Feel Better, Live More with Dr Rangan Chatterjee - BONUS | Why Running A Marathon Will Change Your Life with Hugh Brasher
Episode Date: September 24, 2022RE-RELEASE: This episode first aired in October 2021. To enter to ballot for 2023 click here http://www.londonmarathon2023.com/ballot This Sunday 3rd October, I’ll be one of 50,000 people taking t...o the streets to run the Virgin Money London Marathon. So, in preparation for what I’m told will be a life-changing day, I spoke to its Event Director, Hugh Brasher. But this episode is more than a conversation about running. It’s about the magic that happens when hundreds of thousands of people come together and revel in what’s possible. We begin by talking about its history, the famous atmosphere, crowd support and many other factors that make the London Marathon experience unique. We also talk about the vision behind the London Marathon, its inspirational aims and objectives that are still based around those drawn up by Hugh’s father, who co-founded the race 40 years ago. And they have more to do with social unity than sporting prowess. If it’s running tips you’re after, there are plenty of them here. But we also discuss the importance of personal goals – how there’s more to marathon success than a certain finishing time. We talk about making mass-participation events more diverse, supporting the ‘back of the pack’ runners but also how we can use physical activity as a tool for life transformation. Whether you run, walk, spectate, volunteer, or watch it on TV, I hope this conversation might inspire you to get involved one day with the London Marathon. Or perhaps you’ll seek out an event more local to you. The point, that Hugh makes so beautifully here, is that the sport is almost secondary. This event is about community, commitment, coming together and celebrating the human spirit. I’ll see you on the start line. To enter to ballot for 2023 click here http://www.londonmarathon2023.com/ballot Support the podcast and enjoy Ad-Free episodes. Try FREE for 7 days on Apple Podcasts https://apple.co/feelbetterlivemore. For other podcast platforms go to https://fblm.supercast.com. Thanks to our sponsors: https://www.athleticgreens.com/livemore https://www.vivobarefoot.com/livemore DISCLAIMER: The content in the podcast and on this webpage is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your doctor or other qualified health care provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have heard on the podcast or on my website.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
What sport does is it teaches you together you will be better.
Even though you're running 26.2 miles, you'll be floating on this incredible sea of positivity.
Anybody can do it and the feeling you will get will live with you for the rest of your life.
Hi, my name is Rangan Chatterjee.
Welcome to Feel Better Live More.
So I've decided to re-release a powerful conversation from 12 months ago as a bonus
episode this week. You see, last year at this time, I was just a few days away from taking
part in one of the world's most iconic races,
the London Marathon. And just to be really clear, that was me going well beyond my comfort zone.
Now, although I struggled with an injury throughout the race, I got to say it was a truly magnificent day that I will never forget. Now, if you want to hear about my experience
on that day, I do cover that with my running coach, Helen Hall, on episode 216 of this podcast. But this particular conversation
that I'm re-releasing today, it proves to be really popular with many of my regular listeners
who have no real interest in running a marathon. But it was also really popular with people who
have a love of group sporting events. This could be a marathon, but it could also really popular with people who have a love of group sporting events.
This could be a marathon, but it could also be your local park run.
And it turned out to be a conversation that so many people shared and spread with their communities.
Now, I want to be clear here.
This is not just a conversation about running.
I talked to the London Marathon event director, Hugh Brasher, about some concepts
that are really important for all of us. We talk about the importance of trying new things
and getting outside our comfort zone. We talk about the power of community, the magic that
happens when lots of people come together with a shared and common goal. Yes, we cover the history
behind the London Marathon.
I think you're going to be surprised if you don't know the history about the actual vision behind
it, its inspirational aims, and its objectives. We talk about personal goals, how important it is
for us not to get caught up in other people's stories, in their aspirations and their goals.
We talk about how we can all use physical activity as
a tool for life transformation. And really my hope in re-releasing this conversation
is that it inspires you to think about what you can do this year to get outside your own comfort
zone. Now, I hope that some of you might feel inspired at the end to go, yeah, you know what,
Now, I hope that some of you might feel inspired at the end to go, yeah, you know what? I'm going to go for it. I'm going to go for the 2023 London Marathon. If that is you, the ballot opens on
Saturday, the 1st of October. You can just go to the London Marathon website. It's super easy there.
I'm putting a link to that ballot in the episode notes of this conversation in your podcast app.
All you have to do is click on that. I know many of you last year who heard this conversation in your podcast app. So all you have to do is click on that.
And I know many of you last year who heard this conversation with Hugh entered and you got a
place. And in under a couple of weeks, you will be taking part in your first London Marathon. So for
those of you, good luck. But many of you also felt inspired to do other things, like join Park Run, or join a local
walking group, or something else that suits you and your life. So I'm really pleased to be
resharing this powerful conversation that at its core is about community, commitment,
coming together, and celebrating the human spirit. So here it is, my conversation
with Hugh Brasher. The London Marathon is and has been probably one of the main focuses for me for
this entire year. It's been there in the background for me. We'll get into the story of how that all happened later on. But you are in charge of the London Marathon.
