Further Thoughts on Running

As I’ve noted elsewhere, running has become a fabric in the tapestry of my spiritual journey. It has become a metaphor for much about the journey — successes, failures, getting lost or distracted, plodding slowly along. As such, here are a few learnings along the way.

EVERYTHING I NEED TO KNOW ABOUT LIFE

I LEARNED FROM RUNNING

1. Find a sensible pace, fast enough to challenge you yet not so fast that you hurt yourself.

2. When a driver lets you cross without running you over, wave and say “Thank you!”

3. Make sure to go to the bathroom when you start out. Ignoring your body will get you in trouble.

4. Don’t get so focused on the stopwatch that you miss the sunrise.

5.Run with somebody sometimes and run alone sometimes. Learn to appreciate both.

6. Listen to yourself. Don’t quit at every little hurt but don’t ignore the big ones.

7. When someone yells at you or throws something at you, ignore it and keep running.

8. Be careful at night. Don’t let your fear get the best of you yet don’t be foolish. Respect the dark.

9. Run in different places. Covering the same ground over and over can get boring.

10. Say hello to passing runners and walkers even if they don’t say hello in return.

11. If another runner is struggling, say a word of encouragement.

12. Don’t judge slow runners. Someday someone will be faster than you.

13. Learn from a bad run and be grateful for a good run.

14. Savor each day you can run. The time will surely come when you can’t run anymore.

14. Above all, run in the rain. Splash through the puddles as drivers look at you like you’re mad. For a moment, you might be a child again.

GOOD RUN!

About richp45198

I am a clinical psychologist and have an abiding interest in matters spiritual.
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2 Responses to Further Thoughts on Running

  1. Laura says:

    Rich, This is great!! Will you please share on LinkedIn so I can share with all my Wellness folks? I think many would enjoy this.

  2. Susan Bass says:

    For the past 13 years I have spent my whole day sitting. Two hours a day commuting in a car and ten hours a day sitting at a desk. A child waited at each end of my commute and hungry people, homework and laundry waited at home at the end of the day. So after my body complained of the years of sedentary living, I walked! Up the beautiful tropical mountains. One mile took 45 minutes. But the journey of a thousand miles begins with the first step. So I agree with not judging us slow ones. We are fast at other things.

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