Since I was stuck in
Namma Bengaluru for yet another year, I decided to give the TCS 10K run another
shot. I'll cease to call it a marathon because while a marathon is a
mammoth 42.2 km, this run is barely 10. Here's my take on last year's event.
Frequent e-mail
reminders ensured that I registered on time and also convinced a friend or two
to join. The registration this time around was smooth and didn't remind me of passport
applications. The goody bag pick-up, which was strategically located in the
midst of a promotional exhibition (again!) went on smoothly as well. This
edition's goody bag, while retaining its share of men's cosmetics, wasn't as
much of a punching bag. It had a 7 day pass to Gold's Gym! (which I just
noticed). The organisers had learnt. They offered to sell me a pass to park at
UB city, which I brushed aside, thinking it was unnecessary trouble.
The run up
Unlike last time, I
actually trained for this year's run. I ran for about 20 days of the 40 days
that counted down to the race. I could spare only half an hour in the wee hours of the morning for the
training and ended up running 5 kilometres on most of these days. I touched the 10 km mark on two consecutive days of a weekend. I didn't measure my time on any of these
occasions too seriously but I thought I always clocked in under 50 minutes. My
running tracks were more undulating than the race's track which led me to think
that I'd do better on the latter. I also happened to
read Lance Armstrong’s amazing biography in the days leading up to the run. His
biography, titled “It’s not about the bike”, reads really well. It celebrates
endurance sport in a manner that is truly inspirational, among other things.
Race day!
I was determined to
reach the venue early so that I avoid getting slowed down by the crowding at the
start line. I reached the vicinity of Kanteerava stadium half an hour early,
but just when I could see the indoor stadium's strange looking dome, our lane
was abruptly halted by a cop. An assortment of vehicles, of which I was an integral part, waited patiently for the traffic police to
signal it through. Seconds turned into minutes and quiet waiting gave way to
the blaring of impatient horns, which the traffic cop handled nonchalantly, seeing as
how his profession involves the cultivation of a skin that is at least as thick as
that of a well fed water-buffalo. Most faces around sported a look of
bewilderment laced with disbelief at their 7:30 AM Sunday drive being so rudely
interrupted with no sign of resumption. Only when somebody walked up to the cop
did we realise that we had to wait for a political convoy to pass. On realising
this, most people resigned to their fate and stopped honking. Everyone in our
country is forced to grow water-buffalo skins one way or the other.
On
finding a parking space at the Bangalore City Corporation Office, which was strangely
empty, my decision to not buy that parking chit was completely vindicated (or
so I thought). I jogged to the nearest gate of the stadium while dodging traffic
to find a volunteer keenly scrutinising our running bibs. He looked at mine and
pointed to a tiny little ‘B’ written in the corner. “Kindly go to Gate-B near
Mallya hospital. You’re already late,” he informed. I finally made my way to
Gate-B having run a kilometre already! On the bright side, this exercise served
as warm up.
The gates were opened in an orderly fashion
this time. Luckily for me, gate B opened rather early. In spite of the
organisers limiting registration this year, the start line ended up reminding
me of an Indian pilgrimage site. The funnel design for the running track was
still in vogue and people did end up walking barely 100m after the start line
because of crowding. The first kilometre of my race saw me rushing ahead,
pushing hard just so that I can get past the sizable mass, which had assembled
there that morning just to wave at the television cameras. I kept telling
myself that an initial push would serve me well just so that I can get past
this chaotic mass, replete with abrupt collisions that some scientist watching
overhead could have used to model Brownian motion.
A board nearby announced that I had crossed
one kilometre and I could see pockets of space opening up. I was now left
running with all the people who had surged past the crowd and were now leading
the race. I then proceeded to continue, keeping pace with those around me. I
gulped down a glass of Gatorade, which wasn’t mixed properly. I ran alongside
this person wearing a T-shirt that claimed he was from the Territorial Army.
After a while, he slowed down a little and I surged ahead, looking for other
people to run alongside with. I thought I was doing great!
