Running High

Hopelessly unathletic all her life, Christine Pemberton started to run at age 60. Listen to her inspiring story

offline
Hopelessly unathletic all her life, Christine Pemberton started to run at age 60. Listen to her inspiring story

'YOU ARE COMPLETELY obsessed. Running has taken over your life.' That's my husband talking. Every word was meant.'You're becoming boring, like Christine and her running.' This was overheard at a party. Said in jest, but, all the same, it made me think. Running, boring and me obsessed?

Starting to run at 60 has certainly turned my life upside down. What I never expected, though, was that it would impact people around me. Perhaps it's all those early mornings that start curtailing your social life-the need to eat early, turn in early, decline that glass of wine. Sure, all of this is 'boring', but, you know what, I wouldn't have it any other way.

I made a bucket list thinking, 'Oh my God, how can I be turning 60?' I've managed to tick off a few things already. Drive a Land Rover alone through the African bush. Tick. Be in a Bollywood movie. Tick. (Just a blink- and-you-miss extra in Bhaag Milkha Bhaag, but a tick all the same). And then there was 'start running'.

Averse to sports at school, always the last girl to be picked, with great reluctance, for any team, most track and field events metaphorically passed me by. There was a spot of slow jogging for a few weeks in my 30s, when it was fashionable. But that was it. Then came middle-age, aching knees and one double-knee arthroscopy in my 40s, followed by a second double-knee arthroscopy in my 50s, and that was, pretty much, that. Clearly running was not meant to be. Until I heard about a running programme in Delhi, where I live. It targeted women who had never run before, with the aim of getting these non-runners fit enough to run six kilometres in 10 weeks. 'Well, well, well and on to the bucket list you go,' I thought.

Embarrassingly slow and unfit at the outset, unable to run even 100 metres without stopping to gasp for breath, gradually it all started to come together. Despite the painful slowness and my constant out-of-breath state, what emerged from the early morning run...

Read more!