Friday, December 25, 2015

Christmas

Christmas time is family time. I suppose this makes sense, because Jesus' birth was accompanied by family in a story in which everyone had to return to their hometown, where they likely had family. So it comes as no surprise that even today people travel to visit family. I still wonder how Mary and Joseph completed the journey without Clif Bars or GU Energy Gels to keep them replenished, but I digress.

I just got back from a visit to my girlfriend's family in central Minnesota, and during it we made a slight excursion to Grand Rapids, MN to visit her brother. I had never been to this part of Minnesota before, and it really is a different world compared to most (if not all) of North Dakota. It was nice to see large evergreen branches hanging over the road with snow holding on to them as long as they could. Even cooler was seeing all the different trails and protected forest areas that were up there. It seemed like every few miles there was another public trail with access from the road, and while those would be amazing for cross-country skiing right now (something I literally have no experience with), I can imagine them in the summer being quiet dirt trails great for running. It opened my eyes to why those who come to UND from out-of-state complain that we have nothing to do- there were so many recreational opportunities there in northern Minnesota, even in the winter. 

Anyway, once in Grand Rapids we went for a short run together on some of the snow-covered trails around the area. Even though we were slipping and sliding around trying to find any traction, it was a simply beautiful sight. The recent snowfall rested on the trees still and the wind wasn't blowing because of all the protection. We had to take some time to soak it all in. In a world where it is so easy to see all the bad things around us (grab literally any newspaper or go on literally any news website if you live under a rock and don't believe me), we need to realize how beautiful this Earth is. I wonder to myself sometimes what Jesus thought of the natural beauty of the Earth when he physically walked here. If you allow it to, every hill, tree, rock, field, cloud, and mountain can be stunning and breath-taking. I'm well aware that considering the beauty of this Earth is not sufficient proof of the existence of a God, but I really do wonder how such a beautiful, perfectly-arranged planet could have simply 'happened'. I guess my main point is that the woods were beautiful!

The next day I found myself doing a workout on Highway 27 in central Minnesota. Now, to my surprise, this state highway had more traffic than interstates in North Dakota usually do. Cars, cars, cars, noise, noise, noise, haste, haste, haste- this is our world. We are always in a hurry; we are always trying to shove way too much into our already busy schedules; we are living in a world where noise is the norm and quiet is unusual, rather than the other way around; we live in a world where everything is lit because we are collectively afraid of the dark; we call ourselves more connected than ever before due to social media, but I lament at seeing folks staring at their phones and ignoring the world around them. I think this is why I try to seek out quiet places to run. On this workout I was listening to my iPod, because I can't stand the sound of constant traffic; if no cars were on the road, I wouldn't have my iPod. Am I a hypocrite? Probably, but so is any person reading this. We all are. 

I'm back home now. I've fought through the fiercest of battles, including not eating copious amounts of food and trying to fit in two runs a day with church, present-opening, eating, visiting family, and sleeping. The weather this year on Christmas day is about as good as it's going to get, with temperatures in the 20s, as opposed to the last few years when wind chills have been approaching -20. I've been able to go back to my home church and recollect with some of the kids I grew up with (3/8 of my confirmation class was at my service- that's a record!) We've been able to watch A Christmas Story and get the whole family together. Last night when we were singing 'Silent Night' at church, I couldn't help but get some goosebumps and think about the fact that even in our crazy, violent, fast, technological, and global world, it will be alright. The baby Jesus is born and He is here to be our blood sacrifice that we as sinful people need. As we gather together with family, we remember that salvation has come- everything will be ok. 

Merry Christmas!

Friday, December 18, 2015

Mandan High 1983: A Short Profile


Mandan Studs

It's time for some research posts again! Today I'll be looking (well, trying to anyway) at perhaps the best high school men's cross country team this state has ever had. I'll tell ya- this has been a fun article to write, because I've learned A LOT. For example, did you know that what we know now as Bismarck State College once had a JuCo (Junior College) cross country team? Me neither. Let's get started....

In 1981 Leon House assumed the reigns of Coach of the Mandan High School Cross Country program. [Mandan is located in central North Dakota on the west side of the Missouri River- the only thing separating them from neighboring Bismarck.] In 1981, 1982, and 1983, Mandan won the State Class A Boys XC meet, marking the only three state championships the school has had in the boys class A race in school history, even up to now. 1983 seemed to be the culmination of a growing program hitting its peak, with a dominating season, winning every race they competed in and finishing off the season with their 21st consecutive win at the state meet, and the next year they brought the total up to 31 before losing at state. (Down at the bottom of this article is a link to a milesplit page that has an EXCELLENT write up on this team). Perhaps the most dominating performance of the season came at the WDA Championship Meet, where they placed 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, and 17th, with 5k times of 15:03-15:10 (1-4) and 15:57 (5). That's absurd. Bismarck High has been tearing up the state XC scene up for years now, but even they have not had that much depth on their team. Consider at the state meet in 1983 Mandan's top three ran 16:13-16:14 after taking a wrong turn and actually going off course at one point. Afterwards Coach House, calling it one of the worst-run state meets ever, said that his athletes ran "about 20 steps the wrong way with an official right there asleep at the wheel." It still blows my mind that through the whole season they never scored more than 61 points as a team!

So who were the top three guys who ran on the team that season?

David Meuchel was the 1983 WDA Champion and State 4th place finisher (after taking a wrong turn recall). He was the school's the team's first-ever WDA individual champion. So, he was one of the leaders of the 1983 team. In the 1984 state track meet, he took 3rd in the 3200, with a time of 9:42 (the winner was the man who broke the state record at the time, Jeff Dick from Jamestown, who ran 9:10 and won by 30 seconds) and took 5th in the 1600 in 4:32 (J. Dick won 6 seconds with a 4:22). Fun fact: the guy who took second in the 800 that year, Mike Toy from Williston, would later go on to break the Minot State outdoor 800m record with a 1:51, at the same time Meuchel was later at Minot State. Last fun fact about state track that year, in the 110 hurdles, the 4th place runner, Greg Limke from Bishop Ryan, later coached basketball at West Fargo, my high school.

After high school, it seems as if he spent time at Bismarck Junior College and Minot State University. In 1984 at the NJCAA (National Junior College Athletic Association) National XC meet in Twin Falls, Idaho, David Meuchel from Bismarck Junior College placed 45th with a time of 28:11.27 in what must have been an 8km race, as the NJCAA mandated that distance for nationals starting in 1975. I wonder if the course was difficult and the altitude led to slower times. Additionally, the only teammate of Meuchel's to place ahead of him was Lars Smeenk. Now, in 1982, the year before Meuchel won the WDA title, a man named Lars Smeek from Bismarck won the WDA title, so I'm going to assume that the Lars Smeenk listed as the 39th place finisher overall for Bismarck Junior College is the same one that won the WDA title a few years before, and I'll admit I have no idea which spelling is correct. Anyway, a David Meuchal also appears on rosters for Minot State University in the late 80s ('87-'89 I believe). After that, I have no idea.

Darrin Boehm was the #2 runner for Mandan High School while they were tearing it up. He was a junior during the 1983 year, and as mentioned above, he finished 5th at State XC, less than a second behind teammate Meuchel. At the state track meet that spring of 1984, he placed 5th in both the 1600 and 3200, running times of 4:30 and 9:44, respectively. In 1984 XC season, he won the WDA individual title and placed second at the state meet. He also broke a few course records throughout the season.

After high school he went to VCSU (Valley City State University, NAIA at the time, now DII) and ran XC and track. He had a successful career, including being part of the school-record 4x800 relay that ran 7:57. He also is top 10 in school history in three other events: the 1500 (3:56.82), the 5k (15:47.40), and the 3k Steeple (9:35.30), even though I'm 99% sure some of those aren't his absolute fastest times, since he just told me this morning he ran 3:52 for the 1500. He was two-time conference champion and 4-time national qualifier in cross country,  Last year, 2014, he was inducted into the Valley City State Athletics Hall of Fame. He was also a two-time national qualifier in track, once in the steeple and once in the 1500. If I may, I would also add that he was a pretty darn good high school government teacher and track coach!


Boehm!!

Gary Schafer was the third runner for the Braves that 1983 season. He was also all-state in cross country in high school, placing 3rd at the WDA meet and 6th at the state meet in 1983, and supposedly ran 4:44 and 9:56 for the 1600 and 3200 his freshman year of high school. He was another one of the athletes that took a wrong turn at the state xc meet in 1983.

After high school he also went to VCSU and had a great career as well. In 2001 he was inducted into the VCSU athletics HOF, and has the distinction of being a national champion. Out of the all the different levels of college in the US, only the NAIA has the marathon as an event in which the collegiate athletes compete. Schafer, in 1989, won the NAIA marathon title, running 2:29. He also is ranked in the top ten in VCSU school history in the 5k (2nd, 15:12) and the 10K (5th, 31:33).

After college he worked in business as a manager and vice president at Great Plains Software in Fargo (which later was acquired by Microsoft for a good chunk of money), and then worked for LANAC company in Chicago.

