6/8 - Still Upright After Week 1!
- Runner: Mary Chervenak
- Birthplace: Anderson, South Carolina, United States
- Currently Resides: Winston-Salem, North Carolina, United States
- Language(s): English
- Family: Husband Paul Jones
- Statement: "Just because I’m privileged to a life with clean drinking water doesn’t mean that I can take this priceless resource for granted.” – Mary Chervenak, 2007
By the fifth day of the run, I'd abandoned semblance of personal hygiene. Right out of the gate, my team was assigned to run the 3:00 AM to 9:00 AM shift, so we were averaging about three hours of sleep a night. We would stay up all day, arrive at the hotel around 8:00 PM, check in and crash until midnight, and then wake up, repack, load the truck, and head for the exchange point in time to grab the baton from the overnight crew. After one day of schlepping a huge, heavy bag full of clothes and gear., things got very simple very quickly. I stopped showering, brushing my hair and teeth, changing clothes...I was concerned with only sleeping and running: “Rest when you can, run when you must.” became my mantra. My entire morning routine was reducing to rolling out of bed in my running clothes and chewing a stick of gum.
Nancy Fullerton ran into me in Saint Patrick's Square in Dublin. She was almost successful in not looking appalled at my disheveled appearance – and she kindly offered me the use of the shower in her hotel room. I decided to forgo lunch and eagerly scooped up an armload of clean clothes. I've never experienced such an amazing shower – like an avalanche of warm water. And the soap!! Of course, my enthusiasm was dampened slightly when a very nice Irish gentleman returned to me the pair of underwear I'd dropped in front of the hotel. At least they were clean. I now have a personal goal – I intend to leave a pair of underwear in every country I pass through. France, here I and a pair of clean underwear come.
My team ran across Ireland the morning of June 5th, through northern Wales to Shrewsbury, England on June 6th, and out of London to near Dover on June 7th. Even though getting up at midnight to prepare to run has been rough, 3 or 4 or 5 in the morning, just as the sun is rising, is an amazing time to run. Now that my team has switched to the day shift, I find I miss the solitude and strangeness of running in the middle of an empty road through a hushed landscape when saner people are sleeping. We switched to the day shift (9:00 AM to 3:00 PM) on the 7th. My first daytime jaunt was a city run in the middle of the day, which, though it offered more distraction and entertainment than a rural route, also had a lot more start and stop and start again and a lot more people to smack into and threaten with the baton. And I actually skidded on a banana peel, which I thought only happened in Three Stooges episodes, never in real life.
I didn't fall, though, so for those of you placing bets, I'm still upright after a week on the run! Ha!
September 10
“We've done the impossible and that makes us mighty.” -- Malcolm Reynolds
Team Chervenak!
The Elmira, New York leg of the Blue Planet Run was, for obvious reasons, the most sought after.
August 18
Since running through Los Angeles and Las Vegas, I am feeling divinely beautiful, entitled, gossipy, slightly famous (okay, actually, showered and mostly clean)...distinctly Hollywood.
August 9
“Although happiness is desirable, it is a banal subject for travel.” -- Paul Theroux, Dark Star Safari
August 4
I won't close my eyes. I won't sleep. I refuse. Must not sleep. Must not sleep. Don't sleep. Don'tsleep. Don'tsleepdon'tsleepdon'tsleepdon'tsleepdon'tsleepdon'tsleep....
July 23
I have abandoned the rush of Russia for the timelessness of Mongolia. The slower pace, the gentle language, and the quiet, traffic-free roads are a welcome change.
July 19
Until recently, I never thought much about Jell-O. Now, I think about it all the time. It's kind of a silly food, don't you think?
9 July 2007
New shift.
First Jason and Taeko run, followed by Lansing, who hands off the baton to Mary, which gets passed to Laura.
Russia is big
Russia is big. Really big. I mean really, really big. Distressingly, ridiculously, impossibly big.