Sunday, April 22, 2012

Soft path / hard path~

The difference in running on a hard asphalt road and a soft, pine straw dirt path is the difference between night and day.  Still, the different surfaces make for a different experience.

Running in my neighborhood, everything is organized in blocks and lines.  The houses are the blocks.  The lines are the curves of the edge of the street or sidewalk.  The trees are organized into landscaping themes that only the human mind could design. 

The street itself is, for the most part, a smooth platform that does not give at all when my feet hit the asphalt.  Only my shoes’ rubber heel gives a little bit to my weight. 

Above me, the sky is designed, too.  The trees don’t grow in the middle of the street, so the sky is open and the sun can shine down creating a heat strip along the street that radiates up.   When you see steam coming up off the pavement after a cool rain on a warm day, you get the same sensation of a steam bath.

The dirt trail is just the opposite.  The first thing is that the path is like a dangerous ribbon.  Roots, rocks and little ditches cross the path at uneven and haphazard intervals.  That’s why time is suspended along the dirt trail because you’re always looking 10 feet ahead to see where you’re going to place your next three steps.  Plenty of times toward the end of the run, I’ve caught a root or a rock and fallen and rolled.  You have to stay awake on the trail.

Overhead, the spring’s tree canopy is beginning to block out the light.  There is an eerie green tint to everything on the ground early in the morning when only the sky’s light is reflecting through the leaves.  Later in the day, when the sun is shining down on the trees, the light seems to warm up a bit.

Still, it’s get kind of spooky along the trail when you’re running along and the only thing you hear is your own breathing.  Then, a rustle of leaves or a twig snap not to far behind you sends your head around to see what made the sound.  That’s when you really trip over a root, when you’re distracted.

If it sounds like I enjoy the dirt trail more than the asphalt, I admit that I do.  There is a calming effect on my soul when I’m in the woods.  It’s nature’s balm on modern society where the path is in constant evolution.  A tree has fallen across the trail or water is rushing across the path after the rain the night before.  It’s constantly changing and demands attention.

Perhaps my weekly trek into the woods is a calming therapy to my busy work and family schedules.  It’s a little respite adventure that is never the same because the trail is constantly in motion and is ever changing.  Just to see what’s new along the path is fun.  Just trying to navigate your way around is also an adventure.  It’s never the same.

I like that.

Gotta run,
Chuck
The Vagabond Runner.

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