So overall, this was an amazing high school team that sent runners off to relatively successful post-high school careers. It's not surprising that many of the state's best teams come from the Missouri River Valley region with how rugged the terrain can be out there. It's simply another example of people who were fast even though they trained exclusively in North Dakota.

As always with these posts, let me know if I messed up anywhere or seem to be missing facts!


Links that aided my research:
Milesplit Article About Mandan High
Mandan High Hall of Fame Article on Coach House
Cross Country Journal w/ College Nationals Results
Some WDA XC History
State XC History
'88-'89 Minot State Yearbook Thing
'87-'88 Minot State Yearbook Thing
1984 Class A Boys State Track Results
VCSU Track Records
Boehm Broke Course Records
VCSU Hall of Fame Announcement
Gary Schafer- ND Runner
NAIA Marathon Champions
Business Announcement About Schafer

Monday, December 14, 2015

Reflections on the Semester

I'm done with my ninth semester of college. I have learned that abstract mathematics is a little absurd and non-relevant, but in a 'this is actually kind of cool to learn, but impossible to take a test on' kind of way. Ok, maybe that's a little pessimistic, but I've learned that historians in universities don't exactly study the cutting-edge material that the average Joe cares about either. Oh well, I digress (can you digress in the first paragraph of a post?)

It's a relief! I brought a load of 6 books (monographs is the proper academic term) back to the library, and for good measure deposited my stress with them- hopefully the librarians can find a good place for that. I haven't shaved in weeks, and I even started wearing sweatpants to class because, well, putting on jeans is sometimes a little too hard. My work table, once scattered with assorted syllabi and necessary student teaching information, now simply hosts pens, pencils, an overused water bottle (courtesy of UND dining services), and my Ethernet cord-dependent computer where I watch ultra running documentaries while eating apples with peanut butter. You could say I'm living the dream.

I suppose I should mention something about running. I raced three times this semester. Back in September I raced unattached (unaffiliated with UND because I didn't have cross country eligibility) at the famed Roy Griak Invitational at the Univeristy of Minnesota, running at probably a 90% effort level and having a lot of fun! In October I raced at the UND home cross country meet, placing second and running a big pr of 24:37 for the 8km (5 mile) race; it was a super fun race where I got race side by side against a stud from the University of Manitoba. Then, a little more than a week ago I raced the mile at South Dakota State, this time in the UND jersey, and ran a 4:13 solo and felt pretty good.

My overall plan remains unchanged: I will be at UND for another semester to finish out my track eligibility (ahem, I mean my education) and chase some of my dreams. This next summer I will be out at Camp of the Cross Ministries near Garrison, ND again, coordinating fun trips on Lake Sakakawea and in the Badlands (along with numerous Vacation Bible Schools). Next fall I will be student teaching somewhere, hopefully away from Grand Forks and likely training as hard as ever, for what event I've yet to decide- that'll come later.

Moving to the meat and potatoes of the post, I've learned some more serious lessons this semester when it comes to running and training. Here they are:

1.) If you want to be a better runner, you have to run  more. It's literally that simple. People can overcomplicate all they want, but good writers practice writing; good researchers practice research; good shooters practice shooting; good cooks practice cooking- the list is endless. I've upped my weekly mileage to around 80 this semester, and it helps.

2.) Rest and nutrition are vital. I used to think I took care of myself, but I'm finally learning how to actually do it. Minimum of 8 hours of sleep every night, healthy eating, and not doing anything strenuous on recovery days have me feeling strong on workout days. My easy days rarely dip under 7:00 pace anymore, and that's perfectly fine. Never push an easy run.

3.) No single workout will make you fast. It seems that people are always looking for that one killer workout. They scour the logs of fast runners to find those workouts that leave people kissing the ground afterwards, dreaming of destroying their opponents because they made it through that one workout. This is immortalized in the famous "Once a Runner" book in which the main character completes an idiotic 3x(20x400m) workout and no longer gets tired when he runs afterwards. This is not true in the real world. Training is an accumulation of miles and workouts over time. The more consistent the training, the more fit the runner. The more fit the runner, the better the runner performs. Each workout is important, and no workout should be pointed to when success is achieved, but rather the weeks of workouts added up over time.

4.) Trust in team and coach is more important than than the individual. There are scores of running philosophies that can be found everywhere nowadays (it seems that Daniel's Running Formula is the current flavor of the month), and this can actually be harmful to a team. When reading a training book, it could be easy and tempting to ditch the philosophy of your coach and team and try to better yourself by training like the 'elites'. However, to go even further with the bullet point before this one, precise workouts are not that important. If a team has developed an atmosphere where everybody buys into the team philosophy and believe that the coach(es) can get them to achieve their goals, they probably will. If athletes turn their backs on the team or coaches in search of something 'better' to make them 'faster', the dynamic will fall apart and success will likely not appear. I'm fully transparent to my coach, we tailor my weekly workouts and schedules to what I need to try to be successful. I'm not going to sit down and say "I really think we need more I-paced interval this week", because my coach has more than 25 years of experience. If he says I'm running 400s today (full disclosure: I ran 400s today), I'm running 400s today. We can look at paces and recovery, but honestly it doesn't matter that much what the tiny details are. If I finish and I'm starting to run low on fumes, that means I worked my body hard, and that's all I need to get better. Like I said above, running can be complicated or it can be simple. You can make every run a certain exact pace with exact rest and plan out how much of your weekly mileage will be at certain paces, or you can just listen to your body and roll with the punches. I'll choose the latter.

5.) Some people are simply more naturally talented than others. However, talent is a little bit different than I originally thought. Talent isn't necessarily that a person can go run for the first time and beat everybody. In fact, many of the best runners started out mediocre or even unwilling to try out track or cross country. Talent is how people respond to training. If ten people who run races at the same exact paces are given the exact same training for the exact same amount of time, one person of the ten will be the fastest by the end, and one person will be the slowest. What this means is that every person needs training tailored to them. Just because a friend runs some ridiculous workout doesn't mean you should too. Believe it or not, people are in fact different.

6.) Watching passionate coaches that have the respect of their athletes is addicting.

7.) Watching passionate athletes that have the respect of their coaches is addicting.

8.) My blog posts are too long.

That's all for now! With winter break coming up, I'd like to throw up a couple of research posts like I did last winter break. We'll see what happens.

Peace

Sunday, November 29, 2015

When Work Becomes Rest

beep beep…beep beep….beep beep….beep *click*

Still groggy, I rolled over and looked at my watch. Yup, 6:15 am. I was so pumped for this last night, but holy cats was my bed warm right now. I fished out my phone and checked the weather: 6 degrees with a wind chill of -3. Ugh. Well, I guess I gotta burn off this pie somehow.

I began the tumultuous process of putting on layers for a cold run: socks, two pairs of long pants, a long-sleeve shirt, a running jacket, a warm hat, gloves, watch, and certainly a pair of shoes that were just as tired as I was. I turned on the light and examined my room. I was sleeping on a futon in the basement where just two days previous my family and I had made about 10 dozen lefse (hard to accurately gauge because we ate a bit while cooking); I was the one who added the flour to the potatoes and rolled it into small balls, where my dad would then roll them out flat and give it to my brothers, who would watch over them judiciously on a grill. When it was done, the lefse would be placed onto an open towel, sprinkled with water, and eventually was collected by my mom on its way to the garage for cooling. Once cooled, my grandma, mom, and uncle would fold them and put them into bags for storage.

For now, however, I was about to head out the door. My watch had graciously found satellites quickly this morning, and so I was able to focus on closing the door quietly- a much harder task than you might imagine. No one stirred in the house (I was going to bed earlier than everyone else on account of needing to do morning runs), and so I was conscious of the CCCRRREEEEEEEAAAAAKKKKKKKKKK of the giant wood door guarding the house. Fortunately, I made it outside without rallying the troops. In this small town of about 1200 (the biggest town in the county, I might add) I heard nothing but the hum of homes trying to stay warm. Stars twinkled down at me, and local light posts were reflected straight up into the air by the low-laying fog. I wanted to stand there and soak it all in, but thus is the life of the runner. I started off down the driveway.

The first few miles trotted slowly by with no really exciting events. Two vehicles drove past, probably wondering what in the world I was up to, but other than that it was quiet. Even though the sky was clear above me, ahead of me the fog worked in. It became so thick that I could see nothing but the dark road laid out before me, disappearing into nothingness. I couldn’t see where my feet were placing themselves, but I’ve rolled my ankle enough times to not really care. As I exited the pavement and continued on the gravel part of the county highway (spoiler alert: most of this road is gravel), I went past a farmstead with a large light in the front yard. The farm was protected by a row of evergreen trees currently wrapped in fog, and as I ran past, the light shone through the openings in the trees and scattered through the mist in the air- it reminded me of disco ball because the light would shine and go away, shine and go away.

