Like books sometimes do, Haruki Murakami’s What I Talk About When I Talk About Running fell into my lap just when I needed it. I was working on the first draft of my
novel The Shakespeare Girl – my final
portfolio piece for a Masters in Creative Writing – and I’d signed up to do the
Great Manchester 10 Kilometre Run with a group of friends at work. We wanted to
raise money for cancer charities on behalf of our much-loved friend and
colleague Reena, who was fighting against non-Hodgkins lymphoma. When Reena
lost her battle with that illness in November 2012, the run became something
positive for us to aim towards, to honour Reena and the people who had caredfor her. It was a long time into treatment before we knew Reena’s chances of
recovery were slim. She died at The Christie Hospital aged 33.
A regime of writing and running happened under a good deal
of sadness. Early in the mornings, powered by stress and determination, I started
to run. In the evening I came home from the office and worked on my novel. I
was exhausted but oddly contented. Then I happened on Murakami’s book, which chronicles
the novelist’s obsession with running whilst intertwining autobiographical
anecdotes about teaching, marriage, and writing his novels. It had an immediate
impact, encouraging me to run and write even when I felt too tired to do
either, and persuading me that there could be some kind of fruitful
relationship between the two.
Murakami started running at 33, an age that suddenly sounded
very young. I had never knowingly run for longer than 2 km. At school I was a
sprinter, and even middle distances left me anxious and bored. But I liked to
cycle and swim, I was fitter than I thought, and I soon began making good progress
with a ‘Couch to 5K’ running app. Before long I was running 6 km at a time and
stitching together the difficult plot/sub-plot of my novel in my head as I ran.
Just as I was finding a complementary relationship between running and writing for
myself, I had an accident and broke my hand. The impact whenever I tried to run
caused a jolt in the bones of my finger that was agonising. My training had to
stop. I couldn’t type (the cast went from my little finger to my elbow) so I
had to use voice recognition software for work and for my fiction. It proved to
be an amazing piece of technology that I continued to use from time to time,
even after my arm came out of the cast, but it was slow going in the beginning
and eventually I had to get an extension to my deadline.
In the office, work piled up. I couldn’t type or do any overtime
and almost every email in my inbox seemed like bad news. I speed-edited my
novel and submitted it. I didn’t feel any of the relief I was expecting. ‘You’ve just sent your three year old off to
day-care for the first time, that’s why,’ said my boyfriend Oisín, trying
to rationalise my anxiety at letting the novel go. Just like the teacher who
gets sick on the last day of term, a low-lying cough I’d just about been containing
spilled over into a chest infection. I worked through it with barely a day off
sick, all the while enviously reading about Murakami’s epic runs through Athens
and Boston and Tokyo while I was prescribed one inhaler after another and every
whiff of pollution sent me into a rattling cough.
Then the cast came off and I began running again,
tentatively, with Ventolin and a steroid inhaler. My route took me around the
lake at Chorlton Water Park where there were no fumes to trigger my lung
irritation (now diagnosed as post-viral bronchial hypersensitivity). With the
race only weeks away I decided to invest in a pair of proper running shoes. I
was given a running test and was offered trainers with additional support for ‘over
pronation’, which is basically running too heavily on the inside of the foot. I
began training in my bouncy new techno-shoes. Then overnight I was struck with identical
acute pains on the insides of my knees. I went from running 7.5 km with a
rucksack on my back, to having Nurofen for breakfast and getting off the bus
backwards to avoid shooting pains in my legs.
With a week to go to the run I went to see a physiotherapist
about the pain that wouldn’t go away. It took a matter of minutes for him to ascertain
that I wasn’t an over-pronator at all. The corrective trainers had damaged my
perfectly normal tendons. I only had time for two sessions of ultrasound and
massage before the day of the race arrived. My sponsorships had been generous but
I was certain I wouldn’t be able to run. I felt like a fraud. My friend and
colleague Lianne then reminded me in passing that in the hospital she had
mentioned to Reena that we had all signed up to do the run, and that we would
be doing so wearing moustaches to honour the iconically macho Ron Burgundy from
Anchorman, one of Reena’s favourite movies.
I decided I was going to start and finish the Great Manchester Run even if I
had to walk the entire route. Some things are more important than running, and even
Murakami would agree with that.
On the day of the race I stretched, freeze-sprayed my knees,
took Nurofen Express, put on my elastic knee supports and joined my friends at
the starting line. After the pistol I stopped and started then stopped again,
walked a little way, then jogged, then stopped, walked some more, and tried to block the pain. It became
apparent I was having a different race to most of the other competitors. To
start with, the opening 2 km was the hardest for me, but no doubt the easiest
for everyone else. My knees took forever to loosen up and my opening gait was somewhere
between a lollop and a shuffle. I couldn’t get comfortable or find my stride.
When the course went uphill I was relieved, much of my training had been done
on an incline. When we headed downhill, my knees buckled in pain while runners
poured past me as their momentum increased.
Then, somehow, my knees found a motion that suited them and a
fainter thud of pain became gradually manageable. Murakami, writing about
marathon running and rendering our much shorter race a mere warm-up in
comparison, had written:
Pain is inevitable. Suffering is
optional. Say you’re running and you start to think, Man this hurts, I can’t take it any more. The hurt
part is unavoidable, but whether or not you can stand any more is up to the
runner…
I thought about Reena and everything she’d been through and
I tried to remember Murakami’s exact phrasing as I came up to 5 kilometres,
then 6, then 7, with brass bands and DJs playing at the side of the road, and a
sea of brightly coloured T shirts ahead of me. I am running for my Dad, read the messages on the back. I am running for my son, for my sister, for
my friend. When I ran through the blessedly cool shower I had tears in my
eyes. For the first time ever, I didn’t get a stitch. When it got too hot,
clouds covered the sun. With a kilometre left to go I threw in my lot and
started to sprint. As I took off, a young lad at the side of the road shouted,
‘Go on Greg!’ (my name was on my
shirt) and so I did. I hit the finish line at the Hilton Hotel at 1:11:11 and I
made sure I was thinking about Reena when I crossed it.
You can still sponsor me for The Christie here.
4 comments:
This almost brought a tear to my eye. What a fantastic achievement. You should be very proud! I am super proud of you!!
That's really kind, thank you :)
Hi Greg,
Enjoyed reading your blog, well done. I also ran Manchester 10k and I work for Christies hospital (Sorry to know about Reena :( ). Thanks for doing the race. Infact I blogged about my experience with pain when I did 40 mile walk from Keswick to Barrow, two weeks before manchester 10k. Good luck with your novel.
Best,
Kiran
Really enjoyed reading through this, and well done!
I absolutely loved reading this book, the only difference is that I was a lot less active than you while reading it!
x
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