Years ago,
to celebrate an anniversary, Jennifer and I spent a night or two in
Saratoga Springs. I’d spent time there in college and loved it, and
thought its leafy streets and big houses would be a nice relief from the
city in summer. I thought of Saratoga Springs mostly as an arts town,
what with all the writers holed up at Yaddo and the dance troupes and
music ensembles that had their summer residencies there.
But of course it is even more a horse town, and though we were not
particularly horse people, we went to see the thoroughbreds at their
morning workout on a track across the street from the famous racecourse.
We got to the track early, as trainers led their horses from the stables
to the track. The horses were terrifying: impatient, angry, enormous.
They stamped and pulled at the reins, jerking sideways, nostrils
flaring, eyes bulging. Their movements were almost spasmodic, and I
worried there might be something wrong with them. I wasn’t sure I wanted
to be here after all, to witness what looked to me like a scene of
abuse or perhaps even the throes of death.
But the minute those horses were spurred into action on the track, they
were transformed—from something monstrous and awkward into the very
symbol of beauty and power. They coursed around the track like balls of
mercury spinning in a bowl. It was impossible to peel your eyes away. We
felt their hoofbeats through the ground as they approached us around
the turn to our left; we heard their breath as they flew past us. Their
beauty made my skin buzz. When they were running, the world was theirs
and we were lucky just to be in it.
Watching them, I remembered a similar scene with a pack of sled dogs in
the Sierra Nevadas. It was just after dawn, and we were on our way to
ski. The dogs were gathered off the side of the road, preparing for an
expedition. They were a cacophony of howling, yipping, and snarling, a
tangle of fur and trace, until the sled driver called out for them to
go—and then the dogs went silent and the pack charged off as though it
were one organism flowing across the snowy field.
And even our own dog, a numbskulled pit bull named Chester (R.I.P.),
showed signs of this. We learned when we adopted him that he would never
be happy in our apartment unless he got exercise, got to act like the
working dog he was bred to be. So we walked him for miles (he would
never run longer than a block), chased him around the apartment, played
tug of war with him, made him work for his dinner. The more he worked,
the happier he seemed.
Nothing made him happier than finding a good sparring partner at the dog
park. Most of the dogs there weren’t up for his kind of play, as he’d
learn after a few unreciprocated feints. But when he found another dog
willing to wrestle—best of all another pit bull—he would transform into
something more like a spirit than a dog. Chester and the other pit would
chase each other around the park, then turn and charge one another,
leaping and spinning midair, briefly becoming one animal and then
pulling apart again, never hurting one another, never making a clumsy
move, just being dogs at their happiest and most beautiful. It was
astonishing to watch, making it look like all the fabled danger and
violence of the pit bull was just beauty misdirected. He’d leave those
sessions exhausted, come home and sleep peacefully, and I’d look at him
with a renewed appreciation for his brilliant…dogginess.
When I was still working in my restaurant’s kitchen, the good days were
when I’d feel more like those sled dogs or a race horse than like the
human beings we were feeding. There were moments of grace, when
everything was going well, and the cook I was working with was good and
we were communicating effortlessly: our hands and feet seemed to bypass
our brains, reading the hand-scrawled codes of order tickets (BGV, G+E
OE BAC, 1/2 FT) as a kind of choreographic notation. Orders were
translated through our limbs into a pan of eggs, a pot of gravy, a tray
of ham, all moving on and off the stove, in and out of the broiler, onto
plates and into the pass in a way that could feel almost magical. We
were working smoothly together as a team but we were also working
effortlessly within ourselves, our minds organizing information into
commands for our bodies in a way that didn’t feel conscious or even
controllable.
For someone who’d been raised to believe that intelligence was best
expressed in abstractions, whose whole life was pointed away from
working with his body, kitchen work was a revelation. In college and
graduate school I’d trained myself to sit still for hours in a library
carrel, to read and write while ignoring my body’s hunger for movement. I
loved that cerebral work, and even enjoyed some of that struggle with
my restless body. But working in a kitchen made me wonder what I’d
failed to learn by suppressing what my body was trying to tell me, and
what we miss as a culture by valuing the intelligence of the mind at
rest over the active intelligence of a body in motion.
When I stopped working in the kitchen, it was partly because I felt I
couldn’t keep up with the younger and better cooks we’d hired, and
partly because I had a second child to help care for and a wife with a
never-ending job with an inflexible schedule. I was grateful that I was
able to adjust my schedule to accommodate my life, but I missed the
satisfactions of cooking the line. Running helped fill the hole. When I
started training for races, I’d wake up with the same tired legs, the
same groaning muscles that I’d had cooking. Just as they had in the
kitchen, my muscles needed a minute or two to warm up, but then they
would spring into action like they’d wanted nothing more than to be
there, churning away like dogs on the trail. And I’d feel that same kind
of grace in motion on the road that I’d felt pirouetting in the cramped
space between refrigerators, griddle, and stovetop.
What do you think about when you’re running? non-runners love
to ask, as though an hour or two in solitary motion would be unbearable
mental tedium. I’m never really sure how to answer the question. Maybe I
should say that I have trivial, technical thoughts about running—I
notice I’m off pace, or I note a twinge of pain somewhere and try to
assess what it means. Maybe I just notice where I am, admiring the light
on the side of a building or a cute kid in a stroller. Sometimes I’ll
think more elaborate thoughts, or I’ll purposefully try to work my way
through a problem. But running is often more like a relief from the work
of abstract thinking, a way of sifting the silt out of my mind until it
runs clear again. To the extent that I’m aware of my mind, it’s like
I’m reconnecting something that had frayed, tightening up something that
had gotten loose. My mind is merging into my body and no longer feels
like a processing unit that’s grinding away in the case of my skull,
disconnected from my flesh.
There’s a lot of talk about the mental benefits of running, and a lot of
research to back it up—it rebuilds brain tissue, staves off cognitive
decline, improves mood. I’m pretty confident that running has made me a
more tolerable person, that it’s enhanced my ability to cope with
stress. Maybe it’s improved my memory or kept my brain pliable and
nimble. But those are derivative benefits. It’s harder to talk about the
value of motion for its own sake, the mystery and beauty of an
intelligence in motion. The more I try to sit here and wrap my head
around it, the more I want to go for a run.