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Extract 'Running makes me feel alive, connected to the moment'

Author of The Cow Book, John Connell shares his experience of one long and glorious run he had through a forest in Longford, in an extract from his new book.

I’VE NEVER RUN this far before. I’m thirty and this is all new to me. I’m running now as though everything depends on it and in so many ways it does.

This run, this voyage, is in ways the climax of a journey into the country of the self. The final destination after a year of travelling.

I’m thinking of all this but really I’m just putting one foot in front of the other and willing myself on, hoping to keep going because I’ve quit at so many things in my life, ran away from problems and people, but right now this run is a way to make amends for all that.

It might sound like magical thinking and maybe in some way it is. All actions start in dreams and thoughts and I’ve long held on to this one.

I’m in a local forest of Derrycassin in rural Longford, it has snowed and between the melting snow and puddles of water I race now. My feet are wet but I do not mind. My lungs are strong and firm and I know and feel that at this pace I can continue for a long time, an hour more, two hours more I am not sure.

The magic of a run

This is an undiscovered country.

A man once said to me you get to know yourself on a long run. In the end, he surmised you realise you’re a lot stronger than you think and a lot more stubborn. Those words are haunting me now. They are every one of them true.

Running and farming are two things I understand, two tangible things. With each passing day, progress is made. The cultivation of a crop or cow is like the tending of the garden of the self, not much happens in a week but in the culmination of weeks and months real progress is made, real goals achieved.

Everything starts in dreams and thoughts, the building of a farm, the building of a body, the writing of a book. We are I think in a way the heirs of our dreams.

The sweat on my face has dried and turned to salt and when I lick my lips I can taste it. It has been several hours since I have drunk water: at times a craving comes to me for it and then like a lustful urge it leaves again.

I tell myself that soon, soon I will stop and give in. There are a river and lake beside me, next to this old forest: perhaps when all this is over I will jump in, quench and cool myself. I’ll cup my hands and drink the water from the lake fresh and clean like the old people did in the long ago.

Feeling alive

I am not the greatest runner but I have in me the discipline of an athlete. Running and exercise have given me control of my life, a real foundation on which to build, and from that, the new man that I have become has been forged.

They say running is a lonely thing but out there on the road, on the roads of life, I have never felt more alive, more connected to the moment.

In the forest, the path winds and courses through steep hills and bends, I have names for some of them, secret silly names to help me surmount and overcome them. The gravel is loose underneath my feet as I beat out my weary rhythm. I am alone here today, there is only the forest, the lake and me.

At Switzerland bend, I feel the glee of the flat ground return. The huge pine trees surround me and I imagine myself in some Scandinavian place, some Valhalla of nature, some distant land. I hear the lake waters lap and fold onto themselves. I know that soon the hills of the forest will be upon me and I will have to strain and push myself forward.

I have been running for twenty-five kilometres now and with each passing lap, I urge myself forward.

Out of range

There are jobs to be done at home, cattle that need to be cleaned out, feed to be given. My phone does not work here and while I run in this place I am not contactable. I like it that way it is just the road and me.

My headphones beat out a steady rhythm of 70s pop and easy rock music that keeps me happy and motivated. Alone here now I shout out the words of Blue Swede’s ‘Hooked on a Feeling’.

There was a time I couldn’t sing any more, that I had not the joy of life, but these words as my actions now remind me that there is so much joy in the world, joy amidst the darkness.

The snows have turned to slush as I round the corner and hit the thirty kilometres mark. I am hot and remove my jumper throwing it on top of a nearby bush.

I must be careful now to ensure I do not catch a cold when I finish. The day is cold but I am hot and alive and I think now of all those who run with me, of the ancients, of Murakami, of the Olympians.

When I was a boy I loved to run but as a student, I put that aside thinking the life of the mind to be an immobile one. In the last two years, after everything, I have come to see that the intellectual life as Seneca said is interlinked, that true happiness is found in the present moment and that physical labour and thought are the same.

My feet are the extension of my thoughts and it is intellectual will that gets me around this course, not just mere physical fitness.

The body speaks

At thirty-four kilometres I hit the wall. I am in the land of the new, the place beyond the pines. I have never run this far before but I have the will in me to continue.

I have every will but my body is beginning to tire. My foot pains have returned, I can feel a build-up of lactic acid in my shoulder and my calf muscle is beginning to ache. I run on for another kilometre ignoring my failing engine.

I do not know the rules of this country, its customs, perhaps in the land of thirty-five kilometres there is only pain and ignorance. Perhaps it is a corroboree of effort and sweat culminating in the discovery of the dreamtime of the self.

In my mind, I think of all the places I have been, all the journeys I have undertaken. This run is a part of that story. I will remember it in the list of great days I have had on this earth.

