Happy Birthday, Michael!

Last week went by in a blur. We returned from the west coast, celebrated four birthdays, grieved with dear friends, and went head over heels into Nutcracker season. 

I kicked off the 31 Days series (and already missed a day), but I didn't get the traditional birthday posts in. So, here's to catching up.

When I was 24, I was diagnosed with cancer. Michael was a baby then, 18 months old and still nursing when our lives turned upside down. It was a long year and he was very much aware. He's also been very much aware of the shadow that is life after cancer. I knew that. What I didn't know is that Michael has always been a little afraid of 24. In his mind, people get cancer when they're 24.

When he was 24, sure enough, cancer came knocking. But it wasn't Michael. And it wasn't me. It was Michael's best friend, Shawn. That made 25 very, very hard.

The fall of 25 held deep and gripping grief. First, Michael lost his beloved grandfather. Then, he watched his best friend slip away very, very quickly. 

When Michael was little, we were big fans of Solomon the Supersonic Salamander. He sang songs from Proverbs. Michael and I belted out the beat about "a friend who sticks closer than a brother" every time we drove any where. It was embedded into who he was. I had no idea how deeply and truly embedded.

Shawn had two brothers. They're great guys--strong, faithful, unwavering. But when cancer took that strong body and distorted it into a swollen, painful unrecognizable mess, a third young man stood vigil with them beside the bed. Closer than a brother, or at least as close. And when the cancer started talking nonsense and Shawn didn't sound like himself, Michael bantered back to the Shawn he knew. When Shawn went home to Jesus, Michael stood tall and bore witness to Shawn's witness. It was truly something to behold. 

A few weeks later, the light shone through the clouds. In the very early morning on April 25, Lucy Shawn was born. The towheaded boy became a Daddy. From the depths of grief to life's greatest joy, 25 was quite a year for my eldest son. 

He did a few other things with 25. He went to Brazil and covered the World Cup. He carved a niche for himself in the world of sportswriters and truly became a world class sportstweeter*, with over 117,000 followers.He got nominated for awards. He turned heads.  But when he looks back on 25, this will be there year that he lost Granddad and he lost Shawn, and he welcomed Lucy into the world.  

Big, big year.

Now, he's 26.

I pray for peace for you this year, my boy. Peace and all that is good

 

*this is how Nick refers to Michael's job. 

Inspiration as the Sun Breaks Through the Clouds


Unedited iPhone shots this morning. It's good to be home:-)

Unedited iPhone shots this morning. It's good to be home:-)

If one could run without getting tired, I don't think one would often want to do anything else.

--C. S. Lewis

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Remember, the feeling you get from a good run is far better than the feeling you get from sitting around wishing you were running. 

--Sarah Condor

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If you can fill the unforgiving minute with 60 seconds worth of distance, run, yours is the earth and everything that’s in it, and — which is more — you’ll be a man, my son.

--Rudyard Kipling

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I always loved running…it was something you could do by yourself, and under your own power. You could go in any direction, fast or slow as you wanted, fighting the wind if you felt like it, seeking out new sights just on the strength of your feet and the courage of your lungs.

--Jesse Owens

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Believe that you can run farther or faster. Believe that you’re young enough, old enough, strong enough, and so on to accomplish everything you want to do. Don’t let worn-out beliefs stop you from moving beyond yourself.

--John Bingham

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Go fast enough to get there, but slow enough to see.

--Jimmy Buffett

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To be a runner is to learn continual life lessons. To be a coach is not just to teach these lessons but also to feel them in the core of your marrow. The very act of surpassing personal limits in training and racing will bend the mind and body toward a higher purpose for the rest of my runners' lives. Settling for mediocrity-settling instead of pushing-those who learn to be the best version of themselves know the secret to a full life.

Martin Dugard

 

I Will Never Run a Marathon

Yesterday, was a "rest" day. Usually I walk between 5 and 8 miles on the rest days. I didn't get to it until nearly sunset. It had been a hard day--the day of the funeral of a friend who leaves behind a wife and two young children. I admit, I ran a …

Yesterday, was a "rest" day. Usually I walk between 5 and 8 miles on the rest days. I didn't get to it until nearly sunset. It had been a hard day--the day of the funeral of a friend who leaves behind a wife and two young children. I admit, I ran a little during the "walk" just shake the stress out.

