The following is an article that I wrote last year for the rather splendid running magazine Like the Wind. If you don't already subscribe, and you have even a passing interest in any type of running (if not, what on earth are you doing here?!), I thoroughly recommend giving it a look. It's not all idiots like me writing - some people know what they're talking about!
Running 100 miles in one go is a really
stupid thing to do. I know this because people tell me so on a regular basis:
"I wouldn't even
drive that far!"
"Pheidippides died
after running only a marathon y'know!"
"Isn't it bad for
your knees?"
You know the drill. Everybody knows these
things. Nobody could possibly run 100 miles. Except that they do. All the time.
And the sport of ultra-running (superlative
etymology aside) isn't the sole realm of the genetically gifted übermensch of
this world; everyday people like you and me are achieving this
"impossible" feat on a weekly basis. And the more people do it, the
more people will do it. How many people running ultra-marathons today
got into it as soon as they heard that it was possible from the exploits of
Dean Karnazes? Or the Tarahumara Indians? Or the latest list of the Toughest
Races In The World (TM) in Runners' World? Would it have even crossed your mind
to try to run so far before you heard that others had done it?
Because, if you ask me, the main thing that
it takes to run 100 miles is... stupidity. If you can remain ignorant of what
we all know - that if you run a step further than 26.2 miles (the oddly
specific distance which has apparently been programmed into our brains as the
absolute limit of human endurance) then you will die - you will discover that
you can achieve what you originally considered impossible.
I maintain that anybody can run 100
miles. I am certainly not special. Well not in that way at least... But
that's not to say it's easy of course. It takes dedication. It takes training.
And it takes shear pig-headedness. I have the last one in spades.
But training will only get you so far. Once
you reach the ultimate limit of your endurance, how do you go further? Belief
perhaps? Thinking positive? I prefer to think of it as simply ignoring the fact
that you can't go further. Run stupid I say! Ignore the things that we all
"know" and go out and learn these truths for yourself. Take common
sense and stick it where the sun doesn't shine! This sport isn't the place for
such trivialities as common sense - now is the time to step beyond your comfort
zone, reach for the very limits of your abilities, and then just keep on
truckin'.
You may think, "I can't possibly go any
further". But your next step will prove you wrong. Relentless forward
progress. One foot in front of the other. Just keep swimming. Pick your cliché.
The adage that ultra-running is 70% mental is probably about 95% true.
The Piece of String Fun Run is a singular
race, held once a year as a way to torture unsuspecting ultra-runners with a
simple premise; how do you cope mentally when you don't know how far away the
finish line is? Competitors run to the next checkpoint, not knowing ahead of
time whether they will be greeted with a "congratulations, you've
finished", or simply directions to the next one. The race can be anywhere
from 1,000 meters to 1,000 miles. Only 2 people have finished it each year. This
race plays right into the hands of the stupid runner. "Run until we say
stop". It is simplicity in itself, and only the stupid need apply.
As the great ultra-runner Forrest Gump once
said, "Stupid is as stupid does". Running 100 miles in one go is indeed a
really stupid thing to do. I wonder how much further I can go?
really need to see how far i can go!
ReplyDeleteProbably much further than you think! Best of luck.
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