New Kicks

Jan. 25th, 2010 11:23 am
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By the end of last fall, the tread on my Saucony running shoes was completely gone. Not to mention that several extraneous trim pieces had fallen off, been re-glued, and fallen off again during the preceding spring and summer. And the not-so-extraneous padding at the achilles tendon had been worn away before that.

Still, I hadn't given serious thought to replacing them until several recent excursions down the ice and snow-covered walkways leading to the high school track. That is to say, the several times I nearly fell on my a** because I wasn't even leaving a discernible track in the new snow.

The clincher, though, came the day after I'd integrated a second quarter mile of running into my two-mile daily walk. Several weeks prior, I'd made my last quarter mile a running quarter and, having done so with no ill effects, decided to run the second-to-last quarter as well.

The next day, I felt like the ball of my right foot had been beaten with a baseball bat. My mother used to say, referring to my father, that "You can't hurt a Dutchman by hitting him in the head." Apparently the foot is another matter.

Genetically speaking, I'm only about 1/4 Dutch myself but haven't let that deter me from numerous bone-head decisions. The next day, I went back to the track and did it again. And the next day as well.

By the fourth day, I was ready to say "Uncle Dietrich [expletive deleted] Knickerbocker!" I would apologize to Washington Irving for that, but he did use the family name for monetary gain and without permission.

My wife, on the other hand, would've let him off the hook if he'd just shared the money. Her reply, when I explained my immediate and desperate need for new running shoes, was that I should consult one of the catalogs where she gets free shipping on cut-rate sneakers.

You know, the ones you NEED free shipping on because you send them back 3-4 times over a period of as many weeks before you get the right fit. I'd have been a double amputee by the time I completed that process. Don't marry a nurse if you're someone who expects sympathy more than once or twice in thirty-plus years.

Finally she relented but only after I agreed to not b*tch about driving her to the casino for the third time this week. At first she tried to tell me they were offering a pair of Nike Pegasus as a grand prize on the electronic slots. But I told her I couldn't picture anyone being excited about that in a place where half the clientele is dragging around portable oxygen tanks while puffing on duty-free cigarettes. I know, another astonishing failure of the imagination on my part.

Anyway, the next day I drove to two of the bigger shopping malls in town. I first tried the Shoppingtown Mall in Dewitt because that's where I'd gotten my Sauconys at a FootLocker a year and a half earlier. But the FootLocker was gone and its former storefront was among several that now stood empty. Nothing quite as depressing as an semi-urban mall that's so obviously on borrowed time.

In fact, one of the surviving anchor stores is a Dick's Clothing & Sporting Goods. But, having been treated with an indifference bordering on contempt the last time I tried to buy shoes there, I decided not even to bother. Because I'm pretty sure I can get THAT kind of treatment without leaving the house.

Instead, I opted for the Finish Line where a young girl tried to sell me a pair of Brooks that had a curl in the toe of the right shoe which needed only a bell on the end of it to look like something worn by the fool at the court of Louis XIV. When I pointed it out, she just shrugged, put it back in the box and took it back to the stock room where even now it awaits the arrival of someone about 5' tall with big nose and feet and bells sewn on his pointy hat.

After that, I tried a couple other stores before going to the Carousel Center where I had similar luck. (However, I did meet a real salesman at the Sports Authority. This guy made a determined effort to sell several pairs of high end sneakers that had been drastically reduced because they wouldn't have sold from the trunk of the neighborhood fence on "Everybody Hates Chris.")

The next day, I decided to swallow my pride and limped into the Dick's at Shoppingtown. That was Sunday, it was early, and the sales people were actually quite nice. Probably hoping for someone to write them a decent recommendation, having seen the handwriting on the vacant walls of the adjacent wing.

Anyway, as I was perusing the various shoe displays, I came across the latest incarnation of the Saucony Excursion, the very shoe that had seen me through those painful post-surgery days when I was struggling to keep up with my daughter on our first few walks around the block.

Now, if I were a serious runner, or aspiring to be such, I might've had second thoughts. At best though, I'm closing in on my last days at the track and, being a bit older and wiser as well, I'm not quite as prone to let aspirations outrun physical and financial realities.

So I told the guy I'd wear them home and dumped my ratty-looking sandals into the box. Those would be the hiking sandals I'd bought four years before my now-defunct running shoes and had worn all over Key West, San Francisco, North Tahoe and East Syracuse. When I went through the checkout line, the girl at the register opened the box in case I was one of those white, sixty-five year old, middle-class shoplifters.

The second she opened it, I knew I'd struck a ringing blow for racial profiling. You'd have thought she had a bottle of two-dollar gin under the counter the way she dove for the hand sanitizer. After which she seemed a lot less friendly.

Apparently, even in hard times, folks'll only do so much for that exit reference...

LPK
LiveJournal
1.25.2010
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Started for the track late Friday morning and after walking about a block decided I hadn't dressed well enough for the 12 to 14-degree weather. And I knew, if I was feeling it on the way to the track, the wind would push that bone-chilling cold right through me once I actually got there.

So I headed back to the house to change into a heavier base layer, add another pair of socks and maybe get out my fleece cycling pants. But when I got to the house I realized I didn't have time for all that before picking up my grandson at school, etc. Besides which I'd been feeling guilty about skipping my other exercises the past few days.

Dunno why but I've felt really exhausted some days. Part of it's getting up at night to use the bathroom and some of it's from sharing a room with my grandson. The little boy kicks and fidgets in his sleep and I often wake up to make sure he's covered and that he's breathing OK. (He has asthma.)

I'm not sure that's the whole of it but, between being tired and having to fit things in around five other schedules, I've been opting more frequently to do either the walk or the stretching/strengthening. Problem is, I'm not gonna reach the goals I've set for overall fitness and readiness for work (should that opportunity present itself).

Anyway, I've decided I have to get back into the stretching and strengthening so that's what I've done for the past several days. In the meantime, the tree is up and decorated (bah-humbug), the presents have been shipped to the west coast, and the house, except for the kitchen, is a wreck.

I've also been signing checks for my dad's estate, gathering the necessary documents to sell his car to my son, and cooking a meal here and there. Given that I've never pretended to be a multi-tasker, life has increasingly felt like a struggle to survive with the outcome sometimes in doubt.

And every so often I drift away to one of those places like Key West where I ply the Intercostal Highway on a Can-Am Spyder and otherwise become the one I'd always dreamed of being...

LPK
LiveJournal
12.20.2009
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Two days ago, when I walked down through the woods beside the golf course and out onto the frozen surface of the high school track, it was covered with about three inches of fresh snow. It was early afternoon and no one else had been there, none of the other fitness walkers who most years persist in this madness until the snow is simply too deep to be walked in.

Last year, I was determined to be among the last of them but there was always the same diminuitive set of athletic shoe prints rounding the track before me until the day I finally decided that my lungs were just too totally effed-up to continue.

In the spring, it was the same thing, "Ms. Tiny Two-shoes" had been there ahead of me and continued to be there, first, until the snow finally melted off and I could no longer tell if she was still laying down tracks just to torture me.

To my knowledge, I never actually saw her and always wondered who she was. There were, of course, a number of women using the track over the course of the year.

There was the middle-aged blonde with short-cropped hair who arrived each morning in a white Camry convertible and never smiled and never spoke. And there was the tanned, slender, and uber-athletic brunette who smiled twice and said hello once.

Why even remember such things when I sometimes have trouble keeping track of the laps I've walked? Maybe because the "mystery footprints" are such an apt reminder that life indeed goes on, "within you and without you..."

LPK
LiveJournal
12.11.2009

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