Running for Your Life: Running And Poems
I never know what will come to me when I run. How it will come. The “it” I’m referring to are ideas, often so fleeting that I don’t hold onto them.
Often, not so much ideas as images. Daydreams. Sometimes it’s a memory, perhaps a memoir morsel that, later, I write down in a journal. Sometimes a phrase, something about a movie that I saw a week ago, a month ago.
I have to get down these ideas, images, sensations. Sometimes just a quick sketch, dash a few lines. No, not the computer, or the laptop. Just pen and paper. (studies show a third of smartphone users go online before getting out of bed in the morning; that brains of Internet addicts scan a lot like brains of alcoholics; that the average teen processes 123 texts a day) and yes, if I had time that wasn’t circumscribed by salary work I’d take these ideas and writing fragments and devote hours to the construction of stories, memoirs, novels, plays and poems.
I think, though, if there is a single literary expression that best approximates running for me it is poems. Running is poems. What is an attempt at the universal, the precision of life and language. Close, close again. And beautiful. Small and large and perfect. And simple.
Can’t wait to try to reach that perfection again.
Next: Running for Your Life: “Wish You Were Here”
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