By now I was comfortably grooving along to the scratch scratch scratch of running on gravel. My face was beginning to ice over, and my eyelashes were collecting frost. It was still dark, but then I saw a deer in the ditch! I was surprised that it hadn’t run away yet, but as I got closer I realized it was just a mailbox. Shoot. A little ways down the road I really did see a deer though- even the tail was obvious! But that too was simply false; it was actually a green transformer box sitting at the edge of the field. Gosh darnit anyway. Around mile 6 I stopped to take a quick leak, and I couldn’t help but pause for a moment and enjoy the quiet. I had escaped the embracing arms of the fog, and now I was looking across the landscape while the sun lazily rose behind the clouds. Some stars still fought valiantly for position in the sky, and my higher elevation on this road gave me a view of more than 10 miles east of where I was standing. A coyote forlornly called in the distance, the eternal sound of the saddest sounding animal out there. Nothing stirred and the only sound was that buzzing in my ears that appears only in the absence of noise. I had a chance to reflect on the peace of this place.

Being stuck in the concrete jungle that is academia can have its ups and downs, but it took me until I got out here to realize how badly I needed the release and peace that comes from running out in the country. This week I’ve seen sunrises and sunsets, birds and deer, frost and fog, and hills and flat. I did not see any other runners, walkers, joggers, or bikers. I was able to truly enjoy my training, and even doing workouts was more a blessing than a curse. Sure, I fielded a fair number of questions about the absurdity of my pursuits, but hearing a coyote howl out across a dead quiet, stunningly beautiful prairie at sunrise made it all worth it.

At eight miles I turned around and headed into the workout part of my run. The early morning, hills, and extra layers made the next 8 miles a struggle, but there were times when everything seemed to connect. Sometimes during a run, the runner can reach a certain stage of zen where the line between pain and joy disappears and they enter a stage of simply being. After my first couple harder miles, I hit that point. I would look down at my watch, worried that my sudden joy would be a consequence of slower pace. But it wasn’t. I was trekking on foot perhaps faster than anyone had trekked on this road before; I was running straight into the wall of fog in front of me that never seemed to go away; I was completely exposed in the open with no cover, but also no souls to see me or wonder what I was doing; I was letting the silence flow around and over me, and my mind went blank to enjoy the moment; I was breathing harder, but never once would I consider stopping. As the icicles on my beard grew big enough that I could no longer open my mouth too far, I realized that this would be as close to living as it could come. What I was experiencing cannot be explained to a person who has not yet had it happen to them. All fear was gone and my heart was full. This- this is life.

And so I finished my run. 16 miles worth of ice, frost, and quad soreness. I had already went through more thoughts and emotions than some people will entertain in a whole day. I knew that soon we would have to ship out of Garrison and head back. For me, this means back to school, papers, and proofs. If that doesn’t sound appealing, it’s because it isn't. It means back to paved everything and noise without rest. It means light pollution and going to the grocery store without knowing anybody there. But it also means track season is here. In less than one week I’ll be running my heart out around a track chasing times that I have been training for since June. It means access to an amazing facility and trainers. It means freedom from the relentless attack on my body by pies, lefse, and peanut butter m&ms in the last few days.

Yesterday as I stopped halfway through my afternoon run to admire the enormous sun falling to the horizon, I remembered that through the day I caught up with old pals, stopped by the Bible Camp that I’ll be working at for a sixth summer next year, and spent quality time with my family. I thought to myself: it really doesn’t get better that this. My life is a song of worship. Running is worship. Quiet is worship. Sunsets are worship. Sunrises are worship. I started running back towards town on the empty gravel road.


Scratch scratch scratch scratch

Friday, November 20, 2015

Insecurities #4- Talking

This is a series I've thought about writing for quite some time now, and I hope it can be uplifting to anyone who can relate with the content. The amount of mental toughness it takes to be a serious distance runner is absolutely absurd, but with it comes mental struggles that can be equally absurd. I want to start writing typing about some of the mental struggles I've experienced and how I've worked through them. Of course, some will have encountered these same problems, some even worse than what I have had, but nonetheless they can be related to most people, I believe. With that, let's jump in to round 4.

-----

Person: “Do you run on the track team?”
Me (oh no): “Yeah I do”
Person: “So do you like run the 400?”
Me (I can see where this headed, and I don’t like it): “No, I’ve been running the mile the last few years, but now I’m moving up to the 3k and 5k.”
(I can predict the next question every time)
Person: “So how fast can you run a mile?”
There it is- the dreaded question. I now know that I have backed myself into a corner enough to where there is no escape. I have two options- try to sidestep the question or tell the truth. I choose the former.
Me: “Well, do we want to include altitude-converted times or not?” I’m hoping that by evading the direct question by bringing up a topic many people don’t know about, I can burn enough time to actually save myself. Usually this doesn’t work, because people don’t care about conversions; they just want to know the answer. We parse back and forth, but eventually it gets back to:
Person: “So how fast can you run a mile?” Checkmate. I brace myself and quickly stammer out:
Me: “Well I’ve run 4:09 at sea level.”
WWWHHHHAAAAAAAATTTTTTTTTTT. Are you serious? I don’t think I could break 8 minutes in the mile right now!
Or
I don’t even think I can drive that fast! Hahahaha
I sit there, turning red. I try to explain how this time is still a full 10 seconds above what I would need to run to even be considered a threat on a stage bigger than the Midwest, but it's too late. I’ve had this conversation plenty of times, and it all jumps back to the fact that everybody had to the run the mile in school growing up. This is a special distance that Americans can relate to, because most people have some sort of an idea how fast their mile time was, and how far a mile is anyway. We speak in terms of miles when driving, for example. This is such an insecure topic for me, because many people find it abnormal.

In many sports, athletes put in BIG hours. Nobody is surprised when the athlete shows up wearing workout sweats with the complementary ice bag, because it is assumed that they just got done with a long practice. Many people even remember those days themselves. Well, 3 hours of practice isn’t that big of a deal, they’ll say, because back when I was in high school etc etc. People can relate with long, hard practices. Many people know about drills, weightlifting, locker room banter, and teammate bonding, and so it’s a lot easier for them to understand the life of that athlete. I have never encountered that sort of understand from a random person.

When I try to describe my training to someone who doesn’t run competitively or didn’t run competitively, I usually don’t get an understanding nod with an interjecting ‘when I was in high school’, but rather wide, speculative eyes. When I say I’m running around 75-80 miles a week, people ask why I would even want to do that. When I tell them about the workout I just finished, they say that’s crazy. When I tell them my races times, they simply shake their heads and remember how much they hate running. I think this is the reason I’ve started spending more time reading about professional and high-level college runners on running websites. There, people talk about training with the full understanding that if you’re reading it or listening to it, you probably care.

What carves away at me the most though, is when people believe that I don’t care about their training or racing because I’m faster. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve been talking to someone and they are telling me about some aspect of their training, and they eventually say, “but you probably don’t care about any of this”. It’s almost offensive in a way, because I put all of this time and effort into training, and when I’m listening to somebody share their experiences, they all of a sudden feel like they aren’t good enough. I love listening to people talk about these things, because I personally know how hard it is to find someone who will just listen to you talk about your training without getting googley-eyed. I enjoy listening to my little brother talk about his high school training, because maybe he doesn’t get to do that often. (completely unrelated, not in any way associated with my little brother’s high school team sidenote: if you’re a high school coach and a bunch of your athletes have shin splits and are exhausted from your training, you’re probably overtraining them. If they don’t run well at a meet, don’t make them run more in practice the next week)


So what am I getting at? Well, the insecurity I’m writing about this time is the fear I have of discussing my training with people who don’t run or train. The reactions I get from people, either non-caring or astounded, are actually disheartening. It’s refreshing to have someone who I can sit down with and talk training without expecting some crazy reaction. Maybe this post sounds really whiny, and maybe I sound like a high-and-might type that’s a little out of touch with reality, but the words I write are still true. My thesis is this: Be excited to talk about your passions without fear, and be equally excited to listen to others talk about their passions without fear. Not only will you learn a lot from each other, but you might have a reignition in your passion because of seeing a friend chase theirs. I get a fire burning in my soul whenever I talk about my passions, and I’m willing to bet you do too. Just let it out; I promise it’ll feel dang good. 

Blessings,

Nate

Thursday, November 19, 2015

Insecurities #3- Comparison

This is a series I've thought about writing for quite some time now, and I hope it can be uplifting to anyone who can relate with the content. The amount of mental toughness it takes to be a serious distance runner is absolutely absurd, but with it comes mental struggles that can be equally absurd. I want to start writing typing about some of the mental struggles I've experienced and how I've worked through them. Of course, some will have encountered these same problems, some even worse than what I have had, but nonetheless they can be related to most people, I believe. With that, let's jump in to round 3.

-----

Have you ever tied your self-worth to a meaningless statistic? I have.

There was about a time frame of almost two years in which I didn't have a facebook account. I had been using it often, but I decided to take a break and deactivate it for awhile. I had noticed a disturbing trend in which I would connect my feelings about a topic with how many likes or comments I could get on a post about it. If a post wasn't garnering much attention, I would delete it. If it was only getting a few likes, I would sit embarrassed, especially when compared to friends who were racking up hundreds of likes simply because they loved their cat or something. On the flip side, I would puff out my chest in pride if I had a bunch of likes, because not only were other people validating how awesome I believed my posts to be, but they must have marveled at my popularity. Well this was completely and utterly unhealthy, so I got rid of it and prayed for a time. The end result was that when I finally did get my facebook back, I noticed that my posts were different. I was trying to uplift others, and not myself; it no longer mattered what the blue likes bar said or how big the red number in the top right corner of the screen was. It felt...good!

