4/11/13. I had an endorphin rush this morning. Thursdays are usually an easy day for me. I don't need to be anywhere until 9:30, and so I can turn the alarm off and wake up when I wake up. This is usually about 6:30.
It's nice to wake up naturally. I'm usually relaxed and in a good mood and looking forward to a day where I will probably do some things that matter, but without rushing.
The endorphin rushes are apparently a gift from running, but at this point they don't seem to be connected to running. They show up when they want to, although I think being well-rested, relaxed, and happy helps.
Sometimes when I'm waking up I sense that I'm feeling particularly good, and as I gain consciousness I recognize that I'm in the middle of a rush. It's important not to move. I've found that any movement breaks the rush -- it disappears like a spiderweb, and then I might as well get up and have breakfast.
So I just lie there and have the experience. It's a little difficult to describe. The mind is very clear. The body is very alive. And coursing through every single fiber of my being is this incredible, palpable supply of wellness.
A gift from the pituitary gland, apparently, or at least that seems to be the primary source. Or, frankly, it may not even be endorphins. It may be something called anandamide.
I don't care what you call it. I just know what happens. And I'm a firm believer in the link to running.
I'm not convinced that I've ever had an actual runner's high, a euphoric state that occurs during a long run or after you stop. But I have noticed some interesting things that happen to me at the end of marathons, and occasionally late in a long training run.
The definition of pain shifts. I don't know if the pain actually becomes less, but it loses the ability to dictate what you do. And time stops being something you measure with a clock. It becomes I was back there, now I'm here, soon I will go there. And sometimes it's just I am here.
If it's not endorphins, it's something that manages pain and reorients me to what matters.
And that's what happens to me every once in a while, on a Thursday morning or at some other random, unexpected time. I can't summon it. I can't schedule it. I don't know when it's coming. All I can do is pay attention when it shows up, and be grateful.
Showing posts with label anandamide. Show all posts
Showing posts with label anandamide. Show all posts
Saturday, April 20, 2013
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