Thursday, May 04, 2006

WHY DO YOU RUN?

I have asked this question of myself many times since being overcome by this insane addiction 3 years ago. I can sensationalize it all I like by ultimately it feels good for me and it makes me a better person...plain and simple. I have been an elite athlete, I grew up that way. I didn't know anything else. As I entered my mid 30's I got to experience life the way many others do...a little overweight...not in good enough shape to go out and have fun playing a game of touch football etc. etc. I now know what that feels like and it motivated me to do something about it. Now my body tells me when I need to go for a run, my mind tells me things are getting a little foggy here go out and get some exercise. I never saw this coming the first time around, I just becam accustomed to feeling lethargic.

Back to my question, why do you run? Anybody out there have to run for survival? I came across this article today:

BHUBANESWAR, India (AP) -- Cheered by thousands, a 4-year-old boy dubbed "India's Forrest Gump," who was nearly sold by his impoverished mother, ran 40 miles (65 kilometers) Tuesday to enter the country's foremost record book.
Budhia Singh, a slum resident from the eastern state of Orissa whose talent was discovered by a local sports coach, was escorted by doctors and 300 cadets of the Central Reserve Police Force, which plans to sponsor his upbringing.
Budhia had planned to run 70 kilometers (43 miles), but doctors stopped him after 65 kilometers (40 miles) when he showed signs of extreme exhaustion.
Officials of Limca Book of Records, India's best-known record book, witnessed the run and said it would be included in its 2007 edition, the Press Trust of India news agency reported.
"Budhia Singh completed the distance in seven hours and two minutes which is an Indian record. This is perhaps a world record, too. No other kid at his age has completed a distance of 65 kilometers at one go," his coach, Biranchi Das, said.
The boy offered prayers before dawn at Jagannath Temple, a deeply revered Hindu shrine in Puri town, and then began his run to Bhubaneswar, the state capital, on a highway lined with palm trees. Thousands stood along the road, cheering him on.
Das said the boy would have completed the 70 kilometers if he hadn't been interrupted frequently by enthusiastic supporters and television reporters after entering Bhubaneswar. Many rushed to place garlands around his neck even before he could complete the run.
Budhia's father has died and his mother, unable to support him, was about to sell him to another villager two years ago when he was rescued by the coach.
"Poverty had driven Budhia's mother to sell the fatherless kid to another person when me and my wife reached the slum and rescued him," Das said.
The coach had earlier seen Budhia's talent when the boy accidentally entered a sports ground without permission, and was asked to run laps as punishment. When the coach returned five hours later, the boy was still running.
Budhia has gained swift popularity in India. He is being likened by the Indian media to Forrest Gump, the fictional book and movie character who is ridiculed by peers for using leg braces, but overcomes his disability when he discovers that he can "run like the wind blows."
"I loved running today. I can run as much as I want," the 4-year-old boy told reporters after the run, sitting bare-chested but appearing tired.
Then he sucked his thumb.


I can't imagine! There are many stories about people who run to escape their lives. I run for the reasons I mentioned above, but stories like this certainly help put things in perspective!

1 Comments:

Blogger Habeela said...

There are a lot of people who run to escape their lives and many who run to find their lives. What an absolutely incredible story! I don't know if I should be horrified or amazed.

4:25 PM  

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