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Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Well said.

"Marathon runners talk about hitting 'the wall' at the twenty-third mile of the race. What rowers confront isn't a wall; it's a hole - an abyss of pain, which opens up in the second minute of the race. Large needles are being driven into your thigh muscles, while your forearms seem to be splitting. Then the pain becomes confused and disorganized, not like the windedness of the runner or the leg burn of the biker but an all-over, savage unpleasantness. As you pass the five-hundred-meter mark, with three-quarters of the race still to row, you realize with dread that you are not going to make it to the finish, but at the same time the idea of letting your teammates down by not rowing your hardest is unthinkable...Therefore, you are going to die. Welcome to this life." -- Ashleigh Teitel




The above quote does so well at explaining the sport of rowing. But through all of this pain, comes victory, and an indescribable feeling. The push of the legs and the focus on balance culminate in a fast, perfectly set boat, gliding fiercely through the water. That, alone, makes the unthinkable, savage pain, worth every second.

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