***The Long Ago Loneliness Of The Long Distance Runner
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
Make no mistake, despite the lightly- dusted fictionalized places
to protect the innocent, and the guilty too now that I think about the matter,
this honor sketch is about our old town, North Adamsville back in the 1960s,
back in our Class of 1964 youth, no question.
In the 1960s runners were “geeks.” You
know-the guys who ran in shorts on the roads and mainly got honked at, yelled
at, and threatened with mayhem by irate motorists. And the pedestrians were
worse, throwing an occasional body block at runners coming down the sidewalk
outside of school. And that was the girls, those “fragile” girls of blessed
memory. The boys shouted out catcalls, whistles, and trash talk about maleness,
male unworthiness, and their standards for it that did not include what you
were doing. Admit it. That is what you thought, and maybe did, then too.
(And then too it was mainly guys, girls
were too “fragile” to run more than about eight yards, or else had no time to
take from their busy schedule of cooking, cleaning, and, and looking beautiful,
for such strenuous activities. Won’t the boys be surprised, very surprised, and
in the not too distant 1970s future when they are,uh, are passed by…passed by
fast girls of a different kind)
In the 1970's and 1980's runners (of
both sexes) became living gods and goddesses to a significant segment of the
population. Money, school scholarships, endorsements, soft-touch “self-help”
clinics, you name it. Then you were more than willing to “share the road with a
runner.” Friendly waves, crazed schoolgirl-like hanging around locker rooms for
the autograph of some 10,000 meter champion whose name you couldn’t pronounce,
crazed school boy-like droolings when some foxy woman runner with a tee-shirt
that said “if you can catch me, you can have me” passed you by on the fly, and
shrieking automobile stops to let, who knows, maybe the next Olympic champion,
do his or her stuff on the road. Admit that too.
And as the religion spread you,
suddenly hitting thirty-something, went crazy for fitness stuff, especially after
Bobby, Sue, Millie, and some friend’s grandmother hit the sidewalks looking
trim and fit. And that friend’s grandma beating you, beating you badly, that
first time out only added fuel to the fire. And even if you didn’t get out on
the roads yourself you loaded up with your spiffy designer jogging attire, one
for each day, and high-tech footwear. Jesus, what new aerodynamically-styled,
what guaranteed to take thirteen seconds off your average mile time, what
color-coordinated, well- padded sneaker you wouldn’t try, and relegate to the
back closet. But it was better if you ran.
And you did for a while. I saw you. You ran Adamsville
Beach, Castle Island, the Charles River, Falmouth, LaJolla, and Golden Gate
Park. Wherever. Until the old knees gave out, or the hips, or some such
combination war story stuff. That is a story for another day.
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