Popcorn #1
POPCORNING – (as defined by me, meaning the rapid fire of my
own ideas, just popping out of my head, random thoughts, and nonsequiturs. Perhaps a popcorn will land in your lap and
when you pick it up and eat, it will be tasty, or maybe not.)
Some of you who know me will be surprised to learn that I
got rained on today during my 6-mile run. You know I am the Autzen Stadium of
running. They say, with a sideways sort of grin, that it never rains on Autzen Stadium,
just like it never rains on me when I run. People I run with know this about me.
They have witnessed this phenomenon firsthand too. I can drive in the rain over
to the river path to run, windshield wipers slamming full force, and as soon as
we step out of the car, the rain will stop. We then will finish the run, and
right as we get back into the car, the rain will start up again. And I do this all
the time without prayer, although I can’t deny that I could be praying subconsciously
or that I am hoping so bad for the rain to stop that it can be misinterpreted
as a prayer and my prayer comes true. But that’s just an idea.
Today, I got wet. According to my calculations, it was a
four-dog-shake run. Murphy while running forward, legs still trotting, wiggling, beginning at the head and ending in the rear, would shake
off the rain about every mile and a half or so. It was at about a mile and a
half, just after his first shake, that we encountered a gray squirrel. I got to
thinking how beautiful they are, that massive, silver-gray tail outlined in
brown, their tails being almost as big as their bodies. It’s impressive. It’s
not exactly the tail of a peacock, but it is not completely dissimilar to that.
Once someone told me squirrels are just rats with pretty tails. At the time I
accepted that, but as I reflect on that now, I think he had it wrong. Squirrels
don’t try to burrow their way into your house to live with you, steal your food, share your heat, look up your wife’s dress, and give you diseases, even though
some people in recent times have contracted the bubonic plague from a squirrel
bite.
We have a lot of squirrels around our house. Our squirrels
are the ugly brown cousins to the gray ones. I wish we had the pretty ones, but
even the brown ones are kind of cute in their own way. I’m constantly seeing
them in my yard. And so does Murphy. He might be half border collie, but they’ve
outsmarted him every time even though their teasing of him looks risky to me. He
might catch one someday, but I doubt it.
One day I went out in my yard to pick some lettuce growing
next to my fence. A squirrel was atop the fence about a foot higher than I was
on the ground. He watched me cautiously as I approached. When he didn’t scamper
away, I tried to shoo him. Instead, he reared up on his hind legs, baring his
claws and teeth. I thought, “Oh yeah, big tough guy. Why don’t you just
skedaddle!” I thought surely his bravado would fade as he looked at me--big
bear of a man that I am. Now understand, I’m looking at myself through the
beady eyes of a squirrel. By human standards, I’m a medium-sized, slightly built
man, more accustomed to running than fighting, especially with small squirrels.
I wasn’t afraid. As I bent down to pick the lettuce though, sensing he was
gaining in height, I felt more vulnerable as a target for a full-on squirrel
attack, as I noticed him, or possibly her, gender makes no difference, as she
poised more and more for jumping on top of me. I backed off cautiously and spontaneously
changed the menu. There would be no salad with dinner tonight.
I couldn’t believe I had backed down from and was actually
frightened by a 1.5-pound squirrel. Typically, I’m not afraid of wild animals,
although it does freak me out sometimes when I see those postings at trailheads
warning of bears or cougars. I will say the bears don’t worry me so much,
although my chances with a bear would be less favorable than with a mountain
lion, probably. But bears seem reasonable. I think they pretty much want to be left
alone, as do I. So, they go about with their bear business and I go on with
mine in a human way, running upright and sweating. Sweating is handy for
cooling off as is upright running. But sweating also may have some other
protective qualities. We stink. No matter how successively we cover up this
fact for other humans with soap, deodorant, and perfume, the animals know. They
know. Under that soap and that perfume, they know who we really are. We are that
definite P U animal. Not temporarily like that skunk when it raises its tail,
but constantly. We are naturally an extremely malodorous animal, probably not
very desirable as a meal for carnivores. We like to think animals avoid us
because we are big, bad, clever, and we carry big guns that go bang bang. Really it
is our scent. If we could smell it as much as other animal species can, we’d
probably avoid each other as well. We might not even be the social animals we
are now. We’d all live alone in our own stench, seldom venturing out to come
into contact with other humans. Now I don’t think we would end as a species,
gone extinct because of our stink. I think we would still sneak together for
short trysts in the night, the sex drive being that strong. You’ve maybe heard
that insulting idea of what a man would still do if he could just put a sack
over her head. In this case, both a man and a woman would hold their noses just to
experience the ecstasy, that ecstasy of sex, and as a byproduct, we would reproduce.
And babies don’t smell that bad, except occasionally when they poop or burp up
gross. They don’t even need to apply deodorant to their tiny armpits.
