In My Shoes: An Unlikely Runner's Guide to Running... and Life
By Josh Wackler
()
About this ebook
However, everyone, runners and non-runners alike, will smile, laugh and cry at this unlikely runner and author’s inspirational life lessons, all of which parallel lessons observed while committing the simple act of running.
Throughout every chapter, each of which contains a lesson in life and running, Josh shares heart breaking stories of using running to help him through loss, inspirational thoughts regarding the Boston Marathon bombing, humorous stories about battling angry geese while running, and everything in between.
Whether you’re a seasoned marathoner or someone who prefers to admire marathoners from home, you will truly enjoy Josh’s unique perspective on all things running...and all things life.
Josh Wackler
Josh Wackler was born in Missoula, MT and grew up in Western Oregon. After completing a degree at Oregon State University he moved to Kansas City for 8 years before settling in to Nashville, TN since 2013. The only experience he has in writing was as a floating columnist for his college school paper, but here he is with his very first published book! He ran his first half marathon in 2008 and shortly thereafter started blogging as a way to track and log his running and training. The blog slowly morphed into a deep look at life seen through the eyes of a marathon runner, and a book was born. He hopes you all can enjoy this book as much as he enjoyed writing and living through it.
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In My Shoes - Josh Wackler
In My Shoes:
An Unlikely Runner's Guide to Running
...and Life
Josh Wackler
In My Shoes:
An Unlikely Runner's Guide to Running
...and Life
© 2019 by Josh Wackler. All Rights Reserved.
Published by Wackler Enterprise
Cover by Sweet ‘N Spicy Designs (http://sweetnspicydesigns.com)
Edited by Barbara Ardinger
Smashwords Edition, License Notes: This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
All rights reserved. No parts of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form without written permission from the publisher, except by reviewers who may quote brief excerpts in connection with a review.
The miracle isn't that I finished. The miracle is that I had the courage to start.
—John Bingham
Acknowledgement
I want to thank the members of my review team, the people who read this book as a work in progress. Thanks to:
1) Damian Barreiro
2) Meg Belcher
3) Dr. Kimberly Brengle
4) Laurie Kamerer
5) Dr. Audra Lance
6) Dr. Callie Lance
Thanks also to my editor, Barbara Ardinger, Ph.D., who turned my regular guy
writing into the better prose you’ve read in this book. Thanks also to Sue Jorgenson, who proofread the finished manuscript, and to Eileen Troemel, who helped me find a cover designer, gave me excellent advice about publishing this book and assisted with self-publishing.
Contents
Foreword by my sister, Laurie Kamerer
Preface: Why Am I Writing This Book?
1. Follow Your Heart
Appendix to Chapter 1: 2014: The Year We Took Our Race Back, by Laurie Kamerer
2. Be Humble
3. Failure Is Inevitable
4. It’s Heart That Matters
5. Be Patient
6. Running Is Cheaper than Therapy
7. Differences vs. Faults
Appendix to Chapter 7: My Running Playlist
8. Pay It Forward
9. Be a Better Person
10. Destination vs. Journey
11. Slow Down to Go Faster
12. Motivation
13. Dream Big
14. Stop Complaining
15. Questions Beginning Runners Often Ask
16. Unwritten Rules
Foreword
If you’d asked me ten years ago what kind of book my brother might one day write, here’s what I would have said: "Josh could write a book about hunting or fishing or bartending. Definitely about leadership or customer service. No, wait—this will be his first book: 101 Reasons I Will Never Be a Runner."
Sure, Josh had done his share of running all his life. Mostly on sports teams and when being chased by a bear. For years he marveled at my running marathon after marathon and staying in marathon shape
as a lifestyle. As a working mother of young children, I discovered running with friends as a clever way to try to maintain a social life. To Josh, however, this was in the two wrongs don’t make a right
school of thought: running sucks and having a standing 5:30 a.m. appointment to run also sucks.
That’s why, at first, I didn’t pay much attention when he started making the occasional inquiry about running. What kind of shoes do you wear? Are the shoes that important? Is the runner’s high
really a thing? Do you eat before you run?
Before I knew it, Josh had run a half marathon. And then another. And another, in which he took second place. He clearly had the speed to qualify for the Boston Marathon. And he also clearly had his sights set on that very goal. For many runners, qualifying for Boston is the Holy Grail of running. Most find it an epic feat. But Josh has a secret weapon: he is very, very stubborn.
He qualified for Boston in his second marathon. In contrast, I’d run a dozen marathons—including his qualifying race—before I managed my own qualifying time. And only then with the help of a highly motivational pacer: my brother.
Josh started running races as an experiment. First to see if he could run 13.1. Then to see if he could run 26.2. And finally to see if he could run 26.2 in a ridiculously stingy amount of time. By the time he stood at the starting line of the Boston Marathon in Hopkinton (just outside Boston) in 2012, running had come to mean so much more to him. Community. Comradery. The joy of helping others find their own starting line…and the wonder of watching them cross the finish line. The profound strength of the human spirit.
