

Ahead of the marathon in London, writer, runner and On partner, Lydia Keating, pens a personal essay exploring injury, and the physical and emotional signals that shift our course.
Words by Lydia Keating. Photography by Seung Lee.
I sit in a room on the fifth floor of a tall building on the Upper East Side. At least four television monitors are turned on, each flashing scenes from different cable programs. The volume is low on each, and garbled murmurs fill the space. The only clear, crisp noise is the receptionistās voice when a new person walks in. āName?ā and āYou can take a seatā are mostly all she says.
The room is labeled as the Pain Management Center. I know it isnāt quite the right place for me, but if I wait for a sports medicine doctor or an orthopedic surgeon, itāll be another month before I get an appointment. An older woman holding a cane sits a few seats down from me. Iām staring at the carpeted floor when a little white pill rolls into my periphery.
āHoney,ā the woman says. I look up, and sheās smiling at me, but her forehead wrinkles with concern. āCould you please get that?ā she asks. āI dropped it, and I just canāt bend over that far.ā āOf course,ā I say. I stand up and pinch the tablet off the floor. She extends her arm and smiles again when I place it into her hand. I see deep creases in her palms, the type my middle-school friends would run their fingers across at recess to predict things in my future (I would live a medium-long life, I would be rich, I would one day be very smart).
āThese are my magic pills,ā she says, placing one onto her tongue, which gleams with saliva under the fluorescent lights. She takes a swig from her plastic water bottle, nearly empty and all bent. āThatās what I call them,ā she continues. āBecause they make my pain vanish. Magic.ā
I sit back down and carry on filling out the questionnaire the receptionist gave me. The room smells vaguely of rubbing alcohol. The form lists questions about my previous medical conditions. Have I experienced pain here before? Have I ever fainted? Am I depressed? Have I ever been depressed? Have I ever had surgery? Did the pain ache, or did it throb? Was it sharp or piercing?
In the past two weeks, Iāve seen a physical therapist, an acupuncturist, and a sports masseuse. Each of them required me to fill out iterations of the same questionnaire. All asked me to describe my pain in detail. I write with a dull yellow pencil:
Describe the pain? Itās in my lower back. It is usually dull and achy and is only sharp when I run.
Does it affect your day-to-day life? Yes. I canāt run.
Just before the New Year, I feverishly write down goals on my phoneās notes app. I craft a perfected version of myself, the one I promise I will be in 2024āthe final year of my twenties.
I separate my goals into distinct categories: writing, running, content/career. My running list goes as follows:
Complete 10 MARATHONS BEFORE I TURN 30. Thatās three final marathons this year: London (April), Berlin (September) and Pikes Peak (September)
Get a running coach
Get back into a lifting routine. Lift 3x a week
Organize a monthly Fruit Gang community run like the one I did before the NYC marathon
Create a running community and/or get more involved in the NYC running community
When I look at my five-item list, it excites me. Iām nervous, of courseāI know itās ambitious. But Iām invigorated by the challenge.
After the holidays, I fly back to New York and hire a run coach. We devise a plan. I tell him about the three marathons. I explain that the major race in London, the first one (only four months away in April), is the most important to me because I want to go for a personal record.
He emails me my marathon training plan the following day. Reading it, I feel giddyāa sensation of limitlessness. If day by day, I stack the bricks of hard work, anything is possible.
The following day, on the second day of the New Yearāa crisp, cold, bluebird morning in New YorkāI drive to Prospect Park to run my first workout of the training block. Itās a workout consisting of a generous warm up, ten alternating one-minute intervals, and a cool down. During the final mile of the run, as I take on the undulating hills of that iconic loop, I feel a dull aching in my back.
I push through the pain because so much of running is that: pushing through thoughts, sensationsāphysical and emotional signalsāthat tell us to stop. Itās one of my favorite parts of runningāhow it teaches us to embrace discomfort, a lesson that somehow never gets old or stale. Discomfort should be welcomed, running tells us, because itās an indicator of change, of improvement. At its core, thatās what running is all about: a way of showing ourselves we are capable of change, that if we want to, every day, we can choose to become better versions of ourselves.
The obvious conundrum is then, when should a runner heed discomfort? It becomes a complicated negotiation.
