Real-Life Superheroes, Part 5

7 year-old Jack Hoffman has had some bad luck lately.

Two years ago, he  suffered a seizure, and nearly died of respiratory failure.  Then he was diagnosed with cancer.   And then he had two brain tumor surgeries.

But Jack has had some good luck too.  Between operations, he met his hero Rex Burkhead – a running back for the University of Nebraska football team, the Cornhuskers.

Recently, during a break in his treatment, Rex invited Jack to the team’s annual spring scrimmage.  As you’ll see, the team had a surprise planned:

Jack took to the field in full gear, and ran a heroic 69 yards for the game’s final touchdown.  The crowd of 60,000 went nuts.

Jack is currently on a break from his 60-week chemotherapy treatment.  His tumor has shrunk substantially in the past year, and his father, Andy, says he’s “doing great.”

More on Jack’s heroism here.

Trading Diamonds for Stones

A few years ago, when I was stuck in an office job I didn’t like, I found myself staring out the window.  It was a gorgeous, sunny day, and I felt like a panther inside a cage.

A colleague came up beside me. “Today is a diamond,” he said.  “Workdays are stones.  You and me, we’re trading diamonds for stones.”

It was a depressing thought, and I determined to get out of that job and change my life for the better.  The trouble was, I didn’t know what I wanted to do.

A friend of mine came up with a good idea.  He sat me down with a piece of paper and a pen, and told me to write down the best experiences of my life.

ideas

In no particular order, here’s what I wrote:

  • Sailing with my brother on Lake Kennisis in the summer of 1986, when a hurricane blew in and we nearly shipwrecked.
  • Tobogganing in Edmonton, with my nieces and nephews, IN MINUS 50 DEGREE WEATHER!
  • Running my first 100 mile race.
  • Sitting on the dock with my mom one summer night, while the Northern Lights tarted up the skies.
  • Skiing down Whistler Mountain with my visually-impaired friend.
  • Hiking through a forest with Shawna and running into that big-ass BEAR.
  • Canoe tripping with my dad, in lakes so clean you could drink straight out of them.
  • Getting the phone call from my agent that my novel had sold.

HPIM3895

I handed the list to my friend.  His face lit up instantly.  “Good job,” he said.  “Now what do all of those things share in common?”

It took me a while to figure it out.  But eventually I saw the common thread.  All of those events, with the exception of that last one, took place OUT OF DOORS.  It sounds obvious, but it was an incredible revelation to me at the time.  If I really wanted to be happy in the future, I needed to find a way of getting outside more often.  And ideally, I’d do it with the people I love.

Years have passed since then, and while I still have a job that keeps me chained to a desk a lot of the time, it’s extremely creative, and I’m surrounded by zillions of smart, spunky people.

More importantly, I know what I need to do to keep myself sane.  A week spent behind a computer screen can gut me like a fish, but an hour on the running trail puts me right.

So if  you feel as though you’re trading diamonds for stones, don’t worry.  Most of us have to spend some time in the mine-shaft before we achieve the career we want and deserve.  The trick is to figure out how to get more sunlight into our lives in the meantime.  Figure that out, and the bars of your cage may well evaporate.

I Love This Video and I Don’t Know Why!

What is going on in this video???

Where did all those dogs come from?  Why is the little girl not afraid of them?  Did she raise them from the time they were puppies?  Is she some kind of dog whisperer?

Why is the girl so happy?  Is she maybe a dog herself?  Did she make a wish on a magic bone and transform into a human?

Why is she throwing those things in the air?  What are those things?  They look like blades of grass, but I actually think they’re cheese strings.

Why are the dogs all German Shepherds?  Why are there twelve of them?  Jesus had twelve disciples; is there some significance about the number?

Could the dogs actually be wizards from the future?  Maybe they wanted to deliver a message to the little girl: “Don’t eat too many cheese strings, they’ll make you fat.”

If I had some spare time, I’d write a short story about this video.  I’d call it “Cheese String Girl and the Dogs from the Future.”  Millions of people would read it, and Disney would make a movie of it, and everyone’s questions about this weird video would be answered.  And after the movie was made, you would be asked to keep the twelve German Shepherds.  And you’d take good care of them and let them run free in a grassy meadow, and from time to time you’d frolic with them, and feed them cheese strings, and laugh endlessly.

Running with Borscht

The symptoms are unmistakable.  You’ve forgotten your kids’ names.  The family dog hates your guts.  And you’re getting bad vibes from that person in the kitchen who you suspect you may have married at some point.

I hate to be the one to break the bad news, but you’ve got an advanced case of Runner’s Guilt.  It’s a common affliction at this time of year, what with 20-mile long runs pre-empting our family responsibilities.

Happily, there’s a simple treatment for this scourge.  It’s called THINKING ABOUT OTHER PEOPLE FOR A CHANGE!