And I'll be trying to sort of figure out what is it about this race that seems to have such
appeal for so many people. And literally a few hours ago, my cousin Bobby sent me a text. He said to me,
Rangan, the run is incredible.
Even before the run, strangers are saying good luck to you on the streets.
Underground drivers are doing the same on the tannoy.
This just shows you the buzz that you get before, during and after the run.
The atmosphere that I had on that day is not something I've ever found again since.
the atmosphere that I had on that day is not something I've ever found again since.
I will now say for sure, it's my favorite day of my entire life by some distance. If I had to redo one day again, I would choose it over any concert I've been to, any birthday and any holiday.
Wow. Yeah.
So why was I sent that text? What's so special about the London Marathon?
It, I mean, genuinely it, that description, how he's laid that out is for so many people,
that is so true. And why? I think it's because you will be floating, even though you're running
26.2 miles, you'll be floating on this incredible sea
of positivity where people as, you know, uh, total strangers are wishing you the best in the journey
that you're on those 26.2 miles. And we are lucky in life. If we get three or four people that
genuinely want us to be successful, But on that day, you will have
tens of thousands of people shouting your name, put it on your vest, put it on your t-shirt.
And, you know, we can't be Harry Kane at Wembley. We can't be Andy Murray at Wimbledon.
But on that day, you will feel like that when they're playing at their best and you will float,
like that when they're playing at their best and you will float if that is possible floating 26.2 miles but that that that is the feeling and the emotional the emotional connection that the crowd
the incredible crowd that come and support will give you i'm getting tingles just thinking about
it because as we speak as we record this what is it 12, what is it, 12 days?
Yeah, it's 12 days to go.
And a bit less than that, you will already be running at this moment in 12 days time.
So yeah, the final stage of the Odyssey will have started.
For people sort of listening now or watching this,
who maybe don't run and, you know, listen to this show for, let's say, health advice and inspiration. You know, why does the London Marathon matter? Why does it matter
beyond the 40, the 45,000 people who actually turn up and run it on the streets?
What goes on beyond that?
And why should everyone really care?
Look, it's a great question.
And again, there are just so many different answers to it.
But it is about inspiration. It's about inspiring people on their health journey,
be it their physical health journey
or their mental health journey.
And that latter piece, that mental health journey, be it their physical health journey or their mental health journey.
And that latter piece, that mental health journey, now more than ever over what we as a society or world has been through and is still going through, that is so important.
And when you break down running, it's incredibly simple.
It's just one step in front of another.
But you have control over whether you take that step or you don't take that step. And for each person, there's research going on at the moment that for each person that does the London Marathon, another 200 people have been inspired to take up that journey of positive physical and mental health so you've got this incredible community spirit coming together
um and and it is it's just like i say it's it's basically it's 40 000 people running on the
streets of london um but around them the biggest street party in the world is going on celebrating
those 40 000 slightly mad souls um doing this incredible thing, 26.2 miles.
It's not normal, but it's achievable if you put your mind to it. And that's, I think, the power
of what the London Marathon has become, which started with, you know, 1981, my father co-founded it with john disley at that stage it was mainly men it
was like only i think only 300 women just under 300 women out of 6 000 um just over 6 000 finishes
in the first event were women now it is a sea of humanity of everyday people
that statistic is pretty incredible for every one person who does the race,
200 others get inspired. What is that? Is that from watching on telly? Is that from
seeing people who look like them? I guess not the elite athletes say, oh, I guess that looks like a
regular mom just like me and she's doing it I mean what's going on
there how does it inspire people beyond that actual event so as you've said it's it's exactly
it's like because what you see is what you believe and therefore you see someone looking like you
doing the event you go well if they can do it can do it. But there's also a huge charity fundraising connection.
So about three quarters of the runners will be raising funds for charity,
but about 1.6 million people have donated to the people running.
So even though you've got 40,000 running,
you've got 1.6 million that have donated.
You've got 4 million watching on telly in the UK live, let alone those
that are following it up with, you know, sort of on demand. You've then got it transmitted in 196
countries around the world. And that incredible, it's the stories, it's the human stories that
make the London Marathon what it is. It's not the stories so much of the
elite athletes. They're amazing performances, incredible performances, but it's that connection
where people realize that actually that person is the same as me or that person has a story and I
have one that is different, but is motivating for me to go on that journey.
That text from my cousin that I mentioned,
the first part of that, which I didn't read out before, was him saying,
why did I first do it? I did it because I used to watch it every year on the BBC. I used to see it.
