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recommended run

_ early in the morning, we drove in to chicago from our hotel by the airport.

_ the streets were still quiet, but already preparations were being made: barricades erected, police in place.

_ and then our first glimpses of the runners, streaming from the subway stations toward grant park.

_ almost 20,000 people ran the chicago rock and roll half.

_ we lined up, and looked up at the skyline, and waited for the gun.

_ we ran with the first wave...

_ and quickly realized that running & shooting don't go all that well together.

_ so you'll have to excuse these shots!

_ we strode through the glare of the rising sun beneath the underpasses...

_ ...and burst out into downtown chicago.

_ as the sun poked out over the skyscrapers and the course turned onto the lake-front, the heat rose exponentially. water stops became central to a good running strategy, and we started to alternate water with electrolytes.

_ ...and powered on.

_ groups of local high school cheer squads lined the course, shouting us on, and throwing the occasional gatorade our way.

_ a few miles from downtown, the landscape lengthened out. it became more spare, less distracting. runners were left alone with their individual battles of physical will.

_ at the southern-most point, we switched back, passing beneath an encouraging symbol of rock and roll's potency.

_ and, motivated by the skyscrapers on the horizon, we rushed to meet them.

_ the finish line in sight...

_ ...and then the greatest thing ever: the guilt-free stop.

_ we turned back to watch the other runners come in, and saw a good spread of emotions. a last, powerful push, for example, and its accompanying rictus.

_ or what appears to be disbelief at having run so far and so fast.

_ in the last mile, knowing it's the last mile, exhaustion typically gives out. it exhausts itself, and is replaced with a light-headed 'presentness': effort without physical effect. thought goes numb, it's just breath and a vague sense of movement.

_ and then you cross the finish line and it's like 'ah jesus what the hell!'

_ distrusting the race-clock, many people checked their watches before they even stopped running.

_ while others let their power song run out.

_ this girl was in a world of her own...

_ ...happy to be done, perhaps, amply satisfied.

_while others looked a little pissed off, wondering why there were so many people crowding their sunday-morning run.

_ many raised their arms as they crossed the line. for themselves, for the pictures, it wasn't clear.

_ and some just pushed themselves even harder...

_ ...who cares who's looking.

_ a clock-watcher, one foot past the line.

_ by this point the sky was slightly overcast, the heat hazy and the humidity up. it wasn't great running weather anymore...

_ ...and, as such, some people were more than happy to be done.

_ while others relished the moment.

_ running, in the late miles of a race, when the aforementioned numb-mind sets in, has a curious effect on the facial muscles.

_ ...and in the seconds following that guilt-free stop, when you return to yourself, who knows what they'll do.

_ it's an interesting mirror, and to see yourself like this is to see yourself in a rare light.

_ people kept on coming, ten a second, crossing the finish line.

_ experiencing their finish in their own profound and personal ways.

_ no matter how conditioned they were as runners, the aim in a race like this is to push your limit.

_ so when they crossed that line, the exceptional runner fell away, and the day-to-day person, the subway strap-hanger, the girlfriend, the stocker-of-shelves, the commercial producer, stepped back into place: more often than not, agonized.

_ but of course, this was a fantastic moment.

_ so unequivocal an accomplishment...

_ that even babies can tell.

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_ we held a referendum on oxford, and people agree that it's the best town for miles around (and we count in the hundreds). after our morning at the kennels, we wanted to satisfy our three immediate needs: running, dogs and good books. and so we took our host's hound out for a quick scurry to faulkner's house. as you can see in the map above, we passed right through the town square, took the main road south, and took a sharp right on old taylor road.

_ mary jane vaulted out the front door...

_ and broke into a run.

_ we headed down toward the square...

_ toward oxford institution square books, our favorite, and, apparently, as 'good a store as the best in new york'.

_ when we got to rowan oak, we had the grounds to ourselves. here we are, looking up at faulkner's house, just to the right of the famous colonnade.

_ the view to the back of the house, his library is on the corner, on the ground floor.

_ a view up to the guestroom.

