Friday 4 December 2015

Curiosity

Humans are extremely curious by nature. 

I'm not just talking about science and experiments. We spend a ridiculous amount of time in knowing and learning about things that we will never even put to use or we repeat actions even if they lead to failure, with the hope that there will be one successful result.

We like to know about the top speed of our cars. We want to know the top speed of our neighbour's car. We make sure that we know how many seats are in the President's air plane. 

A child dismantles and thereby destroys his toys, simply to know what is inside. Our astronauts wanted to know what is beyond earth even before they could conclusively determine what use the beyond would serve us, and off they went.

We've created social media to know "everything". We create world records, just to see if it can be done.




Our morbid curiosity, makes us stop or slow down next to car accidents, not to help the victims or alleviate the arguments between the drivers, but just to know what happened and then off we go.

We watch videos on YouTube and then keep clicking on the suggested videos and after one hour we regret the time wasted since nothing concrete was achieved. That one hour was just curiosity tricking you with the hope of finding something.

Running, I understand is another form of satisfying our curiosity. You ran a PR/PB in a race so the next thought is to see if you can beat it. Can I go faster?. You ran a 50 km ultra and after finishing you'd like to see if in the next race, you could run longer, maybe 75 kms.

Just like in science where the curiosity of scientists is leading to developments, the curiosity of athletes and amateur athletes is pushing the boundary of sports.

This I believe is the reason for people running and training harder, year after year. 

Recently, I saw a few posts on Faceboook after the conclusion of Airtel Delhi Half Marathon and many runners asked a rhetorical question; should I go for a faster time next year?.

We know that the body came with an expiry date plus age progression related slowness. It is almost our duty to see what we can do with it before we no longer exist or before we are unable to exercise. How fast can we go? How long can we go? 

The curiosity is creating better athletes and pushing the limits and it does not make any sense to not be curious when it comes to your own backyard experiment- training and racing.






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