The fiancé’s children all have lovely singing voices, which
is amusing given that I sing terribly and he sings not at all. His youngest
daughter in particular is part of a musical duo that performs mostly songs written several decades before she was born that are complex musically and
lyrically. You should hear her “White Rabbit”; be sure to catch your jaw before
it hits the floor. She and her musical partner have also composed a few
originals, which also tend to take on unsentimental topics; one of them, for
example, plays off the idea that insanity means doing the same thing again and
again but expecting different results each time. It’s not really the clinical
definition, of course, but then neither was anything in the infamous Alanis
Morissette song truly ironic, and anyone who goes to pop music for clarity on such
concepts might need to consider a source that’s a tad more peer-reviewed.
The “definition” in the insanity song is one many of us can
understand on an everyday level. Mired in routine, we nonetheless somehow
imagine that one of these days, surely this time, sooner or later, things
will change. It’s not really insanity; it’s more a sort of complacently hopeful
deludedness, but that’s too hard to put to music. Funny thing, though, you
could just as easily argue the opposite is true: insanity is doing the same
thing again and again and expecting things to stay the same. They won’t. Either
way, the problem is expectation, the belief that our actions can control the
outcome in the way we desire.
Ultra runners are often told they’re “insane” for attempting
to run distances that any reasonable person would travel in a car, a small
aircraft, or not at all, since frequently those distances are covered in loops
that just get you back where you started. Obviously I’m biased, and I don’t
think ultramarathons are any crazier than any other way to pass the time, be it
Civil War reenactments or reciting Shakespeare in Klingon. The question
occurred to me, however, at one point during my 52-miler last Saturday: which
kind of insanity is this, the one where you expect things the same or the one
where you expect things different? This was quickly forgotten as a new question
occurred to me: just how much sand can fit in size 6.5 trail shoes that already
hold swollen feet?
The race was the Rainier-to-Ruston Relay and Ultra in
Washington State. I was wary about running another race in the Pacific
Northwest, especially one that was billed as “mostly flat and downhill.” Yes,
we started at the foot of Mt. Rainier and moved away from the big scary
mountain toward the sound, and much of the course followed a developing
rails-to-trail path, all of which would suggest flat and downhill, but
remember, I’m from rural Illinois. When we say “hill,” we mean speed bump. When
someone in the PNW says “hill,” they mean people get stuck up there and have to
eat each other to survive. As it turned out, elevation was the least of the
problems I encountered. The course wasn’t flat, but the hills weren’t an issue.
Expected something same, got something different, didn’t much matter.
The first time I ran 50+ miles, the heat index registered
three digits. It was awful, I was parboiled, and I never wanted to do that
again. Granted, I was running my second 50+ ultra in early June, always a heat
risk, but still, the race ended not too far from Seattle—you know, the place
where it’s always cold and rainy? I know that’s what you think, at least unless
you’ve actually been there more than once. Yes, there were cool temperatures
and showers in the days leading up to the race, but on race day itself,
Sasquatch came out of hiding to wish us well at the starting line on a
beautiful sunny warm-about-to-become-scorching morning. (It wasn’t really
Sasquatch; it was one of the race directors in a gorilla suit dyed brown, which
I hope for his sake he got out of before the heat got bad.) Expected different,
got same, wasn’t happy.
One thing that happens when I try to run long distances in
hot weather is I completely lose my appetite, which would be great if I were
trying to lose weight but is problematic when my current level of physical
activity demands the caloric equivalent of at least 23 Snickers bars and I
can’t even choke down a jelly bean. But that was OK, because the aid stations
hardly had any food anyway. A lot of the ultra community subscribes to a “no
whining, suck it up, tough it out” mentality and it’s possible that the race
directors were practitioners of this ethos, but I happen to belong to the
subset of runners who see long races as basically movable feasts. Why suck down
all those nasty piss-flavored shit-textured Gus at a marathon when you can have
pizza, Coke, and all-you-can-eat bacon at an ultra? But here there was no
pizza, no bacon, not even Coke, which is in my view equivalent to having no
holy water at a baptism. Oh, they had a few bananas here and there, and plenty
of room-temperature Gatorade in a room registering 90 degrees, but not much
more. This lack of sustenance was not expected, but other than the
dizziness and nausea, not a problem.
It wasn’t all bad; there were scenic views, of course—PNW,
remember? Mountains, streams, trees, all that cool naturey stuff trail runners
swoon over. Light-headed though I was, I didn’t swoon, though I did
enjoy it briefly, appreciated its splendor, probably would have appreciated it
even more had I kept in mind that the naturey parts would end after the first
20 miles as we moved away from Mt. Rainier and toward Tacoma, away from dirt
paths and shady trees and onto hard pavement and shady nothing. Midway I
already knew my goose was cooked—incinerated, in fact. I’m an average runner at
nearly every distance and I fully expected I’d have to walk some of the race; I
just hadn’t wanted it to be quite so soon, barely past the halfway point and
the worst yet to come. Expected to walk, did walk, didn’t expect to walk through
The Sand.