Here’s what you do.  First, draw up a list of the people in your life who are suffering.  Any kind of ailment will do – a layoff, hip replacement, a bad break-up, etc.  Enter the addresses of these afflicted souls into Google Maps.  Plot a course that equals your training distance, then run!

Note: while it’s important to stop and say hello to each of these afflicted friends, try to avoid prolonged conversations.  Yes, you’re on a charitable mission, but it’s equally important to keep your heart rate elevated.  By all means, give your friends a supportive hug, but don’t stop running for more than two or three minutes.

One other thing – and this part is crucial – you must impart a small gift to each of your friends.

The ideal gift is small and light; something that’s easy to carry during your run.  Gift certificates are perfect.  So are thumb drives full of music.  Packets of heirloom seeds will delight the green thumbs among your friends.

Then again, if you’re feeling especially generous, you can always deliver jars of Russian Cabbage Borscht.

borscht

A cautionary note: 1500 millilitres of Russian Cabbage Borscht weighs just over six pounds.  Three Mason jars full, swaddled in a bath towel and crammed tightly into a running backpack, weigh roughly the same as 8 litres of milk.

How do I know this?  I know this because I delivered that precise volume to a number of friends during a recent 35-mile training run (I’m prepping for a 100-miler).  Sounds insane, I know.  But to my credit, I  planned the run so that I’d unload the first jar fairly early in the run.  That is to say, at mile 19.

“It smells a bit like armpit,” my friend Farhad said, unscrewing the lid and taking a sniff.  (Farhad’s recovering from a nasty case of Shingles.)

“It’s better when you heat it up,” I said.

I’m not really sure what I was thinking with the borscht.  Borscht is a healing food; full of every colourful vegetable known to humankind.  Vanity also played a role, no doubt.  For years, Russian Cabbage Borscht has been my “thing.”  I make it with lots of sour cream and dill.  Blend it until it’s velvet.

Farhad dipped in a finger and took a taste.  “It tastes like dirt.  Really good dirt.”

Your Running Playlist, Part 2

I can’t write when music is playing in the background.   I need total silence to write.

On the other hand, when I want to run fast, I needs good tunes.  And nothing gets my legs pumping faster these days than Zedd:

If I had my own planet I’d make everyone write songs that catchy.

Seriously, when that song’s playing, I run faster than the internet.  If it was playing in his ear buds, I bet even the statue of Glenn Gould could win a marathon.

Glenn_gould_sitting_in_front_of_CBC_building

Zedd started playing piano at the age of four.  When he turned twelve, he learned to play the drums.  For a while there, he wrote a new song every day.

Zedd has done remixes for Lady Gaga, Black Eyed Peas, P. Diddy, Swedish House Mafia and Skrillex.  They’re good, but not nearly as good as his fist-pumping, slightly off-kilter originals:

The Running Shoes That Saved My Life

Muddy shoes

There they are.  My beloved Sportiva Wildcat Trail Runners.  Those shoes saved my life back in September 2011.

How did a pair of Sportiva Wildcat Trails save my life?

It’s an amazing story.  So amazing, I got invited onto CBC Radio to talk about it.

You can listen to the gory details here.

In Every Race There is a Surprise

Back in 2007, I met a hardcore trail-runner in Yellowknife.  He was as tough as the Canadian Shield, and skinnier than two toothpicks tied together.  He took me out for a run along the “highway to nowhere.”  As we ran, mile after mile, past the Giant Mine, where 9 men tragically lost their lives in an explosion 1992, he told about some of the running adventures he’d had over the years.  The animals he’d run into during long trail races (Grizzlies, wolverines), and the times he’d nearly broken ankles in the dark.  “You have to be prepared,” he said.  “In every race, there is a surprise.”

A couple of months later, I ran my first Ultra-marathon.  And he was right.  I got a BIG surprise.

The Niagara Ultra, at a mere 50 kilometers, is the Maggie Simpson of Ultra-marathons.  Still, it’s 8 kilometers longer than a conventional marathon, which seemed like a big leap to me at the time.

I drove down to Niagara-on-the-Lake at 4:30 a.m. on a June morning, got my BIB (#105) and sat in the Kinsmen Hall in my singlet and shorts, trying to stay warm until the race began.  The forecast was calling for clear, cool weather.  The sun rose over the Niagara River while Huey Lewis and the News sang about “The Power of Love” on the radio.

At 6:45 I went outside and joined the other runners.  There were maybe 100 of us standing about on a grassy field, rubbing our arms for warmth.  A stern man outlined the route and thanked the various local sponsors.  Then suddenly he said, “Is everyone ready?  Okay then, GO!”

There was no count-down clock and no pumping music.  Suddenly the hundred of us were running across the dewy meadow.

Things happened very fast.  The pack merged onto the Niagara Parkway path; a recreational trail that snakes alongside the Niagara River.  We were to run from Lake Ontario in the north to the great falls in the south, and then back again.  The crowd of runners quickly thinned out, and I got into a groove.

virtual-tour-79336-01-1335331793

The asphalt trail was shaded by mature oaks and elms.  Shortly after the first aid station, I ran past the Field House, the stately brick home General Brock used as his headquarters during the War of 1812.  More importantly, it was where my beloved Gran lived for many years, and where I spent many Christmases and Sunday dinners.

