When all you are is all you can be.


One of my favorite books is a little tome by Jess Laire entitled “I Ain’t Much, Baby, But I’m All I’ve Got” (Doubleday: New York: 1972) I happened to read it at an earlier time in my life – where being what I was, wasn’t all I wanted to be. The shortest synopsis of the book is that you are what you are and you can choose to spend your life frustrated by what you aren’t or learn to be grateful for what you are.

In those days, my goal was to be in a major symphony orchestra. I had friends who, at least to my ears, were no better musicians than me and they were getting jobs in major orchestras. I was convinced that I had as much talent and ambition as they did. What I didn’t have was the job they did.

Life in those days was a succession of heightened expectations, exhausting preparation and debilitating disappointment as I searched feverishly in professional journals for position openings, practiced endlessly for auditions and listened hopelessly as I was told that I hadn’t made it into the next round. It was a nightmare cycle of anticipation and letdown.

In the years since I stopped playing professionally, I’ve seen hundreds of friends, colleagues, students and even my own son go through the same cycle. Sure, a small fraction have actually distinguished themselves and gone on to a measure of success, but that only makes the reality of having missed the mark all that much more bitter a pill.

It doesn’t take much imagination to see the parallels between being a performing musician and a runner. Very early on, though, I vowed that I would not make the same mistake as a runner that I did as a musician.

Like most new runners, I was overwhelmed with the kind of progress I was making. Then again, as a 25 year smoker, ending a run without hacking and coughing was progress. As weeks turned into months, and months into years, the angle of ascent began to flatten out. It didn’t take very many years before there were no new distances, no sure PR’s and no guarantees of success. I had quickly come to the moment of truth as a runner that had taken me a lifetime to reach as a musician. I was about as good as I was going to get.

But unlike my life a musician, my life as a runner didn’t have to be frustrating. As a runner, I could choose to accept the standards set forth by the running community as a whole, or I could create my own personal running world in which I alone was the standard bearer and where I single handedly could decide whether a run was good or bad. I had the choice of deciding if running was going to be an activity that enhanced my life or one more area in which I wasn’t able to live up to my unrealistic expectations.

I chose to view running – any running – as a gift. I chose then to see myself as one of the most fortunate of people on earth. I am fortunate first because I can run, and second because I am a runner.

Too often, it seems to me, runners refuse to accept that, in Jess Lair’s terms, they ain’t much but they’re all they’ve got. That’s not to say that they should want to be better – they can choose to want to go faster or farther or both. But it all has to happen in the context of accepting that what they are is what they are.

If what you are is a 2:20 marathoner or a 15-minute 5K runner, then by all means, you should do everything you can to be that. If, on the other hand, you discover that you’re a 5:30 marathoner or a 45-minute 5K runner, then being that is what you are. And being that is plenty.

The largest race I participated in had 47,000 entries. That’s a lot of people running from one place to another. And I would argue that what they share in common is far more important than the differences in their race times. What distinguishes those on the starting line from those on the sofa is that the definition of their best is always subject to re-evaluation.

So if you see me smiling while I’m running, don’t be surprised. What I know for sure is that I am the best runner I know how to be and the best runner that I’m willing to be. That might not be much, baby, but it’s all I’ve got.

Waddle on, friends.

One Comment

  • vanessa walters says:

    me too; I am beginning (again at 65, almost 66) to be a runner. I am a 44-45 minute 5K…dead last in the runner pack, just ahead (barely) of the walkers behind me. And this is in my faster races; Im now older than when I began run/walks before and pounds heavier than before. people have been telling me to QUIT, give it up, you’re TOO OLD to keep doing this..here I am, still signing up for 5Ks..earning my t-shirts the hard way, by starting and finishing these $%^& races. Quit? No..

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