I run two rounds on a village road every
morning. The villagers used to stare at me, but they gave up after a few
months. There were always three old men sitting on the culvert and drinking tea
and gossiping.
After a few months they started asking me questions.
“Why do you run?”
“Where were you last week? You
didn’t come for three days”.
I did not answer. I just
waved at them, smiled and ran on. Any way I decided that there was no point in trying to
keep my goings and comings a secret (to prevent theft and break -ins). The
whole village was watching my every move!
One day I found three
children standing near the culvert, two boys and a girl. They must have been
around ten years old.
“Why are you running?” asked
the boy.
“I am training,” I said.
“For what ? “ he asked. The
other two stood shyly behind him.
“I am training for a half
marathon.”
“You run half? How much is
that?”
“Twenty one kilometers”, I
replied awkwardly, wishing that I looked
more like Usain Bolt and less like a samosa.
“Do you win?”
“Sometimes”, I said, “when
they have a category for older people.”
“You don’t mind if you don’t
win?”
“I do mind,” I said,” but only
for a few days. The important thing is to try harder and train better for the
next time.”
They were gone by the time I
came around the second time.
Two days later they were
back. They were dressed in track pants and canvas shoes. The spokesman stepped
forward, “ we want to run too. Please teach us.”
“Well,” I said, “you need to
sprint, not jog marathons.”
“What is that?”
“Run really fast,” I said.
“You run slowly like me only when you get really old.”
“How old are you? “He asked.
“Going to be 62 next month” I
said.
The charmer smiled and said
“You don’t look so old, and you are
pretty---“
My heart was totally won
over. He was obviously going places when he grew up!
I spent fifteen minutes training them in the mornings.
They faithfully stretched, did squats ,sprinted
up and down and stretched again.
They were disciplined and dedicated. They kept at it as long as I did, which
was about an hour). I found an old
stopwatch and presented I to them.
“This is to help you train ,”
I said.
Two months later , when I
jogged in the morning, they were lined up by the side of the road. They had a
small box of ladoos and each of them had a medal.
“What is this?” I asked.
The spokesman stepped
forward.
“We went for the district school
athletics. We won!!! We are selected for the training camp.”
They were wearing their
medals. Two boys had silver , and, you guessed it, the girl had the gold.
Dr. Gita Mathai
The
writer is a paediatrician with a family practice at Vellore.
If you
have any questions on health issues please write to

Truly inspiring. Nice. I'm coming back to this blog for sure.
ReplyDelete