Who the hell would bomb a marathon? The shock and fury make my eyes hot and narrow.
Second thought: what a way to go – accomplishment, adrenaline, euphoria, and a quick blast.
Yesterday, ironically, I realized I was fully recovered from overdoing. That only took 11 days… I took careful walks around the park while recovering, so as not to lose much ground.
Second thought: what a way to go – accomplishment, adrenaline, euphoria, and a quick blast.
Yesterday, ironically, I realized I was fully recovered from overdoing. That only took 11 days… I took careful walks around the park while recovering, so as not to lose much ground.
Today I roughly doubled my walking distance and I'm back up to ~18 min. On a flat.
I'm grateful.
I grew up in Egypt, a Middle Eastern country. We were there in the relatively tranquil days of the late 1970s: Sadat was secure in power, a secularist who stood no nonsense and could be bought – excuse me, persuaded – into a peace treaty that ended several thousand years of war. (For the meantime.)
Islam was a thoughtful, neighborly religion. Guests were treated like the loveliest royalty. A blonde 13-year-old girl with a forward figure could (at least, did) walk the streets in daylight fearing nothing more than vile remarks and, in a crowd, a vile grope.
I'm grateful.
I grew up in Egypt, a Middle Eastern country. We were there in the relatively tranquil days of the late 1970s: Sadat was secure in power, a secularist who stood no nonsense and could be bought – excuse me, persuaded – into a peace treaty that ended several thousand years of war. (For the meantime.)
Islam was a thoughtful, neighborly religion. Guests were treated like the loveliest royalty. A blonde 13-year-old girl with a forward figure could (at least, did) walk the streets in daylight fearing nothing more than vile remarks and, in a crowd, a vile grope.
That was the key to life in a tourist country: avoid the crowds.
When terrorist attacks happened, and they were rare then, they happened in crowds. My family was constitutionally adventurous and put off by mob thinking, quite apart from the (really tiny) chance of bombs, so we just did what came naturally and took off on our own.
We saw crowds the way a sailor sees sandbars: a lot of work, and not much fun to get stuck with.
Now, with CRPS, this distaste for crowds has become a deep aversion. The physical dynamic of being in crowds is unbearable: when people bump me unexpectedly, it's horrific; the noise overwhelms my sensory brain, which, let's face it, is overworked already; and, of course, my hotwired autonomic nervous system is ready with the fight or flight response... with nowhere to go that isn't in the crowd.
Breathe. Breathe. Breathe.
I was reading Angela N. Hunt's book about living while training for a first marathon, and her description of the starting crowd was appalling. For me, it would be like being inside a tiny electric fence, cattle jostling around against the outside, bashing and zapping me mindlessly and endlessly.
Not do-able. Not even think-able.
But that's just a problem, and problems are meant to be solved.
There are several possible solutions: invoke the ADA and start in my own class behind the crowd; rustle up about five good buddies -- preferably large, sturdy types -- to run around me for the first half, and be a better fence until the crowd thins enough;
run a different marathon course over open country, with only a handful of others; or abandon the whole thing.
I can hear some strenuous votes for the last option. In the wake of the Boston marathon bombing, I'll ignore them. Completely.
I will go on. If distance is not an insuperable barrier, then neither is willful fear. I'm a woman, weakened, disabled, and rather poor; I have enough to be afraid of. I don't let it stop me. Why should this? I'll wear the names of the dead, if it helps. I won't let it stop me.
I will go on. I'll find a way to avoid the crowds, in some creative and tasteful fashion.
I will go on.
"Watch me go."
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