It wasn't that I was running from anything. To the contrary, I was running for something. Whether it was to better my time, prepare for a race, or just enjoy the pure joy of exercise, I had purpose in each step, and that kept me motivated not to veer off course, on the track and then later in life.
It was probably that spirit of purpose that prompted me to join 30,000 other crazies in the annual spring ritual we know as the Broad Street Run. This 10-mile jaunt starting at the top of Broad Street (Broad and Somerville) and concluding in South Philly at the Navy Yard attracts all types - racers, joggers, gawkers - who decide to take on Philly's most celebrated avenue for the thrill of victory, or just the free grub at the end.
For me, this was the second time on the run; I'd wheezed through the race a couple of years ago. I hadn't been serious about training and thought my long-distance instincts would simply kick in and carry me nonstop through the finish line. (Instead, I actually considered hopping the subway near Temple. Who would know?)
I gutted it out, finished, and was inspired along the way by a group of African American youths wearing shirts that read "Students Run Philly Style." But it wasn't the shirts that caught my eye (I'm an ad guy by profession). It was that each runner was paired with an adult coaching him or her every step of the way. Sometimes the companion coached the kid; sometimes the roles reversed; but the mantra each couple followed was that neither would leave the other behind. They would finish the race together, or they wouldn't finish at all.