Dear Foam Roller…

Dear Foam Roller:

I think–

Oh, you thought I was just going to say “fuck you,” didnโ€™t you? Well, hold on. Well, what I have to say is a little more nuanced than that. I hope you have a couple minutes.

I think Iโ€™m starting to understand our relationship a little bit, and I donโ€™t want to exactly thank you, but I kind of want to thank you. Kind of imagine me smiling reaching to high-five you, then faking you out at the last second and giving you the finger while scowling, but then shrugging my shoulders and high-fiving you for real a second later. Yes, I realize that sounds a lot like a metaphor for a lot of peopleโ€™s dating experiences.

Anyway: Thanks, fucker. I like to do painful things like running, for such long periods of time that parts of me donโ€™t like to work that well, and in order to keep doing those painful things, I bought you at a sporting goods store. Although I wonder if youโ€™re available at places that supply other S&M products? Seems like it might be a good fit.

So, every night for a while now, you and I have been rolling around the kitchen floor together. Actually, I roll on you. Youโ€™re stoic throughout, and I wince and whine and make funny breathing noises. I put my bodyweight on top of you and roll you up and down the side of my thigh, where Iโ€™m told something called an IT band exists–one of those body parts you donโ€™t even know is there until it decides to ruin your week, kind of like an appendix, but for runners. Anyway, I have complaints about that thing too, the IT band, but theyโ€™re unimportant as long as you keep doing your job. Which is apparently to make me cry through a weird sort of massage.

Some people think “massage” and they think of a warm, friendly face, someone who cares about your well-being, someone trained to figure out whatโ€™s ailing you and why, and then through understanding but firm human touch, heal that and make you feel better. You know, a massage therapist. You, foam roller, are not a massage therapist. You are like a sort of surrogate for a massage therapist, and not a good one. You approximate a massage therapist the way a body pillow approximates a real person, or a di–you know what, Iโ€™m going to stop there.

Basically, I do not think of a massage therapist when I think of you. I think of Gunnery Sgt. Hartman from Full Metal Jacket screaming, “You will not like me. I am hard, but I am fair.” The more pain you cause, the more good I assume you are doing for my running/ultrashuffling career. Keep in mind I havenโ€™t had any professional training on how to use you, save for what a couple of friends have told me, and the videos from the folks at The Run Experience–who have introduced me to “East-West” rolling, which in terms of pain is like taking the leap from smoking ditch weed to smoking crack. Holy shit.

Has anyone ever used you for interrogation? Just a thought. Thereโ€™s this spot that I think is where my IT band and quadricep meet, about halfway between my hip and knee, that I think could get me to give up classified information I was sworn to keep secret even upon threat of death, if it was foam-rolled just so.

Look, I guess Iโ€™m cool with what you do. I realize itโ€™s your job, and itโ€™s kind of my job to let you do your job. There are other things in my house that I think do much more joyous jobs, like the blender, the French press, and the ice scream scoop, but I guess not everyone has a super-fun, sunshine-and-rainbows gig in life, right? And you donโ€™t, so I shouldnโ€™t hold it against you. I think my IT band is feeling a little better this week, after our third or fourth session that consisted of you getting rolled over by me, and me squishing my face into several different configurations and making up new curse-word-strings for three to four minutes. And I guess that means weโ€™re doing okay, I suppose.

So I guess I should say keep up the good work.

Asshole.

Adventure Journal is free but relies on reader support to make stories like this possible. Please join the thousands of your fellow adventurers and subscribe to our amazing printed quarterly or pick up an issue here.

GIVE YOURSELF THE GIFT OF ANALOG

ADVENTURE JOURNAL SUBSCRIPTION


Four issues, free shipping, evergreen content…