Now cougars, that’s altogether different. After all, they
are cats. I mean who hasn’t noticed how crazy cats can be? If you are unaware
of this because you’ve been living under a rock, then go watch some videos
known as crazy cat videos. Besides who hasn’t experienced this. One minute you’re
petting a cute, fluffy cat who’s enjoying the rub, rolling over, purring, and
next thing you know you are contending with a whirling ball of fur, a vicious
piece of flesh, mostly teeth and claws stabbing and lacerating you. But I’ve
always figured if it came down to an all-out fight with a domesticated cat, I’d
get the best of it. Big cats have that same characteristic as the little ones in
that they are unpredictable and scary, but if it came down to hand-to-paw
combat with a cougar, the end of me might be the opposite of what it would be with a little kitty, this time the cat might get the best of me, especially if it
pounced unannounced from out of nowhere as cats will do.
The thing is a cougar might not bother you at all. It’ll
just be doing cat things until suddenly the mood catches the cougar and it acts
ferociously before it's even had time to think about it. Cougars, like humans, are bloodthirsty animals. They’ll kill you
just for the sport of it. For no real reason at all. We humans even call our killing of other animals, hunting,
a sport. I mean, we often eat the meat and then put the meat’s head on our wall,
to admire we ate that thing, but it’s fun for us to kill in this way, not so
necessary anymore for survival. A cougar is maybe even more bloodthirsty than we are. A cougar is probably not defending its turf
necessarily and it’s probably not going to eat our disgusting flesh. It’s going
to kill us just for the fun of it.
Women, especially, can tell you what’s
up with humans. Women’s biggest fear rightfully so on a trail run is not so
much in encountering a bear or a cougar, as those may be the biggest fears for
me. It’s encountering a man whose brain is twisting like a toad. While I might
be cautious of wild animals, even a lowly rattlesnake. A woman is more afraid of me because I am a man. So, I must reassure her as I run by with a smile, perhaps a
runner’s wave or a nod but not too big of a smile. I don’t want to scare her. She
knows the male of the human species is especially rapacious and bloodthirsty.
And “rapacious” should remind us of another word, of something else a woman must
always fear when encountering an unknown and sometimes even a known man. It’s a
shame. It's so wrong.
What I’m doing here is attempting to reproduce some of my
thoughts during my wet 6-mile run today. Right after leaving the car at the Delta
shopping area, I got on the path down to the Willamette River, the twelfth biggest
river in the United States. I realized I had forgotten my earbuds. I decided not
to circle back and cross the busy Delta highway to get them, even though I had
planned to listen to and was so looking forward to an episode of the storytelling podcast, the Moth. Podcasts
keep my mind focused on a topic and my mind off of the running., which who
wants to think about running while running, although there is that too, and
that can’t be helped.
Besides I thought it would be fun to run with just me and my
brain. In an unfocused way, popcorning can be just as distracting from the
running as the tighter focus of listening to a podcast. The problem is my mind
can go all over the place. Like Murphy, I’m noticing squirrels, shiny objects,
and bushes that would be fun to pee on. I like it though. My mind becomes a
sort of playground, going to the merry-go-round,
the swings, the slides, and maybe even sipping from the drinking fountain. If
you weren’t so understandably afraid, I’d invite you to join me in my lonely playground,
to come inside and play with me in my mind. But the closest you’ll maybe get to
that is reading this.
Another comparison I might make is about how fertile I think
the mind can be when you take it on a run with you if you don’t leave it back
in the car with the earbuds. In my case though, growing in the fertile soil, you might find a corn stalk
growing next to a strawberry vine, next to a rose bush, next to poison oak.
This is not a farm anyone would want to live on perhaps by choice, but somehow,
I do and I survive. Corn one day. Poison oak the next, but with a rose thrown in
too. And a strawberry on top. Variation is the spice.
OK. My run is over. It was far from a good run. It was
definitely a wet run. Even though the rain slowed at mile three, by then I was
soaking wet, so it didn’t make a hell of a difference that it slowed down. And
it never stopped. Far from perfect, me and the run, I’ve started to wonder if I’m
slowing down these days and will that be permanent? I keep wondering because in
general, my pace is becoming slower and slower as you would expect for someone
rushing on to 70 years of age. But then every once in a while, I go out to run
and everything is right and I am fast again. That gives me hope. I can feel it
like I’m gliding lightly, each foot barely landing before takeoff, and the
world is whirring, blurring by. And Murphy beside me is galloping instead of
trotting as usual. Unlike Donald Trump and his perfect phone call to Ukraine, my
run is not only perfect but it is true. But that’s another day and another
run. It was not this one.
I will leave you now. I left
out a lot of things like seeing a single gold ornament hanging lonely from the
spindly branch of a scrub oak. Hello, shiny bulb. Meet me, a lonely, dim bulb,
too stupid to know to get out of the rain. Or how there was hardly anybody out
on the trail except for the obligated dog walkers and one cyclist, crazier than
the rest of us out there. At least we had our dogs to think about. With the
rain, the dogs aren’t bothered. They just shake it off, the way we should shake
off the inconveniences and stresses of life. Actually, that is one of the
benefits to a solo run, to get away from it all, to strain the body so in the
end it must relax and our mind will too. Today my mind got a workout, soggy but
playful. It is a good way to end this now, the end of another run with a criticism
of Donald Trump at the same time. It doesn’t get much better than that. . . . Can
it?
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