• Training & Performance
    • Start running
    • Beginners
    • Running
    • Running Technique
    • Trainings
    • Offroad
    • Triathlon
    • Reviews
  • Wellness
    • Nutrition
    • Let’s go outdoors
  • Crossroads
    • Culture
    • Lifestyle
    • Playlists
  • Lovers
    • Stories and History
    • Editorials
  • News
  • Podcasts
  • Italiano
Runlovers
  • Training & Performance
  • Wellness
  • Crossroads
  • Editorials
  • Tips

Hello!

  • 3 minute read

There is a rule among runners that unfortunately not everyone respects. Maybe not everyone knows it, yet it is so civilized and beautiful and costs very little. The rule goes like this:

When two runners cross paths they say hello, even if they do not know each other.

Easy, huh?
Yet not many people respect it; on the contrary. We often cross paths, ignoring each other, each going our own way. Mind you: in itself there would be nothing wrong with that. It is perfectly normal not to greet strangers. But that of runners is a tribe, you have to say hello!
Having finished the pseudo-moralist rant, I would like to talk a bit about the categories of runners who do not salute, or at least the ones I have isolated.

The distracted

He’s too caught up in the race, maybe he’s in obvious respiratory distress and so saying goodbye to you is the least of his thoughts because he has others, he has the fine to pay, and he’s really breathing hard. Oh God the breathlessness, oh God he feels sick: help him!

The touchy

I use the feminine because this category is mostly occupied by women. It is those generally well-dressed runners without a drop of sweat to blemish their faces who run like relentless trains looking only ahead. You greet them as you would greet anyone and receive in return a laser gaze that just says, “Are you telling me? Are you hitting on me?” No, I just wanted to say hello but I speed up, just in case.

The grouse

He is male and the opposite of touchy. The rule as old as time is that a man who greets a stranger is trying, and the stranger who greets a man out of pure courtesy is his future wife, obviously only in his mind.
The good thing about the grouse, dear women, is that it is easy to recognize because it runs moving its head exactly like a rooster: it looks like a watchtower in hysterics. He looks in every direction two hundred times a second because he has to spot the one who has realized how charming and supple he is in running and has already fallen in love. Obviously only in his head.
We said it looks in every direction, right? Minus one: in front of him and in fact he often bumps into the umbilical, the category that follows.

The umbilical

The name says it: the umbilical runs looking at the navel. More specifically, his feet, because he is evidently most concerned that he will stumble or that some Northern witch’s spell will make the ground disappear under his feet. What makes him think this is not known but it is certain only that he does not look ahead. So if you greet him, he doesn’t see you and he doesn’t see who is there to greet. He is not bad, he is just very focused.

The “I am kind, but”

It’s a category I love and I really like to tease them-they are the ones who want to say hello but you always catch them at the worst time, you know it and you’re being a bastard. Like when they are doing their repeats at 2 min/km and are in obvious oxygen debt. You pass them as you’re going so relaxed that you’re even filing your nails, and you say hello to them with a smile, and they respond with the face of someone sitting on the toilet who is pushing. I adore you because you always try your best, and I am a darn, you are right.

The offended

It can be male or female and simply does not know the basic rule. If you say hello to him, he doesn’t respond but only looks at you offended as if to say, “How dare you, who knows you?” After the greeting (not reciprocated) he will usually speed up thinking you are a thief attempting a clumsy approach. At most it escapes your rudeness: greeting me, who you don’t even know me, how shameful. I just wanted to be nice brother, anyway bye.

There is only one exception to the greeting rule. You should not wave to those you overtake for two reasons: because you might give them a stroke and because it might be understood as a gesture of mockery, like “I’ve overtaken you and I’ll even wave bye-bye to you, Captain Slug!” It is not beautiful and runners do not have to be fast but beautiful, that is.

(Photo by Jonny Caspari on Unsplash)

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Runlovers
© Runlovers | All rights reserved | Privacy Policy
 
This blog is not a newspaper or journalistic publication, as it is updated with no regular periodic schedule. It therefore cannot be considered an editorial product under Italian Law No. 62 of 2001.

Input your search keywords and press Enter.

Gestisci Consenso
Per fornire le migliori esperienze, utilizziamo tecnologie come i cookie per memorizzare e/o accedere alle informazioni del dispositivo. Il consenso a queste tecnologie ci permetterà di elaborare dati come il comportamento di navigazione o ID unici su questo sito. Non acconsentire o ritirare il consenso può influire negativamente su alcune caratteristiche e funzioni.
Funzionale Always active
L'archiviazione tecnica o l'accesso sono strettamente necessari al fine legittimo di consentire l'uso di un servizio specifico esplicitamente richiesto dall'abbonato o dall'utente, o al solo scopo di effettuare la trasmissione di una comunicazione su una rete di comunicazione elettronica.
Preferenze
L'archiviazione tecnica o l'accesso sono necessari per lo scopo legittimo di memorizzare le preferenze che non sono richieste dall'abbonato o dall'utente.
Statistiche
L'archiviazione tecnica o l'accesso che viene utilizzato esclusivamente per scopi statistici. L'archiviazione tecnica o l'accesso che viene utilizzato esclusivamente per scopi statistici anonimi. Senza un mandato di comparizione, una conformità volontaria da parte del vostro Fornitore di Servizi Internet, o ulteriori registrazioni da parte di terzi, le informazioni memorizzate o recuperate per questo scopo da sole non possono di solito essere utilizzate per l'identificazione.
Marketing
L'archiviazione tecnica o l'accesso sono necessari per creare profili di utenti per inviare pubblicità, o per tracciare l'utente su un sito web o su diversi siti web per scopi di marketing simili.
  • Manage options
  • Manage services
  • Manage {vendor_count} vendors
  • Read more about these purposes
Visualizza le preferenze
  • {title}
  • {title}
  • {title}