I thought it'd be great to do it. And it'd be great to say I've done the world's most famous
marathon. But he said, since he has done it, he said,
those reasons mean nothing anymore. I don't want to say that I've done it.
I just want to experience that day again. And I guess for someone like myself, who's
12 days out from my first marathon, reading that, hearing you talk, it gives me tingles.
I'm thinking well
yes it may be different this year uh because of what's been going on in the world
but i'm thinking what is you know maybe it's something that you can read about you can be
told about it but maybe it's something that you can't really quite get until you actually do it. And look, I'm going to love talking to you after the event
because it is, it's a feeling that however much I try and describe it, it's almost indescribable.
It is just that connection that you have with your fellow runner, with the people supporting you
who have been on this journey and your
connection with, with people that are supporting the fundraising. Um, so, and, and, you know,
I can't promise you that the last six miles will be feel as you're doing it, the most amazing
feeling. Um, but it's afterwards, it's like very often people cross the finish line and they're
just in tears. They're just gone through an emotional journey, remembering the reason that they ran, whether
it's for a loved one, whether it's for someone they lost, whether it's for themselves, whether
it's for their community, for whatever reason, it puts you in a place that actually is a
positive place to be.
And you've been through this journey.
And I would just say to your listeners,
it is indescribable,
but if you can, you know, anybody can do it.
And the feeling you will get, as Bobby said,
will live with you for the rest of your life.
Anybody can do it what you say. So
this morning, I've been asking people who I've come across in my life,
would you sign up for a marathon? Someone close to me said, no way. I don't see the point in
having to, I don't see the point in pushing my body to that extreme.
Someone else said to me, I don't have time to train.
I think at the school gate yesterday when someone said, oh, not long till the marathon now, Rangan.
I said, yeah, why don't you sign up for next year?
Rather you than me.
than me. So why is it that something that in your words anybody can do so many people think is unattainable and not for them? So I'm going to ask you a question back because if someone had
said to you two years ago before you've gone on the journey that you're going on was it for you
what would you have said? yeah that's a great question
Hugh um so let's rewind two years you know for some people a marathon's on their bucket list I
don't think it was for me like I honestly don't think it was for me and I think that's because
you know I would do the park run yeah um maybe every other week with my son you know so that's
5k it was fine no real problem although uh yeah there was a time when i was starting to get hammy
discomfort after two or three k um and so it's a good point what i probably would have thought
if i'm honest sounds good but god knows where i'm going to fit in this sort of time into my already
really busy life. If I do have spare time, I'd probably rather do something different.
How did it change for me? Yeah, that's going to be my next question. That's exactly how does it
feel now? So funnily enough, in the two weeks proceeding to when I found out, stroke agreed to do the marathon,
I was struggling with an injury actually. And I couldn't really do the park run. I was sort of
the 2K, my right hand, he kept going. And my third book had just come out, Feel Better in 5.
I was starting off a book promo in London for a week. And I was on the Chris Emmons Breakfast Show.
book promo in London for a week. And I was on the Chris Evans Breakfast Show.
And, you know, I grew up watching Chris on telly. So it was a bit of a pinch me moment, even though I'd been on the show before, it was still, you know, this is Chris's show.
And we just had a phenomenal conversation. Chris was talking to me for the first 10 minutes about
this podcast, and saying how it's changed his life and it's,
you know, everyone should listen to it. And I was thinking, this is Chris Evans talking about my show. I couldn't quite believe it at that time. Then we spoke about the book and things
were going great. I thought we were just winding up the interview. And Chris suddenly said,
and speaking of marathons, what do you say, Dr. Rangan Chastian, the London Marathon
2020, what do you think? And essentially, he challenged me on air. I think I sort of semi
said yes and said, well, I'm pretty sure I couldn't get a place now anyway, it's not long to go.
He goes, no, no, we've already got your place before the interview. So him and Vassos were looking at me and basically challenged me on air.
And I said, yes.
I don't think I quite realized it at that time that it was only about 12 weeks to go at that time, maybe 12 or 15 weeks.
Of course, the April 2021 ended up getting postponed.
Of course, the April 2021 ended up getting postponed. I know you ran a virtual event last year, but the actual in-person event is happening, I guess, almost 18 months a year,
a year and a half after that initial event, which for many reasons for me has worked out quite well.
