The Quiet Glory of (Continued) Aging Into Athleticism
LET'S HAVE SOME TYPE TWO FUN!
Content Warning: If reading about exercise of any kind just generally makes you feel like crap no matter the tone or purpose, listen to yourself and opt out! We’ll be back on Sunday with non-exercise content galore.
Last weekend, I ran 27.5 miles over 35 hours as part of my fourth Ragnar Road Relay — the race that helped coalesce so many of my thoughts on aging into athleticism, that prompted me to write the piece below, and to sign up for my first marathon.
I’m resharing that piece today because 1) my brain is still a little slow post-race; 2) I’m putting the finishing touches on a big, week-long feature project that will go live here in August; and 3) this feels like one of those essays that hits differently every time you read it, or maybe it just hits me differently every time I read it, because I still find myself periodically amazed that the kid who refused to run the mile in PE just finished her third marathon.
Our bodies are amazing, but our ability to change are minds about what nourishes and invigorates us — that’s amazing too.
Maybe you’ve read this piece before and want to see how it hits you differently today. Maybe it’s brand new to you. Regardless, I’ve added a postscript about the millennial-ness of this particular style of race and updated my go-to running recs at the bottom of the piece — where you can also find this week’s subscriber-only race-delayed Things I Read and Loved.
And don’t miss this week’s episode of The Culture Study Podcast — which is all about the changing business (and labor practices) of romance writing. We’re also taping episodes this week on America’s Sweethearts: Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders and Recipe Culture (How do we manage them? What happens when every recipe is available to us? How do you think of heritage recipes and the responsibility to continue making them? What about NO SUBSTITUTIONS culture? Submit your questions here.
**And finally: I’m working on a larger piece about how freelancers, independent contracts, and gig workers think about TIME OFF, whether for illness or rest or caregiving or vacation. If you have thoughts/struggles/advice, I’d love to hear it — just click here.**
The Quiet Glory of Aging Into Athleticism
I wasn't ready to be an athlete, in any capacity, as an adolescent or as a young adult. I am now.
In elementary school, I was that kid who figured out how to hide behind some random outdoor building to skip doing laps 2 and 3 of the mile. During my short and undistinguished soccer career, I once locked myself in a bathroom to avoid going to a game. We only had right-handed mitts for P.E., and I never really learned how to catch (or throw) a ball. I really liked my high school history teacher, but not nearly enough to believe him when he told me that I should consider joining the track team he coached. I was, as we say now, a real indoor cat.
This isn’t entirely true — I loved to ski, and camp, and water-ski. I went on rafting and backpacking trips. But not-being-athletic was the story I told myself about who I was, what I liked, and what my body wanted to do. When I first started “working out” in high school, it was always purely utilitarian and utterly joyless: my internalized millennial fatphobia disciplining me vis-a-vis Jane Fonda step aerobics tapes and the elliptical machine.
I think I found slightly more pleasure, or at least mental space, from running when I was in my 20s. But exercise was still rote — a thing I did because body regimentation was part of the never-ending work of what I understood as feminine beauty. I never thought of it as a sport, or of myself as an athlete. There were no elliptical Olympics. I was just checking a box.
This mindset began to change, very slowly, in my early 30s. I began spending less time in the gym and more time running the wheat fields around Walla Walla, where I was working as a professor before leaving academia. My best friend had started training for a half-marathon, and because, to be honest, I didn’t like her doing things that I didn’t also do, I thought I would as well.
At that point, I’d run six miles before, maybe seven, but the first time I worked up to ten, I felt like I was the Queen of the Universe. I felt like I could lift seventeen skyscrapers, like I could push myself past mild discomfort into a space of new capabilities.
I ran that half marathon. The next year, I ran another. I got rid of my training watch when it pushed me too hard and I injured myself, but I was still mired in that understanding that the only way to run was to try and run all the time. The suggestion that strength training, like actual cross-training, particularly strength training, might actually make me a better runner? Blasphemy. All I understood was cardio. In 2020, I was training for my first marathon and not feeling great about it when the pandemic hit, and then everything was canceled and I got really into Peloton and every summer was smoky and I started wondering if maybe I was done running distance forever.
