|
A brief chat with
Albert "Hap" Cawood
by
Michael A.
Musca
Runner's World Daily:Your
writing about the sport of track seems like an insider's view. What is your
running background?
Hap Cawood:
I never ran competitively except in college intramural races. As a high
school football lineman, I never liked running because I was slow. .... But
when my brother started training alone, I ran with him to keep him
company--from sprints to distance runs. That's when I felt the depth in
running, so I have jogged ever since. The sport at which I excelled in
college was middle distance swimming. From that, I learned the mastery of
the energies and rhythm, and my experiences in swimming races gave me
insights into running races. Early on, I saw the similarities--the
present-tense tension before the start, the mental states, the minute
control required, and finally, the more skilled and transcendent speed.
.
RWD:
Why did you write this particular book?
HC:
When I watched my brother Ray train and race in 1960, I saw a book in it. He
had laid out some fascinating story lines, so I decided to swipe them for a
novel titled "The Miler," though I didn't think I would be 43 years getting
around to writing it. To me, his solitary quest represented the efforts many
make to bring an inborn talent to a level of excellence and revelation. My
first overriding motive, though, was emotional. I wanted to bring the reader
into what I saw in those races--the beauty of the run.
RWD:
There are parallels throughout the book among the themes of music, dance,
and running. Do you have a background in any or all of these muses?
HC:
No. I see in good racers an elegance of movement, so I brought in the
dancing element to emphasize that. My feeling toward running is such that,
when I go to a concert, I only listen to the pieces to hear segments of
races in them. I hear races in music and I wanted the reader to do the same.
RWD:
The story's main character, JJ, has a non-traditional female coach, and her
coaching methods certainly topped other unusual running coaches in real-life
and in fictional tales. Was this based on reality, purely fiction, or a
combination of the two?
HC:
The methods were based on reality, though the techniques and experiences
came from my life after my competitive years and in that sense were
fiction... When I met the woman who had those healing and intuitive
abilities and who inspired the coach character, I knew I had the missing
link that could give the story depth--the seer who can take you past the
illusions. We are very fortunate if we are coached or taught or mentored by
someone who can see us clearer than we see ourselves, who senses the goal
hidden behind what we think we want. That mentor knows that one has to work
from the inside out. The best know that higher attainment requires not only
mind over body but also spirit over mind, and that there is a science to it.
The distance runner exemplifies that potential in a distinctive way, and
only by getting inside the runner can one know the mental battle and command
that bring to life the art of the race.
|
|