GUEST
		
		Christopher McDougall: Born to Run
		
		
		 
		CBN.com 
			 BAREFOOTING IT
		  As a writer for Men’s Health magazine and one of Esquire’s original “Restless Man” columnists, Christopher McDougall says a big part of  his job was experimenting with extreme sports – mountain biking, surfing giant  sand dunes, etc.  He’s reported from  three war zones for the Associated Press and spent months in some of the most lawless regions  of Africa, yet never got a scratch.  But strangely,  putting on tennis shoes and going for a run would cause him horrendous pain in  his feet and legs, which led to painful cortisone shots to alleviate it.  
		Unfortunately, what happened to him is typical  of most runners, he says.  Almost eight  out of 10 runners are hurt every year.  A  study by Harvard’s Dr. Daniel Lieberman shows that runners in cushioned shoes  suffer three times more impact shock than runners in bare feet.  Dr. Lieberman says that, “A lot of foot and  knee injuries that are currently plaguing us are actually caused by people  running with shoes that actually make our feet weak, cause us to over-pronate,  give us knee problems.”  
		Until 1972, when  the modern running shoe was invented by the sports industry, people ran in very  thin-soled shoes, had very strong feet, and had much lower incidence of knee  injuries, he says.  When it comes to  shock absorption, the plushest shoes you can buy are worse than no shoes at  all. 
McDougall says he found the answer to why  his foot hurt on an assignment from Runners’ World magazine to find the world’s  premiere runners.  The search took him on  an extended journey to find the elusive Tarahumara (tara-OOH-mara) Indians in  Mexico’s lethal Copper Canyons (where the drug cartels grow their crops).  
		He met many colorful people  along the way – Caballo Blanco, an American who disappeared into the canyons  years ago to learn and live as the Tarahumara did.  Finding him led to the “Running People.”
		The Indians easily run 50  miles for fun, and they do none of the things modern science says they  should.    “I always associated running with pain and  injuries,” McDougall says. “I was led to believe that running is hard for the  body.  But the Indians run all the  time.”  He asked himself two key  questions, “Why are they not hurt?  Why  are they having so much fun?”  McDougall  decided that he wanted to learn to run they way they did.  “The secret is how you run,” he says.  
        BORN TO RUN
  The Tarahumara say when you run on the  earth, if you run with the earth, you can run forever.  McDougall first thought this thinking was sweet  but ignored it.  What they are really  saying is that you don’t pound down on the earth when you run, but skim over  it.  Imagine the earth is like a ball, and  you’re on top of that ball. You’re trying to keep the ball spinning – much  like the act of a circus performer. 
        McDougall  says he came at running from the wrong perspective.  He also says eating and diet is supplemental  to this type of distance running, but it not the main thing.  It’s all about learning to run gently.  “Once you learn to run gently, you don’t get  hurt, and you’re not postponing or avoiding the run,” he says. “You don’t have  to comfort yourself afterwards with ice cream.   To run is the reward.”  That’s  when everything fell into place for him; the diet regulated itself.  As he dedicated himself to learn to run for  the joy of it, his habits changed tremendously.   The big difference happened when he took his shoes off.
 McDougall  says that when most people run they land on the heel first; that 85 percent of  runners in shoes land on their heels.   But 100 percent of barefoot people land on their fore-foot.  One example of a natural tendency:  When you jump off a chair, how do you  land?  You land on the balls of your  feet.  “Shoes have enabled a way to run  that we never did before.  In a way, it  was not made to do,” McDougall says. Our bodies are not engineered to do it.  
 McDougall  enjoys running around his neighborhood now that he is healthy and has  discovered a thin-soled running shoe.  He  also runs with shoes-with-toes that was used by Barefoot Ted in the Mexico race.   The shoes were originally used by kayakers  and boaters.  Barefoot Ted saw them and  liked them.  The major running shoe manufacturers have caught wind of the trend and  are making the shift.  They’re coming out  with “minimalist” shoes of their own which are in the pipeline. 
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