After a couple weeks of constant heel pain, I stopped running and vowed to take a week off.
That was last Sunday.
My heel is no better. But I might run anyway.
Strangely, I don’t miss running. At least not the act or sensation of it. I’m not pining for the trails. I’m not desperate to run long and slow, or short and fast.
But something doesn’t feel right. Inside me. I’ve felt it all day. Call it depression, melancholy, ‘the blues.’ I’m not myself. Not today.
I’m not sure why. Usually a “weighted hike” helps. So I tried that. I put a dumbbell in a backpack and set off through the forest. I ate fresh blackberries, sat beside a stream, and watched a fly land on a perfect green leaf.
A weighted hike usually does the trick. The dumbbell gets harder and harder to carry. The shoulder straps dig into my skin. I lean forward, seeking a posture where everything hurts a little bit less. At the end of a weighted hike I’m in physical pain. But I feel better. On the inside. Nature, solitude, and decompression lift me up from within.
That didn’t happen today. Today I got home and still felt blah.
I’m not sure why. It could be because there is nothing I have to do today. The lawn doesn’t need cutting. My daughter does not need to be dropped off at a birthday party. My wife and I don’t have to go shopping. No distractions to distract me from whatever I’m feeling inside.
Maybe it’s shift work. Two long days followed by two long nights. Four days of sleep deprivation and a messed up body clock. The aftereffects carry into my days off. I feel jetlagged. I feel hung over. I feel short tempered. On my first day off, I am mindful of how I speak to my wife and daughter because my fuse is short and my patience is thin.
Today is my second day off. I slept long and well. I’m weary but not exhausted. I’m well on the way to the feeling of “normal” that usually returns by my third day off.
Maybe it’s the work other people do. My job title is Watch Commander. I supervise approximately twenty-five uniformed police officers. I sit behind a desk, while they are on the street, doing the real work of policing. I hear it all over the radio. Assaults, thefts, domestic disputes, overdoses, and a seemingly endless stream of mental health calls. There are so many broken people, and the police officers I work with spend large parts of their days trying to help. They work hard, and virtually everything they do is because something bad has happened. Earlier this week a senior citizen was the victim of an unprovoked violent attack. Her injuries are life altering. The cops I work with arrested the offender and went with the victim to the hospital. It happened at 7:00 o’clock at night, in a nice part of the city, on a beautiful summer’s evening.
Maybe it’s the work I do. Like a contentious situation which I could have handled better. Or sensitive information which gets shared with me because of my position. Or decisions which I make that affect the professional lives, and personal well-being of the police officers on my shift. Men and women I’ve come to care about deeply since I started working with them earlier this year.
Or maybe it’s because I haven’t been running. I biked this week. I went to the gym. I stayed active. But I did not run.
It seems too coincidental that I would feel run down after a week of not doing something I usually do almost every day.
It’s funny, because last Sunday, when I decided to take a break, I was out on the trails in behind our home, and I wasn’t loving the run. My heel hurt, and my motivation was practically nil. I’d entertained trying a two-hour run, and knew I didn’t have it in me. I just didn’t want it. Which was unusual, because often I look forward to two-hours as the perfect amount of time to be out there on my feet – to challenge myself without overtaxing my system.
So last Sunday, when I decided to take a break from running, I felt kind of proud of myself. I felt like I was listening to my body and my mind and it was the perfect time for a break. A week for my heel to heal and my running mojo to recharge.
And now six days later, I feel the opposite. A reminder that running for me is about so much more than physical health. And it’s not just central to my identity. The blah I feel today is a reminder that running is essential to my well-being. Physical tiredness and work stress are nothing new. They are essential elements of policing. Nothing about this past week was fundamentally different than the last 23 years of my career.
Except it was one of the few weeks in which I did not run. And today I’m paying the price.