I’m preparing myself for a 16K
run early next year. And I’m also thinking of climbing another mountain or two
in the summer. So to inspire myself again, I read Haruki Murakami’s “What I
talk about when I talk about Running”. I have read this book before when
I just started running, still in my early bout of 5Ks and have not set foot on a mountain. It had been inspiring then so to psyche myself up for a
longer and harder endeavor next year, I read it again.
Hopefully, I’ll be more fit when that time comes. Lost some weight and more agile hauling myself up a steep
slope and have enough endurance to get down without my husband or a guide
assisting me. I also hope to be running the 16K with no walk breaks and cramp
free. Tough goals, I know.
This book by Haruki Murakami had
been an inspiration to me not only because of the author’s running experience
but also because he talked about the role of running on his life as a novelist.
As a writer, it was interesting to see what his thoughts were on running because for me,
running had been a good distraction to my often needless fretting caused by concerns beyond my control. It had also been my metaphor for life,
making me feel that if I can survive a couple of kilometers, I can survive
anything.
Running also developed a mental
toughness in me that wasn’t there before. I was never athletic, I’m more of a
bookworm, I still am and have no sports whatsoever. Now, I run not only to
clear my mind but to have a semblance of an exercise routine that
includes the outdoors. Last May, I credit it big time for helping me down a 760 MASL
mountain, when my heart was beating so fast and scared of cramping my
foot in a forested area. Because I almost did get cramps, especially getting down the mountain, I controlled each step and tensed my foot muscle in
the process . Without the training of running 10Ks, I’m not sure I could have
made it down.
Of course, I’m not saying that
I’m a superb runner. I could have a way better personal time but my goal for now is
simple, to reach the finish line running, no walk breaks, no throwing in the
towel. Of course, one day, I hope to run longer and faster if I have the time
to train. But despite my not so stellar running goals, running has become part
of my life. It had been my inspiration to finish something at all cost, be it a
project or an essay. Like exhorting myself to cross a finish line whether limping
from cramps or running like a fast wind, wow, that I haven’t done yet. And of
course, to train hard, not to be a proud fool even if I ran a couple of 10Ks
already.
Like an excerpt in Murakami’s
book:
“For a runner like me, what’s
really important is reaching the goal I set myself, under my own power. I give
it everything I have, endure what needs enduring, and am able, in my own way,
to be satisfied.”
“Most ordinary runners are
motivated by an individual goal, more than anything; namely, a time they want
to beat. As long as he can beat that time, a runner will feel he’s accomplished
what he set out to do…Even if he doesn’t break the time he’d hope for, as long
as he has the sense of satisfaction at having done his very best -and possibly
made some significant discovery himself in the process -then that in itself is
an accomplishment, a positive feeling he can carry over to the next race.”
What also struck me in this
Haruki’s memoir is how he credited running in helping him deal with a toxin
that supposedly writers battle in the process of writing.
“Basically, I agree with the view
that writing novels is an unhealthy work. When we set off to write a novel,
when we use writing to create a story, like it or not a kind of toxin that lies
deep down in all humanity rises to surface. All writers have to come
face-to-face with this toxin and aware of the danger involved, discover a way
to deal with it, because otherwise no creative activity in the real sense can
take place…”
“To deal with something
unhealthy, a person needs to be as healthy as possible. That’s my motto. In
other words, an unhealthy soul requires a healthy body…”
“Some writers who in their youth
wrote wonderful, beautiful, powerful works find that when they reach a certain
age exhaustion suddenly takes over. The term literary burnout is quite apt
here…This results, I believe, from their physical energy not being able to
overcome the toxin they’re dealing with. The physical vitality that up till now
was naturally able to overcome the toxin has passed its peak, and its
effectiveness in their immune systems is gradually wearing off. When this
happens it’s difficult for a writer to remain intuitively creative… If
possible, I’d like to avoid that kind of literary burnout”
I also liked the way he described
writing as climbing a mountain. I also feel that way at times, when I have to struggle at every sentence and grab for each appropriate word until I reach the end of the
piece’s summit or conclusion.
“For me, writing a novel is like
climbing a steep mountain, struggling up the face of the cliff, reaching the
summit after a long and arduous ordeal. You overcome your limitations, or you
don’t, one or the other. I always keep that inner image with me as I write.”
And how running like writing is
not about impressing people but reaching personal goals.
“In the novelist’s profession, as far as I’m
concerned, there’s no such thing as winning or losing. Maybe number of copies
sold, awards won, and critic’s praise serve as outward standards for
accomplishment in literature, but none of them really matter. What’s crucial is
whether your writing attains the standards you’ve set for yourself.”
I’m sure I will re-read this book
again when I want some inspiration on my writing and running. Hopefully, I can have his tenacity and joy for both. Murakami wrote this book while
preparing for the New York Marathon, one of the 24 marathons he had
participated in and while training for another triathlon race. An amazing book
from an amazing man.
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