I woke this morning to the sound of a train. A large freight
train, probably headed for some Midwest junction loaded with pallets of iron
and steel to feed our staggering economy. It was 4:30 am (eastern standard
time) when I looked down on the clanging string of box cars from my 18
floor hotel room. It was still dark out and exactly 5 hours before my normal
waking hour.
Like getting enough sleep. I don’t know how many times I’ve
read that I need 8 hours of sleep each night, especially when running a lot. It’s
all about recovery they say. Hell, when I’m traveling, if I get 5 hours of
sleep per night I’m not just feeling good, I’m feeling guilty. Trains, time
zones, early flights, business dinners, meetings, jet lag, noisy hotel rooms,
arid hotel rooms, caffeine, all of these things, they just suck the sleep right
out of me.
Or eating a healthy, balanced diet. You know, the kind with lots of fruits and vegetables, protein, not too much fat and always enough fiber.
Ehhh…on the road? Does red wine, New York strip steak, mashed potatoes, gravy
and crème brulee qualify as a balanced training meal? Maybe for a Henry the Eighth
jousting battle but probably not for the next 100k. I know, I need to be more
creative with my meals. But I’m traveling in the mid west people!
Another is getting quality workouts. This one is a joke. Just
when I’m supposed to be doing hill training to prepare for a race in the
mountains, I’m running on bike path next to a river in Ohio. When I’m supposed
to be building my skill on technical trails riddled with rocks, I’m running
through an airport terminal trying to avoid security. It sounds absurd, but
there is a certain beauty in absurdity. And, yes, I’m proud to have been
stopped by airport security on more than one occasion! For me, it doesn't really matter—whether I’m
training after a good night’s sleep and a helping of barley juice on a pristine
trail overlooking some awe-inspiring mountain range, or red eyed with
indigestion in the airport parking garage in Chicago, I’m still running.
If I
have the right perspective, I often find there are just as many interesting
things to experience when running in less ideal places and conditions. In fact, when traveling, I find these unfamiliar places often have a little more
flavor—with a little more indigestion, of course.