We Were Born to Run—Not to Fight
By Kaz Dziamka
We,
as a species, may call ourselves whatever we want: Homo sapiens, Homo faber, Homo ludens, Homo loquens, or
whatever—but from a biological and evolutionary perspective we are primarily
running animals. Most of us, though, do not seem to know that our ancestors
hundreds of thousands of years ago succeeded in finding a niche in a hostile,
very competitive environment by developing unique skills as long-distance
running hunters. Today, however, it is unlikely that many members of our
species are aware that a human body has been designed by Nature to run to death
an antelope or a deer or indeed any other mammal that is afraid of us and will
try to run away. Yes, even horses, even wolves, who
could cover as many as 50 miles in a day, could not compete against a 19th-century
Apache or a modern Tarahumara (a close relative) or a Kalahari bushman. If
necessary, an Apache could run 70 or more miles a day; a Tarahumara could
outrun him by another 20 or 30 miles. In fact, the Tarahumara Indians, “the
Stone Age superathletes,” who inhabit “the wild,
impenetrable” Barrancas del Cobre
(the Copper Canyons in northern Mexico) “may be the greatest runners of all
time”:
When it comes to ultradistances, nothing can beat a Tarahumara runner—not a
racehorse, not a cheetah, not an Olympic marathoner. Very few outsiders have
ever seen the Tarahumara in action, but amazing stories of their superhuman
toughness and tranquility have drifted out of the canyons for centuries. One
explorer swore he saw a Tarahumara catch a deer with his bare hands, chasing
the bounding animal until it finally dropped dead from exhaustion, “its hoof
falling off.” Another adventurer spent ten hours climbing up and over a Copper
Canyon mountain by mule; a Tarahumara runner made the same trip in ninety
minutes.
Perhaps, though, running 100 miles
non-stop is not such an impressive feat of fitness to those few who are
familiar with ultramarathons and, in particular, to
those who compete in them. After all, although not typically part of the
corporate mass sport, ultramarathons—any marathon
longer than 26 miles and 385 yards, usually 50 or 100 miles—are fairly common
all over the world. But the Tarahumaras could easily
run much longer distances and outrun anybody in the most astonishing feats of
human endurance ever recorded. “According to the Mexican historian Francisco Almada, a Tarahumara champion
once ran 435 miles, the equivalent of setting out for a jog in New York City
and not stopping till you were closing in on Detroit.”
The Tarahumaras
could win all ultra-marathons in the world, but they are not interested in our
money and in our passion for celebrity. On the very rare occasions they were
persuaded to participate in the Colorado Leadville ultra-marathon, one of the
toughest in the world, they did—predictably—very well. In 1993, for example,
they demolished the competition: the three participating Tarahumaras
finished first, second, and fifth. (The winner, by the way, was 55 years old.)
But they usually retreat to their still not easily accessible canyons—reluctant
to return. And, unlike the Spartans, who achieved a “comparably high state of
physical conditioning,” the Tarahumaras are not
militant and don’t waste time and resources preparing for military exploits.
They are, on the contrary, as benign as bodhisattvas; they don’t use their superstrength to kick ass, but to live in peace.”
If the above has not made you
skeptical, then you ain’t seen nothing
yet. Incredible as it may all seem, the Tarahumaras
have accomplished more, much more:
In the Tarahumara Land, there was
no crime, war, or theft. There was no corruption, obesity, drug addiction,
greed, wife-beating, child abuse, heart disease, high
blood pressure, or carbon emissions. They didn’t get diabetes, or depressed, or
even old: fifty-year-olds could outrun teenagers, and eighty-year-old
great-granddads could hike marathon distances up mountainsides. Their cancer
rates were barely detectable.
It might be that a solution to some
existential problems could be very simple: you run whether you are depressed or
not. And when you run, you smile because running makes you feel happy—just as
it makes Tarahumaras happy.
Their real name, though, is Rarámuri—the Running People, not Tarahumara, the
“bastardized name given them by the conquistadors,” the greedy, homicidal
maniacs and one of the most hideous human life-forms that have ever developed
on the planet. Those Catholic monsters were perhaps equaled but not surpassed
in the atrocities they had committed by another group of European Christians
who had completed the destruction of Native lands and Native Americans in North
America, where the conquistadores had not had time to penetrate.
As a culture, the Rarámuri
are one of the “great unsolved mysteries.” However, their secret may be easy to
understand. Unlike almost everybody else in today’s cultures of what Aldous Huxley once called “sitting addicts,” the Rarámuri have never renounced their biological and
evolutionary heritage bestowed on us by our long-distance running ancestors who
had become a new species by not only walking upright but also by moving from
walking to running. With the chimpanzee, our closest living relative, we may
share 95 percent of our DNA sequence, but unlike the chimps, human beings are
designed to run, not just to walk. This is why we have a nuchal
ligament; they don’t. This is why our foot, a marvel of evolutionary
adaptation, is different from the chimp’s. (Leonardo da Vinci
“considered the human foot, with its fantastic weight-suspension system
comprising one quarter of all the bones in the human body, ‘a masterpiece of
engineering and a work of art.’”)
A masterpiece of engineering designed,
however, to be used without a modern shoe. A masterpiece of engineering
constantly damaged by the invention of the running shoe—the “worst crime ever
committed against the human foot.”
And that is because we are not just a
walking animal, not just a running animal—we are a barefoot running animal. All
horrible injuries sustained by runners are due to not running properly, due in
turn to not running barefoot. The only running protection the human foot will
tolerate without the danger of crippling injuries down the road is an even,
thin sole of flexible material like leather or rubber attached to the foot with
strings in an un-confining, unrestricting manner. Exactly like the running
sandals the Rarámuri will use in a particularly rough
terrain.
I don’t know what all this has to do
with rationalism and secular humanism. But regardless of who we ultimately are,
we should at least try to understand our biological and evolutionary heritage.
We may be officially Homo sapiens,
but clearly it is not sapiens to
continue to destroy and to contaminate the eco-systems that have sustained us
for millions of years. It is not sapiens to
continue to be irrationally arrogant and violent and to wage ever-more
destructive wars. And it is not sapiens to abuse our bodies by becoming
overweight and obese, sickening and dying prematurely from a host of terrible
diseases that could easily be prevented if we only did what Nature has designed
us to do.
You may not believe any of the above.
If so, then at least read a stunning book by Christopher McDougall, Born to Run: A Hidden Tribe, Superathletes, and the Greatest Race the World Has Never
Seen.