Today I happened upon a few minutes that stood still.  It was during the final miles of 18.5 mile run.  Above Newport Beach's back bay, along the green belt, I glanced ahead and a tiny sliver of white caught my eye.  I slowed to get a better view.  Gently, in the distance, the figure began to take shape, sending clues through its slow, deliberate movements.  Alone amid a background of green leaves and a silent wind, a great White Heron stood before me. How close can I get?  I slowed to a walk.  Then slowed some more. 
One hundred feet, fifty feet, twenty five. I inched closer. Fifteen feet! He turned to walk, cautiously, step by deliberate step, away from me. When I looked at his feet, then my own, I realized that we were walking in sync. We continued this slow waltz for less than a minute, and as I ambled along, I couldn't help but wonder how many more times I could lift my knee before this master would simply lift his wings and disappear into the sun. 
Lift he did, and as I made my way through the last few miles, my pace quickly followed.
6 comments:
I love experiencing moments like that one. Thanks for sharing!
I also am being more deliberate in my thoughts for the new year. Your most recent 2 posts about your approach to running, goals, success--very good to hear. We're all successful, even when we have to readjust.
Mo and Janet, thanks for those nice comments. Keeping things in perspective with my running is a big part of my philosophy these years. Its what makes it all worth while in the end.
New to the blog. I think we briefly met at Sycamore Canyon last year.
Love the blog and hope you dont mind if I follow along sometimes.
Evan, yes, glad to hear from you and we did meet at Sycamore last year. I remember you bounding back up the hill before I'd even made it to the turn around. I thought you were doing the 30k! Hope to see you on trail sometime soon. Rock it!
great blog. Well said
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