(To mark twin 50th
anniversaries in 2017, as a fulltime running journalist and as a marathoner, I
am posting a piece for each of those years. This one comes from 2011.)
NINETY-NINE-point-nine-nine
percent of the time I run alone. Most runs end before the sun peeks above the
hills on our eastern horizon. Few runs repeat the same lap more than a handful
of times.
One
run this year broke all those habits. It circled a high school track for dozens
of laps. The black surface intensified the heat of the midday sun. I joined a
crowd of hundreds, mostly walkers, many of whom drifted into the runners-only
inside lane.
I
left my loner comfort zone for the best of reasons. This was our town’s annual
Relay for Life, which supports cancer causes, remembers the casualties, honors
the survivors, praises the caregivers. I ran for all those reasons, plus to
give thanks that I could still do this.
The
first 24 years of these local Relays had passed me by nearly unnoticed, though
relatives and friends had fought through or lost to cancer. Then I was
diagnosed myself with prostate cancer. It was treated early and apparently
successfully, and left me with new appreciation for how quickly good health can
turn bad – and often can return to good again through the miracles of modern
medicine.
In
my first post-treatment summer I ran 45 laps of the Relay, one for each day I’d
spent in radiation. I ran from predawn to sunrise – to symbolize passing from
the darkness of diagnosis into the light of recovery, but more prosaically to
minimize heat and crowding on the track.
When
planning my return to the Relay, I realized that the first run had been too
easy. Dealing with cancer is never ever easy, so I would raise the toughness
level by starting at noon when the day was hottest and the numbers were
highest.
During
opening ceremonies I stood with Jerry Stromme, a graduate of my marathon
training team. What he was doing was much bigger and more selfless than what I
had in mind. He never had cancer himself but came here to support those who do
or did have the disease that the Relay combats.
Jerry
expressed surprise at seeing my here. “This is the first time I’ve ever seen
you running,” he said. I joked that “it’s my kind of event. You can start
anytime you want and stop whenever you like.”
But
this wasn’t true for either of us. We both had our plans. His was to total 250
laps, or 100 kilometers. Mine was far less noteworthy – to run for two hours,
one for each year that had come between the dark days of exam and treatment
rooms and this bright summer afternoon.
My
plan took its last and best twist as I was about to leave home for the track. I
cut note cards into thin strips and wrote the name of someone to remember,
honor or thank on each lap.
I
wore shorts with pockets. As each lap began, I pulled a name card at random
from the left pocket, ran around the track holding that person in my hand, then
deposited the mini-card in the right pocket and drew another name for the next
lap.
WHILE
UNDERGOING treatment I had promised to become an activist in matters of
prostate-cancer awareness “after taking care of personal business.” Each
Fathers’ Day I help with a wonderfully named event, the Prost8K. All proceeds
go toward funding a free cancer-screening event a few weeks later.
About
1000 men are tested each summer, and 100 of them have results suspicious enough
to warrant further checking. Some cancers are caught when the odds of
successful treatment are greatest.
I’ve
seen detection work two ways. One of my grandfathers didn’t have any chance to
survive once his prostate cancer revealed itself. One of his sons, my uncle,
was tested early, treated and remained healthy 20 years later, in his 90s.
A
urologist found my cancer early, and two years after treatment I was doing
fine. I wanted the same for as many other men as possible.
I
also want runners to know that our activity doesn’t grant us immunity.
Marathon legend Bill Rodgers and Olympic marathon qualifier Benji Durden know
that as well as I do.
Each
of the men named above was among my honorees at Relay for Life. My two hours
ran out before the cards did, and I had to carry several at once on the final
lap – which wasn’t truly the last. The best two laps came later, at sundown.
The
first was for survivors, walked (slowly, to savor the moment) with hundreds of
fellow purple-shirted cancer veterans. Looking at many of them, I saw myself as
lucky to have had one of the more treatable forms. I saw too that we were all
the lucky ones to have outlived our disease so far.
Immediately
after this victory lap came another, where we joined our caregivers. I walked
with granddaughters Paige and Shaye, ages seven and five, who had given their
care without knowing it.
None
of us patients had to came this far back on our own. This had been a “we”
effort, not an “I.”
Notice
that there’s no mention here of how far I ran in two hours or at what pace. I’m
not telling because those results wouldn’t impress you and because this wasn’t
a race. There are other ways besides the numbers on a GPS or stopwatch to
define running well.
Walking
away from the track at dusk, with a granddaughter at each hand, we saw my
friend Jerry Stromme still running. He had been on the track for eight hours
already and would run well into the night before finishing his
100K-for-a-cause.
Photo: Blue-shirted veterans of
prostate cancer gather each summer for the well-named Prost8K.
[Many books of mine, old
and recent, are now available in two different formats: in print and as ebooks
from Amazon.com. The titles: Going Far, Home Runs, Joe’s Team, Learning to
Walk, Long Run Solution, Long Slow Distance, Miles to Go, Pacesetters, Run
Right Now, Run Right Now Training Log, See How We Run, Starting Lines, and This
Runner’s World, plus Rich Englehart’s book about me, Slow Joe.]
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