But going back to that initial point, yeah, I probably would have said a similar thing or probably thought
I can't fit that in, but saying yes has transformed my life, right? Because saying yes
has taken me on a journey of self-discovery. I was going to do it in April, 2020. Like,
yes, it would have been tough, but I've got together
with a phenomenal running coach. He said, wrong, you can do it. It's going to be tough, but we can
get you rounds. Um, but since I've had longer and I'll be working with her, my body is moving more
efficiently than it's ever moved before. I've learned about my mental obstacles that happen
when things get tough. I've done
tough things in the past, but in a slightly different way, this is sort of showing up other
parts of my personality for me. So I actually thought a few months ago, I said to Helen,
who's my running coach, I said, Helen, even if this got cancelled, I am running a marathon on
Sunday, October the 3rd, 2021. I hope it's in London,
but if it ain't, I'm doing it somewhere because I'm ready in my head. It doesn't mean I feel I've
done enough training, let's be really clear. But in my head, I'm like, no, I am completing a marathon
in 2021. Yeah. And I mean, just when you say that bit about doesn't mean you're
necessarily ready as a first time runner. I think that's what everybody feels. I think
they get there and it's like the process you've gone through the training. I mean, yeah, you've,
you've had, I mean, what is incredible to say is on the day of the marathon, it will be 889 days
since the last in-person London marathon for the masses. It's quite
incredible. So it's two and a half years since April, 2019 to October, 2021, 889 days. I have
worked it out because you're looking at me like I've-
Well, I'm just saying, presumably that's the longest gap ever since it started, right?
Absolutely. Since the 29th of March, the first year, 29th of March, 1981. And then it moved to April in 1982. So there's never been that gap. And I
think that journey you've been on in terms of adapting over that time is a journey that so
many people will have shared with you and the ups and downs the disappointments that we've had through through this journey and then you know that's why i i really believe that the third of october um i mean
i don't know whether you watched the olympics and tokyo 2020 and the emotion that the athletes when
they came off the track were showing was profound it was deep um and even though they were competing without any crowd
just i think their relief that they had been able at the end of their four year or now five year
cycle being able to complete their event i think that's what people this is going to be the People's Olympics on the 3rd of October. And that
connection that people have with their own emotions and the journey they've been on,
I think it's going to be the most memorable London Marathon ever.
Wow, we've had some pretty incredible ones in the past.
Well, let's take it back to the start. I believe that the idea for the London Marathon
came about when your dad, I think, had a post-run drink in Richmond all the way back in 1978. So
tell me about that. What was going on at the time?
Yeah, my dad liked the pub. So in our house, it got called the station.
I have no idea why.
He was coming back from the station, but actually he was in the pub.
And the running club that he belonged to was called Ranla Harriers,
and their clubhouse was behind the pub.
And he was there one evening, and his clubmates came back,
and they'd just been to New York. And as you say, it was 1978 and they'd been to New York City
and they had run the New York City Marathon. And they were waxing lyrically about it, saying it was
the most amazing thing. My father had to go see what it was like. And I have to say, my father
thought, well, that's the worst thing I could possibly think of, running 26.2 miles on the road.
possibly think of running 26.2 miles on the road he loved the countryside he loved the mountains he's you know he would go out he might go out for three or four hours for a walk but the thought of
doing it on a rock hard pavement was the last thing he thought would be um would be a good
thing but he went there and he wrote movingly in the observererver in 1979 about that he had had an epiphany like Saul on the road to Damascus.
And, you know, my father had been Olympic gold medalist.
He had heard the crowd roar at Melbourne in 1956.
He'd, as a reporter, which is what he was, he'd been at so many
different sports events, the World Cup in 1966, but he said he'd never heard such a roar as the
roar of the crowd supporting 20,000 people in then the gun crime capital city of the world,
which New York was in 1979. And that feeling, he asked, he said he knew
that London had the course because John Disley, who co-founded it with my father, said it did.
But he said, did London have the heart and have the soul to welcome the world? And again,
the 3rd of October, we will show we do. And that Britain does. is just as I say I can't wait to speak to
you a few days afterwards and hear the journey and what you felt it was like. I mean hearing you
recount that story about your dad and you know the passion with which you speak. I always felt there was tears there, Hugh.
What does this event mean to you? Yeah, a huge amount. I mean, it's,
it's, it's, it's, it's his legacy. It's his and John Deasley's legacy. I mean, they were incredible people. You know, my father was the pacemaker to Sir Roger Bannister,
along with Chris Chataway.
And you see a picture of those three people and they were sort of pantheons of sport and what they did outside sport was quite incredible. Does it make me emotional? Yes. Because the London
Marathon has become what I call, and I believe is called, one of the crown jewels of British sport.
And if you look at the others, you talk about the FA Cup,
you talk about the Grand National, you talk about the boat race,
you talk about Wimbledon.
Firstly, everyday people can't do that.
They're all over 150 years old.
The London Marathon is 40 years old.
And it's that unique bit where you are starting on the same start line of the gods of the sport.
