Thursday night, before my city became paralyzed with the brief, strange confusion of “sheltering in place,” I attended a vigil for the marathon
bombing. The wind was blowing hard, the half-mast flags snapping in the
darkness. It was hard to hear—the wind was blowing across the speakers with
this strange hollow-thunder noise. I loved that, the wind making itself known,
this invisible force that can only be seen and felt in the reactions of what it
touches. Like love, really. Someone read a poem, and other people sang, and it
did what those tools do—opened hearts enough and pointed to the soft places in
our souls where a scrap of comfort, if not understanding, can creep in. I was
most moved by the runners who spoke. They talked of their community, of the
love and support they find, of the comfort and challenge and addiction of
running. Their words, these runners, were as moving as the poetry, the songs,
the wind. In the end, it’s all the same thing.
I am not a runner. A marathon is something far beyond my
abilities, or interests. When the world overwhelms me--as it has this week--I go to words. I read, I
write, I re-find my sanity, my faith in humanity, my calm place to go forward
with this often hard and messy business of being human on this earth, my best
thing to give the world I love so fiercely. I know many people run for the same
reasons. They pull on little fluorescent shorts, lace up their sneakers and
go, pounding their hearts into the trails and pavements, until life comes back
to focus, back to size. Other people take to their guitars, their pianos, their
churches, mountains, oceans, deserts, kitchens, equations, woodshops,
gardens…their best thing, the instrument or action they have where they can best
give and receive of the good of the world. And where they can muddle some sense
from the darkness. May we all find this thing, and soon.
My sisters are both runners, and in general, far better
athletes than I am. I dabble, I enjoy, I stop to look at things and take pictures
and come home and write essays and poems about all that I’ve seen and then wander about in a poetic, world-loving daze. That’s fine, and really, it gets a lot of
attention for being a Good thing to do. I like to think that my words are the
best I can give the world, and I find a lot of reassurance on that front.
But, my sisters and their running brethren go out and sweat
and empty their bodies and find something like peace and happiness through that
strength. They choose a hard thing, and take delight in their abilities. My older sister ran a half-marathon on a whim a few summers ago. (She
admitted the next day to being “a little tired.”) After the events of this
week, she, like many others, is looking for a marathon to run and hoping to
qualify for Boston.
A friend told me this week that he cries watching marathons,
that the power of that mental and physical commitment always impresses him.
When I think of all that brings me to my knees as being beautiful—passion,
effort, good-intention, and a holy glow at what humans are capable of—I cannot
think how I overlooked how inspiring and glorious running is, or, really, all
athletics are. What the human body is capable of is no less soul-inspiring than
what the human mind, the human heart can do. We are becoming a nation that does
not know our bodies well—we are no longer required to be physically strong in
order to eat. And so, such physical strength and the body’s natural grace often becomes a sport, a game. Except that it shows us yet another way in which we
can be wonderful, malleable, resilient. “Or haven't you noticed just how
invincible and unbeatable spirit is, so that its presence makes the whole soul
fearless and unconquerable in any situation?” Socrates asked that in The
Republic.
How that spirit presents itself varies. For which I’m
grateful. But here, for a little while, I’d like to lay all that I can, all my
words and the best intentions of my spirit, at the feet of the runners. Your
efforts, your sweat, your struggles, your success, your choice and joy in these actions…this is as beautiful and as needed as any words spoken to a lonely crowd on a dark night,
seeking comfort.
Today, while listening to the news of the largest manhunt in
U.S. history, I didn’t know what to do, so I started writing this. I made art,
I read poetry. When, finally, the world became a little safer, I went outside.
Some of the first people I saw on the quiet streets were runners. It almost
made me dig out my running shoes.
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