I Can’t Hit a Baseball, But I Can…

Written by: Brandon “Monkey” Imp

To me, hiking the Appalachian Trail is hard! I never thought it would be easy. I never thought it would be a walk in the park or a vacation. It is a lifestyle, and it takes energy to maintain the lifestyle. I have to watch every step I take and every cent I spend. I have to stay mentally alert and determined. I need goals. I need motives. Since I have pushed my medical school application plans one year ahead, I have little to construct. I am okay with this. I have thought of a better motive: to prove to myself that I am capable of overcoming physical challenges.

I have never been physically “gifted.” Yes, I am slender, but I am uncoordinated, have little muscle, and care little for athletics. I was the kid picked last in gym class. I played baseball for four years and hit the ball once. I am the opposite of a prodigy. History has told me that I am unathletic and should not attempt to take on physical challenges.

 
But I can do this. I can hike the Appalachian Trail. I have already walked 20 mile days through the mountains and lived to tell the tale. My mind is in it and I am feeling good. If I ascend Mt. Katahdin, I know my slothful couch-potato days can be over. I still may not be able to hit a baseball, but it won’t get me down any more.If you check out our itinerary, you will notice that we are about one week behind schedule. I am not worried though. We are finally leaving the mountains, where we averaged 16-20 miles per day. Virginia? We will be doing some marathons: 26 miles in a day. People train for months, years even, to run a marathon. We will be doing it often, over hard terrain, with 30-35 pound packs. How cool is that?

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7 Responses to I Can’t Hit a Baseball, But I Can…

  1. David says:

    What you are doing along the AT is far more fulfilling than hitting a baseball. Keep your motivation up and stay strong.

  2. Mak says:

    One step for Brandon, one huge leap for un-coordinated kids everywhere. Maybe you can give motivational talks to bookwork/introverted middle-schoolers after you're done.

    Good job, kid! Keep going!

  3. Mitch says:

    Shit, you're going to get more lean and mean than me.

  4. Anonymous says:

    I hiked GA through VA last year and also thought VA was going to be cake. Skyline drive is but there are some big ups and downs before you get there. I froze on Mt. Rogers, in the middle of July it was getting down around 30.

    The trail is all mental. Everyone goes through a bunch of injuries but in the end it's all in your head whether you keep putting one foot in front of the other. I am already planning my next hike and taking 6 months to complete it. Planning on doing a lot more drinking and partying in towns next time. I love how every “dry” county in the south still has tons of moonshine.

    Seen SofaKing out there?

  5. mommaof6 says:

    My favorite Eagle Scout only hit the ball one time???? Are you exagerating???

  6. pjgingers says:

    Brandon, your 26 mile marathon days are totally cool! So glad it's going well and you are loving it. I look forward to meeting your “stinky” self one day. Mrs. G

  7. Brandon Imp says:

    Thanks everybody for the support! Mitch, I will be able to beat you up one day; that's a promise. =)

    We have seen SofaKing! We've been hiking around the same area as him for a while now – definitely one of our favorite entertainers out here. We just took a zero in Pearisburg/Blacksburg, so hopefully we are still in the same area. It's weird how you can go weeks without seeing somebody that is only a day behind or in front of you.

    Mommaof6…hmmm I wonder who this could be??? Haha. I wish I was exaggerating! I was really really bad at baseball. I played in IL before we moved to NJ, and can remember the hours mom and dad would spend throwing the baseball with me. Unfortunately it never helped on game day!