blisters, porta-potties, and heat strokes: And then there's the Other runs....

We all love to write about the good runs. Those runs where you feel like you're floating, like you're feet don't even touch the ground, the breeze is blowing, and always behind you, cars slow down to look at you because you're going so fast (and you're running in the woods), you channel barefoot Ted somewhere in India, and he answers...
and then there's the Other runs.
Last night I left my truck at work and rode home with my wife (who I had met to watch my 5 year old graduate pre-k) so this morning I ran to work.
1. We have a newborn and are getting no sleep and Nothing crushes a run (mentally or physically) like no sleep. A mile out of the gate and I knew my pace sucked, but what the heck, it's just a fun run to work anyway, right? (self talk, self talk, self talk)
2. There's a section of down hill that's literally 1/2 mile all down hill. Awesome! I LOVE downhill running more than anything else - That's how you fly! Unless of course you're running sockless in a new pair of minimalist shoes that you've never tried before that happen to be a little long. Half way down the hill I started to smell something -- "I thought someone was bbqing!.... but oh lord, it's a FIRE!" -- on the front pads of both of my feet. I'm pretty sure they were melting. Yay blisters.
3. I get to the bottom of the hill, turn the corner to the flat for the next couple of miles and they show up. Runners cramps. Now, I'm not talking about those adorable little 'stitches' you get in your ribs when you're first learning to run, no no, I'm talking about nether region cramps where all of the sudden it feels like the Tanzanian Devil is declaring war on your colon. Fabulous.
About a 1/2 mile up the road there's a porta-potty. Now, I know what you're thinking, "gross!" and "it will never have toilet paper in it", and while you would normally be right, this particular porta-potty was at a tennis court, and unlike runners, and soccer, baseball, and football players, tennis people have these things called "standards". Score. So I make it to the porta-potty and I find it pristine cleaned and freshly stocked, however there's another problem. As you may know, running cramps of this nature don't give up (pass on) particularly quickly so I was now faced with 2 options: get off the porta-throne before I really 'want' too and risk another attack in the next 2 miles to work OR pass out from heat stroke because we live in TN and if Satan himself had been sitting in this particular porta-john he would have been screaming to turn the air on.
I crawled out of the big blue incubator and back into the TN sun (which now felt like December after sweating off 10 pounds in last 3 minutes) and resumed my run, which caused me to face number 4:
4. So now what? I'm Really in a hurry to get where I'm going (namely an air conditioned facility at work) so I should run there as fast as I can -- BUT (no pun intended), the thought of bouncing and sloshing my volatile guts around by running seems less than ideal so maybe I should walk... which will then take longer... I really should have driven my truck home.
SO, the next time you have a less than ideal run, just remember this epic adventure of blisters, porta-potties, heat strokes, and the other 'runs' (see what I did right thur?) and feel better about yourself ;)
 
What an adventure hope you're in a better place now, I mean in your office, not chatting with satan:wideeyed:
 
This is awesome! Not everybody is willing to admit it but we've all been there - some of us more often than others. Luckily, I read somewhere that runners are less likely to have colon cancer. There's always a silver lining. Runners really need to talk about this more. Share insights and strategies. Really. Too many of us are caught off guard by poop problems during a run. I changed my whole diet and am working on strategies to avoid this on my longer runs. Thanks for sharing 2nd Wind! I always appreciate the rare, taboo topics and embrace those who are willing to share their experiences with them!!
 
This very morning I had my first experience with "low belly gottago's" in my running life. I was about exactly at the halfway point of an early 11 miler running the Schuylkill River Trail and I knew that there might be a rest room open in 1.5 miles in Valley Forge National Park. Maybe. A wave passed through me and I realized that the 1.5 miles might as well be 100 and looked for a plausible opportunity to step off the trail. My guts said take your time as long as you find something within the next 50 feet or so. A trailside power pylon was the only thing. I looked up and down the trail and all was clear. Stepped behind the pylon, zippity doo da! and was on my way in about 45 seconds. Ailanthus leaves served well enough for a dusting - one advantage of being an Arborist is that I know my leaves!

I can wait another 56 years to experience this sort of crisis, though I think I handled it pretty gracefully.

