A City in Florida

The weather outside is perfect for running today.  The temperature is about 41°(F) and a dense mist is hovering above Portland. It’s like Karl the Fog has come up for a visit. There is so much oxygen and moisture in the air that breathing deeply almost feels like gulping water.

I ran Terwilliger to Marquam trail clockwise – this is the more challenging direction with a 4 mile steadily increasing grade to a 2 mile + steep drop back to downtown. The trees on the trail were literally dripping moisture – it wasn’t raining, but as the moisture condensed on the moss and ferns growing in the understory, they dripped down onto the trail. A bit muddy – which makes descending a spicy endeavor.

Last week I ran the same trail in the opposite direction and there were sections with sheets of ice covering the trail – those are mostly melted out, but there are still a few spots of frozen mud/ice. Slick as snot I was thinking as I was gingerly making my way down.

Good soul run had me thinking about how much I like to run solo. I’ve only had a few scares being far out solo. Times when I was more than concerned that a chain of events was going wrong and things could go pear-shaped at any moment. And it’s true – there is never one catastrophic thing that will go wrong – it’s a little mistake here, followed by another and another. SRENE is the acronym I learned climbing to prevent catastrophe. Solid, redundant, equalized, no extension. It’s a recipe for building anchors. And for staying safe.

Once I was mountain biking at Kenosha Pass in Colorado, it was summer and a normal summer thunderstorm rolled through – except all I had was a pair of arm warmers in addition to my cycling shorts and jersey. I was probably 15 miles from the car when the hail started and the temperature dropped by 30 degrees. My lips were blue, my teeth chattering uncontrollably – I ate all the food I had in my jersey pockets and rode back to the car as fast as possible. I was scared that day.

Another time was was solo mountain biking near Elliot Knob in Virginia. Carrying my bivy gear in a pack and navigating a tricky rock garden. I was way out of town up on the ridge when fell off the high-side of the mountain and over a retaining wall. As always when these things happen – first you check yourself to make sure everything that is supposed to be attached – is still attached. Check. The only damage was my broken brake lever and my ego. I landed on the pack. Was that a dream? Am I still here? Indeed I am.

It’s the realization of how vulnerable we can be.  And if we focused on it, it would consume us and we would be frozen like frightened animals. It’s always present though hiding in the periphery. It’s good to know it’s there and to understand what that feeling is – it’s fear.

I read On Fear many years ago:

What is needed, rather than running away or controlling or suppressing or any other resistance, is understanding fear; that means, watch it, learn about it, come directly into contact with it. We are to learn about fear, not how to escape from it. – Krishnamurti

I love that quote.

The art of the run commute

I can’t remember when I started commuting to work on foot – I think it was after reading Racing the Antelope: What Animals Can Teach Us About Running and Life  in which the author writes that if you want to run long distances – you have to run long distances. So the easiest thing to do is to just start running everywhere you go. Easier said than done – but it’s a great way to get to the office in the morning (getting home is the tricky bit – see below).

Today’s commute

inbound: http://www.strava.com/activities/99880888
outbound: http://www.strava.com/activities/99941080

The Reveal

I get questions from people at work about the run and strange looks from cyclists. I have to remember (difficult sometimes) to run facing traffic and ride with traffic – sometimes I get them mixed up because I don’t realize that I’m riding not running or vice versa.  I’m taking the same route.

I thought I’d explode my running pack and reveal my super top-secrets about my 4 mile inbound commute.

runpack

Leave everything you can at the office.

I mostly commute by bike, so I have an opportunity to bring in my shoes and jeans early in the week. I leave my shoes here, and have been mostly wearing the same pair of jeans all week. Software design is unlike say… changing the oil in a car, so my clothes don’t get very dirty. Plus it saves water through smaller laundry loads at home. Be kind to mother earth.

I’m very very lucky.

In many things in my life… but also that I have towel service and showers at work. I’ve gone long stretches with no showers – it’s totally possible using the wet-wipe technique. As in – buy a commercial supply of wet-wipes and take a wet-wipe shower. It works. Outdoor stores also sell no-rinse body wash if you want to go that route depending on circumstances.

On to the pack.

1. Inside the stuff sack are t-shirt, work shirt, socks and my unmentionables (which regrettably are the one thing that I’ve forgotten periodically. Infrequently, but still). As the old New England saying that I learned growing up says, “Use it up, wear it out, make it do or do without”. I improvise.

2. My iPad mini. Essentially my laptop replacement. It’s amazing – everyone should have one. I resisted a consuming device for a long time  – now I see the light. It also doubles as my reader.

3. The eagle creek ditty bag contains my phone, wallet, moleskin (in case I want to stop and sketch some amazing scenery while running <– I’ve *never* done this), some pens and a couple of emergency bus tickets.

4. Two mojo bars. If the urge strikes to keep on keepin’ on – then that’s what I’ll do, and I might get hungry. So I always pack snacks.

