What I have learned from running every day for 3 years …
I was never excessively interested in any form of athletic endeavour as a child. I only really started running as something to do to get out of a student flat for an hour a few times a week — from the centre of Dundee over the Tay Road Bridge to the home soil of Fife and back. On arriving in Glasgow as an SHO, I started running the odd 10k and between times was just running on a treadmill but still nothing to write home about.
That changed in 2011 when I read “Born To Run” by Chris McDougall. It’s a book about a journalist’s quest to overcome injury, barefoot running and an ultra-marathon in Mexico. I devoured that book in 24h and decided that this was going to be my new thing. Having only ever run a competitive 10k, I entered a 40 mile race from Partick to New Lanark in July 2012 with a marathon sandwiched into my training plan. Since then I’ve run seven ultra-marathons (any race >26.2 miles) and squeezed training around work and family.
On 1st December 2017, I decided to start a daily running habit motivated by the annual Marcothon (essentially 5k or 30 mins per day in December as per Marco Consani, Scottish ultra-runner and husband to the equally successful Debbie Martin-Consani who has the single best Twitter handle ever @ultrarunDMC). On the 1st January, I decided to carry on and maintain a running streak for as long as I am able.
My rules are simple:
- At least 1mile/10minutes per day — in reality, by the time I’ve got changed and out the door I never stop at 1 mile but knowing that I can allows me to trick my body out the door.
- Must be wearing trainers and some form of running clothing — running back from the pub in jeans and shoes doesn’t count.
- That’s it….
This daily habit has led to a number of benefits for me:
- I no longer have to decide IF I’ll run on a particular day, the only question is WHEN that will happen.
- I have dedicated time each day to think or not to think — I don’t “do mindfulness” so this is the closest I get.
- I’ve not been ill — other than occasionally self induced…
- I’ve not been injured — permanent low grade aches but nothing bad enough to stop me running.
- I’ve slept much better (when the kids allow).
- My daily RunKeeper updates on Facebook have trimmed down my friends list very effectively.
- I’ve realised how fortunate I am to have a wife and life that permit me to do this.
As of today (Wednesday 16th June 2021), I am 1293 days in this personal challenge. My next natural celebration will be at 2000 days on Wednesday 24th May 2023. Maybe I’ll stop then. But then maybe I won’t…..