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Opinion The Last Word

Mystical Steps

Step. Step. Pause. Breath. Step. Step. Sprint. While wearing only a thin tank top and shorts, I recently found myself running a three-mile race in nearly 30-degree weather. For fun. My lungs felt like a floating icebox in my chest. In my ears, I could only hear my heavy breaths reverberating from side to side. I remember looking straight ahead at the trees and dirt path in front of me, not really comprehending what I saw. My head and thoughts were frozen in time, although my legs were still moving forward. All my body knew in that moment was that I was running. Running seemed to have this power over my body: My brain no longer controlled my movements, and my legs took their own course.

Upon finishing the race, I felt like my legs simply said, “You can stop now,” so I stopped. I was suddenly thrown back into reality, one that escaped me for the past 22 minutes. I had blurry vision and a hazy understanding of what my body just went through. Tears fell from my eyes and my forehead was cold with dried sweat. A doctor might think I was going to pass out, but this feeling was something beyond medical explanation. I didn’t realize it at the time, but running had an almost mystical power over me.

I felt something I never thought I could feel. I steadily came to realize that running has some power over people. This is the power to rise above human limitations and defy the notion that we humans are flightless.

Our species tends to assume we are the strongest and smartest creatures in the room. While scientifically we are the most intellectual of creatures, the notion that we are the strongest is far-fetched. The truth is, humans are fragile, not only physically, but mentally. Physically, we have several limitations on our bodies. We couldn’t even lick our own elbows if we wanted to.

While being physically restricted, people are also mentally fragile and have complex emotions that are hard to fully understand. One feeling that incapacitates us is fear. It can paralyze us in a matter of seconds. Like that feeling when running, when feeling fear, the brain and the body separate. Running, however, offers a relief from that fear, a way that our body can rise above the things that hurt and hinder humans. Limitations are left behind, somewhere among the trees and that dirt path.

Running for pleasure is often misunderstood. I’m often asked, “Why do you run for fun? Are you crazy?” Having more than a few miles under my belt, I am acutely aware and have been on both sides of this question. The “fun” runner usually answers this with a mixture of modesty or the casual, “Well, good exercise, I guess.” Sure, running is a great exercise, but really, running is an escape. When you run, you might not realize it, but you are pushing yourself both mentally and physically. When I ran in high school, I would tell people that running was the hardest sport. There’s no real equipment involved and no teammate that you are face to face with. You are running against yourself. There are actually moments in running where reality’s problems become the driving force in your speed and your endurance. It’s a chance to escape.

Forces that once held you down and challenges that once seemed impossible simply disappear when you run. You can focus on where your legs are going and where they will take you. In this way, you are embodying what it means to take control and make your body move even when your brain might resist. This power, this conquering of limitation is attainable when you run. This is why running seems so crazy to people. When you run, you are attaining a seemingly impossible feat.

While not physically running all the time, I feel like I am constantly being outrun by the high standards and goals of perfection I set for myself. Trying to reach these standards is a constant race I may never finish. Somehow, I’m a minute too late, a few steps short, or too slow to start. The way I escape this is through the long stride, and the push I feel when I run. The feeling that my mind will finally release the white-knuckle grasp it has on me. Instead, the green grass and pavement cushion each heavy step. With each stride, my feet create a rhythm for my body to follow. With this rhythm, I feel strong, empowered, and secure in my own skin.

Izzy Wollfarth is a Rhodes College student and intern at Contemporary Media, Inc.

Categories
Sports

Is Memphis a Fitness Friendly City?

Audubon_Park_Memphis_TN_06.jpg

Surveys of America’s fittest and fattest and park-friendly cities are a dime a dozen, and I see about one a week. Here’s one that came in today from the Trust for Public Land. I don’t read most of them any more. But public sports facilities — that means anyplace you can use for free or by paying a fee — have played a big part in my life and they are part of our lifestyle and our personal and municipal budgets.

Most surveys lie. Fat cities are not fat due to a lack of public facilities. The problem is diet, personal motivation, and access. Ours is a disposable city, and the facilities and the people are not always in the same place. Here’s my Memphis survey. It is personal, subjective, anecdotal, and uninformed in some categories, less so in others. But in most cases I have seen ’em and and used ’em, which is more than most of the surveys can claim.

Public parks: Oversupplied. Shelby Farms is four times bigger than Central Park. Overton Park is getting better year after year. There are riverfront parks from Mud Island to Tom Lee Park to Crump Park near the Ornamental Metals Museum, some of them rarely visited. Mud Island River Park is closed half the year. Greenbelt Park on Mud Island is the best of the lot. Tiger Lane at the Fairgrounds is for the football crowd. Kennedy, Willow Road, Bellevue, and Leftwich/Audubon serve multiple needs. There are probably too many parks for a disposable city to maintain adequately.

Walking trails and running: Adequate. Put your shoes on and take off. True story: a former colleague was so obsessed with training for a marathon that he ran hundreds of laps around his living room when it rained. There are oval tracks at the fairgrounds and many high schools. There is an organized race of some kind nearly every weekend.

Fitness machines and structured programs: Unbalanced. Suburbs oversupplied with clubs and community facilities, inner city Memphis is undersupplied. Kroc Center, Streets Ministries, Memphis Athletic Ministries, and Church Health Center are helping a lot.

