Page 106
Story: Runner 13
47
Adrienne
I appear to be in a deep bowl. The sun is high in the sky – according to my watch, it’s gone noon and soon we’ll be hitting the hottest part of the day.
I say we. There is no ‘we’. There’s only me.
I’ve lost track of the miles. One hundred? One hundred and fifty? I stagger from one water cache to the next, sometimes searching for that tiny glow stick for what feels like hours, hallucinating lights that are popping up all over the place, like moles in the ground, disappearing the moment I get close.
People say that running races is good practice for the challenges life throws at you. But I don’t agree. A race has a course to follow: a starting line and a finish. Even if that course takes me through the harshest environments on the planet – through snow and ice in Norway, driving rain and bogs in Yorkshire, or the supreme heat and brutal sandstorms of the Sahara Desert – I know that if I put one foot in front of the other, I’m making progress in the right direction.
If there’s anything I’ve learned about life, it’s that it’s nothing like that. I’ve spent years ploughing ahead in a direction I thought was the right one, only to have the ground give way beneath my feet. One foot in front of the other? How can you keep going, keep making progress,when at any point you could hit a dead end through no fault of your own? Every step in life is into the unknown.
It’s why sometimes I feel like I can’t step forward at all.
Paralysis sets in. I get terrified that I’m going to make a wrong move.
It’s why the Ampersand races never held any appeal for me. I understand why Boones does it. To emulate life itself. To make each step unpredictable. To just survive one of his races is to win.
So why? Why are they so popular? Why did I agree to do it, when I know that failure is almost a guarantee, and the only inevitability is suffering?
I think after everything I’ve been through these last seven years, I understand myself better now. And I understand the Ampersand races better too. The joy is in the expectation of failure. If success is a given, it’s no longer interesting. It’s not about self-flagellation or a masochistic desire to feel pain. It’s about putting myself in the arena. About satisfying that little voice inside that asks can you do a little bit more? A sneaking suspicion that if I truly asked myself that question – really tested it – I would find out that I have no limit.
Ha. Me too.
The arrogance.
Whatever limit there is, I’ve found it. If there’s a precipice, I’ve tumbled off it. I’m so tired I keep falling asleep on my feet. I want to cry. I want to sleep. I want to curl up into a ball and succumb to oblivion.
My muscles no longer protest every step, but instead they feel like they’ve turned to molasses. I even glance behind me, to see if someone has strapped an anchor tomy back that’s dragging in the sand. But there’s nothing there except my footprints.
I stare ahead. In front of me I no longer see the route. I see an all-encompassing darkness, the mouth of the pain cave yawning open. I have no choice but to hurtle straight into it. ‘Hello, my old friend,’ it says to me. ‘Welcome home.’
The pain cave. A familiar place for any ultrarunner. Pain is a given in this sport, something I’ve become intimately acquainted with. To run these distances is to learn to accept that it is going to hurt. The metaphor of the cave is apt – it’s a dark place, but it’s a shelter. It means that I’m alive. It means I’m moving. It means I’m enduring.
Yet this pain cave is anything but comfortable. There’s barely any cushioning in there, my brain colliding against the sharp, jagged edges of things I don’t know. How far is left? How many more hours until this is over?
I have a choice now. I can keep the cave this bleak, dark place – only marginally better than letting my mind deal with reality. Or I can pick up a paintbrush and apply it to the walls of the cave, fill it with colour and life, make it an enjoyable place to be. I can make this a place of beauty, not despair.
For a time it works. I distract myself, covering the walls with pictures of my favourite things – of Ethan, of the fells, of dips in shallow mountain pools and the scent of heather in the air. I actually feel my body unfurl and relax as I think of the lakes – diving into the refreshing cool water, glistening in the late-summer evening light – or as I picture curling up with a novel in front of my little wood burner.
But the cave doesn’t play fair – and lurking deep inside there are also monsters.
Memories I’ve tried so hard to bury spring to life, playing in front of my eyes.
‘You’re my star runner,’ Coach Glenn says. In front of him I see a steaming plate of battered fish and salty chips. We’re in Poole; we’ve just done a huge training block along the Jurassic Coast, pounding the cliffs and the relentless changes of elevation. He’s put me on a programme designed to harden up SAS soldiers. Despite the fact that I run because I love it, he wants to push me. Annoyingly, my body is responding to it. I’m getting better – running faster, with more endurance, and winning races. Coach Glenn knows me better than I know myself.