But something interesting and unexpected happened when I started training this Spring for my second Ragnar relay. All those pandemic hours spent actually listening — to Peloton instructors, to Maintenance Phase decoupling health and body size, to Power Zone training that underlined the ways rest was as important as exertion — they rearranged something fundamental in my head. When someone tells you you’re an athlete every day for two and a half years, at some point you start to believe it.
How is it, at age 41, that I feel like my body can do more — and that I can take more joy in it — than ever before? I’m not faster, but I’m more resilient. I’m not doing as many overall miles, but I feel stronger. I love it more, and more feels possible. Sure, my knees are slightly more creaky, and I have to be keenly attentive to stretching and Theragunning and hydrating in a way I never was before. But exercise just generally no longer feels punitive or disciplinary. Instead, I feel something far more akin to curiosity. If part of me feels weak or tweaky, what’s struggling in other parts of my body and needs strengthening? And if I’m attentive to my body, if I’m legitimately kind to it, can it do more than I thought it could?
I had a breakthrough earlier this month, running that Ragnar that, if I hadn’t signed up with my friends two years ago, I might otherwise have avoided. (Ragnars are relays, set all over the United States, in which a team of 12 runs 200 miles over the course of a day and a half. The logistics are complicated but the organization is stunning; we ran from the Canadian Border down to Langley, WA, on Whidbey Island. It’s ridiculously and deliriously fun).
Beforehand, I had trained up to 14 miles in long runs, and was slated to be one of the higher mileage runners, totaling somewhere around 20. But then two of our runners got Covid. You could essentially red shirt those team members (it wasn’t as if we were trying to win anyway) and everyone could run their original legs….or you could do what we did, and make them up ourselves.
I ended up running 27.7 miles, including a 7.7 mile hilly finisher at 1 pm on effectively zero sleep. Another woman on our team ran 30, including a killer 10 miler seemingly straight uphill at 2 am. A teammate who’d never ran longer than six miles before she started training (which included her first time over 10) racked up 14. Pretty much everyone ran farther than they’d ever run before — just with space between legs and lots of fuel. And no one injured themselves. (If you want to see more, here’s my saved Instagram stories).
We finished exhausted and glorious — and signed up for next year’s race immediately. It makes twisted sense: if anything, it’ll be easier next time with full vans. But about half the team is also now signed up for the Portland Half or Full Marathon, too, which will be many of our longest races ever. All of us, save one beast Gen-Zer, are in our late 30s and early 40s. I’ve read a lot of pieces over the years about how women come into their distance prime later in life, but I also felt like it would never apply to me.
Some of that understanding of “prime” is physical capabilities, of course, but it’s also mental, too, right? I just think women’s relationship to endurance, generally speaking, changes with time. Plus running is so much easier than so many parts of being in your late 30s. Like, if I could choose between running a half marathon and figuring out how to successfully resubmit a rejected health insurance claim….I would pick the half-marathon. Any and every day. There’s a reason our Ragnar team name was “Easier than Parenting.”
But there’s also something about pushing past your own understanding of your limitations that frees you from other arbitrary limits. As in: that was really hard. But my body can do really hard things, I know that now, in a way I never knew before, because I wasn’t actually interested in finding out.
I don’t think this relationship is limited to running — or to physical activities we traditionally understand as “sports.” Maybe the thing you didn’t think you could do is take a short hike alone, or at the pace that feels good to you. Maybe it was that you didn’t feel like bodies like yours could rock climb, or do yoga, or lift weights. But nothing about this mental shift is contingent upon movement that is extreme.
Here’s the point where I say there’s such thing as too much curiosity, too much eagerness to push past limitations, and too little regard to the body’s myriad ways of telling you no. Recently, I’ve been learning a lot from what happened to my friend, former colleague, and ultramarathoner Brianne Sacks over the last year: “In 2021, I set the fastest known time for a woman on a 68-mile trail traverse, was the third woman to finish a 100-mile mountain race from Utah to Idaho, and ran a marathon in three hours and three minutes,” she wrote earlier this year. “However, I failed to comply with the most important rules of athleticism: respecting, listening to, and resting your body. I struggled to admit that my body deserved to be replenished after I ran it ragged.”