You have to say it like that, The Sand, like it’s “the boils” or “the locusts.” There’s a
five-mile stretch along the river that’s infamous among runners in the
know; this is the unfinished portion of the rails-to-trail project for which
this race was raising money, and I suppose this section was meant to reaffirm
how badly they do need that money. You know what would have been hilarious is
if they’d had one of those signs that said “Take only memories, leave only
footprints” because sand makes both mandates futile. You can’t leave footprints
because in sand that fine and silty, you step, you slide, you sink, you
struggle, and when you finally extract your leg from the sinkhole you created,
the sand shifts to cover the evidence of your struggle, waiting for its next
victim. It’s alive, I tell you, and it’s evil. You keep expecting it to end. It
doesn’t. I think I might actually still be there right now, I’m just so delirious
I’m hallucinating being home writing about it.
I had gone into this race feeling reasonably well trained
and coming off a fairly decent 44-miler. As the race went on, however, I had to
keep revising my estimates for how I would finish. Surely I’d beat my previous
50+ mile time of 12 hours by a lot.
OK, not that much, not two hours, but certainly an hour and a half. OK, one
hour. Eh, twenty minutes. Fifteen? Ten?
And then it happened, the point where I knew I wasn’t going to beat my previous
time, wasn’t even going to come close, was in massive pain from achy muscles and
blistered feet (but hey, at least those blisters were cushioned by all that
delightfully abrasive sand stuck in my shoes), realized it was going to take me
ridiculously long at my current pace to get to that finish line and for what? What
did I expect to get out of this whole thing, anyway?
I decided as I approached the 31-mile aid
station that I would DNF. It was still 50K, and I smiled grimly thinking how I
could still legitimately keep my “Even my DNFs are ultras” car magnet. That
would be enough of a takeaway for me. “You look tired!” the sweet elderly aid
station worker exclaimed as I approached. “Sit down!” She pulled out a folding
chair and I fell into it as into a deep pit. Yes. This was it. I would tell her
I was dropping, and my excursion through hell would come to a close. But I made
a mistake and turned to my left instead of my right—yes, it all hangs on that,
my inability to tell right from left—and instead of the aid station worker I
faced a young man in a wheelchair. “You’re doing great!” he cheered
enthusiastically. His spine curved oddly and he had just enough motor control
to reach forward his arm for a fist-bump. “You’re awesome!” he beamed.
I sighed. I fist bumped back. I hate you, nice man, I thought, and got up on my feet to keep
going.
Just after the 35-mile point, another runner managed to
catch up to my hobbling pace and asked if I minded some company. “It’s a lot
easier if you have someone else around,” she said with a friendly smile. I
agreed—it’s not like either of us were capable of moving fast enough to get
away from the other if I’d said no—and we set off together.
“I’m Jqwrhm,” she introduced herself. I had no idea what she
said—I wasn’t even sure of my own name at that point—and in the pause that
followed this pronouncement she smiled as if used to that kind of reaction and
said, “My mother was kind of a hippie.”
Since my own mother was not a hippie and I have little
familiarity with hippie culture, I didn’t know what that meant but I was too
tongue-tied with fatigue to ask. Instead I simply gave her my name.
Another pause. “That’s unusual too, isn’t it.” And I knew
then that she had no idea what I’d said either.
My quasi-nameless new friend and I trudged on, and as we did
something interesting happened. It sucked. It sucked a lot, for all the reasons
I just gave, but that wasn’t the interesting part. To try to allay the
suckiness, we began chatting about different races we’d done, funny things that
had happened to us while running, how brutal the heat felt, how vile the sand
was, her brother’s overdose, my parents’ bad marriage, my own upcoming
marriage, her own nontraditional wedding (she wore chiffon pants and a crop top
and her grandmother very nearly punched her for it), and a whole lot of other
things to pass the nearly four hours it took us to make our way together to
Tacoma.
I’m not going to say everything was all right after that. It
wasn’t; it was horrible, I hated it, and I wanted to stop with every
agonizing step. At one point, passing another disappointing aid station with sad
brown bananas and near-boiling Gatorade, I declared I would DNF at the next
station, this time for sure.
“You’re so close,” Jqwrhm said quietly. “You think you’ll be
happier if you stop, but later on you know you’ll be disappointed. You can do
this. You can.”
