Running, Training
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How I Ended Up Next to John Irving

A smiling person holds up a book titled "Lauf und davon: Geschichten vom Joggen" by Diogenes, with the cover showing a runner on a green path.

A few years ago, I con­tributed an essay to a book about run­ning. It was called Die Philoso­phie des Laufens (The Philoso­phie of Run­ning) and pub­lished by Mairisch, a small inde­pen­dent press with excel­lent taste and the kind of lit­er­ary courage that larg­er hous­es often like to claim for themselves.

In Jan­u­ary, Mairisch got in touch with me about some­thing unex­pect­ed. Dio­genes — one of the most estab­lished and respect­ed pub­lish­ers in the Ger­man-speak­ing world — want­ed to include my essay in an anthol­o­gy. The book would be called Lauf und davon — Geschicht­en vom Jog­ging (Run and Away — Sto­ries of Jog­ging). Of course I said yes. It felt like one of those deci­sions you make instant­ly, hap­pi­ly, almost casu­al­ly, with­out ful­ly under­stand­ing what is actu­al­ly happening.

The Experience of Being Alive in a Running Body

Only today did it real­ly land. My contributor’s copy arrived in the mail, and sud­den­ly the whole thing became real in the most phys­i­cal, unmis­tak­able way. There it was: my name, my text — Im Takt, aus dem Takt — sit­ting in the table of con­tents beside writ­ers like John Irv­ing, Alan Sil­li­toe, and Isabel Bog­dan. Names I know. Names that car­ry weight. Some of them giants, nation­al­ly and inter­na­tion­al­ly. And some­how, improb­a­bly, there I am among them.

It is a strange hon­our. That is the phrase that keeps com­ing back to me. Strange, because it still feels slight­ly unre­al. Strange, because I know exact­ly where I come from as a writer: not from a care­ful­ly engi­neered lit­er­ary career, but from curios­i­ty, from think­ing on the page, from try­ing to say some­thing pre­cise about the expe­ri­ence of being alive in a run­ning body. And yet it is an hon­our all the same — qui­et, exhil­a­rat­ing, and a lit­tle hard to process.

The essay they select­ed, Im Takt, aus dem Takt (In Time, Out of Time), is about run­ning with apps, about rhythm and mea­sure­ment and what hap­pens when a run is guid­ed, inter­rupt­ed, framed, and some­times dis­tort­ed by tech­nol­o­gy. It is about pace, but also about atten­tion. About the odd ten­sion between want­i­ng to opti­mise the run and want­i­ng to dis­ap­pear into it. Even now, I like that this was the piece that made its way into the anthol­o­gy. It feels con­tem­po­rary in the right way: not loud, not preachy, just inter­est­ed in one of the lit­tle con­tra­dic­tions of mod­ern run­ning life.

Writing Has Its Own Strange Timing

What I feel most today is some­thing soft. Grat­i­tude, def­i­nite­ly. A cer­tain dis­be­lief. And yes, pride too — the decent kind, I hope. The kind that comes from recog­nis­ing that some­thing you wrote found a life beyond the moment in which you wrote it. That it trav­elled. That oth­er peo­ple saw val­ue in it. That it now sits, bound and print­ed, in unex­pect­ed­ly dis­tin­guished company.

So this is a small note of thanks, and also a small note of won­der. Books still have the pow­er to sur­prise you. Some­times a text you wrote years ago comes back wear­ing a dif­fer­ent cov­er and opens a door you did not even know was there. And some­times the mail brings not just a book, but a reminder: writ­ing has its own strange timing.

And since I am already here, let me say this plain­ly: Lauf und davon — Geschicht­en vom Joggen is a beau­ti­ful idea for a book, and now, hap­pi­ly, a real one. If you care about run­ning not only as sport but as sto­ry, mood, obses­sion, escape, and way of mov­ing through the world, this anthol­o­gy might be worth a place on your shelf.

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Hello – my name is Florian. I'm a runner and blazing trails for Spot the Dot — an NGO to raise awareness of melanoma and other types of skin cancer. Beyond that, I get lost in the small things that make life beautiful: the diversity of specialty coffee, the stubborn silence of bike rides, and the flashes of creativity in fashion and design. Professionally, I’m an organizational psychologist and communication practitioner, working where people, culture, and language shape how change actually lands. When I’m not doing that, you’ll find me behind the bar at Benson Coffee in Cologne — quality-driven, proudly nerdy.

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