Volume
When I
first signed up for the 132-kilometre Essex Way Ultra, I decided to keep my
running volume low in order to minimize the risk of injury. Over the last few
weeks, though, I have felt that my body is able to absorb higher mileage, so I
have returned to what used to be my normal training schedule for many years.
With 26 days remaining until the race, I am now planning to maintain 80
kilometres per week for another three weeks before starting to taper.
Of all the
things I could write on my blog, running may be the least interesting. Still,
it is a big part of my life and something that keeps me focused through all these
big shifts. While some may think of me as impulsive or changeable, it is more that the dynamics of all this are very powerful and that it is genuinely difficult to figure out the best course of action.
In a recent
interview, David Szalay – the author of Flesh, which I am now halfway through –
said that “the more we know people, the harder they become to define”, and that
is a very encouraging thought in this age of solitary identities. Be it Paris
in the early aughts or Hong Kong a decade later, we accumulate these layers and
memories that give depth to who we are, but also fragmentation, as the
discontinuities keep adding up.
Labels: running



















