This race was mine, certain from the day I qualified.
Two long years of preparation spent I,
Daily exercise, crude but healthy diet,
no luxuries to tempt me.
Life in isolation, utter focus on the event ahead
and on the prize everyone eventually wins,
my chance coming sooner than most
The day is here
My handlers, cruel and uncaring. They have their job to do.
Give me one last meal before the off.
Meat and water. Dried biscuit. Protein and Carbs.
I am led to the start, my handlers and two officials accompanying me.
I hear the crowd chattering.
They have waited for this event for two years.
Headlines in all the papers.
Many fought to stop it. Cruel they said, barbaric
I could feel the course roughness of the collar they fitted to me
heavy and itchy against my neck, so so rough.
It was close now, the crowd starting to focus
I could smell the tension, the anticipation in the air
I position myself in the middle of the trap door
wanting a clean exit out of the trap.
No weaving around, I need to do this with style
The crowd starts to chant, my heartbeat racing,
sweat pouring, stinging my eyes. I cannot see
‘do it, do it, do it’ they cry
Please start, the wait seems eternal
There is no starters pistol, just the sound of the trap door flying open
The crowd roars
The race begins
I am amazed by my own acceleration
It’s a short race, over before it is begun, a sprint to the end
As the finish line approaches I feel my collar start to tighten
I would love to gesture to the watching crowd as I cross the finish
But it’s against the rules. My hands are tied
As my head tilts to one side, I know I am there.
No lap of honour. No honour left at all, just swinging gently.
Left hanging. I have run this race alone.
Race over, the prize, eternal rest
The crowd leaves.