As a math guy, I'm a big fan of numbers. I can analyze a group of numbers in more ways than I'd like to admit, and running is much the same. I can memorize a list of someone's personal bests and times they've ran that season. I can recall my times from years previous, who I raced, what their times were, and what they eventually ran later. In fact, I have a memory from high school when I was talking to a teammate about a time he ran, and I was a little taken aback at the fact that he didn't know what race I was talking about- it really wasn't that important to him. Actually, I've found many people don't live and die on times.

I do.

Now again this isn't healthy. I've defined myself by my times. I routinely check my profile on undsports.com or my tfrrs.org page and wonder inwardly what people think of me when they see my times. Do they think I'm a scrub? Do they think of me as competition? Do they think of me as an unattainable goal? It literally consumes me. I see people at meets and my brain wants to think of them in terms of their times, not their personality. I might be talking to teammates about another runner, and if they say 'who is that?', I might respond with 'well, he's the guy that ran X time in Y race'. There has been times where I've been able to run a significant PR (personal record), and I feel a burden lifted simply because people won't think I'm slower than I actually am. It's pathetic. It reminds me of fantasy sports, in which the main goal is to depersonalize athletes in order to see them as statistics in order to accomplish your goal. I see other runners as their best times in order to judge my ability to race them.

One of my favorite professional athletes is Sara Hall. She is currently a long distance runner trying to make the U.S. Rio Olympic Team in the marathon, and she just this last weekend took 2nd place at the U.S. Road 12k Championships behind unarguably the best female distance runner in America right now, Molly Huddle. Sara and her husband, US half-marathon and marathon record holder Ryan Hall, talk often about the 'comparison trap'. The main idea behind this is that we get so caught up in comparing ourselves to others that we fail to see the joy in simply being at peace with our own performances. Who cares if somebody is better or worse than you? The best you can do is to do your best, not someone else's best. It's so easy to let our minds be dominated by the stats of other runners and how we stack up against the group, but in reality it doesn't matter. We need to take joy from what we do and compete at our best at all times. If we beat someone, great! If not, it's not the end of the world.

As I've mentioned in a previous blog post, I've started doing something that is both uncomfortable to me and to most college runners: approaching people on other teams and trying to get to know them. It sounds crazy, but I've come to enjoy it A LOT. The more I get to know another runner on a personal level, the more I find myself cheering for them, and the less I find myself stuck in comparison. I see other college guys chasing some of the same dreams as I am, and with their hearts set on working hard to get there. Suddenly it doesn't matter to me how fast they were at some meet hundreds of miles from where I am at a place I've never been to. Sure, seeing people run well motivates me to train hard, but I don't run a workout envisioning my rival right in front of me, sucking air as I confidently pass them down the final stretch, victoriously stretching out my arms to receive the reception from the crowd at my triumph. No, that was the old me. The new me loves what I do, not what others do.

My last point is the worst of all comparison but perhaps the most common: comparison among teammates. It is my firmly-held belief that we have all done this at some point whether we've been an athlete or not. We've compared test scores and been jealous of a classmate getting a better grade; we've compared jobs, some getting higher pay than others; we've compared stats, some teammates clearly doing better than ourselves. I will never forget the time a teammate that I trained and raced with looked me in the face and told me that it really bothered him when I beat him in a race. That's not what running is about. If we worry about teammates beating us, we miss the joy of being able to race and train at all! I know that there is pressure to make travel squads, conference teams, etc, but the moment you make a teammate into your competition, you've lost. Teammates can push each other towards new heights, but not fight each other about who gets there first, or who gets the best view at the top.

So this is my worst insecurity. I am every day fighting off the urge to compare myself to others. I instead try to live in joy and try to remember the words of the famous passage from 1 Samuel 16:7, "The Lord does not look at the things man looks at. Man looks at the outward appearance, but the Lord looks at the heart." What a world we would live in if we saw people's hearts rather than outward appearances. But we don't. So, instead I have to fight and pray to love people for who they are, not what their best 5k is in comparison to mine. We all should do the same.

Blessings,

Nate

Wednesday, November 18, 2015

Insecurities #2- Injury

This is a series I've thought about writing for quite some time now, and I hope it can be uplifting to anyone who can relate with the content. The amount of mental toughness it takes to be a serious distance runner is absolutely absurd, but with it comes mental struggles that can be equally absurd. I want to start writing typing about some of the mental struggles I've experienced and how I've worked through them. Of course, some will have encountered these same problems, some even worse than what I have had, but nonetheless they can be related to most people, I believe. With that, let's jump in to round 2.

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Before the beginning of my senior year of track in high school, I found myself grinding out miles on a stationary bike while staring at a predictably bland-colored wall in the backrooms of West Fargo High School. I honestly can't even remember what the injury was, but I came into the season far less prepared than I wanted to be. My first individual race came at the Bison Sports Arena in Fargo (an indoor track that isn't used for indoor track anymore), and I was able to stick with the leaders for a little bit, but my lack of strength caught up with me and I tanked the second half of the race, finishing with a disappointing place and time. It was devastating. I had aspirations of being a conference champion, and here I was sucking wind against guys who I had beaten before. My coach, fine-tuned to high school athletes in a way I have yet to ever see bested, assured me that I would be fine once I got back into shape, and furthermore that it wouldn't take as much time as I thought. His words attempted to lift me out of a pit and set me someplace that I could see clearer and breathe easier. Well, the short version of the story is that two weeks later at the same place and running the same distance against the same competition, I won a convincing victory at the indoor conference meet with a time that even surprised me. My first injury had been endured.

As luck would have it, the week leading up to the outdoor conference meet that same year, I found myself in the empty hallways of my school, head resting against a locker, sadness pulsing through my body. I had sustained a small strain in my calf a few days before, and it was the day of conference and I wasn't 100% healthy. I had been stretching and foam-rolling (well, I was using a rolling pin my parents borrowed me, isn't that a North Dakota family for ya?), but to no avail. When nobody was looking, I would bounce on my toes a few times to see if the pain had completely subsided. Nope. We were hosting conference, so I sought refuge in the school, where I continued to stretch and try jogging to see if the pain would go away. Nope. My races that day were terrible by my standards.

Less than a year later I found myself sitting on the floor of the UND locker room, stretching after another boring pool session, wondering what I was doing with my life. After getting handily beaten in all my cross country and track races, I sustained another injury, and this time I was told it was simply because I was weak and inflexible basically everywhere: hips, quads, back, etc...It was tearing me apart. I recall writing in my math notes one day: "Where would you be right now if not for running?" The question teased me for weeks. Did I really have a place running for a university when my body continually gave up on me? Could I not be doing much more good someplace else? I was still doing that thing where when nobody was looking, I would try jumping or jogging slowly to see if the pain had gone away. Nope. (By the way, I know that other athletes do that too- torment themselves by constantly testing their injuries when they KNOW it's not going to be healed, but they hang on to some sort of false hope. When they realize it still hurts, it only adds to the mental pain)

But then I became healthy enough to run a couple laps as part of my rehab exercises. It was only a few laps, but it was a huge mental relief for me. I literally felt the weight lift off my shoulders. You know, an injured athlete is quite an interesting creature. Sports and training are what they know, and teammates/training partners are their social groups; both of those disappear with injuries. The athlete is no longer in the 'in' group and likely doesn't understand inside jokes among teammates anymore. Their method of exercise and physical well-being is taken away from them, and they can torment themselves in many ways. Their appetite will lessen, their sleep patterns won't be as fluid, and their head will be filled with questions that had never taken hold there. It's especially worse for scholarship athletes, because those signed papers represent something that can't necessarily be filled when injured, and that can contribute to the helplessness they feel. For me, the worst is when I'm injured but go to a meet to cheer on my teammates. I get to field questions about why I'm not racing, and simply walking around in street clothes is enough to make me feel like everybody is looking at me, knowing. Sometimes it makes me just want to leave, because I feel so uncomfortable. I hear the gun go off at the beginning of every race, and a part of me simply dies. That could be me on the track.

Soon I was running more and more, and I even did some workouts. Unfortunately for me, I came back too quickly and re-injured the same spot, but I wasn't crushed as bad this time: I had remembered the joy of hobbling around the track when I had been waiting in want for months. The oft-quoted cliche held true: I didn't really know what I had until it was gone. Injuries can be a source of increasing sadness and discontent. Separation from team, long and grueling rehab exercises, and an unchanging full-time class load are all weighing down heavily on the athlete. The athlete may watch teammates perform outstanding, and have trouble being truly happy for them, because it was their absence that created the void for the teammates performance to even happen. But all that is wiped away when the sport can be experienced again. The joy of reliving the dreams of your past weeks can overcome any previous sadness. Being able to smile with teammates again is a truly wonderful thing.