5. Amphipod (above iPad mini) with my office key card and house keys.

6. iPad shuffle. I don’t always listen to music when I run… I’m a purist at times, but on the run commute, when I’m not trying to get anywhere fast. I always keep my slow jamz looping. Mostly David Guetta,  Deadmau5Calvin Harris or Will.I.am.  The cheesier the EDM beats, the better. *Earbuds that wrap around your ear for running – crucial.

7. My lunch box packed with snacks. I’m a soup fanatic, so I usually go to a food cart at lunch for soup. Filling and warm – soup is so amazing. Almost as amazing  as french green lentils.

8. My kicks. Right now Brooks Pure Flows. I have a pair of heavier shoes – Brooks Ravenna’s, but when I have my pack on, I want the lightest setup possible – so I go for the Pure Flows. I can’t say enough good things about this shoe. Love ’em.

The pack is an Ultimate Directions (model no longer made) … around 1300ci. It’s waterproof, has padded shoulder straps and thin waist and sternum straps. The trick to running with a pack on is to have it cinched up so tight that you almost can’t breathe. You want to pack to conform to your body and not move around on your shoulders when moving. Cinch it!

Not shown:
If I’m running at night I have the reflective tab on the back of the pack, but I’ll also use my red blinky light from my bike and maybe a headlamp.

I wear glasses so I take a hard case and carry my glasses in that (I can see well enough not to run into parked cars while running, so I don’t wear them).

Outbound. AKA – the return commute.
99% of the time it sucks. My running clothes never dry during the day, so I’m putting on cold and clammy shirt, socks, etc. I’m tired, hungry – it’s dark outside. The run is primarily uphill. I don’t shy away from it –  there are no illusions that it’s going to be “fun”. And I always have my jamz.

My Movie

Rule #1: it’s my movie

Wide angle showing the beach and Diamond Head … zooming above the water into Oahu … Waikiki Shopping Plaza… Armani Exchange.

It’s 3 days before Christmas and all the shoppers are out… Happy.Shopping.

Cut to the little elves working in their elven mine deep under an arctic ice sheet… digging up presents in the ice *Rule #1*)… uh oh… they found something

Quick (shaky) zoom into Santa… and wuh-oh. It’s a Kaiju dressed up like Santa. WHAAAATTT!!!  And he wants some Armani t-shirts. (*Rule #1*)

Time to call…

What do you think? Holiday Blockbuster? Kickstart it?

Consistency & Confidence

http://www.strava.com/activities/99283575

I’ve done this run so many times that I have it dialed. I thought yesterday afternoon about today’s run… trying to think of a new loop. Not the downtown loop again.

I know exactly how to run it – drop to the river, run the flats and then climb back out of a hole to get home. Strategically it suits me with a fast descending start. I can race the descent and bank my average for the suck that comes at mile 6. Up up. I’ve had the wheels come off on the flats on certain days… my form starts to waiver… if I’m listening to music – nothing sounds good. My stomach hurts… my hamstring feels weird… is that pain in my ankle there… or no? The demons start to creep in… “slow your roll man. Big ups are coming… conserve… the doubt… the fear”.  Fighting the demons and digging deep… a topic for another post.

If I want to go longer than 5 miles I either need to drop down the backside of Mt. Tabor and out and back on the 205 trail… keeping an eye out for meth heads or human misery jingling along the trail – bottles and cans in a shopping cart, or run through downtown into the west hills – combining my work lunch run with my commute run. I find it easier to link 2 familiar routes together than to run an entirely new route. The 16 mile enchainment earlier in the year that included going up and over council crest was just a linkup of 3 lunch runs plus my run commute. I’ll do that one again once the weather gets a little better. It was 17 degrees when I left this morning. How much to I want to suffer this morning?  A little or a lot?

I procrastinated for as long as I could this morning. I sat around reading the paper, sipping coffee… some water… at a certain point it becomes quite ridiculous – there is no rational way to convince myself to keep procrastinating. It becomes unbearable. I always seem to misplace my keys when I’m in this state – it’s a subconscious hijack. Who hid my keys? I did.

I was thinking.. it’s really cold… this is going to suck. And then realized that’s not a helpful way to think about the task soon to be underway. A quote I always return to is from Alex Lowe, whom I had the pleasure of meeting on two occasions. To paraphrase… “at a certain point – there is nothing left to do but get after it”. Then there is the switch. The decision is made and I buckle up. Flow control has been handed over. Did I make that decision… or was it someone else? Does it even matter?

When I was in high school, I used to run looking down at my feet – I have this memory of running before the sun came up through the nice neighborhood next to ours, the sodium street lights glowing yellow and there I am…staring down at my shoes. That thought creeps in when my form starts to fall apart. There was just a hint of it today,  right at the end of the run – I sensed it more than felt it. I was close to home and just as an mental exercise redoubled my focus on form – lengthened my stride, swung my arms more than felt normal.

I think this is the greatest lesson from running.  After a certain period of time things always fall apart. With practice and experience, you get better at noticing the subtle indicators. And you deal. And each time you get better.

Drivin’ N’  Cryin’ – Straight to Hell