Bri’s is still in recovery from the overtraining syndrome (OTS) that not only made it impossible to run, but difficult to function, full stop. And she’s not alone: 60% of elite athletes and more than one third of non-elite runners have experienced some form of OTS, and it’s particularly common in people who are always burning out in high-stress work situations.
OTS feels like a symptom of a deeply American addiction to growth: that we always have to keep pushing ourselves forward, no matter the costs, to feel some measure of success, some modicum of personal and societal gratification. It’s like turning all the worst late-stage capitalism work habits onto our bodies. It makes no sense, but it makes total sense. For a lot of us, it’s the only way to go about a thing, any thing — more is more is more. This posture not only sours activities we otherwise love, but also inflicts very real and long-lasting damage to our bodies.
With all of that acknowledged: right now, for me, that’s not what any of this feels like. For one, I’m certainly not getting faster, or winning anything, or even interested in knowing my pace save to keep to slow. I also know there’s some sort of time limit on how long I’ll be able to do any or all of this, and it makes every run precious — and helps foster an appreciation for my body, a care for it, that I’ve never had before. Maybe this genre of awe is akin to what some people feel after giving birth. For the first time, I’m treating it as the remarkable assemblage of systems that it is: deserving of rest, and respect, and nourishment.
The wildest thing is that when I do that, I can actually, ultimately, run longer — and feel so much better post-run than I ever have before. It’s an ongoing revelation, really, and it’s not an accident that this switch has happened at the same time that I’m actively working to unlearn the fatphobia and workism that defined so much of my adolescent and adult life.
Of course, athletes and their coaches have known about this sort of thinking for a long time. Maybe, if I had been less of an indoor cat, I would’ve learned it as a teen. Or maybe it would have been warped by the lens of competitive organized sports, and I would’ve burned out entirely and developed even worse disordered eating habits, and never have been able to do something exercise-related without feeling like I had to win, and an old and devastating injury would haunt every movement. I truly don’t know. I do know that I wasn’t ready for sports, mentally or physically, at that age. And that right now, this year, this week, I am arriving at this feeling of a very certain sort of athleticism — of being an athlete! — entirely on my own terms. ●
Postscript: When I was running a ten mile asphalt stretch in the baking heat on Friday afternoon, I distracted myself from the reality of the moment by thinking about the race itself, which was filled with 12-person teams from across the country. Some were filled high school students who race along with members of their cross-country teams; some were composed of multi-generation families. Some were oriented around a particular country (Belarus) or a running club (Latinos Run) or a workplace (I can’t imagine). But the overall vibe was deeply millennial, from the music they played at the exchanges (so much early 2000s pop) to the team names (lots of references/puns/costumes related to The Office, Friends, Harry Potter, Anchorman, etc.).
I talk about this a little in the piece above, but there’s something about being in your 30s and early 40s that motivates you to find things that aren’t work or parenting to structure your life. For previous generations, that thing was usually religion and non-monetized hobbies; for so many millennials, it’s a particular sort of exercise (because it’s productive/optimizing in some way) and hobbies you’re always kinda wondering if you should monetize (and thus render productive).
It’s also, of course, a status thing (time to exercise means some amount of leisure time) and there’s lots of fun stuff to buy and lots of data to crunch (if you’re a gear or data head) and a shortcut to the sort of loose-tie community that I’ve been writing about here for the fast few years. But a lot of these spaces are still pretty fatphobic and very white and otherwise exclusionary, and it’s worth thinking through the norms and practices that make these spaces feel like home to some and hostile to so many others.
At some point, I want to write about the intersection of millennial productivity/optimization culture and this sort of “Type Two Fun” (miserable when it’s happening, fun in retrospect), so if you have thoughts or reading suggestions, I’d love to hear them — and if you have stories of your later-in-life relation to the concept of athleticism, I want to hear those too. And as a bonus….
…..Some Things That Are Making Running Awesome For Me Right Now, in no particular order, with no affiliate links, and with the full acknowledgment that you do not need a lot of fancy gear to make running awesome (New and Updated for 2024)