Running for Your Life: Hot Running: Don’t Knock It Till You Try It

For years now boys and girls of a certain age (9-14, is my guess) have spent a good part of Prospect Park summer camp whaling away at each other, fencing with play-swords as long as their arms.

Straight, pointy things that don’t hurt from a wallop, or so it would appear to see the pint-sized warriors in action.

They pepper the trails in clusters of privilege, public paths that they swarm in league with untutored “counselors,” who encourage the land seizure so that literally as I run along I must dodge past them, often to avoid being struck by these “swords,” as one does a gauntlet during some lame male rite of passage.

Oh, youth, is that your sting?


Doctors will tell you not to over-exert yourself in searing heat and high humidity.

Better to exercise, race your heartbeat to aerobic health in the comfort of an air-conditioned gym.

Don’t hot-run, though, whatever you do. You’ll be sorry.

Sounds reasonable, and for most runners it’s the way to go.

But for me, summer running is a joy, a personal triumph. I run outside in all kinds of weather in part so that I will be in the kind of shape to be able to handle running when the temps and humidity spike.

A badge of pride, if you’ll excuse it.

Next: Running for Your Life: Artists Talk



Running for Your Life: “Gatsby” Gulch

Suddenly, everywhere you look, there are writings about F. Scott Fitzgerald, and most prominently, “The Great Gatsby.”

My first brush with “Gatsby” was in Grade Nine English class. It was the singular most important novel of the curriculum.

A nonreader, I confess I didn’t get it. I mean what the hubbub was about.

What it was in there for a kid attending a small high school in a marine-based town that the modern economy had forgot, where the scourge of New York style capitalism would somehow speak to my heart, is lost on me.

“Old Yeller” would be more like it.

Anyway, now, we’re tipping into the 2020s, a hundred years after the “Gatsby” decade, and man are we getting our fill.

In a recent London Review of Books, a piece by Alex Harvey looks at “Paradise Lost,” a new biography by David S. Brown published by Harvard U., and Scribner’s “‘I’d Die for You’ and Other Lost Stories” by FSF himself.

Here’s a beauty from Harvey review: “The dominant tone is [Fitzgerald’s] work becomes promise unfulfilled, human waste, the inevitable slide toward ruin.”

Frank Rich in New York magazine, quoting “Behold, America,” a new nonfiction book by Sarah Churchwell, reminds us that the plutocratic villain in “Gatsby,” Tom Buchanan, is a white supremacist prone to observations like “if we don’t look out the white race will be … utterly submerged” and “It’s up to us who are the dominant race to watch out or these other races will have control of things.”

Fitzgerald delivers as the storyteller, the sensitive artist aware of the soulless horror in which she finds herself.

Why “The Great Gatsby” is the classic, we’re reminded in this treatise of human failure, delusion not illusion. In Fitz’s case, a race to the grave. (He died in Hollywood, suffered the fate of a barely attended funeral … in 1940 he wrote, Hollywood “was a dump, in the human sense of the word. Everywhere there is … either corruption or indifference.”) When life masks are seen by those with artistic sight, the illusion of something richer, better, utopian is revealed for what it is: a toxic lie.

Here is what could be the path. Fitzgeraldian stories that in a dramatic telling reveal, describe the cesspool that is our emotional capital – that we are doomed in Fitzgerald to live hard, die young, leave a good-looking corpse; in O’Connor we feel a monastic-style tone, alive to the wonder of human drama, adventure, excitement to be one that comes from loves remembered, triumphs recalled, dreams to be fulfilled as dreams, not through some VR stunt or video game prowess but through the as-yet untapped potential of the human brain.

What does the modern-day Gatsby reach for? What desperate rite do we expose: the retelling of “The Great Gatsby” 100 years after? That Hollywood destroys thought, emotion, the novel?

And Rich ends his piece with this: Two years after “Gatsby” was published to disappointing reviews and sales, budding real estate developer Fred Trump would be arrested at a Ku Klux Klan riot, not far from Tom Buchanan’s home in Fitzgerald’s fictional Long Island enclave or East Egg.

“Old Yeller,” anyone?

Next: Running for Your Life: Hot Running: Don’t Knock It Till You Try It





Running for Your Life: Shake … Spear

Ode to the joys of seeing theater like “Twelfth Night” at Shakespeare in the Park …

How hundreds of people in this time of unbridled mind-meld marketing, no barrier to the full-on soul extraction at work at the behest of the current US gold rush kings: Google, Amazon, Facebook and Netflix don’t enter this space – Transported – Beam me away, Scottie.

To the sixteenth century, where joy is the wide-eyed stare of the confounded actor, in the clever tricks to bring to earth the blustery Malvolio.

It will not last, and indeed we are as a civilization measured in individual opportunity, much advanced from Shakespeare’s time when so many were denied the opportunity to see, to learn and have their suspicions about the universality of human nature confirmed in this story.

Yes, so many of us, in fact the entire citizenry of New York City, more than 8 million people, are free to see these magical stories, these works of art that cleanse a soul.

For 90 minutes, the length of the performance. One hundred minutes if you count the pre-theater immersions.

And then it’s head-first back into the maw of brain disruption. Buy Apple and only Apple! Search Google for life-confirming facts. There’s an Amazon robot that will make your bed! Second season of “The Crown.” Binge!

Next: Running for Your Life: “Gatsby” Gulch   

Running for Your Life: Run in the Rain

In summer, unless it’s a full-on electrical story – Crack! [insert bolt of lightning here] – I’ll run in the rain.

That’s one of the benefits of my current pace: Slower. Slower. Slower.

At that speed I can limit the risk of slipping and falling during a run. I see the puddles, the rivulets, the drain backups. Considering my pace is more shuffle than sprint, I can avoid most soakers.

They do come, though, the soakers. Wednesday (July 25) a downpour started only minutes after I’d left the house.

In no time, I’m drenched to the bone. Footfalls squish, drown out all but the fat droplets on broad leaves.

In past years, I’d run in the rain to the gym – and then run on the treadmill.

But my treadmill running days are over. I injure myself on those suckers. And there are too many people wearing ear buds, watching telly, interior-drained.

In short, “working out.”

A run in the rain cannot be reduced to a workout.

Rather, it’s a peel back to childhood, wet with wonder.

Next: Running for Your Life: “Gatsby” Gulch   

Running for Your Life: Newspaper Notes

Here’s a dirty little secret.

Folks (of a certain age) take newspapers for granted.

They walk down the street and see the “news” – staring back at them from corner delis.

They don’t wonder where it comes from. How this essential service magically appears every day. The best of them just gather whatever chump change they have in their pocket and pick up a copy – and read about the neighborhood, the country, the president, their passion.

Box scores for baseball fans, crossword puzzles for word nerds.

I remember the daily “Peanuts” column. “Doonesbury.” “Bloom County”  (sniff).

Features have come and gone. But the papers, the promise, remains.

And here, on Monday (July 23), the story breaks that the New York Daily News is cutting half of its already drastically reduced staff. Photographers, gone. Sports reporters and desk – slashed to the bone. 

Ooof, that hurts. As I’ve written here recently, I’ve got a stake or two in this opinion. In fact, if my print job is still there (such history sparks caution) in 2020, I will have worked in newspapers in each of the past six decades – 70s, 80s, 90s, 00s, 10s, and 20s.

It seems to me that every other person I talk to these days is working on a “book.” What we need are people working on newspapers.

Do your-soul a favor and pick up a paper from your neighborhood newsstand. In fact, pick up two. Repeat. At this rate, they may not be there forever.

Next: Running for Your Life: “Gatsby” Gulch