3 miles
treadmill, basement
outside: rain, all day
My first treadmill run since last February. Wow. I listened to “Nobody Asked Us,” the podcast with Des Linden and Kara Goucher, and it helped make the time go by faster. Running inside is fine, but rarely inspiring. Sometimes a podcast or audiobook helps.
Can I possibly create a list of 10 things I noticed? I’ll try:
10 Things
- My treadmill faces a window that is covered over and under our deck, so no view, only dark emptiness — and the reflection of a lit bulb, looking like a full moon in a starless sky
- my feet hurt for the first mile; I think it might be my shoes
- I didn’t wear a hat or a headband and fine bits of my hair kept slipping out of my ponytail
- at one point these fine strands were standing straight up — static from running on the treadmill?
- later, these same strands were wet, dripping with sweat, and plastered against my neck
- hard to get into a rhythm at the start; my feet felt heavy
- 10 minutes into the run, everything lightened up and I felt like I was floating above the treadmill
- several times, my hand hit the front bar — I like to run close to the front
- my cheap treadmill works just enough, but not well. It won’t start until the speed is at almost 2, then it goes faster than the speed on the screen. If you adjust the speed too many times, the numbers on the screen get all scrambled. This happened today, and for over half of the run I was staring at strange, squiggly lines instead of numbers
- I didn’t hear or see it, but I thought about the mouse (or mice) that are probably sharing space with me down in the basement. I imagined one of them running across my feet
Did it! These things were not really about a place, but about my body. Maybe this winter, when it’s too dangerous to be outside, I should try some experiments with noticing and focusing on my body moving?
Discovered this poem the other day:
It Must Be Leaves/ Jane Hirshfield
Too slow for rain,
too large for tears,
and grief
cannot be seen.
It must be leaves.
but broken
ones, and brown,
not green.
Speaking of the phrase, it must be, I came up with a title for my poem about the color yellow, which ends with the idea that some things will always be yellow, even when I can’t see them. The title? If it’s a banana, it must be yellow. This title was inspired by a science article with the same name: If it’s a banana, it must be yellow: the role of memory colors in color constancy