I've read a stack of running books lately, listened to a ridiculous number of running podcasts. That's what I do. I gain a new interest and then I read voraciously about that interest. Over the years, I've acquired and borrowed books on all sorts of things: pregnancy, childbirth, babies, homeschooling, cancer, nutrition, theology, gardening, and more. My bookshelves are bursting. And now I have running books. 

They're interesting. Several of them are memoir-type books, or memoirs with lots of practical advice thrown in. It's interesting to read memoirs that aren't faith-based; an education in a whole new population of people. (I would love to read a Christian running book, though, because the ones I've read don't really feel "familiar.") What's more interesting is understanding the psyche behind people committed to running, running well, and running long distances. When I read those books, I'm sure I could run a marathon. 

Then I step away from the book.

I'm 48. My feet hurt. My knees hurt. I'm homeschooling 6 kids and frequently visiting 3 more. I bore all 9 of those children {ahem}. I'm nurturing several elite athletes. I'm someone's Nona. After all my reading, I think I know how to run a marathon. I even think I'd like to run a marathon. However, it is highly unlikely that I am well-suited-- physically or otherwise-- to run a marathon. and I'm pretty much OK with that. I have my own personal running goals, ones that suit my body, my temperament, and most importantly, my family. 

I am a terrible Tweeter. Wait! This is going somewhere. I promise it's all related.

The other day, I got on Twitter for the first time in about ten days. I just always forget about Twitter. I tried to be social and appropriate and respond to 35 notifications. In doing so, I found myself on someone else's Twitter feed, scrolling through all her tweets to find the one I wanted to answer. My goodness! She'd tweeted a lot that week. And most of her tweets were tweets about places she was writing and projects she was posting. The productivity was astounding. 

And I felt guilty. I know how to do all those things, write all those things. I've listened to more blogging/social media/ how-to-write books and podcasts than I ever listened to running ones. I think I can even objectively say I have a gift for writing. But writing isn't just lacing up one's shoes and running 3 miles in the morning any more. It's committing to a marathon a month and the strict schedule of tempo runs, hill repeats, and weekly long runs. I know how to be a prolific, successful writer. And I know that I am no more suited to that at this time in my life than I am to running a marathon. 

It has taken a summer of long walks and the sound of footfall over and over again to be okay with that. I admire the marathoners--both the writing ones and the running ones.  I've lived my whole life believing that if I just try hard enough, I can do anything. Mostly, that's come true. But now, at midlife, I recognize that I might be able to do anything, but it's not wise for me to do some things. Just as I do not have the body of a marathoner, I am not created to be a mega-blogger who devotes herself to the hard work of publishing prolifically. I can't do that and do this--this life at home--well. I can't train for a marathon and take care of my family, either. Besides, I'm not sure a marathon would be a particularly healthy thing for me to do. It works for other people--younger people, people who don't have my health history, people who are in a different time and place in their lives. But not me. Thank God for the marathon writers! What they have added to our collective wisdom is a blessing. I am not one of them and I don't aspire to be. 

I'm just shooting to be a 5 miles in the morning every day kind of gal. 

So, I made this button. I like it. It took me a few minutes while sitting in a parking lot. It doesn't click to any where. I don't know how to do that and don't have the time to Google it. I expect that somewhere along the way, Mary Beth might connect it for me. (Or not. She's really busy these days and she has decided she wants to squeeze some running into her schedule and do a Turkey Trot 5K with me. Go her!) I haven't done all the other linking and tweeting I'm supposed to for the 31 Days things either. I'm going to try to do that today, but I've got another birthday to celebrate tomorrow and I really need to put my brain to that. Oh, and we have a well-established tradition of birthday posts and I'm already three behind ... 

So here you go, my "quick morning run" button, which isn't even button-sized. But it will be. Maybe.