A man gets to know himself on the road and in me, I have found a multitude of histories; a conflict of nations, of language, of faith.

In the recess of the past, I see my grandfather on the run fighting in the War of Independence in his flying column, moving from safe house to safe house. It was only weeks ago that my father told me that he had been captured and imprisoned at that time. What would he make of me now? His namesake, running in a forest for no other reason than life itself.

By the water’s lapping edge I imagine the older people, too, the Celts who once ruled this place. They are all of them in me and I in them. A landlord once owned all this, this lake, this forest. I am running on colonised land. Running as a post-colonial man, whatever that is.

I think now I must be getting delirious and perhaps I am. ‘Murderalise ’em, Rock!’ I shout out aloud now, uttering my old Rocky movie mantra to snap me back into the present. My feet are tired, my body sore and the Italian stallion urges me on in my mind, asking for just one more step.

At the last turn I near the end of my race. It has been four hours or more. I carry my wounded body across my imaginary line. There are no waiting crowds, no cheering lover, no landlords or IRA men. It is just me and the forest and the cold winter’s day in rural Ireland.

I slow to a walk, stumbling towards the grass of nearby Mullinalaghta Gaelic football field. I hunker down to catch my breath. I am thirty, I have never run this far, I have never felt so alive.

John Connell is an award-winning journalist, producer, farmer and author of the award-winning number 1 bestseller The Cow Book. His new book The Running Book is out now with Picador.

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    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Marlon Major
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    May 26th 2013, 9:18 AM

    Absolutely brilliant. This is very positive and a natural tourist destination for the nature conscious.

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    Mute James Hyland
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    May 26th 2013, 1:32 PM

    @ Marlon Major
    very true and possibly the answer to the poll today about holiday plans

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    Mute Lucy
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    May 26th 2013, 9:30 AM

    500k!!! My goodness!!

    Seriously though Ireland has some stunning places tucked away! People really need to get out and start exploring! There is always something new to see!

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    Mute Tony O Connor
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    May 26th 2013, 10:08 AM

    Walked the Grand Canal with the bro a few years ago. Took 4 days and passed thru some fantastically unspoilt countryside. Couldn’t recommend highly enough, and it’s out there ready and waiting❕

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    Mute Emmet Power
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    May 26th 2013, 10:16 AM

    Did you camp along the way Tony?

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    Mute Tony O Connor
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    May 26th 2013, 11:24 AM

    I’d like to say yes but we stayed in B&Bs, in Sallins, Edenderry and Tullamore. It actually added to the experience in that we got to meet locals each night…and didn’t have to carry as much on our backs!

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    Mute keith irish
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    May 26th 2013, 8:52 AM

    Cycling around ireland for charity in august, might try and take this in, sounds nice.

    82
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    Mute Simon Eales
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    May 26th 2013, 10:32 AM

    Ireland’s own Camino!

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    Mute Bramley Hawthorne
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    May 26th 2013, 8:38 AM

    How much of it is along busy roads?
    Several of these way-marked routes are unusable due to heavy motor traffic and there is no joy walking in single file as cars and trucks speed past you.

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    Mute Michael Mctague
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    May 26th 2013, 8:49 AM

    Well don’t walk it then stay in and have a good moan

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    Mute Ailís McKernan
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    May 26th 2013, 9:54 AM

    I’d love to do it!

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    Mute Good News Caravan
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    May 26th 2013, 11:08 AM

    I’d love to do it to Ailis. Maybe we could do it together.

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    Mute vv7k7Z3c
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    May 27th 2013, 1:17 PM

    Ailís, I think ‘Good News Caravan’ is asking you out. I sense another TheJournal.ie dating story!

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    Mute Ailís McKernan
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    May 27th 2013, 7:48 PM

    Maybe we could! Can you start a fire using flint and kindling should the unthinkable happen? That is, we take a wrong turn and are lost to civillisation and have to resort to making a cave habitable and killing our own meat.

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    Mute vv7k7Z3c
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    May 27th 2013, 7:50 PM

    The romance is clearly blossoming. Good luck you two!

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    Mute Good News Caravan
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    May 27th 2013, 9:16 PM

    You like meat too? I will start saving for that ring.

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    Mute Baz Madden
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    May 26th 2013, 10:50 AM

    Looks class. Would love to get on the bike and do it over the holidays. Fair play to all involved… I’d imagine you would come across some really interesting areas off the beaten track. I live near the great southern trail in limerick (which is a conversion of the old railway from limerick to Tralee) and you see some very cool places you would never see on the road and I can imagine this would be the same…

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    Mute vv7k7Z3c
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    May 27th 2013, 1:20 PM

    Sounds good Barry. I walked part of the Beara-Breifne Way in Galway recently, which is really near my house. It was amazing to see parts of the country that I’ve never seen before and that were right on my doorstep.