I have still had other injuries in college, and each time I feel the same way: my world around me seems to crash down and crush my body with it. Smiling becomes harder, and joy becomes less. But I have gotten better over time. I now recognize injuries to be a blessing in disguise. Nothing in athletics can refocus your attention quite like having athletics taken away for awhile. You get to go back to the basics and start loving the game/sport again. In fact, I've started considering myself a lucky person to have had as many injuries as I've had, because every time I learn from it. I learn how to take care of my body in a new way, I learn something about training I had never thought about, and I learn how to endure seeing opponents crush out fast times while I watch. I've even learned how to be truly happy for teammate's success while I cannot run.

Above all, I have a solid foundation. With each passing year I realize how important it is to have a base in my life that isn't running or anything else. I have learned from reading the Bible how unimportant individual success is, and how important loving others and being there for their success is. My life isn't fully invested in running, and it does not serve as an idol for me, because I recognize that the most important part of life is to serve and live and Jesus did. In my most recent injury, it bothered me for a couple hours, but after that I said 'you know what, I know that God has a plan, and good can eventually result from this, whatever that may be'.

Injuries have always been a major stress for me, because it takes away something rapidly becoming an idol and forces me to refocus. It hurts mental and physically, and it truly tears some people apart, but if you keep the big picture in mind, you can actually thrive through them. Don't ever let your self-worth be tied to your success that depends on you staying healthy. Self-worth comes from knowing that you are fearfully and wonderfully made.

Blessings,

Nate

Tuesday, November 17, 2015

Insecurities #1- Body

This is a series I've thought about writing for quite some time now, and I hope it can be uplifting to anyone who can relate with the content. The amount of mental toughness it takes to be a serious distance runner is absolutely absurd, but with it comes mental struggles that can be equally absurd. I want to start writing typing about some of the mental struggles I've experienced and how I've worked through them. Of course, some will have encountered these same problems, some even worse than what I have had, but nonetheless they can be related to most people, I believe. With that, let's jump in to round 1.

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I recall my freshman year at UND when I was already running twice as much as I was my senior year of high school, and my body was going through transformations as a result. The very first thing I noticed was my calves. See, I have tended to run in such a way that my forefoot will land first, and that places a lot of stress on the calves. It stunned me, and it started to almost become a burden. I would be walking up the stairs to my dorm room and there would always be a mirror on the wall, and I would watch my newly-formed calves stretching and contracting and I walked to the second floor. On some occasions when nobody was in the stairwell, I would even embellish a little and get up on my tip-toes to marvel. I wish I was making this up, but I'm not.

It didn't take long into the second semester of my freshman year before I became acutely aware of the body-worship that was taking place. I would be walking around campus in shorts and wonder to myself if anybody noticed my calves like I did, which is completely ridiculous! I started wearing jeans more and more to try to train myself to stop looking at and thinking about it. It actually worked for awhile, but I had to do some prayer to realize that it really didn't matter what my legs looked like- we are all created different. I was satisfied with answer- or at least I was until I had to deal with it again.

The next years went by without trouble, but these past two have been kind of rough. As I've gotten faster and my competition has improved as well, I have noticed that almost everybody I finish near has similar characteristics: skinnier, more defined, and more runner-esque. When others run, you can see each individual leg muscle from miles away (especially in pictures), whereas for me there really isn't any definition- just a white blob. When others run, you can almost picture the wind knocking them over because they have no fat on them, but when I run I jiggle. When others run, their jersey fits loosely over their body, whereas mine fits more snug with less breathing room.The worst is watching professionals train, because they are so ridiculously fit and lean, and I'm usually sitting there eating peanut butter or something.

I know I am not alone in this. How do I know? Look at the prevalence of burn-out and eating disorders among endurance athletes. The desire to be skinnier, faster, and toned all at the same time can lead to disaster. I know I've had workouts where I was unable to finish and for the simple reason that I didn't have enough calories in my body out of fear of gaining weight.* I know a handful of people who have personally struggled with eating disorders, and it can kill a season, but more importantly a person's mental state. Every heard of Dagny Knutson? She was the swimmer from Minot who shattered every record imaginable, made it into the big-time, had an American Record at one point, and then came crashing down due to bulimia. Here's an excellent article about her from the New York Times: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/26/sports/swimmer-dagny-knutson-retires-again-seeking-normalcy.html?_r=0

The first time I had any real help with body-comparisons and lack of any kind of self-confidence was conference cross country my junior year of college. We were at Montana State University in Bozeman, and during warmups I was trying to figure out who the big-dogs were; I had seen previous results from earlier in the season, and I knew that there was a guy from Southern Utah who would make it to nationals because he was a stud. I was looking through their team and they had many tall, lanky, lean runners that looked the part, and I couldn't figure out which was him. Fortunately, during the post-race awards ceremony I got to see which was he was- he was the short, stockier looking guy with the enormous calves. He looked to me more like an 800 runner than a cross country runner. I also realized that some of those super skinny, runner-esque guys I had beaten. It dawned on me that perhaps it didn't matter what your body looked like after all. 

With each passing year I become more and more convinced that it doesn't matter what your body looks like. You put in the time and you'll get better. Some people are more naturally talented than others, but that's out of your control. Trying to perfect the look of your body in order to expect some kind of artificial success is worthless and stressful. I know now that when I line up at the start line, chances are that most of the other runners will look more like a distance runner than me. I don't care. Every day I get to do something I love and enjoy it. I eat as healthy as I can, but I don't fear having a dessert or unhealthy snack occasionally. I have gotten skinnier, but if I'm hungry I'm not afraid to EAT. If somebody looks faster than me, I don't care- prove it to me in a race. If they are faster, who cares? I then have a new goal to chase. 

Don't ever let body image control you. There will always be skinnier people out there. There will always be people who look faster out there. There will always be people who have your ideal body image out there. Realize these two things: 1.) An ideal is just that- an ideal. 2.) There are people who cannot enjoy what they love for various reasons. Set goals, but know when to take a break. Above all, realize that, like I said above, we are all created unique and special by our Creator, and never take that for granted. Our body was made as a temple of worship, not a temple to be worshiped. 

I hope you enjoyed this post or were able to take something from it. I have at least three more of these posts on the way.

Blessings,

Nate


*I want to be crystal clear- I do not have and have never had any kind of eating disorder, but that doesn't diminish the argument.

Friday, November 13, 2015

High Performance Center

As I finished running a strider before the workout, one of my teammates came up beside me and said that we needed to get started, because she was getting jittery; I must admit I felt much the same. This was simply a workout- something we do two or three times a week, and yet I almost felt like I was about to start a race. Something was certainly special about this place.

As we finished one of our 400s, we looked over to the entrance area, where some older people were standing around, looking at the building and watching the track team workout. After years of training inside an old historic building, we were not used to people dropping by to check out the freshness. It took me back to last week, when we had the grand opening for the public. Hundreds of people- young, old, runners, non-runners- came out to celebrate. We heard from the some of the wealthiest most influential leaders in the community, and even had a ceremonial breaking of the tape where some of us ran around a small portion of the track and ran through a finishing tape while everyone stood around, clapped, and took pictures. Yet, amidst all the energy, there was a distinct silence in the building.

The inside is so incredibly massive in size and unparalleled in design that even a gathering such as this could not swallow up the quiet resting in far parts of the building. Athletes demonstrating in the other half of the buildings were tiny specks in another world. If they yelled, we may not be able to hear what they say. The roof is far over our heads, and looking into the oval lighting can be euphoric even. We have moved all of our track stuff over from the Hyslop- mats, carts, implements, hurdles- and yet the space still seems empty.

As we continued to pump out 400s it dawned on me that a large majority of the track team was in the building at that moment, and yet the amount of open area was stunning. Most lanes were dormant and the turf was recovering from whenever last the football team used it. A thought crossed my mind, one that I have many times in the past couple weeks: it is surreal that this is for us. Throughout my college career we have been to some beautiful track facilities, and I always marvel in jealousy at the host school and how lucky they are to not only have the facility to host meets, but also to train in. Now we have a 300-meter indoor track with the nicest surface money can buy surrounding a full-length turf football field. We have, no matter the time of year, a place to train where it is 60 degrees and not windy. We have space to accomplish what we want to accomplish. We have full length runways and pits for the jumping events. It continually blows my mind. Maybe to truly appreciate a place such as this, one must come from humble circumstances.

Of course, the grand opening to the public wasn't the first time we were thrown under the radar this fall. A few weeks before that there was a track and field reunion coinciding with the home cross country meet weekend, and that brought oodles of people from all over the place to come check out the new digs. The highlight of my day may have been noticing halfway through a conversation that I was talking to a 7-foot high jumper (he jumped that high- I mean he was tall but not that tall) and school record holder, but the excitement pulsing through the crowd of people was real. I watched as kids ran down the track, smiles erupting from their faces. I saw elderly folks walking around the track, soaking in the large posters on the wall, showing off famous athletes and teams (and the names of the donors for the pictures) of old. Most people could only say 'wow'. This had finally happened.

