Modern Athlete Magazine Issue 128, March 2020 | Page 22

ROAD RUNNING walked around with watches that could monitor their heart while using satellites to calculate exactly where they were and how far they had run. The clothes they were showcasing was seemingly space age and far removed from the old rags that I had on, and suddenly I felt so out of place that I feared I may end up finishing last, or very close to it. I had never run further than four kilometres at any one time, and here I had the audacity to take on these technologically advanced beings all around me? “Well you’re here, mate, no turning back now!” I heard my own voice admonishing me, and I looked around, startled, hoping that I didn’t say it out loud. The announcer called us all to the start and I found myself swept up in a mass of humanity, readying for ‘war.’ I felt the butterflies in my tummy and a rush of adrenaline making me shiver with anticipation. All the feelings of inadequacy were forgotten as we were herded into the starting shoot by race officials, and as soon as I heard the crack of the starter’s pistol, I felt the surge of the mob as we all rushed forward as one. The race was on. Finishing the 2018 Two Oceans with his youngest son as we ran past the Sea Point swimming pools. I was holding on, and I kept pushing myself forward. I was enjoying the pain I was in, the same way I used to enjoy the pain during many of my fistfights in the years before. Now here I was, fighting myself, pushing past limits I previously thought of as impossible to go beyond. I looked around me and there were people along the street, cheering my every step and urging me forward. They wanted me to finish, and they wanted me to run strong, to give my all. In my exhaustion, I felt a peace I had never known before, and I felt nothing but love for these strangers smiling at me and cheering for me. I felt wanted and appreciated, and in that moment I was home, because I was a runner and this was my happy place. The last kilometre of the race felt like an eternity, I just wanted to stop and walk, but I pushed on. I was doing this for me and my children, I was doing this to give that better man hiding somewhere inside me a release from his captivity. When I saw the finish, I put in a surge and I felt a joy I had never known as I crossed the line. Something inside me had changed in those 10 kilometres I had just run, and I felt more in tune with my soul than ever before. How different my life was prior to that moment in Sea Point. For far too long I had found myself stuck in darkness, filled with nothing but despair, in a place of gangs, drugs and alcohol, filled with violence and no hope. I had become nothing more than an ‘oxygen thief,’ somebody who spent their days wasting away doing just enough for the next time they could get high or drunk. 22 PJ Moses, reformed I got into fights to satisfy the beast within me, not gangster, ultra- stopping until there was blood flowing from the one marathoner, running writer ISSUE 128 MARCH 2020 / www.modernathlete.co.za who offended my thug sensibilities. My nose looked like Rocky’s at the end of his many battles with Apollo Creed in the famous movies, and I had scars all over from the knife wounds over the years. My skull still had some glass embedded in it from bottles people broke over my head, and my front teeth were missing. The streets were where I felt most comfortable, and being drunk or high helped me deal with the fact that I knew the lifestyle I was living was not a sustainable one. Then running found me, and I slowly started to transform into the man my family always thought I could be, and my kids needed me to be. Now here I found myself jumping into the unknown, but I knew there was no other way. I knew that my previous life had no upside to it, and that I would either end up in prison, dead or an alcoholic and drug-addicted junkie that was no good to anybody. I decided I wanted to live a better life, not in terms of material gain, but a more fulfilling spiritual existence and a more useful one. I knew it would not be easy, that I would face ridicule from friends and strangers. I would have to sacrifice and change many of my ways. I would have to fight without using my fists, and I would have to keep going when I felt that I couldn’t do it anymore. Was I ready for the change? I didn’t know, and that scared me, but I knew there was only one real decision to make if I wanted to be a better man. I decided to run. The destination was never the goal, the journey was always more important. And this part of the journey taught me that there is always hope in the darkness, that you should live to be a better version of yourself tomorrow, better than the person you were today. The pace at the start of that race was frenetic, and I got caught up in the mass stampede of fleet-footed humans. I had no strategy, I only had one goal and that was to run, and run hard. Soon my lungs felt like somebody had thrown petrol on them and set them alight, and my throat was as dry as the Kalahari. But I felt alive, even though my legs were protesting with every step I took down Beach Road, gathering pace