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Gaits to Fun and Fitness
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13596 |
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Section : |
LIFE
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| Issue
Date : |
4 / 1988 |
2,091 Words |
| Author
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Tom Carter Tom Carter is a correspondent on the Foreign Desk of the
Washington Times. |
If Aesop were instructing his students in moral precepts today, instead of using the tortoise and the hare to teach that the race does not always go to the swift, he might have created the fable of the jogger and the walker.
The moral would be the same. But unlike the ancient tale where the rabbit loses the race by napping while the slow but sure reptile makes its way to the finish line, in the modern version the jogger would be sidelined by chondromalacia (runner's knee), periostitis (shin splints), sciatica (shooting pains in the hip and lower back), or any one of a hundred other stress ailments that befall runners.
The winner in the modern tale would be the slow but sure, injury-free walker. And rightly so.
The running and fitness boom has evolved into a walking explosion. City streets are no longer clogged with grim-faced, sweaty joggers. Walkers, once the butt of jokes, are sashaying out of hiding, turning the daily constitutional into the fitness activity of choice.
Walking is as simple as putting one foot in front of the other, yet so complex it is a miracle. Ask any new parent after watching baby's first step, or the men who walked on the moon.
Almost everybody does it, but this most commonplace of activities has suddenly been elevated to the status of a national trend. Our chief form of locomotion is now chic sport.
The numbers speak for
... (1992 of 12114 Characters)
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