Yes, this was a long time coming. My freshman year my senior captain told me that when he was recruited in high school he had been promised this building. I've heard stories of people back into the late 90s being promised this building. Many people speculated that it would never be done as a result. It sits literally on the foundation of the old hockey arena, a place where my coach has said that the distance runners would go run 200m repeats in the winter, but eventually were barred from doing so because the building was condemned. Cradled next to Memorial Stadium, now it stands above other nearby buildings, proudly blazing the lit up interlocking ND into the dark skies of late fall in North Dakota, a sign of what has been made.

Going even farther back, UND was founded in an interesting place. At the time a university was scrapped together a mile outside the actual city of Grand Forks, isolated on the prairie. In every direction from the campus there was nothing but wheat bending in the breeze for miles. Trees? Nah. Water? Well the Red River was a few miles away if that dirty thing counts. Civilization? Eh, kind of. However, some visionaries decided that a university of higher learning was necessary to civilize the plains a little. Now we have a law school, med school, aviation school, business school, and everything in between. Every time something like the HPC is built, we are telling a story of strength. We can defeat the North Dakota winters. We can defeat the nothingness of the prairies. We do not have to be at disadvantage simply because of where we are from. It is a symbol of the heart of the people here.

We are going on cooldown now. We leave the building and go into this tiny little parking lot on the North side. We have to be a little careful, because the raised sidewalk is the same color as the parking lot, and Ryan almost ate a cement sandwich last week when he didn't notice that. We go around the dirt that has been seeded to raise some grass in the spring and head out into the city. When we come back, a travel bus sits in the parking lot. We speculate who it might be. Is it the football team UND plays tomorrow? Is is the volleyball team UND played yesterday? As we go into the HPC, it turns out to be a group of people checking out the building- standing over the railing and taking it all in. They seem as stunned as we were the first time we saw it. We went down the stairs to the track area. Yup, still pretty quiet.

As we packed up and left, I forgot to turn around and take a good look before we left. Oh well, I suppose we'll be in here quite a few times between now and May. Maybe by then I'll accept this gracious donation and stop being in shock that we actually get to train here. Then again, maybe not. How could one ever become accustomed to such a wonderful place? We now have a place to show off; we have a house to protect.

Sunday, November 8, 2015

When the Reality is Better Than the Dream

The phrase 'deer camp' means a lot of different things to a lot of different people. For my family, it means every year during the first weekend of deer gun season in early November we assemble at the farm for a weekend of hunting, eating, and shooting the bull. With each passing year I realize that the hunting part takes a back seat to everything else. Each one of us is escaping his 'reality' in order to go off the grid for a weekend of bliss.

This weekend was my poorest in a long time in terms of training. I got a workout in on Friday morning before we left, but I barely managed 20 minutes of running on Saturday before sundown, and 8 1/2 miles on my normal long run day, where I'll usually run almost twice as many miles as that. Yet, I couldn't be happier. After a long day of hunting outside sun-up to sun-down, I have zero motivation to change into running clothes, go out into the dark, and run a sketchy prairie road to the section line to the county highway. Remember, this isn't a city where the streets are nicely lit for you. When the moon is not full and shining, you can't really see the ground beneath your feet. Combine that with bumpy, muddy, pot-hole ridden roads, and I think I'd rather stay inside and eat far too much of our perfectly crafted high-protein cuisine of venison, eggs, potatoes, and onions (and that's exactly what I did).

I talked with a teammate recently about a certain high-pitched buzzing that I get in my ears when everything is silent. When I'm outside in a place devoid of human noises and there isn't too much wind, all I can hear is the buzzing in my ears. I feel genuinely sad for him for not experiencing that before, because it is a magical sound that I search for. People in a conversation about why in h-ee-double-hockey-sticks I run as much as I do, the question occasionally pops up jokingly, "Well what are you running from?" [this is followed by some kind of expectant expression, as if I should have expected this question or something] I realized this summer that I AM running from something- noise. Cars, trains, people, buildings, airplanes, sirens, ...the list is endless. Living in Grand Forks sometimes hurts because I walk out the door in the morning and I'm immediately slammed with noise, ruining what might otherwise be a peaceful sunrise. Sometimes I almost feel enclosed.

And that's the wonderful thing about deer camp. No matter what's going on inside, I walk out the door and I see the stars, I hear the wind, and that's it. The world is at peace and I can breathe fresh, crisp fall air. I really have come to believe that everybody runs from something, but people who spend time in the country feel the same way, especially at our deer camp. Work, stress, obligations- all are deserted for a weekend of what some might call 'a dream'. Whether it's seeing the sunrise while sitting in a shelterbelt watching deer come running by; whether it's walking not-so-stealthily through a forest of cockleburs; whether it's watching shooting stars zoom across the light pollution-free night sky; whether it's sleeping in a place where no one will disturb you; whether it's watching deer swim across the river, fleeing the pushers, and keeping your gun on 'safety' the whole time; whether it's sitting around and talking about whatever is on your mind without worries of judgement; and whether it's running down a valley just to sit by a creek and listen to nothing while sweat steams off of your body with the sun setting- this is as close as life will get to 'reality'. I guess now it's back to the 'dream world' that involves writing papers, filling out schedules, meeting obligations, trying to get enough sleep, eating a lot less food, and writing more papers. Until then, I reminisce about the kind of quiet that I flee from. What do you run away from?

Monday, October 26, 2015

My Opinion on the UND Nickname (Part 3)

Part One: http://northdakotarunner.blogspot.com/2015/07/my-opinion-on-und-nickname.html
Part Two: http://northdakotarunner.blogspot.com/2015/07/my-opinion-on-und-nickname-part-2.html

Big news came out yesterday after the first round of voting for the final nickname that UND will adopt.
1.) The Fighting Hawks had the most votes, and in fact collected almost 1/3 of the total votes.
2.) Only about 27% of eligible voters actually voted.
3.) President Kelley allowed for the Nodaks nickname to continue to the final round of voting, reasoning that because it was only 100-and-some votes short of the second place finisher, Roughriders, it should be brought along. The North Stars and Sundogs were eliminated.

To begin, I was stunned to find out that Fighting Hawks had garnered the most votes. Off the top of my head I cannot name anybody who indicated to me that they would vote for this name, but rather I heard droves of people who would vote for Nodaks. It has been offered to me that many of these votes come from out-of-staters, and while I've noticed that now as well, there's no possible way for me to assert that without some evidence.

What stunned me more was the low turnout. For all the hullabaloo this issue has generated, the voting was frankly pathetic. I will reiterate what I say to people during political elections: if you don't vote, your opinion doesn't hold weight. I don't want to hear your opinion if you refuse to vote and actually contribute to the process. The only exception to this might be those who want to stay 'North Dakota' and refuse to vote out of protest, but even that is beating a dead horse. To those who don't vote because they want the Sioux nickname, believe that the process has been corrupted, and that the Sioux were silenced, I have more to say about that topic later*.

Why didn't people vote? It's sad. UND's spokesman said he was pleased with the turnout because it was the largest online survey response ever. That's one way to spin it, I guess. 27% is still small, no matter how you slice it, especially when the future of the university hangs in the shadows.

Some people are all up-in-arms about President Kelley's allowance of the Nodaks into the final round of voting. First of all, he was in a tough spot. If he keeps it out because that's what the rules said to do, he would take flack from those who would consider him unflexible and tight-fisted. If he allows it to move on, he takes flack from those who accuse him of circumventing the process and imposing his will on the voters. I personally found his decision to be a smart one, because it was so close to Roughriders. Second, who is surprised? We have precedent of Kelley suggesting change on the fly. Remember when the lists of names was being whittled down, and when 'North Dakota' was removed, he claimed that he would consider allowing it back in, even though the committee had already made a decision? Whatever you believe about his motives, this should not have surprised you.

Think back to the public nickname submission process. Remember the hundreds of cool names people came up with? I was excited to see all the creativity and ingenuity people had! As names were whittled down, I noticed that some names were much more bland than others. Unfortunately, my friends, we are close to assuming the blandest name that could have come from that list- The Fighting Hawks. Seriously? It's so generic and boring! But, people claim, I saw this cool Hawk logo on the internet- it kind of looks like the Chicago Blackhawks logo. Well, that's great. It still doesn't alleviate the real problem here- the fact that out of any cool name that we could uniquely label ourselves as, we choose some tasteless, run-of-the-mill nickname. What a waste of time and money.

[Now, I'm going to advocate for my choice of the three- Nodaks. First, we have been the Nodaks before. Second, it has nice flow to it. Last, but far most importantly, it's flexible and unique! I can't tell you how many times I've heard this: "Nodaks is dumb. What the heck is Nodak anyway?" WHO CARES. Nodaks doesn't have to be anything specific. That's something that we can come up with after the vote. We can define what it means to be a Nodak. We can define what a Nodak is. Nobody will mistake our university's nickname or its fan base, because we will have a unique nickname. It will stand out and give people something to talk about. Fighting Hawks is not special and will not draw attention- it's boring and dry. Nodaks is special, unique, flexible, and something we can be ultimately proud of. Vote Nodaks for UND's nickname.]

