The point being, to let the exhilaration I feel at the end of each run carry on to the next day.
[Haruki Murakami What I Talk About When I Talk About Running]
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Have a coffee. Read this. Don't spill the chocolate sprinkles on the page...
- Professors and Literature
- Why Biofuels are Nature's Worst Enemy
- Aiding is Abetting
- Why Money Messes With Your Mind
- The Primal Nature of Sports' Fans
- Essay Mills
- Harvard's Masters of the Apocalypse
- Downturn and libraries
- With the downturn, it's time to rethink the legal profession
- Dry Run
- Screw you, GM
- Why bluffing about books is a civilised art
- What drives people to steal precious books
- Put your Twitter face on
- Where's the bailout for publishing?
- The Guardian: Project Marathon - Playlists
- Germaine Greer: on women and comedy
- Why Americans are obsessed with wine being good for you
- Why the child foodie movement has to go
- Shoes and Weapons
- Down with Facebook!
- Burger King's body spray
- Who checks the spell-checkers
- The day the newspaper died
- The End of Alone
- Ready, aim, fail.
- ? = beauty
- Women, keep drinking
funny that.
ReplyDeletei can't run right now, so i'm walking. i walk to and from work (1 hr each dir) and all over the place on saturdays to make up for my not running. i have found that it's hard to slow down. is it my walker's high? is this my exhilaration carrying me on? all i know is that i can't go from speed walking to regular walking. i have to sit (my metaphorical brick wall) to stop.
momentum is a crazy thing. not always good though. not a big fan of it when a bus driver stops suddenly.
slow walkers irritate me. Every time I walk through the mall, I am overcome with rage at how people can be SO SLOW.
ReplyDelete