I reach out to grab a chip off his plate, but he bats my hand away. Instead, it’s a pre-prepared meal out of a Tupperware for me – quinoa and butternut squash providing a surge of carbohydrates, grilled turkey for protein, Greek yoghurt for fat. Every micro- and macronutrient has been calculated to give my body the optimum opportunity for recovery and growth.
But sometimes a girl just wants a chip, you know?
Coach pops one in his mouth and chews, grinning. He knows exactly what he’s doing. It’s not only the physical side he trains. It’s the mental resilience. Sometimes that means putting up with his taunts, dealing with emotions like jealousy and resentment, learning how to channel that into motivation for a better, stronger run.
For some reason now, out in the desert, I can taste that mouthful of grains and cold squash. It makes mystomach queasy. But actually, it’s not because of the thought of food. It’s because of the memory of what he says next.
‘Have you heard of any other prominent young runners coming up in the circuit?’ he asks, his tone light. Nonchalant. ‘I’m going to hold one of my special Boones training camps again. I don’t want another year to go by without an Ampersand race win.’
It’s never been enough for him that I win other races – the Yorkshire 100 is my target and he knows it – not an Ampersand race. But he’s obsessed with them. He wants to see a woman finish one – maybe even win one.
Adrienne
I appear to be in a deep bowl. The sun is high in the sky – according to my watch, it’s gone noon and soon we’ll be hitting the hottest part of the day.
I say we. There is no ‘we’. There’s only me.
I’ve lost track of the miles. One hundred? One hundred and fifty? I stagger from one water cache to the next, sometimes searching for that tiny glow stick for what feels like hours, hallucinating lights that are popping up all over the place, like moles in the ground, disappearing the moment I get close.
People say that running races is good practice for the challenges life throws at you. But I don’t agree. A race has a course to follow: a starting line and a finish. Even if that course takes me through the harshest environments on the planet – through snow and ice in Norway, driving rain and bogs in Yorkshire, or the supreme heat and brutal sandstorms of the Sahara Desert – I know that if I put one foot in front of the other, I’m making progress in the right direction.
If there’s anything I’ve learned about life, it’s that it’s nothing like that. I’ve spent years ploughing ahead in a direction I thought was the right one, only to have the ground give way beneath my feet. One foot in front of the other? How can you keep going, keep making progress,when at any point you could hit a dead end through no fault of your own? Every step in life is into the unknown.
It’s why sometimes I feel like I can’t step forward at all.
Paralysis sets in. I get terrified that I’m going to make a wrong move.
It’s why the Ampersand races never held any appeal for me. I understand why Boones does it. To emulate life itself. To make each step unpredictable. To just survive one of his races is to win.
So why? Why are they so popular? Why did I agree to do it, when I know that failure is almost a guarantee, and the only inevitability is suffering?
I think after everything I’ve been through these last seven years, I understand myself better now. And I understand the Ampersand races better too. The joy is in the expectation of failure. If success is a given, it’s no longer interesting. It’s not about self-flagellation or a masochistic desire to feel pain. It’s about putting myself in the arena. About satisfying that little voice inside that asks can you do a little bit more? A sneaking suspicion that if I truly asked myself that question – really tested it – I would find out that I have no limit.
Ha. Me too.
The arrogance.
Whatever limit there is, I’ve found it. If there’s a precipice, I’ve tumbled off it. I’m so tired I keep falling asleep on my feet. I want to cry. I want to sleep. I want to curl up into a ball and succumb to oblivion.
My muscles no longer protest every step, but instead they feel like they’ve turned to molasses. I even glance behind me, to see if someone has strapped an anchor tomy back that’s dragging in the sand. But there’s nothing there except my footprints.
I stare ahead. In front of me I no longer see the route. I see an all-encompassing darkness, the mouth of the pain cave yawning open. I have no choice but to hurtle straight into it. ‘Hello, my old friend,’ it says to me. ‘Welcome home.’
The pain cave. A familiar place for any ultrarunner. Pain is a given in this sport, something I’ve become intimately acquainted with. To run these distances is to learn to accept that it is going to hurt. The metaphor of the cave is apt – it’s a dark place, but it’s a shelter. It means that I’m alive. It means I’m moving. It means I’m enduring.
Yet this pain cave is anything but comfortable. There’s barely any cushioning in there, my brain colliding against the sharp, jagged edges of things I don’t know. How far is left? How many more hours until this is over?
