My Running Buddy

I don’t usually run with anyone.  I understand why people do, though – it helps to push you farther.  I once had an old guy wave me down while I was running.  He continued to chat me up, all the way around the lake, despite the fact that I was wearing headphones (which I thought was the universal signal for “don’t talk to me”, kind of like reading a magazine on an airplane).   Short of stopping, I didn’t know how to get away from him. And so I continued running with him, mainly because I did not want to be outpaced by an old guy.

Running with him wasn’t awful.  But for me, running is a solitary, mediative experience.  I far prefer my headphones to any idle chit chat.  I de-compress, I relax, and I figure out whatever problems are nagging at me.

The weather is hit and miss these days, so recently I had to run at the gym.  A few minutes in, a guy about my age got on the treadmill next to me.  I immediately noticed a tattoo on his forearm:  “without music, life would be a mistake”. (I have since learned that this is a Nietzsche quote.  I vaguely remember some Nietzsche from college, but I like him much more now that I know this quote.)

The dude was jamming out as he ran — he stopped short of playing an air guitar, but he drummed his hands on the treadmill, and punched the air a few times.   He was a kindred spirit, in his own private concert just like me.  (“The Sweatiest Music”).

I was dying to know what he was listening to.  Am I missing essential music on my workout playlist?  But, of course, treadmill etiquette dictates that you don’t really acknowledge the person on the treadmill next to you.  And asking to see someone’s iPod is akin to asking to read their journal.

So I didn’t.  But we ran on, side by side, each in our own world.    Kind of like running together, only better.

Namaste, Eddie

I am not mature enough to be a yoga person.  I am too fidgety, and I can’t clear my mind, and, most of all, the trippy new age music either annoys me or makes me giggle.  

Lately though, I’ve been doing hot yoga, and I have to say that I really like it.  I think the stench of the sweaty guy next to me is distraction enough from the music, and the heat makes my non-flexible body feel stretchier.

I found my musical soulmate at a coffee house once.  The playlist was perfect, and this is not something that happens everyday.  But I took that poor barista for granted, and paid for it by sitting through hours of bad coffee house playlists later on.

Therefore, I intend to cherish the yoga teacher that I have found, who just might be my yoga music soulmate. I am loath to reveal her location for fear that the class will become too crowded.  Let’s just say — Jimi Hendrix, Radiohead, Eddie Vedder – now that is music I can Downward Dog to.