You know, whether it's the Elliot Kipchoge, whether it is Bridget Kosky, whether it's David Weir,
whether it's Shelley Woods, whether it's Manuela Schall, whoever, these incredible athletes who have been on the same
journey as you. And yeah, they might be running an awful lot quicker, but you just don't get that
in anything else. And I think how Britain has adopted this and it will be something like 40%
of the watching population will be watching, having the London marathon on
their TVs, which is incredible. That doesn't happen these days with Netflix and Amazon and all
the other, other channels, but people have just adopted it. And, um, yeah, it's, it's, yeah,
it's a real honor to be in the position I'm in and to be inspiring people to take up running, whatever age.
I'm passionate about kids taking up sport and just how it brings communities together and people together.
on the London Marathon website, your vision, your values, your aims are all there.
It says, one of the aims of the London Marathon is to show humanity that on occasions,
society can be united. I found that really interesting, particularly if we think about the state of the world today, which is very, very divided, a lot of polarisation. This would be going on for years,
even before the past 18 months that was going on. So why is it such a passion through this event
that you want to show humanity that society can be united? And also, why in those words did you put to show humanity that on occasion,
society can be united? Those two words, I thought were really interesting.
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So as you said, society is divided and that's wrong it is just there is no reason that we should be divided if we start to want to understand where someone else is coming from
where we want to listen to where they're coming from. And the marathon breaks down barriers, you know, 26.2 miles.
It's a long way.
And everyone on that day, it's what sport does actually.
It's incredible.
It's what sport does.
You realize that you are united in a purpose.
And I go back to kids and, you know, I've got an 8-year-old, an 11-year-old,
and I found out you have the same.
And, you know, mine did junior park run on Saturday,
and I think, you know, you're talking in the same way.
And if you can, you know, what sport does is it teaches you together you will be better.
It teaches you that together with surrounding yourself with great people, you will do great things.
But you also can't control everything.
And you can't control if someone is going to be better than you.
If you go for a job interview, for example, you can't control if the greatest person for a job is going to turn up,
but you can control whether you are well prepared for that interview,
whether you have done your research,
whether you turn up on time, whether you turn up relaxed,
whether you turn up having slept,
whether you turn up having eaten the right food,
whether you turn up on the top of your game.
And if someone turns up better than you, heck, you did your best. Some other time,
you will come out best. And that does go slightly away from what we've talked about in terms of
showing the family of humanity that on occasions it can be together, because the more occasions
that we make it happen, the more we break down those
barriers, the more that the world will realize that that's what we need to do going forward.
And, you know, these goals were put in by my father and John Disley.
Same ones, really?
Same ones. So there are a couple of extra ones that we've added, but that is one of,
we slightly changed the words. It was the family of mankind as opposed to humanity mankind is not now it's humankind or humanity so we've slightly
tweaked in terms of um uh the words but those that that and and the marathon's done that if you go to
to after the boston bombing tragedy and our event happened six days later. And people, you know, we had 30 seconds of silence on the start
line to show our togetherness with what was going on in New York at that time. And we will have
people from around the world, not all the countries will be able to join us on the 3rd of October
this year. But it's another reason we've put the event back to the 2nd of October 2022. So once again, we can welcome the world. And marathon, you know, we're part of
Abbott World Marathon Majors, Berlin, New York, Chicago, Boston, Tokyo. We genuinely want to try
and bring the world together. And it sounds a ridiculous statement. It really does.
the world together. And it sounds a ridiculous statement. It really does.
You know, it doesn't actually, you know, because as you were describing humanity,
division, togetherness, I kept going back in my mind to what you said about what's special about this event, that I will be running on the same bit of roads as some of the best runners
in the world. If Kipchoge didn't have the Olympics this year, I probably would be
running on the same pavement as Kipchoge. And I think that's incredibly powerful, actually,
because as you say, with other events, it can feel quite distant. Oh, that's a great spectacle to watch
from afar. Oh, wow. I love watching this. But actually, what can be more powerful at bringing
people together than actually, you know, existing, running, facing adversity, maybe at times,
facing adversity, maybe at times experiencing pain and suffering, but you're doing it on the same roads, on the same pavements, with the same crowds around you. I guess, of course,
I haven't experienced it yet myself. I cannot wait to. But in some ways, that shows that we're all
the same more than anything else. Exactly. That is exactly it. And I think you mentioned earlier that your wife,
your kids are coming to support and the conversations they'll get in with other
people who are supporting a loved one or just, you know, those conversations again,
will bring people together. So, and I think that the more we are connected with our feelings, the more where
we feel something together, that's what creates these incredibly powerful experiences that you
just don't get in life generally. And it is what we have missed more than ever in the last 18 months as we have been segregated, separated.
You know, our kids haven't been educated at school.
We haven't been able to meet our friends yet.