I have a choice now. I can keep the cave this bleak, dark place – only marginally better than letting my mind deal with reality. Or I can pick up a paintbrush and apply it to the walls of the cave, fill it with colour and life, make it an enjoyable place to be. I can make this a place of beauty, not despair.
For a time it works. I distract myself, covering the walls with pictures of my favourite things – of Ethan, of the fells, of dips in shallow mountain pools and the scent of heather in the air. I actually feel my body unfurl and relax as I think of the lakes – diving into the refreshing cool water, glistening in the late-summer evening light – or as I picture curling up with a novel in front of my little wood burner.
But the cave doesn’t play fair – and lurking deep inside there are also monsters.
Memories I’ve tried so hard to bury spring to life, playing in front of my eyes.
‘You’re my star runner,’ Coach Glenn says. In front of him I see a steaming plate of battered fish and salty chips. We’re in Poole; we’ve just done a huge training block along the Jurassic Coast, pounding the cliffs and the relentless changes of elevation. He’s put me on a programme designed to harden up SAS soldiers. Despite the fact that I run because I love it, he wants to push me. Annoyingly, my body is responding to it. I’m getting better – running faster, with more endurance, and winning races. Coach Glenn knows me better than I know myself.
I reach out to grab a chip off his plate, but he bats my hand away. Instead, it’s a pre-prepared meal out of a Tupperware for me – quinoa and butternut squash providing a surge of carbohydrates, grilled turkey for protein, Greek yoghurt for fat. Every micro- and macronutrient has been calculated to give my body the optimum opportunity for recovery and growth.
But sometimes a girl just wants a chip, you know?
Coach pops one in his mouth and chews, grinning. He knows exactly what he’s doing. It’s not only the physical side he trains. It’s the mental resilience. Sometimes that means putting up with his taunts, dealing with emotions like jealousy and resentment, learning how to channel that into motivation for a better, stronger run.
For some reason now, out in the desert, I can taste that mouthful of grains and cold squash. It makes mystomach queasy. But actually, it’s not because of the thought of food. It’s because of the memory of what he says next.
‘Have you heard of any other prominent young runners coming up in the circuit?’ he asks, his tone light. Nonchalant. ‘I’m going to hold one of my special Boones training camps again. I don’t want another year to go by without an Ampersand race win.’
It’s never been enough for him that I win other races – the Yorkshire 100 is my target and he knows it – not an Ampersand race. But he’s obsessed with them. He wants to see a woman finish one – maybe even win one.
Table of Contents
- Page 1
- Page 2
- Page 3
- Page 4
- Page 5
- Page 6
- Page 7
- Page 8
- Page 9
- Page 10
- Page 11
- Page 12
- Page 13
- Page 14
- Page 15
- Page 16
- Page 17
- Page 18
- Page 19
- Page 20
- Page 21
- Page 22
- Page 23
- Page 24
- Page 25
- Page 26
- Page 27
- Page 28
- Page 29
- Page 30
- Page 31
- Page 32
- Page 33
- Page 34
- Page 35
- Page 36
- Page 37
- Page 38
- Page 39
- Page 40
- Page 41
- Page 42
- Page 43
- Page 44
- Page 45
- Page 46
- Page 47
- Page 48
- Page 49
- Page 50
- Page 51
- Page 52
- Page 53
- Page 54
- Page 55
- Page 56
- Page 57
- Page 58
- Page 59
- Page 60
- Page 61
- Page 62
- Page 63
- Page 64
- Page 65
- Page 66
- Page 67
- Page 68
- Page 69
- Page 70
- Page 71
- Page 72
- Page 73
- Page 74
- Page 75
- Page 76
- Page 77
- Page 78
- Page 79
- Page 80
- Page 81
- Page 82
- Page 83
- Page 84
- Page 85
- Page 86
- Page 87
- Page 88
- Page 89
- Page 90
- Page 91
- Page 92
- Page 93
- Page 94
- Page 95
- Page 96
- Page 97
- Page 98
- Page 99
- Page 100
- Page 101
- Page 102
- Page 103
- Page 104
- Page 105
- Page 106
- Page 107
- Page 108
- Page 109
- Page 110
- Page 111
- Page 112
- Page 113
- Page 114
- Page 115
- Page 116
- Page 117
- Page 118
- Page 119
- Page 120
- Page 121
- Page 122
- Page 123
- Page 124