The 4.5 kilometre mark was past and I
suddenly started wearing. I pushed on for half a kilometre more and halted at a
water point. I drank a little off the bottle and slowed down. There was a
niggling pain in my chest that had never been so assertive during my training.
The worst part about this pain is that even if I slowed down, it increased,
until I had to walk a few paces. Mr Territorial Army man and a host of others I
had swaggered past caught up with me and left me far behind. My head was a
filled with a sense of bewilderment and disappointment. I thought I’d finish
far behind last year’s time, after training so much more. I had done the unthinkable in a
long distance race, twice! I walked. The water that I drank earlier was
churning in my stomach, sending up burps to rudely interrupt my panting. I had
bonked out as Lance Armstrong would call it.
I convinced myself to salvage whatever I
could from the race and slowly pushed on. I started jogging and building up my
rhythm, while analysing what could’ve gone wrong. Was it because of the sun’s
presence? Was it because I pushed too hard while keeping up with much fitter
people? The kilometres ticked away very slowly. I just crossed a board saying 7 km were up.
When I proceeded to the 8th
kilometre, my rhythm was back and my chest pain was gone. A flood of reason
came rushing in. I had tired so quickly because of all those 5 km training runs.
My body automatically slipped into a pace where I’d be exhausted at the end of
5 km. This, coupled with the other factors that I mentioned before, did me in just after the 5 km mark. After a brief period of rest, I was fine. It was time to
finish this race strong. There were people all along the race track cheering
runners on with banners like: “After the pain goes away, only the pride
remains.” Each time we runners thanked these people, they cheered a little
louder, giving us much needed encouragement and little bursts of adrenalin. After the 9 km mark, I picked up
pace steadily. With 500 m left, I was sprinting ahead, screaming to myself to
get the adrenalin pumping. I finished the last bit of the race strong and
checked my watch. I had finished in about 49 min (49:09), which was a huge
relief. I missed the quarter of an hour mark by a really long shot, but was
better than last year’s 51:44. Any endurance competition is a race against your
own self, and every minute gained counts. I finished the race a full 500 m ahead of last year's performance, considering average speed.
The
aftermath
On the other side of the finish line, I saw
all the people who had done better than me. A man who looked at least 60 years old had finished in 45 min! I respectfully shook his hand, humbled
thoroughly. I also congratulated Mr Territorial Army man. Finishing among the front
runners (if I could call them that) is a much more humbling experience than it would appear. After the pain
goes away, you are left with something much more valuable than pride: humility.
I slowly ambled back to my two wheeler which I presumed was safely inside the Corporation Office. To my dismay, I saw that it was a little too safe! All the gates to that building were closed, locked and manned by security guards. I asked one of them how I could get out. He told me to try the other gate, though he was wholly pessimistic of my chances. I almost regretted not having purchased that parking pass. I slowly rode to the other gate and on seeing me, the guard manning it saluted. I duly saluted back, which brought upon his face a big smile that reminded me of a child whose relative had just given him a bagful of foreign chocolates! He swung the gate open and I was off.
I have consistently painted a rosy picture
of this event’s organisation thus far. However, when I returned that afternoon
to have lunch in the whereabouts of the running track, I noticed that there was
a lot of trash left behind on the streets. This was extremely disappointing.
Even while organising such enriching events, the corporate world doesn’t think
twice before taking its dump on the city’s already weak civic infrastructure.
May our buffalo skins grow ever thicker.
I have realised that running is something I
should practice around the year rather than the month before these events. When
you run at an optimal speed, your body expends as much energy as it can continuously
produce, letting you run on and on without tiring. I like to call this wonderful phenomenon The Indefatigable Rhythm. I never feel more alive than when I hit this rhythm. Running in the mornings also ensures
that one stays amazingly vital for the remainder of the day. I was also
untouched by the usual bouts of sneezing or the running nose that Bangalore
keeps giving me. I have decided to intersperse running, cycling and yoga into
an exercise schedule that I should follow. Let us see how that shapes up.
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