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Posts tagged: running

I’m on Instagram if you like this sort of thing.
(…and it’s not ALL nature-y tree-climbing stuff, if you don’t.) ;)

“@bendelaney”

Tools of my night-running trade.

Tools of my night-running trade.

Runners, if you aren’t taking warm/hot tea with you on your runs, you are MISSING OUT!

Runners, if you aren’t taking warm/hot tea with you on your runs, you are MISSING OUT!

Last Night’s Midnight Run Playlist.

I started off with Kanye and Jay tonight because I was genuinely inspired by Kanye’s passionate story and “dissertation” last night on Twitter. It was from the heart and I respected his honesty as a creative person. Plus, it has a great tempo and is a good kickoff.

I’m going to tell you a secret: Early Bob Dylan is amazing running music. There is just something perfect about the simple beauty of his stories, the gentle guitars, the trusty-old-dirt-road-feeling tempos, the whole vibe. Especially in the early years. Boots of Spanish Leather can break your heart if you let it, and you should. It’s a love story that only Dylan could pull off so perfectly.

For the second and third acts we turn to Bobby McFerrin. If you mention Don’t Worry, Be Happy I will punch you. You have no right to make any comment on Bobby McFerrin until you’ve heard his masterpiece album,Vocabularies (and CircleSongs, an early experiment that ultimately foreshadowed it). The whole album is perfection and McFerrin is one of the most under-appreciated geniuses of our time. I’ve listened to this album countless times. Give it a whole listen. You ain’t gonna hear it on pop radio! But this is real music that deserves to be loved because it is brilliant. As for the running value, the tempos, timings and changes are perfect; and the lulls and crescendos make for magical running moments. Test and see whether this music will not make you want to do more than just plunk your legs down the road like some monotonous running robot. This stuff will down-right compel you to move better, to be more graceful more powerful and smoooother.

The last song, Wailers, is important to end on. It is ten and a half minutes, so plan for it. Here’s how I work it (results may vary): I slow down to walk and breath deeply during the beautiful intermezzo/false-ending section that starts around 7:10. I consider this the end of the run. Then comes what I call the epilogue… When the vibe starts to pick up steam again at about 8:10, I start trotting, doing chop-steps, hopping, lunging, stretching arms and legs. By the time the drums come back in at 8:43, I’m running again. About when the choir comes back in at 9:10, I morph into what I call loping—until I learn whether there is an actual running term for it—sort of a longer but still fluid bouncing gait that probably looks a bit like a more rhythmic, athletic “ballet run.” Yes, very macho. It feels amazing though. Somehow the total change in gait actuates slightly different muscle groups and the effect is like a sudden boost of energy, like shifting into a different gear—not faster, just easier. I don’t go for too long there though, yet. It’s taxing on the achilles so I’m working up more strength so I can do it for longer periods. I’m loving it though. Anyway, by about 9:50 I’ve morphed again into a full steam sprint—flat-out, like a quarter horse in a hot tail-wind. I won’t lie or water it down: it’s amazingly awesome to run at your absolute maximum controllable speed and just push. When the song ends, and I know I’ve almost spent it all, I slow down carefully, slowing steadily with each progressively shorter step. Then I walk. Not fast, not slow. Head high with big hard controlled breaths which slow down by the time I reach my car. I drink what’s left of my tea, get in my car, and go home.

There you have it. My midnight run playlist from last night, and why.

Last Night’s Midnight Run Playlist.

I started off with Kanye and Jay tonight because I was genuinely inspired by Kanye’s passionate story and “dissertation” last night on Twitter. It was from the heart and I respected his honesty as a creative person. Plus, it has a great tempo and is a good kickoff.

I’m going to tell you a secret: Early Bob Dylan is amazing running music. There is just something perfect about the simple beauty of his stories, the gentle guitars, the trusty-old-dirt-road-feeling tempos, the whole vibe. Especially in the early years. Boots of Spanish Leather can break your heart if you let it, and you should. It’s a love story that only Dylan could pull off so perfectly.

For the second and third acts we turn to Bobby McFerrin. If you mention Don’t Worry, Be Happy I will punch you. You have no right to make any comment on Bobby McFerrin until you’ve heard his masterpiece album,Vocabularies (and CircleSongs, an early experiment that ultimately foreshadowed it). The whole album is perfection and McFerrin is one of the most under-appreciated geniuses of our time. I’ve listened to this album countless times. Give it a whole listen. You ain’t gonna hear it on pop radio! But this is real music that deserves to be loved because it is brilliant. As for the running value, the tempos, timings and changes are perfect; and the lulls and crescendos make for magical running moments. Test and see whether this music will not make you want to do more than just plunk your legs down the road like some monotonous running robot. This stuff will down-right compel you to move better, to be more graceful more powerful and smoooother.

