Monday, October 24, 2011

Running Against


300 or so runners. That's the number of runners who, back in 2008, gave a flying fuck about the Nike 10k Human Race. It was my first, and so far worst 10k at 1:08 in an official race. It's the one that sculpted my backbone, the one that reinforced my metaphorical outlook of running. In the 2008 run, registration was free.

8,000. That's the limit of registered runners allowed to join the 2011 Nike We Run Manila.

Registration fees are up to PHP1,300 per participant. I arrived almost an hour early, but this orange dri-fit tee-clad crowd was so thick I only got to cross the starting line 3 minutes after the gun start. This choking-hot afternoon race was not the race to earn your best 10k PR. But yes, with the running bug gone viral in the city a lot of people are a lot faster.

Nike is one of the corporations we love to hate. The swoosh is part of one of the logos in that 1% Occupy Wall Street is struggling against. Nike must make gazillions selling cheaply manufactured shoes at expensive price tags and exploit laborers in the process. Needless to say, they invest heavily in branding, advertising and marketing and I must be an idiot for buying the idea and slipping comfortably in invented fictions such as "Hit the road, not the wall" or terminologies such as "Dynamic Support" or "Lunar Glide." I even felt like it was designed for me.



It's immature to admit I don't like it. The 1% is positioned towards increasing their profits, influence and marketing capabilities. Nike also sold ideas and ideologies that they put on their shoes and shirts. They were good and we bought them. We enrich the 1% and keep ourselves to the 99% And yes, that is something I should run against. At the same time, I won't fool myself and say that I'll protest on buying a good product.

Besides, I've got ideas of my own that were born of out my running. To run along is what's important.

Thinking of my own immaturity, I've hit a lot of walls and no longer think of what I am running away from, but what I am running for. And never to forget what I am running against.

I still wear them, but I also struggle to keep my Nike shoes and shirts off. As one of their ads say, Running is always a beginning.

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

LiveStrong Run (10k) 2011

Imagine a World Without Cancer.

The weather was inclement the night before, and the 4am assembly time was too ridiculously early. A diligent-enough runner would have to wake up at least 2am to get ready, eat a little, stretch, drive to the race venue across town. All the hopes made the weather clear and I arrived a few minutes before assembly time. A couple of runners clad in the same yellow singlet were sitting by the gutters. This was the Fort at 4am. Around the corner, a group of young, mestizo teenagers were still huddled around a set of car loudspeakers thumping dance music. The race organizers, on the other hand, had just begun setting up their starting arch and lining up their orange cones.

By assembly time, they moved everyone to the other side of arch, the announcer pleading clumsily, "We run to that direction." It was already past the supposed gun start. There was no fancy ceremonial launch, except for everybody chanting something like "1, 2, 3... go" with the guy who held the microphone.

Despite the catchy campaign materials and the profound relevance of its cause - this was the smallest, most barely-organized race I've ever ran. It's also been a while since I've ran the Fort-McKinley route and I've always found the uphill roads a little cumbersome. Not to the merit of our race organizers, parts of the running path (particularly around the cemetery) were literally pitch-black and zero-visibility at past 4am. Maybe it actually helped quicken my pace. If I didn't run fast enough to follow the guy ahead of me I would have been led off-track. The roads weren't entirely closed, so there were also vehicles along the route that increased the perils in this run.

But it's not like I'm not used to that, because I've ran alone in similar avenues or highways. Hydration was also bad, sure, but I know that all I really need was at least 1 quick and decent gulp for a 10k. And ulitmately: more than half of the registration fee was paid for my wife's company, and she paid for the rest. That's on top of all the encouragement and inspiration she gives to my running. I was really after the slick-looking singlet that said Imagine the World Without Cancer. I was running for that idea.

I remember what I was running for, and in organized racers - what others were running for. People had this stuck at the back of those slick-looking singlets:







However bad the route was or how poor hydration and runner-safety is, I managed its longest distance 10k category in a good-enough 55 minutes. They seemed to hand me all that I needed at that time: a banana, a bottle of water. This button was a welcome bonus.


The morning was beautiful and the strangely good cosmic vibes reverberated. Imagine a world without cancer.

What I ran for was an idea. The remembrance of seeing all those names in the stickers at the backs of runners I chased or passed. However this race was organized, these runners I finished with all look seriously proud.

Sunday, October 9, 2011

What I Ran For at the Rizal Run


Sesquicentennial what?

I prepared an all-OPM play list that lets me begin in a controlled pace: Up Dharma Down and Taken by Cars. Then the play list lines up local rock superlatives like Franco and Wolfgang to blast through my brains during a run that honors the 150th of National Hero Jose Rizal. Dragging songs to the new play list, my blood pumped and endorphins started to ooze with the distortion and guitar riffs. It will be a perfectly flat race route, and the starting line is walking-distance from my house so I will enjoy a home-court advantage in Roxas Boulevard. I've had several servings of spectacular sunsets here, many of them while running along baywalk.

The 16k distance is a step below from the 21k races I’ve previously joined, but its good preparation for my next shot at my sub-2 hour 21k goal this November. While I’m not in serious training, I’m in a good enough condition to finish 16k in 1.5 hours. I just had every reason to run my first organized of the year.

There’s been a great deal of grinding pressure at work with a launch of a new account and client visits so I could use some pavement-pounding to run these worries away to oblivion, at least for a while. And before the run begins, the yearning is just as thrilling.

It also develops before going into full blast, like how molecules begin to boil in a kettle. That’s how excitement built up in the 16k coral in front of the landmark Rizal Monument. On the way to the starting line, you hear the snare drums from a University Cheering squad. Before gun time, the National Anthem is sang, the National Historical Commissioner speaks, and everybody goes for a last- minute muscle stretch. This is a relatively-simpler organized run, as there weren’t any fireworks or fancy laser-light shows at the starting line, but it had enough good fuel to rev up the runners.

I run alone, but sometimes you get sentimental about sharing this happiness. It’s similar to how you wish someone else read a good book you’ve read. I thought of my brother who works overseas, in Bahrain. He also runs, and I would have loved to run this race with him.

Pink and blue 5.30 am skies, the proximity of the sea, boulevards that are closed for your convenience, and an equally excited crowd reminded me of why runners give up Saturday night-outs to wake up for a Sunday morning run. Having run mostly on afternoons, I almost forgot how good the early-mornings feel.


I executed a conservative game plan. I didn’t push or try to pass other runners, but made sure I ran between a 5’30 to 5’45 per km pace. With that, I finished within a minute of my 1:30 goal. Towards the end, I felt like I had so much strength left. . I was sprinting towards the finish line and I was probably running a 4’00/km pace towards that stretch. I should’ve ran more with what they call “pure guts” and worked harder. I realized, this time I was enjoying myself more than working hard on a race.

At the finish line, an usher in Filipiniana costume puts a medal around my neck.

I never bother to line up for those loot bags. I walked towards the Rizal Monument and did my post-run stretch. It's a symbolic bow, this stretch. And this one, for Rizal, in front of guarded monument. We've read your work, put your face in coins and t-shirts, and now we've ran for you. Happy Birthday!

After the stretch, I went home immediately.

I’ll be in time for breakfast with my wife and kid. I’ll get some chocolate milk at a convenience score. I read from somewhere that it’s an awesome drink to mend these muscles. Man, I’m still high and giddy. It’s still a long road ahead and I plan on enjoying myself.