Saturday, March 19, 2011

Born to Run

Just finished reading the book 'Born to Run' by Christopher McDougall. Inspirational stuff I must say. Now I'm even more motivated than ever to work on a consistent running regime. The book has me even fantasizing about potentially running marathons and ultra-marathons. After all, we were born to run!


First came across the title of this book while doing further online research on Vibrams and barefoot running in general. For some reason, I had too much free time on a Thursday and decided it was time to indulge in a little intellectualism, going on my seasonal book binge.

Although most of the books I picked up were business related, this was the only book on running and man was it hard to find! I went first to Popular to try my luck since they were the nearest, followed by the Borders in Wheelock, before finally getting it at Takashimaya Kinokuniya. Talk about the wrong choice of bookstore memberships. That's the one that I let expired, when I'm still holding on to Times and Borders.

Complains aside, the book was awesome. It was the first on my to read list, telling the tale of how the author, despite being told by his podiatrist that he should abandon running due to his injuries and how he was simply 'not built for running', decided to look for a different answer, finally finding them in the Tamahumara tribe and a group of elite ultramarathoners.

While the book did touch on certain aspects of barefoot running, I felt the bigger focus was simply on the celebration of running and the sheer joy of rediscovering what it's like to be able to run light and free again. It really made me feel that even I could achieve great feats of running if I simply tried and corrected some of the misconceptions I've been told.

Especially inspirational for me was Caballo's idea of just thinking about running 'easy, light, smooth and fast'. Running should be just that simple. I also loved all the anecdotes about people who started running simply because they enjoyed it, and somehow blossomed into incredible endurance runners. If they could do it, why not me? Since I can't run fast, maybe I can run long!

Of course, the kicker was the idea of persistence hunting, of how humans in the past were able to run deers to exhaustion after 6-8 hour long chases. That's like ultra-marathon lengths! If a whole tribe of people could do it, I better damn well be able to do a comparatively simpler marathon.

At the base of it there's still the idea that modern running injuries and the description of running as a 'high impact sport' are due to modern shoes. As long as you're able to change your gait and revert to what was once natural, it hardly matters whether you're running barefoot, in Vibrams, or other minimalist shoes.

There's still so much more I'm not able to put down in words. The book itself is real motivational material. I'd encourage every runner and non-runner to pick it up and try out some of the ideas. Just don't be too close-minded with it!

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