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Why People Do Things That Are Unpleasantly Hard

The Straits Times

|

March 31, 2025

That is the surprising route to the best life possible.

- David Brooks

Why People Do Things That Are Unpleasantly Hard

Haruki Murakami was a mediocre student. Like a lot of people who go on to high achievement later in life, the future novelist had trouble paying attention to what the teachers told him to pay attention to, and could only study what he was interested in. But he made it to college, and a few credits before graduating he opened a small jazz club in Tokyo.

After a ton of hard work, he was able to pay the bills, hire a staff member and keep the place open. In 1978, Murakami was at Meiji Jingu Stadium in Japan watching a baseball game and drinking a beer. The lead-off batter for his team, the Yakult Swallows, laced the ball down the left field line. As the batter pulled into second base, a thought crossed through Murakami's head: "You know what? I could try writing a novel."

He started writing after closing time at his jazz club and eventually sent a manuscript off to a literary magazine - so blase about it that he didn't even make a copy for himself in case the magazine lost what he had sent in. It won a prize and was published the next summer. He decided to sell the bar, which was his only reliable source of income, and pursue writing. "I'm the kind of person who has to totally commit to whatever I do," he wrote in his 2008 memoir.

No longer doing the physically demanding work of running a bar, he started to put on weight. He decided to take up a sport, and running seemed like a good option: There was a track right by his house, it didn't require fancy equipment, and he could do it by himself.

He wasn't lying when he talked about his tendency towards total commitment. By the late 2000s, he was running six miles a day, six days a week every week of the year, and had run in 23 marathons, plus many other long-distance races, an ultramarathon and some triathlons.

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