The first time I ran, like really ran, was during middle school gym class. It took me 11 minutes and 47 seconds to finish a mile. I've been running ever since.
我第一次跑步,那種真正的跑步,是在中學(xué)體育課的時(shí)候。我花了11分47秒跑完了1英里。自那以后,我一直在跑步。
Running is the kind of thing where you put in the time and expect to see results, and let me be the first to tell you: It is supremely discouraging when you don't. It's discouraging when you run a five-mile race with your entire family and come in a solid 15 minutes behind everyone else, and it's discouraging when that time is no faster or slower than your five-mile time five years ago.
跑步是一種你會(huì)投入時(shí)間并期待成效的運(yùn)動(dòng)。讓我做第一個(gè)告訴你這個(gè)的人:你沒有做到的時(shí)候,你會(huì)剛到非常沮喪。當(dāng)你和所有家人一起來一場5英里賽跑卻落后了每個(gè)人15分鐘的時(shí)候,是十分讓人沮喪的;當(dāng)你跑完5英里的時(shí)間并沒有比5年前更快或更慢的時(shí)候,也是十分讓人沮喪的。
And yet, my alarm is already set for 6 a.m. tomorrow, even though it's probably going to be rainy and definitely going to be cold and even though most of the time, I really hate running.
但是,我已經(jīng)把明天的鬧鐘設(shè)置為早晨6點(diǎn)鐘了,哪怕可能會(huì)下雨且一定會(huì)變冷;哪怕大多數(shù)時(shí)間,我真的討厭跑步。
Don't ask me why. All I know is this: As much as I hate running, I love being a runner.
不要問我原因。我所知道的一切就是:我喜歡成為一名奔跑者和我討厭跑步的程度相同。
There's some kind of camaraderie between people who spend more money each year on running shoes than on all their other shoes combined, and there's some fundamental similarity between people who can cross 10 miles without pausing.
比起購買其他所有的鞋子,每年花更多的錢買跑鞋的人們之間有著某種友誼;那些不用暫停就能跑完10英里的人們之間也有著根本的相似性。
On days that I run, I exert myself purely for exertion's sake. If you run too, you get why.
在我跑步的日子里,我只不過為了努力而努力。如果你也跑步,你會(huì)懂的。
When you're a runner, your people are the girls with hair elastics on their wrists and the boys with shorts shorter than yours. They might be better, faster or stronger than you, but you belong with them.
當(dāng)你做奔跑者的時(shí)候,你的同伴會(huì)是那些手腕上有用來扎頭發(fā)的橡皮筋的女孩子們以及那些穿著比你褲子還短的短褲的男孩子們。他們也許比你更好、更快或者更強(qiáng)壯,但你和他們是一起的。
It took me almost 10 years of plodding along at an 11-minute mile before I realized that I could call myself a runner, no matter how slow I go or how many races I lose.
我花了將近10年時(shí)間才做到在11分鐘內(nèi)跑完1英里,后來我才意識(shí)到,我可以稱自己為一名奔跑者,無論我跑得多慢、無論我輸?shù)袅藥讏霰荣悺?/p>
I've laced up my shoes at least once a week since the first day I stepped foot on a track in middle school. Some weeks it's every day, some weeks it's not. Some days, I'll barely go more than a mile, and some days, I'll walk more than I jog. I may not have medals, but I have fresh air, time alone, and creaky knees and tight quads.
自從我在中學(xué)踏上跑道的第一天起,我至少每周會(huì)束緊鞋帶跑一次步。有些時(shí)候我那周的每天都綁緊鞋帶去跑步,有些時(shí)候不是。有些日子里,我很少跑超過1英里的距離;有些日子里,我散步的次數(shù)會(huì)比慢跑多。我可能沒有獎(jiǎng)?wù)?,但是我能呼吸新鮮空氣、擁有獨(dú)處的時(shí)間并有吱吱作響的膝蓋和結(jié)實(shí)的股四頭肌。
For me, that's enough. I run, so I am a runner.
對(duì)我來說,那就足夠了。我跑步,所以我是一名奔跑者。