_ there are numerous buildings from faulkner's time still sitting on the grounds, including this barn, which the more romantic among us will think of as housing faulkner's old horse, which he rode at full gallop into town, whiskey in one hand. we're not sure, though, that this ever happened.

_ but there are definitely a few barns around. this served as a stable, and billy built it all himself. note the normal structure of the place, roof on top, walls at the side, so distinct from the normal faulknerian style.

_ this post oak barn was used as a cottage while the main house was being built, and faulkner used to keep his cows here for milking.

_ though rowan oak was not (apparently) named for any tree in particular, we always thought that this tree, found around back by the servant's quarters, was a good representation. it's old enough that you can imagine billy enjoying it.

_ mary jane...

_ ...agreed.

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_ this comes loosely recommended, as it is less a run than a high-altitude slog through paths best hiked, but because we love a bit of punishment we implore you to run this as hard as possible, in the middle of the day, in shoes without any grip at all, while reciting the lyrics to Bloodbuzz Ohio.

_ starting from the base of the sundance ski resort, it's a straight climb to the normal path to stewart falls.

_ everywhere there are aspen trees...

_ ...and, criss-crossing the ski runs, meadow-like in the summer, chairlifts pass overhead carrying the unambitious to the top of the hill.

_ this is real trail-running, with paths sometimes barely visible through the foliage, or, as here, nice and airy and underleaf.

_ we passed loads of hikers heading for the falls. that's them there in the near-distance.

_ though we had a long indirect loop left of our ten-miler, we stopped off here for a few minutes to cool off in the spray. these high school girls are staring at our traveler's/runner's outfits.

_ stewart falls is over 200 feet, separated into two tiers.

_ we headed higher, and took a long loop around to our base camp, opposite bobby redford's spread.

_ when we got back, we had apparently just missed Brad. Which Brad, we guess we'll never know.

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_ as we've been doing recently, we called the best running shop in tucson and asked them what run we absolutely had to do. without even missing a beat, they said the phoneline trail. so the very next morning we woke up nice and early, laced up, and headed out to the sabino canyon recreation area.

_ the trail starts out somewhat innoculously: a wide white path flowing off into cacti and scrub behind the visitor center, but soon you look up and see slopes like this. surely this isn't what they meant, we thought.

_ but yeah it was, and so we crossed a dry river bed, vaulting large egg-shaped rocks, and scrambled up the far bank to an agonizing climb up foot-wide switchbacks.

_ rising 800 feet in less than a mile, this is a fairly annoying kick in the nuts. the heat and unstable terrain didn't help.

_ but the views were incredible, and the feeling of speeding 'round bends, with no barrier between you and the drop, was exhilarating.

_ down below, lone bikers augmented their lesser effort with gears and lycra.

_ from the visitor center, there is a 0.9 mile path to the start of the trail. phoneline runs for 4.5 miles out and back, so, doing the math, and adding in heat and environmental pressures, you've got a good monday morning jog.

_ high up on the path, we met bryce, who's enjoying the summer before he heads back to the academy at west point as a senior. he hasn't been running for a long time, but can still run the first half of the trail in a solid 35 minutes. we talked for a bit, kind of using the camraderie of runners high on a trail to justify our walking.

_ on the way back, we saw tucson in the distance.

_ the last stretch was the most fun. the strain of the incline reversed, we watched our feet stream down the slope, heads down, skipping over stones and on the narrow path through bushes.

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_ in desperate need of new running shoes, we started our day off at runtex on west riverside drive, and followed their advice down to the Auditorium Shores.

_ the listed loops criss-cross the austin bridges, much the same as the transverses in central park, and so you can do any length of run, up to 10 miles.

_ we ran early this rainy morning, completely drenched, and came back later. we met up with mike at the runtex-sponsored water stations. he's from new jersey but ran track out UT in austin. he's a half-miler, and went on about the girls in austin.

_ along the path, the essential stevie ray vaughn statue. srv moved to austin with his first band, blackbird, and is a god-like figure in the massive austin live music scene.


_ the rain cleared, it got boiling hot, so we ran up to the barton springs pool to cool off. 68 degrees 24/7, and the longest lap pool in the US. now that's a good morning for you.

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