The last song, Wailers, is important to end on. It is ten and a half minutes, so plan for it. Here’s how I work it (results may vary): I slow down to walk and breath deeply during the beautiful intermezzo/false-ending section that starts around 7:10. I consider this the end of the run. Then comes what I call the epilogue… When the vibe starts to pick up steam again at about 8:10, I start trotting, doing chop-steps, hopping, lunging, stretching arms and legs. By the time the drums come back in at 8:43, I’m running again. About when the choir comes back in at 9:10, I morph into what I call loping—until I learn whether there is an actual running term for it—sort of a longer but still fluid bouncing gait that probably looks a bit like a more rhythmic, athletic “ballet run.” Yes, very macho. It feels amazing though. Somehow the total change in gait actuates slightly different muscle groups and the effect is like a sudden boost of energy, like shifting into a different gear—not faster, just easier. I don’t go for too long there though, yet. It’s taxing on the achilles so I’m working up more strength so I can do it for longer periods. I’m loving it though. Anyway, by about 9:50 I’ve morphed again into a full steam sprint—flat-out, like a quarter horse in a hot tail-wind. I won’t lie or water it down: it’s amazingly awesome to run at your absolute maximum controllable speed and just push. When the song ends, and I know I’ve almost spent it all, I slow down carefully, slowing steadily with each progressively shorter step. Then I walk. Not fast, not slow. Head high with big hard controlled breaths which slow down by the time I reach my car. I drink what’s left of my tea, get in my car, and go home.

There you have it. My midnight run playlist from last night, and why.

True Running Is.

muse and music,
drug and dealer,
life and liver,
ocean, river.

wound and healer,
peace and keeper,
joy and rage,
shaman, sage.

I had an amazing morning today. Climbed for about an hour, then trail-ran up to the very top of Minnehaha/Beacon Hill, then back down, more rocks, down-climbing, more trails, bit more climbing, trails again, river rocks, got hot—jumped in the river and swam, more river rock running, then end.

I’m trying to find the right term to describe what I’m doing lately. The closest I can come up with is “climb-running.” I’m sure it is not that novel, but it feels like it to me. It is basically a combination of fairly intense bouldering (hands-and-feet-only rock climbing) with trail-running, and generally scrambling over rocks and rocky terrain. It is awesome. I carry a chalk bag, am effectively barefoot (wearing 4 millimeter-thick Vibram FiveFingers shoes), and I move as fast as I can handle it and go until I feel too tired to keep going safely (or I have to be somewhere). My main objective is the following: to move as if I had no other way to get from point A to point B. As if I were a primal man, simply finding a fast and efficient way to get up that rock or across that crevasse, or down that rocky trail. That is, I’m not looking for the most exactingly technical climbing routes or the most grueling trail-running trails. I’m just trying to move well. To consistently move more like a “creature” and less like a modern man. I’m mainly looking for a feeling of whole body/mind engagement and a deep connection to the terrain. And I’m finding it. It is magical.

I had an amazing morning today. Climbed for about an hour, then trail-ran up to the very top of Minnehaha/Beacon Hill, then back down, more rocks, down-climbing, more trails, bit more climbing, trails again, river rocks, got hot—jumped in the river and swam, more river rock running, then end.

I’m trying to find the right term to describe what I’m doing lately. The closest I can come up with is “climb-running.” I’m sure it is not that novel, but it feels like it to me. It is basically a combination of fairly intense bouldering (hands-and-feet-only rock climbing) with trail-running, and generally scrambling over rocks and rocky terrain. It is awesome. I carry a chalk bag, am effectively barefoot (wearing 4 millimeter-thick Vibram FiveFingers shoes), and I move as fast as I can handle it and go until I feel too tired to keep going safely (or I have to be somewhere). My main objective is the following: to move as if I had no other way to get from point A to point B. As if I were a primal man, simply finding a fast and efficient way to get up that rock or across that crevasse, or down that rocky trail. That is, I’m not looking for the most exactingly technical climbing routes or the most grueling trail-running trails. I’m just trying to move well. To consistently move more like a “creature” and less like a modern man. I’m mainly looking for a feeling of whole body/mind engagement and a deep connection to the terrain. And I’m finding it. It is magical.