(This is 50th
anniversary of my first article in Runner’s World magazine.
All year I post excerpts from my book, This Runner’s World.)
January
2002 (retitled in the magazine). Distance running is one sport that
requires doing less than your best most of the time. That is, you hold back now
so you can keep going later.
You can’t run an early mile of a long
race all-out, or you won’t finish. You can’t train your hardest every day
without ever easing off or resting, or you won’t last long.
Running far requires that you pace
yourself. Take that word “pace,” split it in half, add a few letters, and you
have “patience.” That’s what pacing is, an exercise in patience.
Walking to the Portland Marathon start
one year, I happened to pass a church. Chiseled in concrete on one wall was the
line, “Run with patience the race set before you.”
Someone more religious than I told me
later that these words are Biblical, from Hebrews 12:1. All I knew at the time
was how wisely they speak to runners, especially on marathon day.
A marathon demands patience, as
gratification there is long delayed. The race doesn’t start on race morning but
months earlier with the decision to enter and the commitment to train. You
spend more of the training days holding back than pushing ahead.
Even on marathon day the wait for your
final reward is long, with many hours of running separating the start from the
finish. The early miles feel too easy, but you restrain yourself then so the
late miles won’t seem unbearably hard.
Even while pacing yourself well, you
almost surely will run into what the British call “bad patches.” Your patience
is put to its sternest test as you wade through and wait out the inevitable trouble
spots – injuries, illnesses, crises of energy and confidence – that threatened
to end your big effort too soon.
The lessons of pacing yourself
patiently while training for and running marathons carries over to the race of
your life – the one that you hope will have no finish line except the ultimate
one. Here the right pace is one you can maintain indefinitely, through the good
years and the not so good.
One year in a longtime runner’s life is
like a mile in a marathon. You don’t run the first mile in six minutes if
you’re planning to finish with an eight-minute average. And you don’t push the
pace too hard in any season or year if you still expect to be running strongly
next year, or a decade or more down the road.
Either in races or in life, you can
push hard for a short distance or back off for the long haul. Rare is the
runner who can handle an intense pace for a long time.
I’m into my 44th year as a
runner. The length and pace of runs are nothing to shout about, but I take
certain pride in the longevity because it isn’t always easy to maintain.
The past year and a half tested my
patience more than any similar period had before. Without going into the gory
details, I caught a long-lasting, strength-sapping illness last year.
Finally recovered from that, I fell on
a sidewalk and did slow-healing damage to a hip. Running never stopped for more
than a week, but the runs themselves were never shorter or slower.
Here’s where patience came into play. I
couldn’t rush recovery but had hold back, do what was possible and wait for
better days ahead. Pace myself, in other words.
Taking a long-term view is most
important during and right after a bad-patch period. The urge is to break
through the trouble – to pick up the pace and make up for lost time.
This is a time to stay within
comfort-zone pace. Let progress come instead of trying futilely to hurry it.
The waiting isn’t as hard as it might
sound, as long as you see hope for eventual recovery. One off day is an
eye-blink in the life of a runner; it’s like a few steps in a marathon. One bad
month is but a marathoner’s minute; one year, less than a mile.
Taking the long view of pace gives you
patience, and with patience comes peace of mind. Fittingly that word “peace” is
in Italian spelled p-a-c-e.
2018
Update. I’m into my 60th year of running, and now much more a
walker than runner. If that’s the pace I need to keep putting in the miles,
it’s good enough.
[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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