A
boy sometimes learns who his rivals are before he finishes his
multiplication tables. For me, well past the years of blissful
youth, endless energy, and afternoon naps, I return to this lesson
from my youth. Who is my friend, but more importantly, who is
my opponent? In my selected world of sports, I thought it was
an easy answer. – my opponent is on the other side of the
net. He is my foe, the person I must vanquish for victory. He’s
the player wearing the other color jersey. From high school through
college, this simple process of distinguishing whom I must beat
to win the match or game was vividly black and white.
Yet, approaching
my 30th birthday, and realizing my metabolism is slowing faster
than I want, I am guided to the New World of multi-sports …
triathlons! Unless I’m a part of a relay team, everyone
in a triathlon is my opponent.
The Nameless One
My nemesis
and I meet five days a week at the club, just before 6 a.m. to
finish our 90-minute workouts before heading off to our desk jobs.
He usually arrives a few minutes before me and secures the middle
lane (the fast lane for you Olympic-swimming enthusiasts). That’s
when it begins, swimming lap after lap, neck-and-neck, catching
a glimpse of each other during the flip turn at the wall. Thousands
of meters go by and I think that he’s beginning to slow
down to end his workout. Now the competition begins!
Starting behind
him, I gradually swim faster, kick harder, and take fewer breaths
per lap. I could reach under the lane line to grab his ankle and
pull him under. I resist the temptation to cheat and swim forward,
concentrating on technique, striving not to fight the water, and
drastically attempt to hydroplane on the water in perfect form.
Finally, we
are again neck-and-neck. He sees me via peripheral vision. He
never admits to noticing me, but he does it each week. Exhausted,
my body signals for me to slow down and relax, but my nemesis
in the water pushes me by increasing his pace. I match his tempo
by increasing my strokes with more pull and stronger kicks. For
nearly 200 meters we race until he glides to a stop at the wall.
“Nice race,” I say breathlessly. His amicable response:
“I wasn’t racing.”
Training Days
In the months
to come, as my training increases, the excitement of the beginning
of the triathlon-racing season will likewise increase. I will
find myself in some state, swimming in a lake or river, and next
to me there he’ll be. It won’t be like the morning
swim workouts. Instead, we’ll be competing for the ‘elite
ranking’ in hopes of becoming noticed and acquiring sponsorship.
What will
happen now, when we are neck-and-neck, swimming around a buoy
or running through the water towards the bike transition? Will
I be pushing him to kick harder or pull the water with more force?
If I am, then our training was a success and one of us will win
the event or place in the top percentage and become noticed by
corporate sponsors.
Regardless
of the outcome, I am confident we will return to the three-lane
pool at the gym for more workouts – but, perhaps by then
we will have truly learned that we aren’t racing each other.
Instead, we will race to defeat and vanquish the nemesis inside;
the foe that prefers to watch the event on TV rather than training
to be a part of the event.