Tennis: Oversupplied in both indoor and outdoor courts. High schools and colleges that emphasize tennis build to tournament capacity, which leaves a lot of courts unused at other times. The University of Memphis has moved its tennis operations to the Racquet Club, leaving several perfectly good courts on campus for everyday players. Memphis has more public indoor tennis centers than Chicago. There are unused and deteriorating but still playable courts at Frayser Tennis Center. There is no single public center to compare with the biggest public centers in Little Rock, Mobile, Murfreesboro, and Nashville but overall Memphis is still oversupplied.

Racquetball. Oversupplied. A dying sport that thrived in Memphis 30 years ago, but plenty of courts remain at University of Memphis, Racquet Club, downtown YMCA, and some of the fitness clubs and community centers.

Outdoor basketball: Adequate. The cheapest sport around, requiring only nets, backboards, level rims, and a ball.

Indoor basketball: Adequate. Schools, churches, and community centers meet the need.

Bicycle riding: Oversupplied. If you want to ride a bike, there’s nothing stopping you, assuming you can afford one, and if you can’t there are organizations that will help. The dedicated bike lanes, bike paths, and sharrows are nice but a city-wide grid is unnecessary. Memphis is mostly flat and the weather is more conducive to riding than in the Snow Belt.

Football: Oversupplied. Liberty Bowl Stadium is used nine times a year. Football defined the fairgrounds. Most high schools have a field, and some of them are putting in artificial surfaces.

Baseball and softball: Oversupplied. Baseball is a suburban game, and teams migrate to the suburban baseball fields for tournaments and leagues. An unkempt field and backstop is a typical scene at most Memphis parks and high schools, a relic of another day. Good fields like the ones at Rodney Baber are expensive to light and maintain and lightly used.

Soccer: Equals suburban, although some of the world’s greats came out of poor Third World countries. Adequate to oversupplied, thanks to Mike Rose Fields.

Golf: Adequate. Memphis had to close public courses, which are magnets for wasteful spending and political squabbles on the City Council. Galloway serves the high end, and if you are willing to spend $40 you can play just about anywhere. Overton Park needs real greens.

Swimming: Undersupplied, but expensive, seasonal, and fraught with liability. The Kroc Center will help when it opens next year. Closing the Mason YMCA hurt. High marks for suburbs, downtown YMCA, University of Memphis, and Rhodes College which offers a summer membership.

Others: volleyball, skateboarding, squash, lacrosse, field hockey, rugby, bowling, Ultimate. You want to play it, you can find a place. It may require some effort and practice but that’s the point. And it may require some cash and a car, but if you don’t have those there are less expensive or free alternatives. It comes down to motivation and lifestyle. A new building or a new facility — or a survey — is usually not the answer.

Categories
Opinion

Mike Cody’s Last Mile

Mike Cody

  • Mike Cody

Mike Cody ran his last mile Sunday on the campus where he set high school and college records in the 1950s.

The well-known Memphis attorney and mediator has logged more than 80,000 miles and 14 Boston Marathons in his career. At 75, his heels finally failed him. The padding simply wore away, making it too painful to run. Cheered on by family and old friends, he took four more laps around the track at Rhodes College Sunday, finishing in just under nine minutes.

In his prime, Cody ran the mile in 4:24, the half mile in 1:56, and the quarter mile in 48.7 seconds. He was good enough to have competed at the highest levels of the NCAA Track and Field Championships but chose to go to Rhodes, then Southwestern, instead.

“My folks didn’t have any money at all, and at East High School I wasn’t even sure I was going to go to college,” he said. “Back then you would be drafted if you were not in school. I thought I would have to go in the Army. East had no track so the coach would put me on the back of his motorcycle and take me to Southwestern so I could run over there. The coach there talked admissions into giving me a scholarship.”

Cody was a one-man track team at a time when points were awarded for various events. Track was a big deal in the Fifties. Roger Bannister broke the four-minute mile barrier in 1954, and runners were regularly featured on the cover of a new magazine called Sports Illustrated. But the national running craze was still 20 years in the future.

“We hardly had a team at East,” said Cody. “It was a bunch of us would couldn’t make the baseball team.”

Cody weighed 125 pounds, which gave him an advantage on banked indoor tracks where a mile was 11 laps. He could stay low on the turns and thereby shorten the distance. Outdoor tracks were made of cinders, and runners would often have to bring a little shovel to dig makeshift starting blocks. Cody’s half-mile times might have been better if he had not typically run the mile earlier in the day, with a relay or two coming up. Still, his times would have made him competitive with any college in Tennessee except for UT-Knoxville, which was in a league of its own.

Cody was on the leading edge of the road-running craze that swept the country after the 1972 Olympics and the publication of books by runner/author Jim Fixx. His best marathon time was 2:48, when he was 45 years old. He starting keeping a personal running log in 1973 and kept it up until he closed the book on Sunday.

“There were hundreds of people on the track yesterday including lots of little kids,” he said. “It’s a whole different sport. It’s good for fitness but it’s not as serious.”

Last year Cody told me a story about an old friend who tried one sport after another until he finally found his athletic calling and declared “I always knew there was a sport I was really good at, it just took me 50 years to find it.”

Cody plans to get his exercise from now on in the pool or on a stationary bicycle. His good luck was to find his sport early on and pursue it for a lifetime.