I recently went through a breakup. With my running club. We had a good thing going — weekly track workouts followed by cheap beer, weekend getaway long runs in the mountains, the occasional karaoke night, long walks on the beach at sunset… West Valley TC wasn’t just the track club next door. We had something really special.
My first days in London were spent running alone through busy city parks, listening to 90s playlists on shuffle, wondering what workout my teammates were doing that day and imagining them drinking $2 Tecates at the Mucky Duck without me.
But a girl can only wallow in heartache for so long. After about a week, I did what any modern lady would do when she’s on the rebound — I went to the internet. Single White Female seeks Co-Ed Runners. Must love trails, intervals workouts and beer. Not that I was desperate, but the first search result of “Running club London” showed a workout posted for that Tuesday and I looked no further. I left work early and went straight to the track.
I saw spandex. I saw IT bands being stretched and heavier trainers being switched out for lighter ones. I saw two ponytailed women jogging clockwise in lane six and I let gravity take care of the rest. Once I was in their orbit, things moved fast. We did 800 meter repeats together with the rest of the team, we started talking about the weekly workout schedule and, before I knew it, we were talking about upcoming races and how I might fit into the team scoring. And then the clothes came off (at a swimming pond after the workout). I was a goner. Head over heels. I started imagining our future together, dawning their jersey, maybe we would even sing karaoke together one day.
In the changing room, one of the women named Emma found a ribbon with their team colors.
“Look!” she said, and handed it to me. “It’s a sign.” It was meant to be. I whistled the entire bike ride home, giddy and infatuated. I emailed Emma as soon as I got back with all of my contact details, multiple exclamation marks and a smiley face. Read: We are going to be best friends forever.
I met them again on Sunday morning for the long run. Our reunion was not quite as magical as I had hoped. No one seemed particularly excited to see me — at least not as excited as I was to see them. The group started running without acknowledging my presence at all and I tagged along, a little puppy trying to jump up into any conversation where I could sniff event a whiff of relatability.
“Oh, you’re running the 1500 this weekend? One of my old teammates was a really fast 1500 meter runner…”
Something had changed. Where was the spark? Was it something I said? All my enthusiasm bubbles slowly fizzled into self-conscious foam and then simmered into an acidic judgementalism. Suddenly everything they said sounded preposterous and notedly non-funny. Who cares about your track times from three years ago? Also, why isn’t anyone taking their shirts off? It’s totally sports bra weather! You call this a long run? We’ve only gone eight miles! You call this hilly? That was a knoll.
And just like that, the flame was snuffed just as quickly as it had been ignited.
Back to the internet. The following Tuesday, a rival team had a workout on a different track. I emailed Emma and said I would be working late so I wouldn’t be able to make it. The new team ran 600 meter repeats and after the workout, they stretched! Then they did a core strength routine! I was head over heels all over again. Just as I was giddily whistling my way out of the track to go home, one of the girls called out to me, “Hey! We’re going to the pub if you fancy!” Hook. Line. Sinker.
The new team had a long run on Wednesday. I counted down the hours at work until 6:00pm. When I left the office, I opened my gym bag and my heart sank — I had forgotten my shoes. I couldn’t go to practice without shoes. But I couldn’t not go to practice. That would be like a guy saying he had to bail on a second date because he forgot his wallet. It would send all the wrong signals.
So, despite the fact that the last time I was in Europe I was suckered into buying, not one, but two pairs of over-priced running shoes, and despite the fact that I purchased not one, not two, but three pairs of hideous lime green Sauconys for the sole purpose of avoiding having to buy shoes in the UK, and despite the fact that I have never been capable of deciding on a new pair of running shoes without at least four hours of due diligence research, on that Wednesday, I went straight to the Asics store, walked in the door, and bought the first pair of size 7.5 lightweight trainers that I saw on clearance. The things we do for love…
The long run was just over 10 miles and included three decent hills. I had several pleasant conversations with men and women in the group and I couldn’t help but notice certain promising signal words: “half marathon,” “hill sessions”, “relays”, “cross country nationals.” This must be The One.
About six miles in, coasting down a remote section of single track trails, two girls appeared out of no where and came flying past our group. I looked up as they passed to see the unmistakable swinging ponytail of Emma and the other girl from the first team. In a city of over a dozen parks and more than 150 miles of trails, what are the chances? My faced flushed with cheater’s blush. Had they seen me? If so, why didn’t they say anything? Were they spurned? Was the sprint pass supposed to be a counter slap in the face?
I saw them from afar a few more times that evening, always ducking behind trees and hiding my face in water fountains to avoid the it's-not-you-it's-me conversation.
After we finished the long run (and I managed to successfully dodge the awkward bullet with Emma), I went to the pub again with the new team. There was no Tecate and most certainly nothing available for £2. There were no hops in the beer either but there was enough dry British sarcasm to make up for the lack of bitterness in my ale, so I was satisfied. There’s no ring on my finger but I think I’m in for the long haul.