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Timmy O'Brien

When I was thirteen, I had a running coach.

He was short, lean, and muscular.

An Italian man

with a whistle hanging around his neck,

farmer's tan, and below his black widow's peak

sat silver aviators, propped upon his shiny beak.

I ran miles and miles a day, but,

no matter how much I'd run

he never followed. He always trusted me to

stride my roads and lift my knees high

during the kick at the end of the races

against myself.

 

"If you want to run

you gotta drop that baggage," he'd laugh

between sips from his water bottle

as he towered over little me,

panting and red. We both stood

tall under the blazing sun.

I couldn't comprehend exactly what he meant,

I mean, I told him,

"I have ultra-light, top-of-the-line shoes,

compression shorts and athletic toes,

a hairless chest for maximum speed,

sweat running rivers down my spine,

legs that never exhaust, and,

above all, Coach,

a spirit that can move mountains." His response,

silence and a smirk.

Who was he to teach me about running?

 

"You're weighing yourself down boy,

you gotta drop that baggage."

It was his motto for me

every time my time would increase,

because, you see, when running,

increase is bad. Except for hills.

I can still hear his voice in my head,

"Uphill, increase exertion."

He never ran with me, he just told me to go.

He showed me the route and I did as expected,

six days a week, sometimes three miles, sometimes ten,

day after day, again and again,

shoulders hunched and me out of breath,

"runners high," they called it.

 

I hated running, I hated my coach,

I didn't understand why

anyone would want run to anywhere.

Not now. Now, I love it.

It has become my hobby, a specialty

for when one grows up,

your body is built for it, and your mind

has been ready to run since junior high.

It starts as a seedling, when you're barely able to walk,

and by the time your cardiovascular system

has been assaulted by packs of tobacco

and rolled marijuana, it blooms green.

That's when you realize:

Running is easy.

 

And coaching?

Don't even get me started on how easy that is.

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Written by
joseph-valle
American
Published
Aug 17, 2012
Lines·Words
59·374
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