I couldn’t. I didn’t want to. Yes, there was only single-digit
mileage to go but it would take me a couple of hours to do those miles and what
would be the point? I wouldn’t get an AG award, I wouldn’t get a PR, all I’d
get was a finisher’s medal and a railroad spike (in honor of the
rails-to-trails theme, though if I tried to bring it home in my backpack I’d
have a tough time explaining it to TSA). I didn’t care about any of that.
“I’m going to that Chevron station,” she said. “Wait here.”
I didn’t know why she thought she needed gasoline but it had
to taste better than the hot Gatorade did, so I sat on the bus stop bench she’d
indicated and planned on living the rest of my life there. When she returned
some 59 years later, she had two cans of Coke, some Junior Mints and a bag of
salt-and-vinegar chips. “You need to eat something,” she said. “You’ll feel
better. I hope you like the vinegar kind.”
Something was happening to my face. I think I was crying
except I had no bodily fluids to spare for tears so little salt crystals
sprinkled down from my eyelashes. I struggled to open the bag. It took about
three hours. I managed to put a chip in my mouth, chew it, and swallow it.
“Wonderful,” I said, though it sounded more like “Wghmthrl.” That might well
have been her last name for all I knew.
Onward. Other races we’d done. Her
favorite ultra. My most recent race. Her stepfather, who has cystic fibrosis.
My friends, whose son has it and who now benefits from some of the medical
technology that had first been tested on her stepfather. Her mother’s
abandonment of their family. My father’s decision to stop taking his heart
medicine, and my sister’s decision to let him have his way because he’s nearly
90 and, well, maybe he’s decided something about his life.
At the last aid station before the finish line, with about 4
miles to go, I’d had enough. It didn’t matter that we were almost there. This
was insanity. To do something painful, maybe even harmful, when life is so hard
already, for what, exactly—bragging rights? I sucked at this race; I had nothing
to brag about, and I run for enjoyment, not to prove anything. If I wasn’t
enjoying it—and enjoyment got left behind somewhere in the mountains, where the
real Sasquatch was probably laughing his furry ass off at us—what did it matter
that I continued?
“My husband is over there.” My husband? I’m not married yet.
Oh wait, her husband. “He’ll have ice
and salt tabs. Come on, let’s just sit down for a moment.”
“I’m going to call my husband. My boyfriend. My fiancé.
Something,” I mumbled.
I called the fiancé. “Will you still marry me if I DNF at 48
miles?” I blurted.
Of course he still wanted to marry me, no matter what I
decided to do.
“OK.” I took a breath. “OK.” I closed my eyes. “OK.” I
opened my eyes and stood up.
Jqwhrm was right there, as was Mr. Wghmthrl, who gave me a
fresh banana, an antacid to help my stomach, some more Coke. None of it went
down. “I’m sorry,” I whispered.
“Don’t worry about it!”
“Thank you.”
“No problem!”
“Let’s go.”
We went.
It took over an hour to get to the finish line, which was on
the waterfront past about a thousand piers, each one promising to be The
Lobster Pot restaurant which would signal that we made it, each one ending up
being a mere tease as every damn restaurant on every damn pier is done up in
jolly sea décor to look like it might be called The Lobster Pot. When we
finally made it, we nearly missed it, as almost all of the finish line
equipment had been taken down and only a handful of people remained to cheer.
(We weren’t the last, not even close. As it turned out we finished pretty much
in the middle of the pack. Yes, I’m average, and I’m fine with that, thanks.) I
found my sister, who had been waiting patiently for me for hours, and with my
newly acquired railroad spike in hand and a couple castles’ worth of sand
in my shoes, I made my way to the car.
It only occurred to me after I’d cleaned up and was ready to
leave that I had not properly thanked my friend, whose name I still did not
know and without whom I would not have finished. I described her vaguely to my
sister, who went to look around the area for her, but in vain. She had gone off
too. I felt bad, but even more than that I felt tired, so with once last glance
at the stunning view of Mt. Rainier in the distance, where I had begun this
miserable journey half a day ago, we drove off.
Oh, I found out her name when I looked up the race results,
but I still don’t have any way of contacting her that wouldn’t be kind of
stalkerish, so I’m letting it go. I am sure any thanks I give would be waved
away and simply put down to the kind of things people do when they’re in the
same circle of hell together. But people don’t always do those things. It’s not
insanity to expect certain outcomes to certain situations, and a lot of times,
given human history, human nature, and the ways of the world, it’s realistic to expect that when things go bad, you’ll just have to deal
with it on your own. Isn’t that why we do these ultras, to show how tough we
are, how strong, how much we can endure? Eh, not always. Sometimes, as in this
time, we find out quite the opposite: we need help, and, most unexpected of all,
we get it without even asking. Crazy, isn’t it.