When I was a freshman in high school I ran cross country for a very short time.I did it because you did not have to try out and because I thought this is what you did in high school - joined stuff and got involved and eventually you became enveloped and accepted.
Cross country practices were held right after school and consisted of running, just plain running. A group of skinny high school kids would take off from the front of Immaculate High School in Danbury, Connecticut and run a pre-determined course that would take you precisely 2.5 miles in a huge circle around the school. It was the same course they would run for meets - through tree-lined middle class neighborhoods with wet brown leaves in the gutters.
The course ended when you would enter the school from a little auxiliary side road which led directly to the football field. The last 100 yards of the run would be the 100 yards of the field, end zone to end zone. At the very end would be the coach, a short muscular guy named Coach Joe who wore his hair in a black crew cut and had a face like a frog, like his head had been smashed down which made his lips protrude slightly.
Every day at practice I would dog it. I would linger at the start and let all the serious runners go well out ahead. Then i would jog. As soon as I got out of sight of the school I would stop jogging and walk. Then I would jog and walk the rest of the course, alone, listening to my own breathing, folding my thumbs into my fists when I began to get short of breath.
I knew Coach Joe would be there though at the end of the run with his Immaculate windbreaker and stopwatch, passively glancing down as you heaved your way into the end zone then doubled over at the waist and gasped for air.
I did that too, only I really didn't need to. Truth is, even though I was, even then, a smoker, I was never very winded when i got to the football field since I hadn't really expended a whole lot of energy on the idyllic streets of Danbury the past two-plus miles. I would come on the little road and see the football stadium and when i figured Coach Joe could see me I would suddenly run like I was being chased by muggers, my blue Tiger Onitsuka running shoes chewing up yards like a running back on memorable touchdown run. I figured Coach Joe, on seeing me streak across those final 100 yards would think I was giving my all for old Immaculate
High.
But he didn't He saw right through me, the same way others always have. He was just one of the first.
One day after practice he called the whole team together, Long white legs and shiny shorts gathered around. "I see too many guys coming in here at the end sprinting," he said, his brown eyes looking at me, his frog lips pursed. "That's not how it's done. If you got that much left then you're not giving it everything you got on the course. You should be dragging your ass in here, not sprinting."
Guy had nailed me. Little did he know he'd nailed my whole damn life - not just then, a confused little 14-year old trying to get one over on a dumbass coach, but my whole life from conception to that moment to this. It was my MO - let the crowd pass, dog it, then when I thought someone was looking work like a dog to make a good impression. It got me nowhere with the coach, and nowhere with anyone else. It was like splashing my face with water to make believe I was sweating my ass off. But he knew I was taking it easy, he knew and he said it.
For the rest of my life I would continue the same pattern, walking when i could, running when I had to. The difference was, I would always know from that moment on, that I wasn't fooling a damn soul.
Joshua Bondi Isaac 1972-2010
15 years ago

