I wiped the sweat from my brow as I reached the final
switchback. A minute more and I had
reached the clearing, 5.5 miles and 3500’ from the place I’d started, but still
a long way from where I wanted to be.
I walked over to the bench to sit for a moment. It was a brilliant, sunny afternoon here on
the last day of summer in Southern California – the kind of day that makes you
so happy to just be here, that I decided I’d do just that. Just be here for a few more moments. I fought back the tears once… twice… and then
it was no use.
It had been exactly seven weeks, and oh, say, 12 hours since
I’d been here last. It was dark then,
and the city lights twinkled below. Like
today, it had been quiet and still, and a soft breeze might blow every now and
again. It had been a point of coming to
a certain peace and understanding about what was to come. But unfortunately, that was not an
understanding I was too thrilled to receive.
On that evening, I had pulled myself up and continued on the trail to the toll road and then down to the mile 85 aid station of the Angeles Crest
100, where I’d drop from the race. Drop,
as in, not finish. I’d done everything I
could in preparation for that day, and was more confident in myself and my
training than ever before. But looking
back, regardless of the circumstances that eventually brought about the DNF,
did I really believe in myself? Well… I
don’t know. But I do know that
confidence is not belief. Belief is a
whole other animal.
I’ve been thinking a lot about the concept of believing,
largely due to a beer-fueled conversation I had with the winner of said Angeles
Crest 100 and new women’s course record holder, Angela Shartel. She told me definitively that the real difference
between past races and this now present “race of her life” was not her
training, preparation, nutrition, insert any idea you may have here. It was simply the fact that for the first
time in her life, she really believed she could do it.
Naturally, I’ve been doing a lot of soul searching in the
past month plus since the race, and have considered this theme often. DO I BELIEVE IN MYSELF? Do I believe I can do a certain thing? Specifically, right now, do I believe that I
can run 24-26 hours at The Bear 100 this Friday, as I’ve arbitrarily stated is
my goal. Well, if I could run up that
climb just now and it felt easy – that’s all I’ll have to do repetitively for
the duration of the 100 mile course.
That seems reasonable, so yes, I think I can do it.
BUT DO YOU BELIEVE?
Well, I had a really good base going into AC, I recovered
well, and I’ve put in some 10-11 hour days in the Sierras. My mileage hasn’t been as high as my 100-130
mile weeks for AC, but I’ve been running by feel and think I’m in decent
shape. I’m not injured, so I’ve got that
going for me, I’ve been just fine at higher altitudes than Bear will be at, and
holy shit this is my exact problem.
The only way I’m going to believe in myself is if I have
proof.
There, on the Bench of Understanding, I received my second
and final dose of clarity for the summer of 2013. I didn’t truly believe in myself, because I
needed proof to do that. And how can you
have proof of something you haven’t yet experienced? My perfect race, my defining moment was my
Santa Claus.
Mind you, I stopped believing in Santa when I was in
kindergarten. KINDERGARTEN. Jenni Dawson said her mom told her he didn’t
exist and that was all that I needed to hear.
There would be no convincing by my heartbroken parents – it was all too
plausible to my feeble mind that they did really love me enough to by me all
those presents. If they bought a house
and a car, they could certainly buy me a Nintendo.
Likewise, there are way too many things that could go wrong
and way too many better runners to ever allow me to be the fastest or
first. Just as I needed to see Santa’s
jolly ass in my fireplace to believe he really delivered a sleigh full of
presents to the entire world in one night; I’ve been searching for that thing
that will prove I can run at a level to which I am satisfied. Only problem is, that “thing” isn’t really as
tangible as a fat man in red in my living room.
And the “level to which I am satisfied” isn’t a question of
existence. It’s more of a general
feeling of worth and contentment.
Ahhh, we’re talking about greater themes here then, aren’t
we? Perhaps this was less like elves and
the Easter Bunny and a hell of a lot more serious. How do we have faith in each other in our
daily relationships? How do we believe
in our gods? I can KNOW how I was
created and born, because I have scientific evidence. Proof.
Therefore I am fully confident I arrived via uterus rather than a stork,
in the same way I am confident I am physically able to run 100 miles in the
mountains based on the concrete facts of the work I have put in. But to believe in my ability to perform at my
very best, to transcend both the physical and mental that will allow me to
truly reach that sort of runner’s nirvana, well that’s like believing in a god
I’ve never seen. Sometimes there is no
proof. And that’s exactly why belief
creates so much power.
So how does one begin to believe in a thing? I guess the better question is, why? The more I’ve considered it, the more I begin
to think that it’s as simple as just wanting it bad enough. Of course, no amount of wanting the sky to be
green just because it is my favorite color is going to make me believe the blue
sky has changed. But that’s not exactly
as crazy as it sounds. Why does someone believe there is a deity that controls the sun? Why does someone
believe that a man rose from the dead after three days in a tomb? Why does someone believe they will be
reincarnated? Why does someone believe that Elvis lives? Because they need these things to be
true. Their very existence has come to
depend on it.
By that token, maybe it has to be a truly meaningful and
worthwhile thing to develop any belief in it.
For me, maybe time is just too arbitrary of a thing – maybe what stirs
me deep down in my core isn’t a specific time, record or win. In fact, I know it’s not.
So if it is not running 24-26 hours at The Bear this
weekend, then what is it? What is it
that I truly WANT out of all this madness?
Upon closer examination, I’m realizing that all a 23:59:59 would bring
me is more proof of something greater. So I peer closer. All things considered and all weakness bared,
I think the one thing that is honestly holding me back from the ability to run
the race I want is a lack of ability to effectively manage the pain. Sure, most would argue that I have a pretty
high threshold based on some past events like, oh say, running 100 miles with a
yucca spike in my knee. But this is
beyond that sort of physicality. I’m
talking about that kind of pain that ultimately shakes you to your core and
makes you question everything. The kind
that can only come somewhere between mile 80-90 in a 100 mile ultramarathon. I
don’t want to just survive that pain anymore.
I need to welcome it and happily bring more of it.
And what would that bring me? Ultimately, strength. True transcendence of the mind and body. My religion.
My faith. My connection with the
world. The same things most anyone else
is looking for, really. It’s just that
I’ve never gone far enough over the edge to really, honestly have to believe I
am strong enough to survive. Perhaps we are all willing to go to a certain level to accept an un-provable truth. And I guess I'm just one of those people who most often has to take things a little too far.
For a person like me, it would seem that true “belief” comes only when there is no other
option. When you have to do a certain
thing so much that it becomes inconceivable that you will not. And maybe THAT’S why I’m going to Utah on
Friday. To test my soul to the point
where my only option is to believe.
Weakness bared. Weakness beared. I go.
So there I was, on the last day of summer, 3500’ above and a
hell of a long way from the place I’d started.