Running Start
Animals, in their vigor and innocence and lack of self-regard, often hold some deep and true lessons for humans. I was thinking of this today while watching Copper climb the deck stairs. He doesn't do them slowly and gradually, but quickly — and only with a running start.
There must be a physiological reason for running starts, something in the motion of muscles and mobility of tendons. But the psychological component is large, too.
There are the running starts that precede a dive off the high board, the quick steps that introduce a tumbling run — and then there is that scene I've always loved from "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid," where Paul Newman and Robert Redford dash and then leap off the cliff into the roaring stream below to escape their pursuers.
The running start is not always easy — I can see Copper pause at the stairs, as if to gather his energy before the effort. But there is much to be said for it: how it screws up our courage, helps us hew to our original intentions, how it commits us to action.
There must be a physiological reason for running starts, something in the motion of muscles and mobility of tendons. But the psychological component is large, too.
There are the running starts that precede a dive off the high board, the quick steps that introduce a tumbling run — and then there is that scene I've always loved from "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid," where Paul Newman and Robert Redford dash and then leap off the cliff into the roaring stream below to escape their pursuers.
The running start is not always easy — I can see Copper pause at the stairs, as if to gather his energy before the effort. But there is much to be said for it: how it screws up our courage, helps us hew to our original intentions, how it commits us to action.
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