For at least four million years, our ancestors have been
bipedal, they moved around on two legs.
This ability evolved on the African savannah, tropical grassland. Being upright exposed less of their bodies to
hot sunbeams, and their bushy head hair provided extra protection. Their nearly furless bodies, combined with
three million sweat glands, allowed them to shed body heat better than other
savannah mammals.
Being bipedal prohibited lightning fast bursts of speed, but
it enabled steady long distance running in roasting temperatures. Other mammals could make quick getaways, but they
soon had to find shade and chill out. Our
ancestors were able to chase large animals in the heat of the day, hour after
hour, until their prey collapsed from exhaustion or heat stroke.
The person you see in the mirror has a body that is optimized
for running, not walking. Your toes and
heel tendons provide a bounce when your foot hits the ground, improving energy
efficiency. Your legs and spine are
fine-tuned for jogging, keeping your head and eyes steady. Skilled runners seem to move with elegant
smoothness, effortlessly gliding along, lightly skimming across the land.
As I learned more about long distance running, I kept
discovering fascinating tidbits about persistence hunting. Aborigines would eventually outrun
kangaroos. The Penobscot tribe chased
down moose, and the Navajo and Paiutes would subdue antelopes. The Tarahumara pursued deer and turkeys. In Southern Africa, game included steenbok,
gemsbok, wildebeest, zebras, and others. Peter Nabokov’s book, Indian Running,
blew my mind.
The book was born in 1980, when Nabokov covered a five-day
footrace in New Mexico. Hopi, Navajo,
and Zuni runners covered more than 375 miles (603 km). The event celebrated the 300-year anniversary
of the Pueblo Revolt. Santa Fe was “the
first and only white man’s city to be conquered and occupied by North American
Indians.”
In 1680, Spaniards had been building missions in the region
for 90 years, and they displayed remarkable gifts for behaving like class-A tyrants. Natives from up to 300 miles (483 km) away
coordinated their attack to expel the illegal aliens, and defend the American
way of life. Churches went up in smoke,
their hated bells were smashed, documents were burned, 21 detested priests were
sent to their just rewards, along with 380 of their Spanish and Mexican Indian
associates. Good triumphed over evil
(for 12 years). Joy!
The outline of Nabokov’s book includes five chapters that
provide commentary on the five days of the 1980 race. Throughout the text, he inserted passages
about other tribes and eras, with regard to running, and these passages include
some mind-altering gems. By the end of the
book, my perception of what it means to be human had been significantly updated
and clarified.
Every morning, I step outdoors and wince at the rumbling
thunder of thousands of motorized wheelchairs.
We consider this normal, but limited energy reserves guarantee that this
silliness can have no long-term future.
When the last Toyota croaks, an extremely bloated population is not
going to return to travelling by horse.
By the 1890s, industrial cities had become filthy, stinking, unhealthy
nightmares of horse manure, urine, and thick clouds of flies (read THIS).
A mere 5,500 years ago, horses were domesticated in Kazakhstan. Like the atom bomb, this event radically
altered the course of the human saga.
With horses, the ferocious Mongols rapidly created the biggest
contiguous empire in all history. Mounted
warriors dominated warfare for centuries, until guns and cannons came to the
battlefield. Plains Indians didn’t
acquire horses until the eighteenth century, at which point their way of life
promptly experienced turbulent changes, but that’s another story.
Nabakov’s story is about running. For essentially four million years, running
meant survival. A Hopi man said, “Long
ago when the Hopi had no sheep, no horses, no burros, they had to depend for
game-capturing on their legs.” Running
was also vital during conflicts — for chasing despised enemies, and for speedy
exits when despised enemies came to visit.
Running could be crucial for escaping the claws and jaws of man-eating
predators, and other bummers.
He noted that many civilizations used runners to deliver messages
— Greeks, Romans, Chinese, Persians, Aztecs, Incas, Mayans. With fresh runners ready at stations placed
several miles apart, messages could move through the Inca world at 150 miles (241
km) per day. In Greece, the “marathon” race
refers to 490 B.C., when a soldier ran 25 miles (40 km) from Marathon to Athens,
bringing news of the Athenian victory over the Persians — and then he collapsed
from exhaustion and died.
Nabokov provides numerous accounts of Indian messengers
traveling great distances. One ran 50
miles in six hours. A Mojave lad ran 200
miles (322 km) in 24 hours. Seven days a
week, a Tarahumara man ran a 70 mile (112 km) route, carrying a heavy
mailbag. Another report noted that some
Tarahumara lads could run 170 miles (273 km) without stopping. Mexicans would hire them to capture wild
horses, chasing them for two or three days, until the horses could run no more —
while the men remained fresh. After
running 15 miles (24 km), Zuni runners still had a slow heart rate and no signs
of fatigue. Men in their seventies
continued to have tremendous endurance, as well as low blood pressure.
Ceremonial running was done after planting to bring rain, and
ensure a good harvest. For Navajo and
Apache women, a four-day rite of passage ritual was held to honor their first
menstruation. Young ladies would run
each day, to become strong in body and soul.
Many other tribes practiced forms of puberty running.
When he was just four years old, Navajo lad Rex Lee Jim was
awakened before sunrise each day, and sent outside to run four miles before
breakfast. In winter, he might take a
freeze bath, rolling in the snow before running. Geronimo and the Apaches were infamous bad
asses. By the age of 8, boys were being taught
to increase their strength, endurance, and tolerance of pain. They ran up mountains. They ran carrying loads. They punched trees. Apache warriors were far stronger and tougher
than the U.S. cavalry soldiers sent to exterminate them.
I spent many years sitting indoors in school desks, learning
reading, writing, and arithmetic, loading my brains with the ideas necessary to
be an obedient, punctual, productive cog in the industrial society that’s pounding
the planet to pieces. Wild Native
Americans, during the years of their youth, were being taught to be strong,
brave, and extremely healthy. They
learned the skills needed to survive in their ecosystem, in a low impact
manner. During their entire lives, they
sent nothing to landfills.
In the Boston Marathon, participants are running for
themselves, individuals in a vast mob of folks motivated to beat records and
gain fame. When Indians run in races, they
do so as members of their tribe. They have
a sense of belonging, of community, of one enduring culture, that white people
never experience. When natives run, the
message is about peace, harmony, and uniting as a people. Race time is not important.
Fame tends to result in bigheads bloated with pride, an
unwelcome irritant in tribal communities.
Excellent native runners are more likely to pump gas than become famous celebrity
athletes on national TV. There’s no
place like home.
Nabokov, Peter, Indian Running, 1981, Reprint, Ancient
City Press, Santa Fe, New Mexico, 1987.
For more info on running and tracking, see my two previous
reviews, The
Art of Tracking, and The
Origin of Science. Other interesting
books include Why We
Run, by Bernd Heinrich, and The
Tarahumara, by Wendell Bennett and Robert Zingg.
3 comments:
Motorized wheelchairs -- I'll have to steal that for my anti-car rants.
If this was a mind changing book for you, I'll need to read it. Maybe someday I'll be in a place where I can run down an animal without ending up in someone's back yard!
We’re so conditioned to moving by wheels, yet for most of the human journey, there were no wheels. Horses are a fairly recent prosthetic. My trusty bicycle is a wheelchair too. Societies where everyone travels by foot seem to have faded out of our culture’s consciousness. It was striking how different the thinking was in cultures where running was key to survival.
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