Confessions of a Distance Runner
- I can’t “eat anything I want” just because I run. I still have to watch what I eat.
- I don’t always watch what I eat.
- I wear my running tights to the grocery store.
- I think running tights are appropriate attire for anything short of a wedding or funeral. (Even then, it depends on the person.)
- I like GU. I eat it as a snack when I’m not running.
- I consider putting on a baseball cap “fixing my hair.”
- I spit.
- I look at my reflection in store windows when I run by shopping centers.
- I have a lot of “bad run” days.
- Even though I answer politely when people ask me “how long” my marathon was, deep down, a little part of my soul dies.
- I’ve learned toilet paper is not quite as necessary as some people may think.
- When I travel, my first concern is “What are the running routes from the hotel?”
- I don’t feel awake until I’ve gotten in my run for the day.
- I consider days that I don’t run a total wash.
- I cannot go into a running store without buying something. Ever.
- I am filled with euphoric joy when I discover a park bathroom that is open during winter.
- I always need more running gear, no matter how much I have.
- Most of my wardrobe blinks, lights up, or repels moisture.
- I once accidentally wore my headlamp into the grocery store. While it was on.
- I’ve changed clothes in more gas stations, Starbucks, Denny’s, and grocery stores than I can count.
- I consider spandex the fabric of my life.
- I very rarely feel fast.
- I often feel slow.
- I have a soft spot for clothing items in colors that could be mistaken for radioactive contamination.
- I think nothing of discussing gastrointestinal issues at the dinner table.
- I have bad dreams in the nights leading up to a marathon, usually involving forgetting my shoes and having to run the marathon in socks on a hardwood floor.
- I own more running shorts than I own dresses, skirts, pants, and regular shorts—combined.
- Half the time when I’m driving my car, I’m also sitting on a plastic trash bag or a towel because I just ran.
- I consider my car “clean” if there aren’t any dirty socks strewn across the floor.
- I have to “apologize for the smell” before passengers climb into my car.
- Whenever I see someone running (and I’m not running) I’m immediately filled with envy and feel like I should be out there too, even if I’ve already run twenty miles that morning.
- I consider a quick wipe-down with some paper towels and a little water basically as good as a shower.
- I’m always surprised that zippered pockets and reflectivity aren’t standard clothing characteristics.
- When I pass another distance runner in the park, I’ll give a little hand wave and head nod, like we’re in some secret club.
- I’m convinced that 90% of our nation’s problems stem from dehydration.
- When people show me vacation photos, I picture myself running there.
- I believe coffee really does taste better after a run.
- All I really want at race expos is free food and drink samples.
- I feel like all official race apparel is overpriced.
- Short-shorts don’t look that short to me anymore.
- Unless they’re not running shorts. Then they do.
- I’ve “fueled” many runs with birthday cake.
- I feel an immediate bond with anyone running with a hydration belt.
- After a successful long run or tempo, I relay my mile splits to my entire family, even though I know they don’t care and would probably pay me not to tell them.
- The way I feel after a long run is one of my favorite feelings ever, sore joints and all.
- I feel really cool when I run trails.
- Sometimes running is really hard.
- I spend 90% of race morning either in the bathroom or standing in line to use the bathroom.
- I’m always hungry.
- Sometimes I think about nothing during my entire run. Like, I’ll get home, and I’ll honestly have no idea what I thought about the whole time.
- I can farmer’s blow like a champ.
- I secretly wish I could be in a NIKE commercial.
- I can’t look at other runners or people working out at the gym without judging the shoes they’re wearing.
- Whenever someone passes me during a training run, I always assume they’re not going as far as I am.
- I’ve sabotaged my own run by trying to keep up with runners too fast for me.
- I’d rather run a marathon than race a mile.
- I never feel worse than when I’m tapering.
- I don’t care if the guy pushing the stroller is an elite runner. It still stings a little when he passes me.
- I’ve re-worn dirty socks to run in because I forgot to bring clean ones.
- Even though I love starting my day with a run, most of the time I feel like hurling my clock across the room when the alarm goes off.
- I look like a total freak at restaurants because the server always has to fill up my water more than anyone else’s.
- Most servers usually end up saying, “I’ll just leave the pitcher on the table.”
- I wish I were faster.
- If I have to choose between showering before a social event and finishing my scheduled miles for the day, I’ll always choose the latter.
- I am overcome with a feeling of dread the moment I click the “submit” button on an online race registration.
- I have an “emergency run kit” in my car, just in case an unexpected opportunity to run pops up.
- Most days I put on my running clothes, go for a run, get cleaned up, and then put on different running clothes.
- I consider jeans “dressing up.”
- I fantasize about being an elite running with the lead pack at a major marathon.
- I have no idea what is causing the obvious shortage of Mylar blankets at races.
- I say “Kara” and “Shalane” and “Meb” and expect people to know whom I’m talking about.
- Part of me believes that if I could only be picked up by the NIKE Oregon Project, I would be the next great American distance runner.
- I can’t part with any piece of running apparel until the stench is so bad I offend myself.
- I know the distance from my front door to any minor landmark to the hundredth of a mile.
- The night before a marathon, I always “change my mind” and decide I don’t want to race after all.
- Part of me hates packet pickup for marathons because I always end up comparing myself to all the other participants at the expo and usually walk away feeling like the least prepared person there.
- Part of me loves marathon expos because of the energy.
- I believe running keeps you young.
- Sometimes my family will ask me, “Did you run today?” and then shove me out the door because I’m so unpleasant until I get my run in.
- You know how they say distance runners go to the bathroom anywhere and everywhere? It’s true.
- Cowbells really do make me run faster.
- So do drums.
- When spectators at races cheer me on, I feel like each of them is there just for me, even though we’ve never met.
- I know I will never be able to thank race volunteers enough.
- I feel like running is part of my existence, like breathing.
- Deep down, I know it is.
- When I see other runners on early morning runs, and we wave and greet each other with smiles, my faith in humanity is restored.
- I’ve learned that you can’t be a distance runner without having a sense of adventure.
- Or fun. Or trouble.
- I truly believe runners are some of the greatest people in the world.
- And I’m totally serious about the NIKE commercial thing.
Amy L. Marxkors is the author of The Lola Papers: Marathons, Misadventures, and How I Became a Serious Runner. Her second book, Powered By Hope: The Teri Griege Story, will be released in 2014.
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