Together, we will be bringing people that outside is safe and it's going to be the most incredible experience and the feeling I hope you get. And I mean, one of the dangers if
we talk this up and then you come afterwards and you say, oh, gee, that really wasn't what I
expected. Well, I'm sure it possibly won't be what I expected. But you know, one thing I've
learned today over the past few years, I think is kind of just be more accepting. It will be
what it will be. As you say, and I've heard you say this
in other interviews, I saw this really gorgeous conversation you gave, I think, some colleges in
London to try and inspire, you know, I guess, teenagers and people in their early 20s about
going on in life. I thought it was absolutely fantastic. You could see the passion
and your desire to really help people. But, you know, one of the things you spoke about
there and you've spoken about already is focus on what you can control. Well, look, I can control
how much I train. I can control what I eat before and what I drink before. I can't control the
weather, right? I'd love it to be, you know, not too hot. I'd love it to be like blue skies and cool breeze behind me helping me.
But you know, it could be pouring down with rain. And if it does, it does. I can't imagine that
would, if I'm honest, in any way, change my enjoyment of the events. And I guess even if,
of the events. And I guess even if, I don't know, of course I'm hoping to complete the events.
I imagine each year, are there people who pull out and they're unable to, do you know what sort of percentage that is? Yeah. I mean, one of the slightly bizarre statistics is, so about each year,
about 450 people start, but don't finish. So about 450 people drop out on the route of
about 40,000 people. So you're playing around with about 1%, just over 1%.
And that sounds reasonable to me because it's hard. Although everyone can do it,
I actually do believe that everyone can do it. Actually, something may happen on the day. You
might sprain your ankle or an injury might flare up and
you might come to the point where actually you know what i could go through but i'm probably
gonna knacker my knee if i finish this and then not be able to walk for the rest of the year
so you know do you know what sort of people drop out and do you know sort of for what reasons they they often do it it is most often it is an
injury that they sustain um or an illness that they've picked up um that they didn't realize
and then as they're going through the day i mean we've done a huge amount of work this year for the
back of the pack runners um so we've got a party bus at the back um we've got a load of tail walkers
so people who are helping runners we've got supporters from
miles 16 to 24 to walk with people if they are um uh sort of really feeling the effects so we've
done a huge amount to support people on that journey because they've done a huge thing to
just to get to that start line that's's really exciting. First of all, I'm intrigued as to what goes down on the party bus.
But I'm fascinated that as a society,
and I'm super aware that you come from a family of high sporting pedigree.
Dad, an Olympic gold medalist.
I think your mum was a high-level tennis player.
Yeah, she won the French Open, both singles, mixed and doubles.
So understatement of the year that you come from a high-sporting pedigree family.
There's obviously a fascination with the elite in society.
We like to see how fast people can run.
We like to see who's the best tennis player or who's the best whatever.
But it strikes me that talking to you about the London Marathon, talking to my friends who've
done it or who aspire to do it at some point, it strikes me that in some ways there should be more
focus on the back of the pack. Because in some ways, they're the kind of everyday heroes. They're
the sort of, they're your neighbours. They're the people who don't have their own coach,
their own physio. They don't have infinite time to rest and chill after a long workout. They're
the ones who are squeezing that workout in around looking after kids, school run, job, shopping. Is this something that
you think has to change across the side? Do you think it's something that the
London Marathon has had to evolve over the years, this real focus on the back of the pack?
Yeah, I think, and actually, I think it's something, I mean, we've had a partnership
with the BBC since day one in terms of that's where the marathon has been on TV.
And if you think there's coverage pretty well over six hours live, yet the elite athletes are taking two hours and 30 minutes.
So two hours for the women and two hours, actually two hours 15, two hours 20, two hours 15, two hours 20 for the and and just over two hours for the men uh the elite
wheelchairs are about one hour 30 and one hour 40 so actually you've got you do have more coverage
of the everyday stories because those are the ones that actually inspire people and those are the
ones um where the marathon really connects with people going back to on a level.
I mean, the gods of the sport, amazing, but that's not us.
That's not who we can aspire many of us to be.
But actually just being the best that we can be,
doing something in memory of somebody else,
helping someone on that journey helping through fundraising that's things that we can do that's going to give us
a positive life experience and um that's i think you know positivity and being positive in life
that's what it's all about go out enjoy life and and the london
marathon even though you're on this journey of 26.2 miles it will feel at the end that you have
done something incredibly positive what does running a marathon teach someone about life? What doesn't it teach them about life? So I think, firstly, just one step at a time.
You know, we are in society, we tend to fear change. We tend to fear what might happen
change we tend to fear what might happen that is bad as opposed to actually looking at what might happen that is good and um you know i as you say come from a sporting background
my passion is actually motorbike racing that's what i do and um you don't look at the corner
you're always looking through the corner past the corner, past the corner, where you want to go.
Where you want to go is a safe place.
If you're looking at the corner, you're probably looking at the kitty litter.
You're looking at off track, you're going to end up off track.
So you've got to look where positively you want to go.
