The thought of a comeback assumes you've been somewhere. Mine
was doomed by its very premise. Undaunted by logic, I laced up my
running shoes and began. First a body check: Feet? Hurt. Legs? Weak. Stomach? Queasy. Chest?
Undeveloped. Brain? All the above.
And this was before I stepped out the door.
I learned everything I know about my body through running injuries.
Iliotibial band? Never heard of it till I hurt it. Quadriceps? Ditto. Triceps?
Triceratops? With the muscles I've trashed, I should be extinct.
People love rags-to-riches stories. Riches-to-rags stories sell well too.
Sequels - "Champ Resurrects Self After Catastrophe," "Pauper Wins
Lotto, Blows All" - launch follow-ups until interest is milked to death.
My story - polyester-to-middle class - is like Ultimate Oatmeal. Can
Sullivan Go From Lukewarm to Lackluster? Tepid to Bland? It puts even
me to sleep.
Still, my dream is to Be Someone. If I have to enhance the worst parts of
my story so my ascent into mediocrity seems phoenix-like, hey, it worked
for James Frey in "A Million Little Pieces." The world's best-known
marathoner, Oprah Winfrey, endorsed Frey's book, boosting sales
further. Who better to take the "f" out of my "life" story than me?
Plus I had running magazines to guide me. If I followed their 5 Easy
Tips, 8 Guaranteed Steps and 12 Sure-Fire Hints, my lard and flab
would become rock-hard abs, I'd complete a marathon in 10 hours
ringed by group-hugging peers wearing matching t-shirts ... my life, in
short, would be so sublime there'd be no point continuing as it could
only go downhill, so I might as well end it all then and there.
I thought of everything I could to postpone my comeback, but there is no
part of my rehearsing-for-a-Hearse body I have hurt worse than my
brain. Out the door I went.
Every muscle I'd folded, spindled or mutilated in 30 years' running
howled like Allen Ginsberg. The harder I ran, the faster it seemed I went
nowhere, or even backwards.
Who'd made the world a treadmill while I was injured? I wanted
answers. I ...
Hey, the air smelled sweet. It and blood pumping through me, in spring
sunshine, felt like living.
There's no coming back, at whatever pace, if you've not gone forth. MR