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Authors: DEAN KARNAZES

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BOOK: Ultramarathon Man
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But it was time for me to move on, and these questions would remain unanswered. “I can't stay,” I told him as I got out. I came around to his window and he handed me my bag of tacos.
“You crazy,” he grinned. “How much I owe you?”
“Nothing,” I smiled back. “And you the crazy one. Thanks.”
We shook hands and I started moving up the road, unwrapping a taco as I jogged off into the distance.
It was tricky trying to eat while running. At one point I accidentally inhaled while chewing and sucked a piece of diced tomato into the back of my throat. For a moment I thought I would choke on it, but what surfaced instead was a sneeze. And with that sneeze came the chunk of tomato shooting out my nostril. A hardy layer of sour cream helped lubricate its passage, and it deposited a foul, acidic slime in my nasal canal upon exiting.
My wounded toe was killing me. It's funny how the pain would come and go in waves. At times the throbbing was so excruciating I could hardly put any weight on it. Yet during the lulls it was almost imperceptible. Eventually the entire front of my foot went numb.
As I ran farther south along the San Francisco peninsula, the urban landscape slowly gave way to rolling coastal foothills. Traversing a ridge to the west of the bay, I saw the colored runway lights of SFO flickering off in the distance. Low over the horizon, the sparkling headlights of incoming planes were stacked in the sky. I crested the coastal ridge and began dropping down the west side of the divide toward the ocean. The lights of Silicon Valley were no longer visible, and it grew progressively darker. Although the area was mostly undeveloped, periodically I would pass small rows of houses that lined the silent back road. Occasionally there would be a light on inside, or the translucent blue glow of a TV set, but mostly the houses were dark, which was probably for the best. Imagine walking out of your house at 4:00 A.M. to see a man in his underwear running by, struggling as though each step were his last. “Asylum escapee” would be my first thought.
The night air turned misty and damp the farther west I ran toward the coastline. Puddles formed along the road from condensation dripping off the trees above, and the pungent scents of pine and eucalyptus drifted in the air. A skunk meandered out of the bushes. He turned to look at me but didn't seem particularly concerned by my presence. I, on the other hand, was more than a bit concerned by his. Luckily, our encounter was stench-free.
After running up and down several peaks and valleys, I made my way down into one markedly deeper trough. It was cold and foggy in the pit of this gorge, and the climb up the other side was brutally steep. It seemed to go on forever. Just when the road appeared to be leveling off, there would be yet another uphill section. The fog was thick. After doing battle with this beast of a hill for as long as I could, it got the better of me. I stopped to regroup, and stood hunched over and panting on the side of the road, wondering how much more abuse my body could possibly take.
After a brief reprieve, I lifted my head to notice slight breaks in the clouds. I'd nearly climbed above the fog line. I was conquering that hill, nearing the top, and I hadn't even noticed it. Something about this realization lifted my spirits. Things were becoming clearer. I put my head down, ignored the pain, and started back up the rise at a brisk pace—which, after running twenty-five miles, was about the equivalent of a moderate walk.
Though my legs screamed for mercy, each step brought a brighter view of the sky above, and the air seemed warmer and drier the higher I climbed. Perspiration poured down my face, despite the cool fog surrounding me. Then, as though I had abruptly punched through a breaking wave, I found myself standing on top of the clouds. The sky was filled with stars that seemed to shine brighter than I had ever seen before. I felt I could reach up and grab a handful of sky. I was mesmerized by the stillness and the silence, totally absorbed in the moment.
For the first time this evening—hell, for the first time in years—I felt like this spot was precisely where I belonged . . . never mind that I was half naked, in the middle of nowhere, and nearly incapable of taking another step forward. That was inconsequential. I was happy—entirely content just standing there. I had listened to my heart, and this is where it had led me.
The sun
was coming up when I reached the town of Half Moon Bay along the San Mateo coast. I had run for seven hours straight through the night and covered thirty miles. I'd long since passed through delirium and was now in a semi-catatonic state. Events seemed to unfold in front of me as though I were watching a motion picture. In other words, I needed coffee. Badly.
Many of the inhabitants of Half Moon Bay commute “over the hill” into Silicon Valley, which they were now beginning to do in a frenzy of traffic. It was as if someone had switched the projector to fast forward, and all the commuter ants were busily scurrying around in hyperdrive.
I found a pay phone and placed a collect call to home, waking Julie.
“Where are you?”
“It's a long story. The short version is that I'm out in front of a 7-Eleven.”
“Seven-Eleven on Geary Street?”
“No, 7-Eleven in Half Moon Bay,” I said hoarsely. “Can you come get me?”
“Half Moon Bay?! How did you get down there?”
“I ran.”
“You what? You ran? From where?”
“From the house. I got here about five minutes ago.”
“You mean you ran all night?” she said in shock. “My God, are you okay?”
“I think so. I've lost control of my leg muscles, and my feet are swollen stuck in my shoes. I'm standing here in my underwear. But other than that, I'm doing pretty well. Actually, I feel strangely alive.”
I could hear her moving around the room, gathering her things. “You don't sound too stable. Just hold tight and I'll get down there as soon as I can. Is there anything I can bring you? Food? Clothing?”
“Yeah,” I said nonchalantly, trying not to alarm her. “Please grab our insurance card. I might need to stop by the hospital on the way home.”
When Julie found me she was stunned, and delighted. She wanted to know all about my adventure, and I was eager to tell her the story, except that I passed out in the car scarcely a minute into the drive home. The last thing I remember was a string of drool dangling off my yapping chin as Julie gazed over at me in bewilderment. Then things went black.
 