And so I think that what the marathon teaches you is, firstly, one a time it's a long journey um and there's
a chinese proverb proverb and i'm not going to get it right but uh just something like the journey
of a thousand miles starts with one step yeah and and that's what the marathon can teach you it can
teach you also surround yourself get information you've got a coach yeah now I mean where did you find your
coach from where did you get your coach from so look I'm incredibly lucky um and I want to
acknowledge that not everyone has got the resources to have a running coach and uh a time to put into
that um but but the honest truth is what happened is after I came out of the radio studio and got into the taxi
with Gareth who's there who's videoing the conversation at the moment
I was like what have I just done I've just said yes to do a marathon I can't run more than 2k
at the moment without my hammy going. And it's in April.
I was like, well, it's in April. That's not long to go at all. So I had work to do. I had to put
it on my mind, get on with the job. And I thought, okay, how am I going to do this? I've said I'm
going to do it. I would like to do it. And I caught up a chap called Gary, Gary Ward, who's been on the show
before. Gary is the guy who I really put down to someone who helped me pretty much get rid of my
back pain. I had 10 years of chronic back pain in my 20s. I was trying everything, you know,
physios, doctors, or, you know, basically all kinds of treatments.
Things would help for a bit, but I would never get to the root cause of the problem. And I knew,
you know, people say, oh, wrong and you're tall. It's just the way it is. I thought,
I just do not believe that just by being tall means I have to put up with debilitating back
pain for the rest of my life. And I've always been very inquisitive and curious. And I found this guy, Gary, who's incredible. I went on one of his
courses, I think was the first doctor to study his methods. And in a nutshell, he said, wrong,
your right foot is not working properly. If we can get that, you know, moving more efficiently,
I think that will help your back.
And literally five minutes of foot exercises a day. And my back was like 70, 80% better.
So what's that got to do with the marathon story? I phoned up Gary. I said, listen, mate,
you got to help me. I am meant to be doing this in a few weeks. He said, all right, come and see me.
Well, well, you know, let's see what we can do. Went to see Gary and he said, he left me a voice message a few days after and he said, Rangan, I know, especially over the past few years since you've
been on telly and with the podcast, you have got an incredible black book of people to call.
But I'm telling you, speak to Helen Hall. She's unbelievable. So I went down to see Helen with
Gary and that was the last January, 2020. Helen is one of the most incredible human beings I've
ever met. Not only is she got a way of looking at the entire human body, that's just incredible.
And I've seen a lot of
great coaches in my life. She is definitely in the top drawer of anyone I've come across.
She's getting my body moving more efficiently. And as I said, the marathon for me has been a
journey because I've been seeing her and talking to her regularly. She's now become one of my
closest friends. And together, she's helped me. There there's many things she's taught me if i'm
honest he one of the things that she's really helped me see is that your training has to fit
around your life and for me and i really want to sort of get this message out there to people
where possible that and and i wonder what your thoughts are on this because the marathon is a long way. So, you know, most people would think
it requires a huge amount of training, a lot of time out. I have to find this time from somewhere.
A lot of people are still training even when they're already knackered. And I actually think
there's another
way. Because when I say I haven't trained as much as I would have liked to, it's been a busy year
for a variety of reasons. Things have come up in work. My mum, she turned 81 a couple of weeks ago.
She's not really well. She's been falling a lot. My brother and I helped care for her.
And Helen's helped me realize that, Rongan, look, you can only train as
much as you can train. You can't fabricate time out of thin air. And she's helping me realize that
you can actually train for a marathon and also be kind to yourself. And I'm not sure that's
the common narrative. I think the common narrative is you have to punish yourself.
Even if you're exhausted, you have to still get those trainers on and go and push yourself i totally agree with you is in in a
simple phrase in the simple um answer you do not need to punish yourself and actually that's not a
positive thing to do um so you need to start recognizing when you're tired and adapt your
training and or not go training and then do it the
next day you'll you know on the journey that people the hardest bit i mean that you got the
first step but if you've not run before it's those first six or seven weeks that's the hardest bit
once you've got through those first six or seven weeks you're actually getting endorphins you're
getting a natural high from the fact that you're running and you're going to want to do it.
And actually, sometimes it can become compulsive and you've got to try and dampen that down.
Do it because it feels good.
You know, and going back to my father in 1981, he used to write an article in The Observer.
There was the Bracia way and there was the Hanscom way.
And the Hanscom way was like run miles and miles and miles. And my dad's way was much more
going to the mountains, have a bit of fun, do it sort of more infrequently, do it with a pint of
beer. And you'd have different people following on which way was better. And in the end, it's about
the individual. It's about what works for you. I think that's the key point, what works for you.
So this journey of self-discovery for me was really trying to figure out why am I actually doing this?
Am I doing it because I said yes?
I don't think I am.
