really enjoy running that I make any time for it at all. That said, I do miss it when I can’t do it for several days in a row. I begin to feel restless and think, “I want to go for a run. No, I need to go for a run.”

So for the past couple weeks, even when I wanted to, I knew I wouldn’t have the lungs for it, and would end up feeling faint and breathless after only a mile or so. I’ve struggled through a few tough ones, just to get through them, and didn’t feel any better for having done it.  I had my first really good run in a while last night with both lungs and legs holding their own and not giving me much trouble. I did have a little inspiration, though.

I’m generally a very healthy person, and yes, I’m knocking on wood as I say this. I don’t fall ill too often, and when I do it always feels like the world is crashing in around me. When I feel poorly I always think, “how do people with chronic conditions cope?” and I feel very thankful for my health and the health of all my family. I spoke on the phone with my mother yesterday afternoon and after catching up a bit and telling her about how I’d been feeling, and her listening, being the ever sympathetic mom that she is, no doubt wishing she could do something to make me feel better. I ask her what’s happening on her end, then she pauses and asks me, “Has Katie called you yet?”

Kate is one of my older sisters. I don’t talk to her often, but not because we don’t get along or anything. We’re just not phone people and generally we can’t get a hold of each other even when we do want to talk, so we catch up whenever we get together. My mom proceeded to give me the low down, which was that Kate had been experiencing some pains in her neck and arm and it gradually got worse until she saw a doctor and they determined she had a “bulging disc” in her back, near  the base of her neck.  I don’t know much about this condition, but after talking to my mom and then later to my sister I found out that it’s usually caused by some sort of trauma (like a car accident or bad fall-though they can’t account for how this happened) and it is extraordinarily painful and does not have a high success rate for recovery. She wakes up every morning in pain, and despite the course of meds they’ve tried on her, not much works and when it does the relief is very brief. She’s had pains in her arm making her unable to lift it and when she moves her neck she sometimes feels as though “the muscles in my back are ripping apart.”

My sister is a very tough person. One of the toughest people I know. So tough, that when she went to ER the nurses were convinced she was  only having muscle spasms. My sister works in the medical field and insisted that was not the problem. They were shocked when they got the results of her CT scan. I guess they imagined she would have been a quivering mass considering the pain she must have been in. Talking to her about all this, she was calm and pulled together, and had a great sense of humor about the whole thing. They want her to have surgery right away, or as my sister put it, “the doctor is cut-happy.” My sister is going through physical therapy this week, to try and see if there is a way to avoid surgery. These kind of surgeries have a low success rate and even with moderate success the recovery is long and grueling. Kate wants to seek alternate therapies but the doc told her not to have high expectations for anything like that to work, so she told the doctor, “Go ahead and schedule the surgery for two weeks out. Then, when I’ve recovered from this with therapy, I will give you a call and cancel that appointment.”

We had a great talk, but it left me feeling sad. Sad that there’s little I can do to help her and sad knowing how she must feel. She’s tougher than I am, has always been. She can deal with more pain and grief than I think I am capable, but I don’t see why that means she’s got to carry such a crapload of it. I would gladly take this pain from her if I could, though I know I wouldn’t handle it nearly as gracefully as she does. I also felt ridiculous for feeling so badly about my own lame condition. It certainly put things in perspective for me. Suddenly, I did not feel nearly as poorly as before. All my little aches and pains from pounding the pavement seemed so dull and faint, as if maybe I’d only imagined them to begin with.

Last night I ran, thinking of  my sister and not the little annoyances of my own body. They were all still there, the pains and the labored breathing, but for the first time in a while none of it bothered me. I listened to my music and I ran, thankful that I was able to do this and to really know what a blessing it is to move in a body that’s not nearly perfect, but perfect enough for what I need it to do everyday. It won’t always be this way, but I’m happy for it now and for however long it remains this way.

I’m praying that before long I can run with my sister, too.

Maybe this scenario seems familiar to you: You’ve recently run a race where they had photographers covering the course and you get the email that photos of you are now available for you to purchase online. You go to the site, all excited to see the super cool action shots of you in mid-stride, your rippled arms pumping, your eyebrows furrowed in concentrated effort, your face relaying all the glorious ecstasy and pain of your efforts on that course and you enlarge that first shot and… huh. Well that’s you alright, but what’s with that weird puckered expression on your face and what the hell are you doing with your hands? Do your fingers really spread in that funny way? Wasn’t that shot only taken at mile 3 of the 13.1 mile course, so why do you look like you’re about to keel over and die right there on the road? Could your face be any more flushed? What happened to your hair? Did some other racer reach over and mess with it when you weren’t paying attention? Are your thighs really that fleshy or is that some kind of trick photography?

No? None of this strikes a chord? Well that’s good. Then you need not read on. If you love what you see in those race photos, then I think that’s awesome. But I cannot relate one bit, and I know many other runners who’ve felt the way I have looking at running photos of themselves.  The very first time I saw a still of myself in mid-stride I was horrified. Wow, I thought. That’s what I look like? Because that’s not what I feel like. I feel pretty cool when I run. I feel strong, I feel confident (most of the time!) and I feel like I look tougher than I am. But when I see a shot or a video of myself running I feel incredibly self-conscious knowing that the half-prancing, half-flailing woman in the image is really me. Now, ultimately I really don’t care. I don’t ever think about this when I’m actually running. Only when I am reminded through the fine art of photography of how truly awkward I am. I think in my head I just have a very glamorized image of myself, but I think that’s only because running feels so good to do (I repeat, most of the time) so how could I possibly look anything other than awesome while I’m doing it, right? Also I’m just critical of myself in general, but here for so long I had a very false (but positive) image of myself that could not have been further from the truth.

Now related to this topic, is the topic of clothing. We may not be able to help much the little quirks of our bodies moving as we run, but we can chose what we put on our bodies. I normally don’t give much thought to this. I am under no illusions that my running clothes are super cool and coordinated. In fact, I am one of those girls who is afraid of looking too “matchy” so I will make a point to avoid running “outfits” that look like they were made to go together. It’s not that I have a problem when other people wear them but for me I feel like if I’ve made an obvious effort to really match my running clothes then I appear self-conscious. Instead I consciously take measures to avoid appearing self-conscious.  So pretty much I end up wearing whatever is most comfortable. This time of year I have my super awesome “go to” shorts that I wear no matter what. And they are kind of colorful, so ideally I would just wear a plain, white or grey top with them to avoid a color overload, but sometimes I don’t think about that. Sometimes I don’t care enough and I end up wearing many, many colors say, during a race and oh, while there aren’t any professional photographers there, a good friend happens to be and gets a bunch of shots of me chuffing along in a blaze of purple, blue and some other color (I’m not really sure what to call it- burnt salmon?) and with my hair in two bizarre, nubby little ponytails that seemed really cute when I first put them in but have taken on a sort of  “What Ever Happened to Baby Jane” effect after they’ve come partly undone and my mascara begins to run.  See, these are the things that are helpful for me to see. That is at least something I can work on.

So now that I’ve laid it all out there, tell me- Does it ever bother you to see yourself run?

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