Resting in the Run

One day, in late June, I decided to start taking a walk every day. I bought a pedometer, promised myself 10,000 steps and started discovering paths. I walked my neighborhood. I walked trails near soccer parks all over Northern Virginia. I walked in Charlottesville. By the end of August, I’d walked 475 miles. I even climbed a mountain. September came, and I started to run. My body grew stronger. I got faster (but not by much). Slowly, I began to ask myself why. Why was I spending so much time covering long distances, mostly by myself?

 

Because every walk was a sabbath. And I was desperately in need of a sabbath.

 

I am the mother of a large family, a woman whose husband travels, a writer who is compelled by the industry to engage in social media. All day, every day, I am besieged by people who draw from me. Recently someone asked me how I found the time to log that kind of mileage in a summer. I replied that a younger me would have said it was a very selfish summer. The wiser me says it was long overdue self-care.

Motherhood is a 24/7 “job.” At a time when all the other mothers from the 1989 playgroup with my firstborn are now settling into empty nests, I am still doing four loads of laundry a day, homeschooling six children who remain at home and scurrying from soccer to ballet and back again. This parenting gig is a marathon, and I’ve discovered I literally need running shoes to go the distance.

In a world where email and text messaging make one perpetually available at all hours and on all days, it’s not just mothers who are struggling to find moments of rest, never mind the whole day of rest every week as our Creator intended. The old cliche about the mom who can’t even go the bathroom without her children following her? Notice how many people take their smartphones into the place where once phones rarely went.

It’s not just mothers who are on 24/7 anymore. There is a universal expectation that text messages and emails will be received as soon as they are sent. Responses are expected shortly thereafter. Recently, my husband set his email to auto-respond and let people know that he was “stepping away” from his desk for the day. Undaunted, they tried to engage anyway; his text alerts began to chime at an alarming rate. There was no stepping away.

We are hard-wired for constant interaction, and somehow our bodies have overridden the default “rest mode.” After several years of existing this way, despite my attempts to intentionally limit digital input (and output) and avoid the overscheduling of my children, I found myself feeling exhausted and, oddly, alone. I was completely out of touch with myself.

Without a sabbath, a woman feels herself slowly going a bit mad. The clamoring around her reaches a deafening crescendo, and the highways (both physical and virtual) demand increasingly impossible velocity and distance. Panic presses in, and she becomes aware, as Ghandi observed, that “there is more to life than increasing speed. “

I don’t run (or walk or hike) for speed. I run to slow down. I run to rest.

I have found that the only way to a really rest is to get up an hour earlier, lace my shoes, set my phone to airplane mode and allow only the sounds of carefully chosen music or a well-produced audiobook to invade my brain space. Then the rhythm of my feet and the feel of the outdoors — whether sticky and humid or crisp and cool — awaken me to the sense of being created, both body and soul. To move, particularly outdoors, is to appreciate that we are souls living in bodies. So often, we underappreciate the corporeal. The combination of activity and free-flowing conversation with oneself rejuvenates and restores equilibrium. An awareness of one’s body, even if the awareness includes the burning of one’s legs and the pounding of one’s heart, brings thoughts into sharper focus. Sometimes, I am sure that oxygen deprivation has wiped out my short-term memory, and I have very little recollection of what I thought along the way, despite the clarity in the moment.

But I know I had a meaningful conversation with myself. And I know that God was the only other being who heard it. So, that explains to me why I return at peace, feeling stronger, more disciplined, and more capable of meeting the challenges of the day. I have rested in the run.

Running into Myself

On our first morning in California, with Mike’s encouragement, I got up to run along the beach in Santa Barbara. Six weeks ago, I started the Couch-to-5K program. I’m eager to tell you more about the how and the why of its beginning, but today, I want to share with you Week 5, Day 3.

 

Couch-to-5K is walking-to-running program. It begins slowly, with very short running intervals and much longer walking intervals, for a total of about 30-40 minutes of training every other day. I’ve been committed to it. I walk at least 5 miles every day and I try to stick to C25K every other day. Sometimes I go two days between runs; sometimes, I repeat the previous day’s run because I’m not satisfied with my own performance.