 
 
And that's
how I became a runner once again. In the course of a single night I had been transformed from a drunken yuppie fool into a reborn athlete. During a period of great emptiness in my life, I turned to running for strength. I heard the calling, and I went to the light.
For weeks after my thirty-mile jaunt I was nearly incapacitated from muscle spasms and inflammation. But it was a good hurt, one that would make Coach McTavish proud. As I limped around my office, trying to appear natural, I reminded myself that pain and suffering are often the catalysts for life's most profound lessons. A passion I'd ignored for half my existence had been serendipitously reignited in one all-night thirty-mile hullabaloo. The resulting ice packs and tubes of Ben-Gay were a small price to pay.
Every devout runner has an awakening. We know the place, the time, and the reason we accepted running into our life. After half a lifetime, I'd been reborn. Most runners are able to keep a rational perspective on the devotion, and practice responsibly. I couldn't, and became a fanatic.
Chapter 5
The Soiling of
the Lexus
No guts, no glory.
—World War II slogan
San Francisco 1992-1993
It took weeks to recuperate
from my thirty-mile reawakening. The blisters on my toes eventually healed, the muscle soreness subsided, the shin splints eased. I felt enough joy from the experience to keep the running going. Four nights a week, right after work, I would change into my new jogging gear and hit the road. I started with just a few miles per outing, but I soon increased that to five or six miles a day. Like most runners, I had favorite routes that I'd clocked with my car, noting the mile markers along the way.
I'd frequently see the same fellow runners on my route: the guy being pulled along by his black Labrador, the older couple who always ran together, the tough-looking kid with the awkward gait. We'd exchange pleasantries. Near the beginning of the run, it could be an energized wave accompanied by actual verbal communication, like “Hi.” Toward the end of an outing, it would be little more than a nod—even an eyebrow lift was a stretch on the really tough days.
Focusing on work in the afternoon became increasingly difficult because I couldn't wait to head off for a run. Julie would watch with amusement as I dashed in through the door and threw on my running gear. We'd briefly trade small talk, and I'd always depart with a hug and a peck on the cheek, but she could sense that my mind was somewhere else. She was supportive of my running from the onset, largely because my mood was always upbeat afterward. Although we spent less time together, it was a more meaningful connection when we did. I was less distracted, having worked through the issues of the day on the run, my mind uncluttered and available.
As my level of fitness improved, I'd cover the same distance in fewer minutes. Sometimes I'd even get spirited and sprint the last hundred yards. I was really proud about my level of endurance, as if I'd reached some imaginary pinnacle on the fitness stud-o-meter. But one warm fall evening, my delusions were shattered.
It happened as I was finishing a run along the San Francisco waterfront, thinking about how markedly my stamina had improved since I'd taken up running again. The final stretch of the run involved a climb through the Presidio military base along a particularly steep path known as Lovers' Lane. The name dates back to the late 1800s, when enlisted men used to walk from the Presidio to the Mission District in search of a good time. They would leave the base along this steep path and, if lucky, would have a female companion accompanying them on the walk back.