*As promised, here's a vent I've held in for a long time (there's some sharper tone in here, and I apologize if that bothers you). These past years I've heard so many people claim that they are concerned that the NCAA mistreated the various Sioux tribes, either by ignoring them, denying them autonomy, overstepping them, or generally not caring for their input in any way, shape, or form. Well, I'm touched that people seem to care about this supposed 'Silencing' of the Sioux. But since when do any of you give a rip about the Native Americans? I'll tell you when the Sioux were Silenced: they were silenced 150 years ago when many were killed by US military aggression (we call them 'wars' to justify it), drew up some 'treaties' (you know, like those treaties where one side suppresses the other and stuff), and over time shoved them onto reservations that we drew up for them.

Those of you most avidly voicing your concerns for the Sioux and claiming that you have sympathy for the suppressed people, do you also voice concerns about reservation alcohol and drug abuse? What about their schools? Are you involved in assisting their communities in any way? Surely you must to speak so forcefully on their behalf. I do not claim to understand what any Sioux tribe went through when the NCAA told us to get rid of the nickname. I've never been to a sacred pipe ceremony. I have not spent significant time on any Sioux reservations.Quick question: if I approached you right now, could  you- without the help of technology- name the Sioux tribes involved? Could you identify their leaders that you occasionally bash? Do you regularly consult the people? My guess is you can't. Sure, there are some who can, but they won't be the majority.

My point is this: there are many people who need to admit the obvious- the main reason they are suddenly concerned about the voice of the Sioux people being silenced is entirely due to anger at the Sioux nickname being taken away and the tradition dying. These people are easy to spot. They say things like "Well now that we aren't the Sioux, I guess we don't need to give scholarships to Indians anymore" or "Indians shouldn't be getting any special spots in the med school anymore now because of this", as if this nickname was directly tied to problems of poor education and medical care on some reservations or something. To them, the Sioux people are a convenient addition to their argument, but this comes down to anger over the Sioux nickname. It needs to stop. People need to move on. This whole ordeal WILL go down as a stain in the university's history, and we need to learn from it. What have I learned from this?

1.) I'm never going into politics. What a mess.
2.) People really loved the Sioux nickname.
3.) Convincing people to share your idea in an emotional topic like this is almost impossible.
4.) Some people get angered too easily at things that don't matter.
5.) Social media can be an ugly, ugly place.
6.) The general American public doesn't care or know anything about UND.
7.) NDSU fans will still know us as the Sioux.
8.) We will endure.

So there you have it. We're almost done with this colossal mess. I pray that we can move on. Someday.

-Nate




Saturday, October 17, 2015

Reflections on Cross Country

Today may have been my last cross country race ever.

Next fall I'll be student teaching, and after that full-time teaching. I'll likely coach XC, so that would occupy almost every weekend in the fall. This thought dawned on me a few hours after the race today, so I figured I would reflect (because reflection is one of the best ways to learn, right?) It seems fitting that the weather today was, in the most pure way I can say this- perfect. The temperature hovered around 50 with a bright sun shining through the undisturbed, windless air. Time seemed to move slower today, and the leaves nonchalantly fell to the ground after the night's hard freeze. You could smell the fall everywhere.

Cross country is difficult to describe, at best. Many distance runners love getting on the track and grinding out hard workouts while feeling the heat rise from the track itself, but many more long for the grass races. Cross country is as close as we come in college to true foot-racing. One can think of cross country in the simplest of terms: pick any place ANYWHERE, point to a start line, point to a finish line, and say go. Hills, differing terrain, water, woods, prairie, turns, straightaways, heat, cold, snow, rain, sun, and wind can all be expected at any given place on any given day. The basic idea is that of a school playground- two kids ask a third to start them for a race from point A to point B. Whoever wins gets the bragging rights for the time being until a new challenger arises.

Even the start of a cross country race and the way it's executed is different. In track, people want to hit their splits and are generally afraid of going to the front and taking the lead. In cross country, people sprint to the front from the gun and hammer at each other until all but one have given up hope of winning. Times don't matter in cross country, because all courses are different: some are too long; some are too short; some have surfaces that are too soft; some have surfaces that are too hard; sometimes the weather is too hot, and sometimes it's too cold; the competition is different at every course. The natural unpredictability in cross country makes it all the more exciting.

Cross country can be equally exciting for the fan. Many first-timers learn the hard way that cross country is a dynamic spectator sport- there are no bleachers, no stands, no protection, and you have to move (any sport that is difficult for grandparents to watch has to be unique...right?) But this adds so much more to the race experience! When you're running and you see fans running through an open area trying to catch up to you and cheer for you, how great of a feeling is it to see someone sacrifice like that!

Cross country is also like appearing from a shell. Many people head home during summer months and use the time away from school to train hard and try to be better than the previous year, and once the academic year starts in the fall again, they re-emerge ready to do battle again. Cross country, then, symbolizes the beginning and not the end. Cross country is the first step on the long road to achieving goals for many people, and what a wonderful way to do it!

Cross country takes on an even more interesting role in North Dakota. Cross country season for me is calm morning runs at sunrise and running on grass in cool fall air. Cross country season is a time to enjoy the time of year that the weather is pretty much perfect here. As cross country season begins to fold, the cold and snow come, and the mental training kicks in for the next six months as we try to defeat the cold and wind. After that, it's not long before the mental training of defeating summer heat fires right back. After surviving those nine months of struggle, the golf courses open up to racing, the weather hit the right mark, and the real racing begins.

Perhaps I'm complicating this far more than need be. Then again, perhaps I am not. This was my 11th cross country season, and each one has been worth it more than I would have previously imagined. It started in 7th grade, when I would routinely finish in the bottom third of middle school races. It continued through 9th grade when I had a couple of top-20 finishes in JV races, but my only varsity 5k found me in the bottom 5 of the race. Cross country found me slowly working up to become all-conference and then all-state. Cross country found me going through injuries in college and fighting off sickness for conference meets twice. Cross country found me slowly moving my way up from the back half of D1 races to more in the middle. Cross country found me transition from always wearing under armour shirts and shorts underneath my jersey to just wearing my jersey top and bottom only. Cross country found me racing in snow one week, and 80s with humidity the next. Cross country brought me through North Dakota, South Dakota, Minnesota, Iowa, Illinois, Missouri, Nebraska, Montana, and Arizona. Cross country allowed me to meet other people from other teams who shared a similar passion to mine. Cross country each and every year becomes not only a burning passion, but something that I can't seem to find myself ever giving up.

I can't help but think back to after the race today when I was stretching in the open on a perfect fall day. I reflected on after the finish, when I was talking with the only guy in the race to have beaten me. We had run almost the entire race together, and he was simply better than me at the end. Even though it was an incredibly tough race, I had so much joy during it. I exclaimed to him, "That was a lot of fun!"
He looked and me and chuckled. "That's one way to look at it."

Yes, yes it is.

Thanks again, cross country. I already miss you.

-Nate

Saturday, October 3, 2015

Stress Relief

I am a worrier, but usually not to the point where it affects me substantially. However, this past week I was faced with two separate instances that caused me significant stress- one feeling absolutely overwhelmed by life, and the other being treated egregiously by a math exam. In each case, my thoughts swelled to the negative and the sad. It's hard to not let things get us down sometimes in this roller coaster of life.

On Wednesday I was struggling to schedule out my life in such a manner that would give me some breathing room, but also let others in. I wish I could be more specific, but trust me I was stressed. I found myself daydreaming in class, trying to fix problems and salvage situations. I know I can't be alone in this thought process, because I am well aware of how stressful of an environment college life in general can be. Financials, academics, relationships, and personal self-worth can all drive us crazy in ways that not only can we not understand but we sometimes refuse to accept. As cliche as it sounds, it feels like a weight or burden on our shoulders and chest, making it harder to breathe and enjoy our surroundings. 

On Wednesday we had a workout at University Park. During the warmup my mind was still in other places, trying to separate out all the clutter. However, once the workout started my mind cleared. It wasn't that I refused to think about it, but rather that it disappeared from my head. The clouds opened up, my legs moved, my heart rate increased, and I found myself encouraging teammates instead of sulking around. The faster I ran, the better I felt. Only once I had returned to the Athletics Building (the legendary and far too old Hyslop Sports Center) did I recall my day. For the previous hour, I was de-stressed, and even when I returned I felt lighter. 

On Friday (yesterday) I had the great pleasure of finishing off my week of classes with what passes of as by far my worst math exam I've ever taken. As a math major and someone who has excelled in math class over the years, this was tough. About halfway through the exam I could feel the weight of time and the reality of struggle beginning to press down on me. When time ran out and I had to turn in my work, I was ashamed of what I had written. I imagined how the Professor would look with contempt upon what I had turned in. I could already feel judgement from classmates I barely knew and would have no vested interest in my scores. I sensed my GPA dropping, and the wind was sucked from my chest. I know this sounds too emotional, but it was a punch in the face. I staggered to the locker room for my workout, and similar to Wednesday, once I got out on the roads and started talking with teammates (S/O to Connor Danielson), my shoulders perked up and my mood lightened. The air was actually sweeter, which was good because about 45 minutes later I was sucking it in a lot harder than I anticipated! When I got back, I wasn't even worried anymore; the test was behind me, and I could only move upwards from here. 