On another note, Hobbitesse, French women I've known have been, sans doute, the most proficient outdoor pee'ers I have ever known. American women, on the other hand, while not universally, have been some of the most awkward about handling such things in the rough. It's both a learnable skill and a frame of mind that makes for success in such matters.
 
2nd wind, that's why i do my best to have my morning "business meetings" before i run.

Dama, isn't going into the office the place where most encounter the devil? (boss)

Hobbit, just duck into the bushes and say you thought you saw you cat go in there. :cool:
 
2nd wind, that's why i do my best to have my morning "business meetings" before i run.

Dama, isn't going into the office the place where most encounter the devil? (boss)

Hobbit, just duck into the bushes and say you thought you saw you cat go in there. :cool:

Hahaha, now that you put it that way it makes perfect sense.
 
I had to duck into the woods on a half I was running due to the runner's runs. At the time, I was transitioning to barefoot running, so I carried my boat anchors in my hands. I was freaking out because I didn't have any toilet paper, then I remembered my socks! Ha! I used my socks! And then I asked God to forgive me for having to leave them there. :yuck: The End.
 
I was freaking out because I didn't have any toilet paper, then I remembered my socks! Ha! I used my socks! And then I asked God to forgive me for having to leave them there.
Oh no, not your socks! :( Socks, specially the hand knit variety, are so precioussss!!
I suppose, there is one advantage of being struck with hay fever: I always carry some Kleenex with me - in case the trees and shrubs have no leaves, or the only leaves available are those of stinging nettles, my stock of Kleenex comes in quite handy...
 
I had to duck into the woods on a half I was running due to the runner's runs. At the time, I was transitioning to barefoot running, so I carried my boat anchors in my hands. I was freaking out because I didn't have any toilet paper, then I remembered my socks! Ha! I used my socks! And then I asked God to forgive me for having to leave them there. :yuck: The End.
When I was in the Army, sometimes when out on a mission in Afghanistan we would have to use our shirts or our underwear if we forgot or ran out of napkins or tp. Socks were way to important to keeping your foot healthy in those boots so it was better to go without underwear or a part of your shirt.
 
Back in 1984 (Navy days), I was waiting for a late night train to take me from Cascais to Lisbon (Portugal) and had to dump really bad. When I found the toilet there was no paper, so I used the next best thing, Escudos (Portuguese money). It was practically worthless for it's original intended purpose anyway. Earned the nickname "Ugly American" from my shipmates.
 
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I do wonder sometimes why it is that healthy cats, dogs, horses, sheep, deer and so on don't need to wipe their behinds (they stay clean) and we humans usually have this need.
Are we doing something wrong? :oops:
 
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you could learn the "clean pinch no wipe method". no, don't know it myself.
 
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Cats and dogs both lick theirs clean; much as I'd love that sort of flexibility i dont think i fancy trying to emulate them. Horses etc, eating a diet of high cellulose grass etc have a completely different sort of digestive system, and herbivores with longer wool/ hair have backsides caked with dung quite often - I know, I'm a spinner!
 
Oh no, not your socks! :( Socks, specially the hand knit variety, are so precioussss!!
I suppose, there is one advantage of being struck with hay fever: I always carry some Kleenex with me - in case the trees and shrubs have no leaves, or the only leaves available are those of stinging nettles, my stock of Kleenex comes in quite handy...


Me too! I have lots of allergies, so most outings (hikes, bikerides, runs, walks) will include the need to blow my nose. Tissue or paper towel is far more essential than shoes imho.
 
Cats and dogs both lick theirs clean... and herbivores with longer wool/ hair have backsides caked with dung quite often - I know, I'm a spinner!
I'm a spinner as well :) and of my small herd of sheep only one has soiled backside wool - and she has regularly problems with worms, so I wouldn't label her as "healthy". The others are always clean, even in springtime...
Sure, cats and dogs lick themselves everyday, but not immediately after having been to the toilet - if they are healthy, there is not much to lick off! :hungry:

And that leads to the embarrassing question: Is the necessity of toilet paper an indication that a big percentage of human population is not really healthy?
 
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