
We turned left, running, stiffly at first, down Mass Ave. Upon reaching the MinuteMan Trail, one of the primary reasons we chose our apartment (location, location, location), we turned into it, striding along a tree and house lined path, every step bringing more ease in the now-familiar motion. A mile or so in, and we realized we'd somehow missed our turn--and ended up on the busy Alewife Brook Parkway. It wasn't until we met Chad, a sprightly runner dashing alone happily, that we were able to get back on track. (At our pleas for directions, he told us to follow him--the next 3-4 minutes were spent with both of us struggling to keep up with his blithely quick trot.)
At last we were back on the trail, and as we ran through shadowed paths along lines of trees and snowy open fields, we at last took some time to spend the miles talking over the topic of the day--whether or not Jared should run the 2009 Boston Marathon.
(Background: My beloved volunteers in multiple mediums--spending a night a week at the Children's Hospital, and spending time as a big brother in the Big Brothers/Big Sisters Program. This week he received an email from Big Brothers, asking him if he wanted to run the marathon as a charity runner for their team.)
We spent many miles discussing the pros and cons of his running. The cons being that he didn't want to steal my thunder (silly man), he would (potentially) have to give up this season of hoops league, it would be tough to raise the minimum charitable donation ($3000) in three months, and he'd always hoped to run for Children's Hospital if he did run.
(Background: As a once premature baby who spent time in his local Children's Hospital, Jared feels a particularly strongly about volunteering there.)
The pros: With the half marathon in November, and the recent group run cancellations for me, Jared's logged a lot of miles, and is physically in the shape needed to pick up a training program relatively easily. Waiting to do it another year would mean starting over from scratch. Another pro? We could both do our own group runs half the time, keeping touch with the charitable organizations we'd be running in honor of, and run with each other the other half.
Ultimately, Jared decided to see what Children's had to say, as though they typically field a team of runners, the application to run for them has long since come and gone. He emailed them, asking if they had any remaining openings.

It was Friday afternoon when Jared heard from Children's, to, I think, his disappointment--the team was full.
1 comment:
Great to see you today - and I'm a huge fan of Tibetan - Martsa on Elm is great! (Davis Square)
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