It’s dark and late. My ears are filled with the crunch of my sprinting
feet pounding the road’s gravel surface. This is accompanied by the roar of my
rapid attempts at air exchange and the furious barking of every dog within half
a mile.
I’m on day two of a new training regimen and I’m labouring through wind
sprints on the road that winds through the country subdivision where I live
with my wife and two kids. There are no streetlights here, so I’m hurtling
through darkness, guided only by the shadowy contrasts that identify, more or
less, where the road ends and where the tree-lined ditches begin. My feet are
still hitting solid surface and there are no branches in my face so I figure I
must be going fairly straight.
This session is my first crack at working my anaerobic glycosis system,
whose existence I only learned about yesterday. This system provides energy for
about 30 to 45 seconds of intense effort (like a hockey shift, for example.)
What I’m doing is sprinting all out for 30 seconds then resting for two
minutes. I am to repeat this process six times. Despite the fact that this
exercise is almost killing me, I’m not overly concerned about the physical
discomfort I’m experiencing.
At the forefront of my mind is the possibility of headlights suddenly appearing ahead or behind me. I know what I’ll do if it happens: scamper like a panicked gopher into the nearest ditch. I’d rather cower unseen in the thistles than face the slack-jawed gawking of a suspicious neighbour gliding past in his SUV, wondering why a seemingly normal adult is parading around in shorts at 11:30 p.m.
At the forefront of my mind is the possibility of headlights suddenly appearing ahead or behind me. I know what I’ll do if it happens: scamper like a panicked gopher into the nearest ditch. I’d rather cower unseen in the thistles than face the slack-jawed gawking of a suspicious neighbour gliding past in his SUV, wondering why a seemingly normal adult is parading around in shorts at 11:30 p.m.
“Just out for a spot of exercise,” I’d offer weakly if a verbal exchange
was unavoidable.
This would be met by squint-eyed dubiousness, I’m sure. And I would be
permanently stricken from that neighbour’s mental block party invitation list.
This late-night road work is the result of a spur-of-the-moment decision
that’s been years in the making. I’m a 43-year-old professional who’s been
leading a pretty sedentary lifestyle. Go to the office, go home, feed the kids,
put them to bed, putter around the house, poke away at the laptop, watch some
TV, stay up too late, go to bed. Once a week during the winter this routine
includes a trip to the local rink for about an hour of beer league puck
chasing, about the only real exercise I get.
I’m at the stage in life when many people get more proactive about
taking care of their health. But that’s not why I’m out here sprinting in the
dark. I’m not trying to bring down my cholesterol, lose weight, improve my
physique or achieve any libido-related objectives.
I’m borrowing some of the training methods used by real hockey players in an effort to transform my limp, gelatinous body into a dynamo of beer league awesomeness. I'm going to be Tom Cochrane's boy in the song Big League. When the puck drops on my season opener (in just three weeks) I'm going to turn some heads.
I’m borrowing some of the training methods used by real hockey players in an effort to transform my limp, gelatinous body into a dynamo of beer league awesomeness. I'm going to be Tom Cochrane's boy in the song Big League. When the puck drops on my season opener (in just three weeks) I'm going to turn some heads.
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