Two weeks after my initial visit to the Pain Management Center, I return for an MRI. The nurse asks if I want to listen to music, but I decline. Iām in one of those periods of life when all musicāno matter the genreāmakes me sad. I stay as still as possible as the large, cylindrical machine churned, clicked, and buzzed.
Later that evening, the doctor calls me with the imaging results. I have a sacral stress fracture. The sacrum, at the very bottom of the spine, sitting between the hip bones, is shaped like an inverted triangle. It will take eight to twelve weeks to heal, and I have to stay off my feet as much as possible.
My physical therapist tells me that sacral fractures are becoming increasingly common with runners but are often misdiagnosed. When people ask me, āWhat happened? Are you still running London?ā They arenāt always familiar with the term sacrum, so I say, āI fractured my back.ā It sounds unnecessarily dramatic, but itās true.
When I share with my online community that Iām struggling with a running injury, thereās an influx of messages from people sharing their own experiences. I speak directly with a few:
Billie ran the marathon last year. A month after London, she experienced pain in her left knee. It was a stress fracture in the bottom of her patella; she was in a brace and crutches for eight weeks. While healing from this injury, she also moved from Boston to New York. āIāve experienced a lot of anxiety from the injury,ā Billie says. āAnd moving was a stressful period. I feltāand still feelsālike I am missing out on building a new community in New York because I canāt run.ā She tells me when she returns to running, she will be āa lot more mindful and really respect [her] body for allowing [her] to run.ā She has a bib for the 2024 Chicago Marathon.
Natalie ran the Grandmaās Marathon in Duluth, Minnesota, in June, 2022, and then the Twin Cities Marathon the following October. After finishing Twin Cities, Natalie experienced leg pain and numbness in her foot. Several doctors and physical therapists later, she discovered she had run both races on a torn meniscusāa twelve-centimeter tear. She had surgery this past June and began jogging again in January, 2024. Natalie tells me that recovering from her injury has been a meditation on grief. āBecause it is a loss,ā she says. āItās a loss of self and identity. Iāve been coping with the mental health struggles that come with that.ā When she asked her surgeon if she would ever run again, he told her to consider racing other distances. āThat was a stab in the heart because Iāve always felt like, well, if Iām not a marathoner, then Iām not a real runner,ā Natalie tells me. We talk about how thatās a fallacyāhow any distance, even just a minute of jogging, is a worthy distance. I tell her that I want to lean into the recreational track racing scene once Iām back running. That 26.2 miles is undeniably a sizable accomplishment, but there are many other ways to challenge yourself as a runner that are just as (if not more) impressive.
Lauren, a new mother, speaks to me about her experience recovering from childbirth and its effect on her running. She ran at the very beginning of her pregnancy but stopped in the first trimester. Pregnancy exacerbated a muscular imbalance in her pelvis. āMore force, more weight, more of a load,ā she explains. āPregnancy made the injury more prominent.ā She still hasnāt been able to run since having her baby, but she craves it. āEven if I could run just three miles, three times a week, that would make me happy.ā She is optimistic that, with time, sheāll be able to get there. āAs a mom, I realize more than ever how important it is toā¦be healthy and have a clear mind.ā For now, yoga has been her running substitute and living in Denver, itās got her through the cold winter months.
Iām now in week nine of my recovery. Itās getting warmer in New York. I no longer feel pain when walking. When the temperature goes above fifty degrees, I find myself consumed by impatience and a yearning to run. The injury causes me to have some bleak days. Historically, when my mind goes dark, I turn to running. But thatās not an available option right now. Healing is confusingāIām constantly asking myself whether Iām doing too much or too little.
It does, however, feel like thereās something karmically significant afoot. I planned out this ambitious year of three marathons to hit a shiny goal of āTen Before Thirtyā, and on the first day of my first training cycle, the universe said, āno.ā Iāve finally reached a point where I can gracefully part ways with this goal. I can, of course, complete āTen Marathons Before Thirty-Oneā or āTen Before Thirty-Twoāāit doesnāt sound as punchy, but now the accomplishment will be that much more triumphant and meaningful whenever I get there.
Before my injury, I looked at turning thirty as if it were this static, daunting finale of something. Now, I look past it and Iām filled with a jittery, excited anticipation for whatās to come in my next decade: adventure, friendship, good food, returning to my regular runs in Prospect Park, and, most certainly, a marathon in London.