"I wished to live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not, when I came to die, discover that I had not lived."
- Henry David Thoreau
I was not a runner in school. I learned the danger of running later when I already had hardened habits and constricted thinking. The many physical hazards of running are well known: drivers who accelerate right into you without looking, snow hiding a sloped shoulder edge so that one misstep sends you crashing to the ground, a crowded race where it's easy to fall off an unseen curb tearing muscle and skin. But the real danger is more subtle:
- Run one mile without stopping.
- You can probably run two miles, and you do.
- You run four miles. Most people tell you they can't imagine running so far.
- Run ten miles then do it again but faster. If you can run ten miles what else can you do?
- Run a half marathon. If you did that, who knows what your limit is?
- You believe you can run a half marathon. It takes work but you do it.
- You know you can do a marathon so you do.
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