Apart from trying to only see the good in people, and say
good things about people, is the resolution I call “project body beautiful”. To be honest, this has been a resolution for
a few years now, but this year that is 2013, I decided I really do want to
take it seriously.
So the new eating plan has begun – less wine (the hardest
part), less carbohydrates (bear in mind that if I were on death row and I was asked
what my last meal should be, it would a four cheese pizza, as large as
possible, extra anchovies), more exercise, more water, more raw food… blah
blah, we all know the tricks of the diet trade.
Seeing as how I have now turned the big 4-0, I decided that
today was the day to re-look at the running programme. Waking up early is never a problem for me -
given nearly seven years of motherhood - lazy late mornings are just something I
used to do. So off I set looking what I thought
was uber cool. New York Yankees t-shirt,
long grey track pants hiding a multitude of sins, followed by one times ankle
guard for messed up ankle (party injury) and one times knee guard for messed up
knee (skiing injury post cocktails halfway up a mountain in Switzerland). Uber cool?
Perhaps not.
So off I set, and in the spirit of all things weight loss, I
decided to tackle a hill before anything else.
The first five meters were actually not too bad, then things started going
downhill rapidly. Before I knew it, I was
huffing and puffing my way up what would be to others a gentle gradient, which
to me, was like running up Mount Everest without boots on. I made it twenty five meters and had no
choice but to stop, and look around for where I had left my lungs. Two security guards in a neighbouring complex
started to laugh at me, and frankly, who could blame them? I had a Bridget Jones moment right then and there,
and wondered if I should be wearing the undersized bloomers to match the rest
of my now sweaty attire.
Ever the persistent one, I broke out into a gentle jog, and
attempted the hill again. The heavy legs
started to shake, the derriere broke out into a speed wobble, and quite
frankly, any New York Yankees player would not be happy to see me wearing one
of their fan shirts. But carry on I did,
head down, praying for the end of the road with more enthusiasm than I would have
for that four cheese pizza.
Finally, the
end of the road was there to meet me, and I turned around, and managed, with
some weight literally behind me, to shoot down the tar track with such speed
that even good old “Beep Beep” from the Road Runner cartoon would not be able
to catch me. Imagine the surprise of the
security guards when they saw the haggard individual who minutes earlier
staggered past them, come shooting past in front of them, with such speed and glee,
they almost had whiplash as they watched me pass.
This pattern, I am afraid to say, was repeated more than
twice, and became funnier and funnier as the footsteps progressed.
And so, the moral of this story: When life throws you that desperate uphill, put
your head down and tread carefully; when life throws you that long and easy
path – run as fast as your legs will take you, appreciate what it is you have
managed to achieve to get there, and enjoy the rush of the summer wind through
your disheveled hair.
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