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Tarmac Meditations #160: A better way to greet the day. At long last.

July 9, 2015 By Michael Lebowitz 1 Comment

Couldn’t sleep, the night terrors are about the usual and what to do next. So I got up, made coffee and walked the neighborhood hills slowly and quietly in the the pre-dawn… first time in almost a year to be out before sunrise, stayed in the good Heart Rate Zone, said “Hey” to the paper guy as I cruised by. I felt a whole lot better. I saw the the western ridge glowing as if washed in waves of orange and purple fire. A better start to the day! It has been a while. Hoping today is a good day for all of us.

Sunrise on the ridge - in color
Sunrise on the ridge – in color
Sunrise on the ridge - bw
Sunrise on the ridge – BW

 

Image Credits

Photographs by Michael Lebowitz. All rights reserved.

The images in this post can be found on sale here

He has kindly provided Life As A Human readers with this 15% discount code: Laha2015

Filed Under: Inspirational, Running, Tarmac Meditations

Tarmac Meditations #149: It Never Always Gets Worse

October 9, 2014 By Michael Lebowitz 2 Comments

It has been a long year and a half. I have shared here occasionally that both my inner race photographer and my inner Kenyan were layin’ low, lickin’ our wounds and doin’ what ever it would take to lace up and light out once again, with camera in hand, and head to some other place to shoot a long trail race. This past weekend it came about that me and my camera gear found ourselves in Boise Idaho at the start line of RD Jenny Verhalen Stinson’s Foothills 50K Frenzy. Daybreak lay over the ridge, as the usual crew of 145 runners took off.

Single tree at daybreak
Single tree at daybreak

Me, I went up the road to wait for the light to rise. With the help of Sparkle Patterson and Khara Tina Hamilton I left the aid station at 22 miles and made my way very slowly to a good place for shooting the race. For a moment I was right back into my life as I have often dreamed over the past year, that it might be once again. Don’t know what the next sunrise will bring but I am grateful to have made the start line and to have gotten the job done at least one more time.

Sunrise over the ridge
Sunrise over the ridge

More to come…

Photo Credits

Photos by Michael Lebowitz. All rights reserved.

 

Filed Under: Running, Tarmac Meditations

Tarmac Meditations #142: The Road Back

February 9, 2014 By Michael Lebowitz Leave a Comment

I like the invitation of open roads and empty trails wherever they may be.

Road Trip - VictoriaThey imply doing, accomplishment and unforeseen results. The possibilities are what we make of them when we lace up and light out.

Open road

Photo Credits

Photos by Michael Lebowitz – All Rights Reserved
 

Filed Under: Running, Tarmac Meditations

A begining or two…

August 14, 2013 By Michael Lebowitz Leave a Comment

 

IMG_3460-2

 

Slammin’ started here. Well, not exactly. Dennis Ahern, a Boise ultra runner and his good friend, Ryan C Lund, both got into Western States this year. I spoke with them briefly about their good fortune only find out that they were planning on doing the GrandSlam of Ultras. Like any Grand Slam, in golf or tennis for example, you have to win or at least be entered in the first event. I thought for a moment about their good fortune and the idiocy of the idea when it occurred to me that they were living by the old adage, in for a penny, in for a pound. And I realized that I wanted to be there with them.

I pitched the idea to both Marathon and Beyond and iRunFar. At this point I should tell you that I am a race photographer who loves to shoot ultras and a writer who like to write about shooting images, photography and running, that is, when I am not wandering around in a dream state about the Great American Novel. Back to the story:  to my delight both entities thought I had a good idea-following these two non elite, middle of pack folks and telling their story.

Ian Sharman is not a middle of the pack runner. Hell no, he is a fast 100 miler, a sponsored athlete, a coach and a pretty humble guy who arrives at race the night before, sleeps in the back of his car, wins the race, hangs out for awhile and then does it all over again. He gets faster the longer the distance. It turns that he is doing the Grand Slam with his eye on the record set by Neal Gorman 74:54:16 in 2010. This is some record by the way. Western States, Vermont, Leadville and Wasatch comprise the modern Slam. Gorman was 20 hours in the first three and 21 hours at Wasatch. Ian will certainly have his work cut out for him.

So there it was. Commissioned article and photo stories and the year wasn’t two weeks old. That was too easy, way too easy. Ask any freelancer and they will agree. The catch? No travel expenses, no sponsorships for the pieces, nothing that might compromise the journalistic integrity of the work. Oh my. Sad face. But wait!

It didn’t take but a minute to realize that the stories for the magazines were the necessary motivation to look at the bigger picture. Just as many books are generated from magazine articles as way of expanding the scope of the story, a book could be built on the story of the 2013 Ultra Grand Slam that would feature all of the 24 entrants and their journey together to the common goal of finishing and getting a very rare buckle in recognition of their achievement. Without knowing each other they were already a band of brothers/sisters in pursuit of something magical. A Facebook page emerged and the participants showed up one by one.

My little idea had suddenly become big enough to encompass writing a book. Back to Kickstarter. Photographs and books are great rewards for people who support the efforts of writers and photographers. It all made sense now. Raise the money to travel, research, photograph and produce a coffee table book and Bob’s your uncle. I don’t know who Bob is by the way but I take it to mean that all the pieces were in place.

Remember the image at the head of this piece? These are runners in the Javelina Jundred 2012. I caught them in the very early morning. A line of individuals, not talking to one another for the most part, concentrated fully on the task at hand. The back lighting darkens their faces and in so doing raises them above their individual personalities, creating archetypes, meta runners, representations of every who ever laced up and set out for something “over yonder” someplace down the road, a further peak, a dream in hand. I kept looking at this image and recognized that it is a journey for the runners captured in the lens, and equally for the photographer behind the lens. Our lives have brought us to here and where we go from here will be,in part,the result of what happens this day and night. I bear witness, tell the story, paint their images on the walls of metaphorical caves(this generation’s social media)in much the same way as the cave painter of early humanity told the stories of the hunt and their glorious adventures scratched on the walls of real caves.

Let your own dream factories go to work. Keep your eye the Grand Slam this year. There are some wonderful stories out there just waiting for all of us. I can’t wait. It’s gonna be a time for all of us to celebrate the most precious gift we have been given, our lives in this particular time.

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Filed Under: Running, Tarmac Meditations Tagged With: Grand Slam, ultras

Tarmac Meditations #125: Keepin’ On

June 2, 2013 By Michael Lebowitz 2 Comments

Was a pretty tough week this past week, maybe longer. Woke up one day with no vision in my shooting eye. The jury on this one is still out but apparently the sun also rises as does the moon set and the days pass by, indifferent to my meager time here. But, if I greet every day with what I’ve got, blurry eye and fearful of not doing what I do, if I just lace up and light out for a time, everything will be in its place. I will do everything I know how to do going forward, I will learn what I need to know to keep at what I do; I will stay steady in the wind. The list of people in “my” boat got shorter this week; the ones who needed me to help them help me are no longer on the list. There just ain’t time for me to pull your weight, to soothe your fears of your own inadequacies. Your life matters too. Live in it, work it, get stronger. To some others I said “Have my back, I have yours”. Back to basics for me. Eat clean, play fair, get out and run everyday.

And then sometimes, when you think nobody’s lookin’, you cry.

And a Trail Runs Through It...

 

Photo Credit

Photo is © Michael Lebowitz – All Rights Reserved

 

Filed Under: Running, Tarmac Meditations

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