As it turns out, his first book is called In My Shoes: An Unlikely Runner's Guide to Running...and Life.
—Laurie Kamerer
Preface
Why Am I Writing This Book?
I’m the last person who should write a book about running. In fact, if I had told my twenty-five-year old self that one day I would be writing a book about running, that self would have my current self committed.
So why am I actually writing this book? There are numerous books on running already out there, and if mine isn’t any different than those books, then what’s the point of writing a new one? It’s a question I have struggled with for years, mostly because I don’t closely resemble anybody who has written any running book I have ever seen.
I didn’t run in college or in the Olympics for Bill Bowerman, the American track and field coach and co-founder of Nike, Inc. (See Kenny Moore, Bowerman and the Men of Oregon: The Story of Oregon's Legendary Coach and Nike's Cofounder (Rodale Books, 2007).) I’m not sponsored by Asics, Clif, or Garmin. I have never run fifty marathons in fifty states in fifty days. I’ve never run an ultra, or a 50k race. (See Dean Karnazes, 50/50: Secrets I Learned Running 50 Marathons in 50 Days—and How You Too Can Achieve Super Endurance! (Grand Central Life & Style, 2009).)
Nor am I part of a running tribe in Mexico. (See Christopher McDougall, Born to Run: A Hidden Tribe, Superathletes, and the Greatest Race the World Has Never Seen (Vintage, 2011).) I’ve never won a gold medal. I have all of my arms and legs and am in pretty good health. I’m not dying from cancer. I am not a senior writer for Sports Illustrated and I can’t run a marathon in 2:10 or a mile in four minutes. At 6’7", 245 pounds, I more closely resemble a power forward than a runner, and I have often been told all the reasons why I cannot and should not run because of my body type. I grew up playing, following, and admiring the traditional American sports of basketball, baseball, and football. Not running. In fact, I hated running while I was growing up.
In a traditional sense, and compared to other books about running, I have absolutely no business writing such a book. So you might ask, why am I writing this book?
After much deliberation and blogging about running, it finally hit me. My hesitation to write a book arises from my lack of status as a traditional runner and writer. Which is exactly the reason why I felt compelled to write this book. All those reasons listed above, all the things that I am not and have not done…they’re exactly the reasons that compelled me to begin writing.
We normal
folks need a voice.
I’m a normal person with a normal job, just like you. While I have thoroughly enjoyed every running book I’ve ever read, each for different reasons, I find that I sometimes have a difficult time relating to the author and his/her story. I have always wanted to hear from the perspective of a normal
runner. One who has never been a professional writer. Who learns about running through his own mistakes rather than from a professional coach. Who must navigate his daily work schedule to fit running in despite a hectic schedule. Who has to squeeze money out of an already tight budget for travel and registration costs to run in races, since those costs are not covered by some other means. Someone I have never heard of in Runner’s World.
Ultimately, my hope is to show anyone and everyone that, with the exception of very few folks, anyone can be a runner. You don’t have to have a certain body type or background or status. Yes, there are certain clubs and societies in the world that are exclusive and that some of us can’t get into. You have to belong. But the roads…the roads are always open.
Running is a very simple act, one we are all genetically ingrained with the ability to do, provided we make the effort. You lace up your shoes and go running until you decide to stop. That’s it.
But we try to make it complicated and come up with all sorts of nonsensical reasons why we cannot or should not run. But that’s exactly what most of those reasons are. Nonsensical.
Through my years of running and training for marathons, I continue to be thoroughly amazed at how much something so simple has taught me about life in general. Lessons in running parallel lessons in life. And I feel compelled to share those lessons with you and other readers of my book.
I should point out two key facts you should remember as you read the following pages to make sure I’m not giving you the wrong impression. First, I am not a doctor, nor do I have any education in health or medicine. Anything I write about related to injuries, treatment, or health in general should be taken with that in mind.
Second, everybody—and every body—is different. What works or doesn’t work for me is going to be different from what works for just about any other person. Don’t always take what I write as fact. I’m writing about what I have observed through my own trials and errors.
Please keep these two points in mind as you decide what’s best for you and your body.
There are a few other matters that are important for me to spell out. I am not perfect. I have never been perfect, I will never be perfect, and I will never claim to be perfect. When I refer to lessons I have learned and words of wisdom I have come to try and live by, please note that, just like anyone else, I can fall short of those lessons and that wisdom on a daily basis. I simply try hard every day to do the best I can to live up to them.
Throughout the following pages you’ll notice suggestions of the type of household I grew up in. We weren’t the type of family that talked in depth about our feelings, and we certainly weren’t the type of family to go to a counselor or attend therapy. What did I learn growing up? You deal with life as it happens, take it in stride, and find your own ways to cope with whatever you’re dealing with. And if you fail? Good. Welcome to the real world. Deal with it.
Unless something was obviously broken or we couldn’t get out of bed, we didn’t go to the doctor. My parents had a you’ll be fine
approach. They were also adamant about our doing things "the right