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    Mute Baz Madden
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    Jun 1st 2013, 8:45 PM

    Yeah that’s it Amy… Tis great to see places that you’d never come across other than going out for an oul ramble… We walked the length of Valentia island today off road and came across some
    class spots… Thank god I got an A in leaving cert geography, otherwise no one would have been able to identify that sea stack/sea arch

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    Mute Neil O'Leary
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    May 26th 2013, 10:42 AM

    Is there a link to a map version of the walkway?

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    Mute William O'Shea
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    May 26th 2013, 12:24 PM
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    Mute Pius Flynn
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    May 26th 2013, 9:58 AM

    Right on Micheal,
    The Leitrim end should be worth seeing ,really beautiful

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    Mute Pius Flynn
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    May 26th 2013, 10:09 AM

    Right on Micheal , the Leitrim end should be worth seeing, really beauty full

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    Mute Lee Owens
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    May 26th 2013, 9:58 AM

    my two favourite counties,now i can walk :)

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    Mute themanwiththeplan
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    May 26th 2013, 10:09 AM

    Yet we cant build proper roads between these counties!

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    Mute Little Jim
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    May 26th 2013, 12:16 PM

    You are confusing we, the people, with an inept government.
    In one case we get one vote every 5yrs or so, in the other we see what we can do when we take matters into our own hands as communities.
    Great achievement, looks like I’ll be going on a little holiday this year after all. They deserve my meager support.

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    Mute Tatjana Kytmannow
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    May 26th 2013, 12:51 PM

    You can download all walks on the Heritage Council website and can get your local area maps in printed form at your local tourist office.

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    Mute Gerard Tiernan
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    May 26th 2013, 12:04 PM

    Looks like a great walk for a charity event, might look into this further :)

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    Mute Tom Collins
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    May 26th 2013, 5:12 PM

    I know the West Cork section is actually the old railway line hooking up Bantry, Skibbereen, Clonakilty and Bandon to Cork city. The very idea that they are turning it into a walking and cycling path kills any notion of these towns ever getting connected by rail again.

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    Mute Kevin Twomey
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    May 26th 2013, 5:51 PM

    That’s because they don’t need it, totally impractical to ever open such a line again. A good quality bus service is more than adequate for towns like that. They had trains at time when there was no auto transport and terrible roads.

    A fantastic idea, and I really hope it takes off.

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    Mute Tom Collins
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    May 26th 2013, 6:05 PM

    I’d don’t think so Kevin. Middleton has a train link build in the last few years. It’s population is similar to that of Bandon if not less. The people of East Cork are pushing for the line to be extended to Youghal which has a population of just about the same as Clonakilty, that’s we’re the East Cork line would end but a West Cork line would still have Skibereen and Bantry to go which also have a similar population to all the other towns I mentioned.

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    Mute RB
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    May 27th 2013, 9:48 AM

    Nice picture Amy, are you free for a walk sometime ?

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    Mute vv7k7Z3c
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    May 27th 2013, 1:22 PM

    Thanks RB… Not sure if I’d make all 500k. Nice shades.

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    Mute RB
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    May 27th 2013, 2:18 PM

    You look fit enough to me !!!

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    Mute vv7k7Z3c
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    May 27th 2013, 8:00 PM

    Thanks!

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    Mute Danny Mike Hennessy
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    May 26th 2013, 1:52 PM

    This is great that they have linked up these walks.
    However this needs a good website with good maps. it needs more promotion and symbol/ logo just like the camino de Santiago.

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    Mute Richard Peyton
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    May 26th 2013, 10:14 PM

    Woohoo! Ireland’s answer to the Camino de Santiago – without the weather, cheap accommodation or cheap wine!

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    Mute Zoe Daly
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    May 26th 2013, 5:36 PM

    very good article, & stunning photos!
    Thank you

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    Mute James Sullivan
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    May 26th 2013, 5:42 PM

    I have read the book “The last prince of Ireland” by Morgan Ellwyn. A must read! Truly amazing and inspiring. From a fellow O’Sullivan

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    Mute Brian Gorman
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    Mar 18th 2015, 12:15 PM

    Wondering which leitrim villlage has the stone wall remains of building relating to his final destination in leitrim?!

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    Mute Gail Gaudette Lee
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    Nov 18th 2013, 3:52 PM

    Having trouble finding the Heritage Council website for the map-anyone got a link? Thanks

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    Mute Gail Gaudette Lee
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    Nov 18th 2013, 3:50 PM

    does anyone know if the villages close enough to find accommodation every night?

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