I know that I'm not the only one to experience this. The paradox is that something physically demanding like running can actually lift our burdens and lessen our stress. This wouldn't normally make much sense, and the more I think about it and try to explain it, the less sense it makes. One thing that pops into my mind is what work is in our lives. When we have to be restless for long periods of time, do we not begin looking for things to do? It's not in our nature to be sedentary, but rather we find joy in our work. Sitting around is fun for a time, but eventually we stand up and find work to delight in. Running has become (and can become) that for many people. We shut off our minds to the troubles surrounding us and let the joy and delight of what we do overtake. For a moment, we are lifted. This reminds me of one of my favorite Bible verses: "A person can do nothing better than to eat and drink and find satisfaction in their own toil" -Ecclesiastes 2:24" 

This is true in so many ways. Find some kind of work that can help you when you are stressed. That way you won't drown in your sulking. 

It's probably worth mentioning that a little prayer can go a long ways too!

P.S. I'm not sure why when I copy and paste something, the background of the text turns white. I have no idea how to make it go away, so I guess it'll just have to look sloppy. I'm human I suppose.

-Nate

Monday, September 28, 2015

In a Different World

I found myself firmly gripping the seat beside me and expelling weird squeaky noises while Drew slammed on the brakes. The advent of abruptly stopping on the interstate, slowly speeding up, abruptly stopping again, and continuing this for miles was foreign to me, and it was stressing me out. The other passengers briefly enjoyed my struggles, and went back to looking forward. The Twin Cities is a different world.

The traffic on the interstate reminded me of the race I had just run the day before. Down in the deep, dark depths of the metro area sits a grandiose cross country course that normally serves as a golf course, but on that day it would serve host to hundreds of college and high school runners. I found myself tangled in with more than 400 runners in the Maroon II race, competing unattached. I ran a smart, strong, and conservative race, even-splitting the whole thing, feeling good, and never going too far outside my comfort zone. In layman's terms, it functioned practically as a hard workout rather than a race. As a result my claustrophobia was put to the test, because I wove my way through more than a hundred people between mile one and the finish. Many a time I simply wanted to 'get out', but once I settled in, I had a much more enjoyable time. The Twin Cities felt much the same. At first every fiber of my being screamed to get out into some open space, where the permeating sound of the interstate ceased. However, once we went around the area a little and ran in some quaint places, I eased in and found some contentment.

I pondered all of this while I sat alone in the back seat, shirtless, buckled in, and letting the warm wind blow violently through my short hair. The vehicle we were in did not have AC, and for the third day in a row temperatures were hovering around 80 while the sun attacked through every open space and window it could find. I was quite uncomfortable. Earlier in the day we had gone to Battle Creek Park in St. Paul (well, TECHNICALLY it was in Maplewood, argued Drew's mother) and ran for an hour forty-five minutes. Little to my surprise, I was drenched with sweat head to toe. Fortunately many of the bike trails snuck through the woods, providing shade. Unfortunately these same areas were characterized by unsympathizing, unforgiving hills, something my Red River Valley legs still don't tolerate well. I would keep looking at my watch, begging time to go faster and dream of air conditioning and water. I would think back to my summer runs in the North Dakota countryside, where shade is something of folklore. How I survived the relentless assault from the sun then I know not. What I did know is that I was sweating. A lot.

As we continued on our way out of the Cities, it was clear that there were many more cars going into the metro than out. The weekend was rapidly coming to a close, with the cool door of fall every week closing tighter and tighter, with winter on the sidewalk, about the come into the driveway. We were leaving the area. I thought about how many colleges can still be found in smaller towns and cities, and how large meets like Griak draw in colleges from all walks of life, sucking them into the area, throwing them through a course, and sending them back on their way. The travel buses fill up, the local restaurants go through two hours of chaos, the hotels are busy cleaning up from the onslaught, and even the airports fill up with like-colored groups of thin, fit, young adults. The excitement for a time overwhelms, but this too should pass, and teams return to their quiet stomping grounds, ready to head out on their favorite trail the next morning. The Twin Cities is just a different world.

As we come into North Dakota, I put down my book on the Presidency of Theodore Roosevelt and enjoy the scenery. The Red River Valley is my home. No matter the wind, the cold, the flat, the human void, the lack of 'culture' (whatever the heck that means)- this is home. A part of me dies when I hear tough talk about the great need to exodus the Valley ASAP, but it may be for the better. As we drive north on I-29 headed for Grand Forks, with the sun setting and glowing red off of the clouds, the full moon rising in the east, the dust settling in the air and a general cool and calm taking over the area, I couldn't help but feel the itch to go out on a gravel road and run; I wanted to hear the scratching sound of shoes on dirt and have that be the only noise I could hear. I didn't get much of that in Twin Cities, but after all- it's a different world.

I can't help but remember the morning of the race though. We did a short jog from the house we stayed at and went down the road a couple miles. The sun was cracking the horizon, illuminating the landscape flooded with trees and grass. Some lazy fog sagged on top of the grass, refusing to move, and with no breeze, the air and water stood still. There was coolness in the air, and a sense of hope seemed to lift from the ground. As I jogged along down the road, I smiled. Maybe it's not so different a world after all.

Sunday, September 13, 2015

North Dakota's Best-Kept Secret

We pulled off the gravel road into the gravel parking lot. This enormous space was covered currently by two pickups, each with a trailer behind it; finding a parking spot was not difficult. We exited the vehicle and were greeted to full sunshine and breeze from the south. After getting in our normal preparations for a run (clothing, bathroom breaks, hiding my car keys in a nearby flower patch), we ran through the entrance, under a big iron sign with 'Pembina Gorge State Recreation Area' cut out of it. It helped that this time Ryan had his GPS watch and we were better prepared than last spring, our first time here.

Last spring we had be misled by a post on the PGSRA page saying that they had prepared a 12-mile dirt loop to go on. Naturally we assumed that we would keep following the trail to its end, and after our two teammates turned around at 6 miles, we kept pushing forward, confident that we would get back to the same spot. 6 miles turned into 7, then 8, then 10. We were starting to become fatigued, and we assisted ourselves by walking up the hills instead of running them. It was dawning on both of us that we were in for quite the run. Our suspicions were confirmed when we reached the end of the trail, 90 minutes into the run, and we were greeted by a sign letting us know that the trailhead was 7.5 miles down the road. Ryan and I gave each other the a forlorn, understanding look, took a short break, and started down the road. I said a little prayer in my mind, asking if we could be helped somehow. Sure enough, within a minute some ATV-ers came by (this is first and foremost an ATV trail, but hardly anyone uses it) and let us ride back to the parking lot with them. Such nice people.

This was on both of our minds today and we started plodding down the dirt trail into the Pembina River Valley. It's amazing, this area. The Red River Valley is a completely flat tract of land spreading east and west from the north-flowing Red River, but once out of the valley, the land can change magnificently. Thus the Pembina River Valley is a quite rugged, tree-covered area on both sides of the river, with some smaller cliff-faces hugging the scenic byways to drive through. The whole area is simply stunning, even now before the leaves begin to turn in for the fall. 

As we begin our mile-long ascent early in the run, it dawns on both us that the first 15 minutes had literally flew by without our noticing. Much is to be said about how doing something you love with somebody else who loves the same thing can be one of the greatest joys in life, and this was no exception. In the trees the shade protected us and showed us great views of the surrounding area and trails ahead. When we peaked out of the trees, the breeze was there to greet us and the we could see the other side of the valley, protruding greatly from the North Dakota countryside- well, at least most of it is North Dakota countryside, because only a few miles north lies our friendly Canadian neighbors. 

Miles 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7 went without much trouble. Around mile 3 I was stung by a bee for the second time this week (I was stung in the arm 4 days ago, and today was my leg), and it was stinging because my sweat was 'washing' it out, or so that's how I reasoned it. Most of this running was downhill, so naturally when we turned around, it was back uphill for awhile. Ryan and I were starting to tire from all of this, and our focus increasingly became making it back to the vehicles. Late in the run we were passed by some ATV-ers, but for the most part it was just he and I bantering back and forth. The ATV-wide tracks made it easy for us to run side-by-side, highly motivating in this environment. The views were still spectacular, and the running still difficult.  

About a mile from the end, we decided to take a quick break, because we had been going up and up and were about to die. So we relaxed (whatever that means after 13 hilly miles), and charged hard to the finish. There we chatted with the ATV-ers from Grand Forks we had earlier encountered. It seems in this huge area of wilderness we were the only people here. They took off for more riding, Ryan and I absorbed our food we brought along, and we got back into the car. We had been here for two hours, but as we pulled out of the parking lot onto the quiet gravel road, the wind blowing dust across the nearby sunflower field, we could see still the two pickups in the parking lot. Nobody was to be seen anywhere. 

-Nate