 

I haven’t been tempted to give up, but I have worried more than a little about whether I will be able to finish.  Every once in awhile, I get utterly disgusted and send Paddy my performance record. I do this because I know Paddy will only respond with exactly the encouragement necessary. I’m not sure how he does this, but I am very certain it’s an extraordinary gift.

 

The night before my Santa Barbara run, Mike and I took a walk. I have become something of a marathon walker. I can walk and walk and walk, without tiring. I’ve literally logged half marathon walking days, just doing my everyday thing. On this evening, my husband was a very cheerful companion for all eight miles. Since I’d walked so far, I knew exactly where I wanted to run and how to time it the next morning.

 

Week 5, Day 3 is the first time the aspiring runner is asked to run without a walking interval. It’s a 5-minute walking warm-up, a 20 minute run, and a 5 minute cooldown. The longest I’d ever run without walking was 8 minutes. And that wasn’t pretty.

 

I timed the warm-up so that I arrived at the beach just as the run prompt was voiced. Mary Beth has made me a new running playlist of uplifting Christian music that was supposed to inspire me to run around a 10-minute mile (hah!). I started running. And I felt great. The sun was just coming up. I took some pictures on the go. I tried not to glance too often at my phone with the app running, clocking time and speed. I’d told myself I would turn around at the halfway point. I never heard her say I was halfway. I glanced at my phone. Seven minutes to go.

 

Maybe I could run those seven minutes and end up at the pier. Then I’d walk the pier and stop to take some pictures. Maybe I could do it fast enough to get there in time to get good sunrise pictures.

 

My hair began to curl in corkscrews across my forehead. Persistent neck pain all summer has kept me from wearing a headband. The corkscrew bangs drive me nuts every day. On this day, though, along the beach and feeling so good as I ran, I thought about my grandfather. He gave me these curls. He had tight, tiny corkscrews all over his head.

 

My grandfather was an athlete. An Olympic caliber swimmer, an avid cyclist, a man in motion all the time. He taught me to swim. First, I laid belly down on a board suspended between two chairs in his kitchen. Stroke technique without the water, over and over I stroked and he critiqued, going absolutely nowhere. Then he took me to the ocean and I swam off the coast of Long Island. A few years later, we swam together off the coast of Florida.

 

I remember a conversation in his basement, before he moved to Florida. I must have been about ten. I remember exactly where we were standing—the way you remember defining moments. He showed me a picture his brother had painted. His eyes grew dark and serious.


My brother was a talented artist, so very creative. Sometimes, many times, creative people have a dark side. They get sad; they think too much; they are held captive by their thoughts. The darkness can kill them.

 

He watched me carefully and I knew he was trying to tell me something important.

 

You’re a pensive type. I don’t know if you will paint or draw, but you will create. You will think big thoughts. Don’t let the darkness come too close. I keep moving. You can keep moving, too. Exercise will always be your friend. Take good care of your body. Always take good care of your body.

 

I haven’t thought about that conversation in so many years. I didn’t really know what he was driving at then and I still don’t know exactly, but on the beach in Santa Barbara, grace lit the morning. I think it’s entirely possible my grandfather knew a thing or two about depression and he was passing along his anti-depressant of choice.

 

I reached the pier and still had more time left to run. I ran the whole length of the pier and started back towards home before I heard the prompt to cool down. I’d run the whole time—no walking breaks, no real struggle.  Twenty minutes: I’d done it. Maybe, just maybe, it’s not too late. Maybe I can be a runner after all.

 

The sky was glorious. I wanted to laugh and to cry at the surreal moment at hand. I was on the beach, 3,000 miles from home, staring wonderingly into the sky.

 

I was middle-aged and still figuring it out.

 

Who decides to start running when she’s 48?

 

I have about four weeks left of couch-to-5K. I got a little off track while traveling. I’ve never been very good at the “31 days of ….” October challenge. I don’t have a button made or a catchy title for the series (suggestions welcome). But here we are at the beginning of October and I’d like to share a little bit about the marathon that is life and about how I see the long run taking shape before me.  I’d like to share with you the things I think about as I run and walk and try to sort out how fast life is changing in my home and in my body.

 

Come along? I promise we will stop to walk and take plenty of pictures along the way.