I was cruising up Lovers' Lane at a pretty good clip, feeling good about my pace and stamina. Suddenly, two men in military fatigues and backpacks blew right past me. They disappeared up the hill in a cloud of dust.
Wow,
I thought. How were they able to pass me with such gusto? They'll probably stop and rest at the top, and I'll pass them. They're probably just running wind sprints. There's no way they could hold that pace for long, especially with those packs on their backs.
Not a minute later, though, the two men came charging back down. My running cap nearly flew off as they roared past me, and I coughed feebly on the dust cloud they kicked up.
What happened next was astounding. Just as I was getting ready to crest the summit of the hill, the pair came blasting up behind me again! Were they going to lap me once more, or would they rest at the top this time? They did neither. Instead, they dropped to the ground and started doing push-ups. And, as if to rub it in my face, they kept their packs on.
This was too much. These guys were playing in an entirely different league. No, a different
reality.
I walked over to them and said hello, but they just kept doing their push-ups.
“You guys training for something?” I asked.
After a long moment, the one on the left simply grunted, “Yeah.”
I tried again. “It must be a pretty tough race, the way you guys are training. Are there hills involved?”
“No,” the other one said. “There are mountains involved.”
Not a talkative pair, but I was intrigued. “Is it some sort of race, or is it military training?”
“Race,” came the reply.
There were a few more moments of silence. Then they simultaneously muttered “Fifty” and popped to their feet. The one on the right turned to me, raised both eyebrows, and said, “It's called the Western States One Hundred.” And off they went back down the hill.
As I continued my run, I found it difficult to focus on anything except my physical inadequacy. My feelings of accomplishment and well-being were gone. In their place was one obsessive thought:
Just what is this Western States Endurance Run?
Half an hour later, I walked through the door of my house, a man on a mission. As I showered and prepared for dinner, my mind was secretly plotting a way to sneak some personal research time into a typical workday filled with appointments and meetings.
During lunch the next day, I went to the library and found a few articles about the Western States 100-Mile Endurance Run. It was a continuous nonstop wilderness trek through the mountains and canyons of the Sierra Nevada range in California, where the peaks tower into the sky. Participants attempt to cover a 100-mile trail in under twenty-four hours, on foot.
Unbelievable. It didn't seem humanly possible to run 100 miles nonstop, let alone 100 miles through the mountains. That's nearly four marathons without rest, more than three times the distance that had left me temporarily incapacitated on my thirtieth birthday. No way could I possibly see myself attempting such an unimaginable feat.
But then I thought of those two runners blowing past me on Lovers' Lane. Somewhere in the soil of my mind, a seed took root.
 
 
 
The Western States
100-Mile Endurance Run didn't start as a run at all; its inception can be traced to a long-distance horse race, the Tevis Cup, 100 miles through the mountains on horseback. But in 1974, a man named Gordy Ainsleigh changed everything. Gordy had trained relentlessly with his horse for a year, and, as legend has it, just prior to the event his horse came up lame.
BOOK: Ultramarathon Man
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