But there was no time for nostalgia – I had a race to run!  I climbed the Niagara Escarpment to the hamlet of Queenston, ran past the floral clock, the hydro electric plant where the Niagara river thins out, and the lush green golf courses.  I banked the first 10 kilometers in 46 minutes, which seemed a dangerously fast pace for me at the time.  At the 15k aid station a volunteer told me that I was in seventh place.  Seventh!  Never in my life had I ever been in seventh place for anything!

Unfortunately, this was not my only surprise in this race.  A much worse revelation was yet to come.

I ran into the city of Niagara Falls.  No roads had been closed for this race, and there weren’t any police officers to hold back traffic.  Runners were expected to follow the sidewalks, and obey traffic signals.  Since it was now 9 a.m. on a sunny June morning, I found myself dodging tourists with cameras, jumping over “Maid of the Mist” turnstiles, and waving at curious honeymooners.

Niagara Falls

And then, there it was.  Niagara Falls.  I’d grown up just down the road, and had visited the falls any number of times, and yet, on this morning it looked more beautiful than ever before.  I wanted to stop and stare at the falls.  But I didn’t.  My 7th place was on the line.

At the turnaround I downed a cup of Gatorade, and doubled back towards Niagara-on-the-Lake, passing the runners immediately in my wake.  The bulk of the pack was roughly 5 k behind me.

I swallowed one gel at the 25 k turnaround, and another at 35 k.  Hydration was not a problem.  But – SURPRISE – my bowels were.

Yes.  The B word.  I could feel the pressure starting to build.  It became quite a distraction, and I kept my eyes peeled for a porta-potty.

At the 40 kilometer mark I was still clinging to 7th place, but a guy named Doug kept catching up to me whenever I stopped to talk to the volunteers at the aid stations.  “Bathroom?” I’d say.  They’d shake their heads, no.  Doug would roll in behind me, and I’d sprint off again.

A couple of times, Doug got ahead of me.  Each time he came across a paper cup that someone had discarded on the road, he’d bend down, pick it up, and carry it to the garbage can at the next aid station.  He did this over and over again.  After a while, I started doing it too.  At big city races, there are hundreds of volunteers to clean up after the racers, but in a small race like this, it made sense to clean up after ourselves.

Of course, it wasn’t easy to bend down after having run 40k – especially now, when most of my strength was going into holding my butt cheeks clenched together.

At 46k, Doug passed me for good.  I was fighting off waves of gastric pain, and I could barely run anymore.  And so, with 4 kilometers left to run, and no relief in sight, I succumbed to the inevitable.  I jumped off the path, scrambled down the side of the gorge into the forest, and squatted.

While I took care of business in the gorge, I could hear runner after runner springing past me on the path above.  My 7th place was long gone.  But I didn’t care.  I was feeling fine. 

I’m sorry to tell you a story involving poop.  But there’s no way around it.  Bodily functions, and learning how to deal with them, is a big part of ultra-running.  You can’t expect to run for 6, 12, or 24 hours at a time, and not have to think about the food that goes in, or comes out of your body.  It’s life.

Happily, I learned a couple of things from that “surprise.”  For instance: don’t eat any dairy products in the 24 hours leading up to a race.  For me, that usually prevents unwanted bathroom breaks.

I also learned to always run with toilet paper.  And to never shake hands with an ultra-runner at the finish line – at least until you’ve both washed your hands.

The Niagara Ultra-marathon takes place Saturday, June 22nd.  You can find out more about it HERE.

Why Do I Run? Why Do I Write?

010-funny-animal-gifs-running-duck

Why do I run?

Because running is my church.

Because running helps me figure out what I think about the world.

Because I love buying running shoes.

Because I like being alone sometimes.

Because running helps me sleep well.

Because I run past interesting things.  Bears, beaver dams, hidden valleys.

What to do, what to do... (1)

Why do I write?

Because writing is my church.

Because writing helps me figure out what I think about the world.

Because I love buying new journals.

Because I like being alone sometimes.

Because writing helps me sleep well.

Because I get to write about interesting things.  Talking bears, floating islands, secret valleys where time stands still.

Coffee

BONUS REASON I like to run:  I don’t need to worry about eating second helpings of dessert!

HAT TIP: above two photos taken by my talented brother, Andy.

Cool Running Shoe Ad Watch, part 2

Wondering what to buy me for my birthday?  Look no further than RIGHT HERE:

 

The comfort of a running shoes, paired with the exhilaration – and danger – of the trampoline.  Did you know that such an amazing product existed?  I didn’t!

I know, they’re probably crazy expensive.  Plus, it might look a bit goofy, running races in those things.  

Still…  My birthday is in July, just in case you were wondering.