Running on the Right Path
Career changes always require a painful transition period. A few
years back I lost my job as a stage manager for live television
shows, and I was feeling the heat. As I sat in my tiny little
apartment staring at a huge pile of overdue bills, I could feel
the pain coursing through my soul. I suddenly had the
uncontrollable urge to just run.
I am an avid runner who loves running in the wilderness. The
feeling of breaking a sweat with a good stride in the great
outdoors is like no other for me. Your heart is pumping blood
through your body like a turbo-charger, your lungs are sucking
in precious oxygen as fast as you can breathe it in, your pores
are excreting sweat and toxins like crazy, and all of your
senses are at their peak of performance. You can feel the world
around you and you know you are part of it. It is a wonderful
feeling; a healthy addiction if you will. My drug of choice is
endorphins.
I hurried down the stairs to the parking garage. The woman who
lived below me was just getting out of her car when I entered
the garage. She was a cigarette-totin' Maggie with ashen-grey
skin and a raspy voice that sounded like it was the product of
damaged vocal cords due to years of yelling too loud at parties
and breathing tobacco smoke relentlessly. She was tall, rotund
and barrel-chested, with bleached white hair that she wore way
too long for her age, which I guessed was somewhere around
forty. She wore black clothing everyday that made her look like
an albino witch. She was also a single mother of a teenage
daughter that was seemingly out of control. I often saw this
daughter coming home at four in the morning as I was just
leaving for work. She was only thirteen, but she seemed to be in
a big hurry to become an adult. Her mother didn't seem to care
about her too much. I drove to a nearby street and parked my car
next to a couple of other cars at the entrance to a fire trail.
I stretched for about five minutes, and then I was on my way up
my favorite wilderness trail that led into the foothills of the
Santa Monica Mountains (California).
I grew up playing and exercising in those hills. It is my
favorite place to go when I need to get away from it all. There
are fire trails everywhere that accommodate anyone who is
looking for exercise in a wilderness area that includes rolling
hills, bush-covered chaparral, and majestic mountains.
About a mile into my run I began to work up a sweat. A group of
dark clouds passed overhead and it started to rain. It was
winter. I was only wearing a tee-shirt and shorts, and the rain
was cold, but it felt good. The rain drops splashed over my face
and body like a fire sprinkler from heaven that was released
right on cue.
The sun burst through the clouds and I was soon bathed in warm
sunlight again. I entered a rocky area filled with caves that
were formed by millions of years of wind and water erosion. The
Chumash Indians once lived in those caves before the Europeans
came. I looked up to the right and saw a group of teenagers
hanging out in a big cave that was about fifty feet up on the
face of a cliff. One of them noticed me running down below and
threw an empty beer bottle in my direction. The bottle hit a
rock about twenty feet away from me and exploded into a million
pieces. This explosion was immediately followed by an eruption
of laughter from the group. I was thinking about stopping to say
something, but I did not want to ruin my good mood.
I made a couple of left and right turns on trails that I
originally explored when I was about eight years old. I ran
deeper into the hills. Soon I was running up a series of steep
switchbacks trails.
I eventually arrived at the top of the highest hill in that
area. I stopped for a rest, and to take in the beautiful three
hundred and sixty degree view all around me. I had mountains in
front of me, hills all around me and the San Fernando Valley off
in the distance behind me. I watched the sunset over the
mountains and meditated for a moment at my favorite spot on
earth. When I turned around I could see the lights of The Valley
glistening like a million fire flies. I was about five miles
away from the nearest civilization, but it felt like it was five
hundred.
A half hour later I started my run back towards civilization. It
was now dark, but I was not worried about getting lost, for I
knew those trails like the back of my hand. Rattlesnakes were
all hibernating, coyotes aren't much to worry about, but
mountain lions were a different story. Although attacks on
humans were rare, there had been a couple of people killed in
California in recent years. I did not want to be the next rare
event, so I made sure to announce my presence by singing loudly
(and slightly off-key).
Suddenly, I saw a shadowy figure of a person up ahead on the
trail in front of me. I was not used to seeing other people that
far back in the hills. I approached with caution. As I got
closer and closer to this dark silhouette, I noticed that this
person was just standing still at a fork in the dirt road. When
I was about to pass this person I noticed that it was a young
teenage guy. He was wearing brown nylon shorts and a yellow
tee-shirt that said Calabasas Cross Country Team on the front.
He looked very worried, and seemed to be lost.
The thin young man politely asked me if I knew which one of the
trails he was standing in front of was the one out of there. He
explained that he was training for an up coming cross-country
competition and did not realize how far he had run, or how
quickly it got dark "now that daylight savings was over". I told
him that I knew that area quite well, and that he could follow
me out of there.
I made a right turn at the fork in the road, and the kid
followed behind me. As we were running down the switchback
trails it started to rain again. We ran out into a large valley
with tall grass, and then the kid began to fall behind a bit. I
slowed my pace down a little until I could see him again slowly
running behind me on the trail.
As we were passing through the rocky area with all the caves we
suddenly came upon the group of kids that were partying earlier.
They were slowly walking on the trail and passing around a
bottle of whiskey. A young girl noticed us approaching and broke
off from the group with the whiskey bottle in her hand. As we
were passing by the girl she held the whiskey bottle out towards
us and with a sarcastic and drunken voice she said "you guys
must be thirsty"! A full moon was now shining down on the area
and it illuminated me to the fact that this girl was the
thirteen year old daughter of the albino witch lady that lived
in the apartment below me. She was too drunk to recognize me. We
then jogged past the chuckling group of inebriated teenagers and
continued on with our run through the wilderness.
We finally reached the end of the trail and we both stopped
running. While trying to catch his breath, the kid thanked me
for giving him directions. He then disappeared into the
neighborhood. I walked over to my car and stood next to it for a
moment. I thought to myself; I may not have much money, but I
have my health. I am thankful for having parents who cared, and
that I chose to run on the right path in life.
Copyright 2006. Michael P. Connelly