For yesterday�s flight from LA to New Mexico (where i�ll be until mid month
working on my book), i scheduled an early morning flight. I always do this
to take advantage of a most amazing perk of modern technology; air travel. I
totally love soaring miles above the ground through blue sky and dancing
clouds. I�ve parapetted, hang glided, parachuted, and bungee jumped. But
planes…wow. So much land passes beneath so fast. Particularly to those of
us who practice bicycle commuting, air travel has lost none of her
astonishing charm. Wholistic Fitness students don�t complain about airline
travel. That is so predictably ungrateful. Instead, we choose to reflect
upon whose shoulders we stand upon. Any complainer of air travel would do
well to remember the dehydrated pioneers aboard their jolting Covered
Wagons. And the horses that pulled them. Why do we get so ungrateful so
fast?
Following a tender and touching goodbye to Kathy, i boarded my plane. Soon,
like magic, i once again soared through lenticulated clouds as Grandfather
Sun warmed Mother Earth, dawning another miracle day. Looking out the tiny
window, i gazed with wonder at the unfolding ripples of desert ravines mixed
with wavy pine colored mountains. From my high perch i can easily spot many
of my beloved sacred southwest spots. The roughly textured canvas of the
Grand Canyon yawned at me as she began her day. Her vastness made me smile
and i lingered, caught in a distant memory of a trail running race i once
did there.
The race started at the lip of the monstrous canyon and dropped us right
down some hoary burro trail for a dozen downhill miles onto the disheveled
banks of the Colorado. There, we made a U-turn around a dancing Havasupai
native and started all the way back up!
Back then, i was a hot shot course record holder in high altitude trail runs.
Few could outrun me over long, high, and treacherous terrain. I had
distinct advantage however, because i grew up with a wolf, Apache, who taught
me very well how to endlessly and skillfully run up and down mountains.
So, with conditioned bravado and sense of reputation, i charged off the start
line and blitzed the descent like a frightened deer. Even a few of the
local Havasupai racers – members of the Native American tribe whom lived in
the Grand Canyon – couldn�t match my downhill speed. Part of my swiftness
was accounted by my Nike sponsorship; those Nike �Daybreak’s� were damn
good trail running shoes…
Running down the heavily switch backed descent into the sandstone abyss was
for me, heaven. I loved running fast downhills…something about it. Unique
also to my running style was that i did not drink much during races. The
logistics of carrying water were too bothersome to me. I just liked to run.
Instead i practiced yogic techniques during both running and climbing to
need less water than others. Has to do with learning the reversal of apana,
one of the vital vayu�s or winds of the energetic body.
Anyway I was having a ton of fun on the spectacular descent into the bowels
of the Grand Canyon. At the turnaround point at the Colorado River, I waved
and smiled at the dancing indian and received the applause of a few gathered
there. Shortly after that moment, however, the hero that i was busy being
quickly shrunk in size. My heaven soon turned into hell as i began running
up; scores of other racers were thumping their way downhill, kicking up a
dense vapor of 110 degree heated dust. I could barely see three feet in
front of me and breathing that much dust was suffocating me. Maybe that
dancing Indian had cast a shamanic spell on me…
Reality bit into me at that moment like a pissed off rattlesnake; i was faced
with a lung searing, throat choking nine mile, two thousand foot climb back
to the upper rim through sauna like dustdevil with only a half drained,
single water bottle. Real brilliant hydration philosophy, ilg. Worse, for
all my finesse and wolfish flair at downhill running, i had gained only a few
minutes ahead of the group of Havasupai who had easily taken command of the
chase and now had me staggering in front of them like a gut-stuck pig.
Funny how i didn�t notice that war paint on their faces before.
I continued my determined ascent and did my best to be a brave and noble
warrior in the fight to ward off my capture, or worse my total meltdown.
The racers that were still running downhill began thinning out, which was
good. The trail was far too skinny and rocky for two-way running traffic.
That�s right about when one of those racers coming downhill took me out like
a cheese omelette.
He was big too. Enormous, actually, for a race like this…he looked like a
genetic experiment gone awry from the DNA of Rambo and Edward Abbey. He was
wearing combat issue boots and had all of his joints taped up. A blood red
bandana contained long, matted hair accented by chopper pilot sunglasses. As
he literally fell into me, his hairy, broad shoulders bulldozed my 138 lb
frame off the trail and into a thicket of omnipresent cholla cactus. Hate it
when that happens. The up side was the cactus acted like a spikey guardrail,
saving me from a several hundred foot precipice. Now, you�d think even a
militant naturalist would stop if he accidentally took out the race leader!
Not this dude.
Oh, i made it. Didn�t win though. My race leadership skills that day
weren�t the best. The Havasupai caught and dropped my dehydrated, cacti p ricked ass about three miles from the finish line. �Nice shoes,� they
laughed as they overtook me in the way cliff swallows overtake cows.
Bastards. See, the way it works is first your race leadership skills
dwindle, then out goes the whole yogic kindness and cheerfulness thing.
Hell, i bet even Ramana Maharshi woulda let out a few good cuss words if he
was in the same situation! Left alone to swallow my ego with my swollen,
dust caked tongue, i thought maybe i would ask that Rambo guy to monkeywren ch the adobe bread ovens in the Havasupai village. That�ll teach �em.
I can only guess what the other airplane passengers thought about me
yesterday as I stared out the window watching the world unravel beneath the
jet engines like a little kid. What the hell could be so fascinating down
there? It�s just a bunch of dirt and rocks!
Then again, they probably have never tried to outrun Havasupai in their own
backyard…
Be Brave in your efforts today and keep your Practice strong…
coach ilg