I think the old Rangan, the younger, the less secure Rangan five, 10 years ago,
would have definitely done it because I said yes. And I remember when I posted about it on social media that day or the day after we posted the video of Chris asking me.
And a lot of my followers said, Rangan, don't do it just because I said yes. You should talk
to your wife. It's going to be a huge amount of training, a lot of time out of your family, all this kind of stuff. And it was
amazing to see their concern. But it hasn't really been like that. The truth is, and I wonder what
your view on this is, especially because you come from a competitive family. Well, I assume a competitive family from the achievements of your mum and dads.
I think my identity used to be, it used to come from external achievements.
So, oh, if I did this, it would help support my self-worth. It would make me feel
artificially good. So in the past, if I said yes, I was going to come hell or high water,
I would have done that event and completed it, even if it broke me. But the Rangan of 2021,
I would like to think is very different. If I honestly thought that
doing that event would break me or give me a knee injury, I would have pulled out. I would have said,
hey, you know what? I said yes, but you know what? Genuinely, I can't fit it into my life.
Because I've had longer, I've realized, and Helen has been hugely influential on me throughout this
journey, that you don't have
to beat yourself up. She said very much similar to you. She says, what humans are good at is putting
one foot after the other. Humans can always keep going. It's what we do best. And whenever I
struggle, I always think about it. And she says, Ronan, if the distance is long enough, you will
come out of your funk. You know, walk. You may not feel good if the distance is long enough, you will come out of your funk,
you know, walk. You may not feel good, just walk for a bit and you will come out the other side.
So instead of thinking, oh, I'm done now, just walk and you'll probably find you feel different.
So I guess I'm getting quite emotional thinking about this, but I have been on this process of really understanding my body better over the past 18 months.
I feel what I've learned with Helen and on this journey to do the marathon, it's going
to help me in every aspect of my life.
It's going to help me walk better.
If I play golf, I'm going to golf better.
It's going to help me have more mobility in all my joints.
better. It's going to help me have more mobility in all my joints. So actually for me, a week on Sunday, in some ways it's the culmination of all that self-discovery, but it doesn't stop there.
Right. It doesn't stop there. It's not as if that's the end destination for me. No,
I'm not going to suddenly stop running a week on Sunday and go, oh, cool, that's done now. Let me get back to my life now. I'm already thinking about the marathon
year after. If I'm honest, I'm already thinking, oh, what about the London Marathon next year?
What about ultras? I'm already starting to think beyond it. And I want to ask you, Hugh, because
last year was obviously a very difficult year. You had to cancel the event. I remember in the
summer, July, August time, I remember there was quite a lot of animosity on Twitter saying,
you've got to let us know. We've got to know, you know, am I to keep training? Do I stop?
What was that like for you and your team when you were getting that animosity? Because I imagine
behind the scenes, it was very, very hard to know, could you put this event on? But then also, what does that teach us? I understand
people want to know. But if we're really focusing on this as a process, a journey rather than
a destination, in some ways you could argue, it doesn't matter whether the event is happening or not.
Do you know what I'm getting at? Of course it matters. But do some of us get too entrapped
in thinking it's, of course it's a great event, but I don't think it's just about the event. It's
what it teaches you along the way and beyond. And look, you've said a lot of pretty profound
things there. And, um, you know, how did it feel when we were getting the criticism? Um,
you know, just tell us what's going on. It felt difficult. Um, but we had, uh, we had knowledge
that we were trying to do the right thing and that we were doing the right thing,
that we were working with London authorities. I mean, putting the London Marathon on, it's going through five London boroughs plus the city. It's in the Royal Parks. You've got the BBC. You've
got the mayor's office. You've got Transport for London. You've got a myriad of different private
landowners, be it Canary Wharf, Tower Hotel. You've got so many different people that
you are speaking to who help you and who need to be allowing you for that marathon to go on.
And so we were trying to give people as much information that we could. And we were dealing with so many different scenarios that
we had planned. And yes, it didn't happen. But I agree with you. It's about, you can, as an
individual, you can focus on, well, it's just about that one day. And I agree with you, it shouldn't
be about that one day. That one day is going to be incredible but life is should never be about one day life should be about um every day it should be about
the journey it should be about I mean one of the things I want to ask you how do your kids now feel
you know it's coming up with 12 days to go. What are they saying to you, dad? What's happening? What are they saying?
Before we get back to this week's episode, I just wanted to let you know that I am doing my
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chatterjee.com forward slash tour. I can't wait to see you there. This episode is also brought to you by the Three Question Journal, the journal that I designed and created in partnership with
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out, all you have to do is go to drchatterjee.com forward slash journal or click on the link
in your podcast app. I mean, they're excited. They can't wait. They want to come down. They
want to watch. I said, Daddy, will we be able to see you? You know, you're pretty tall. I'm like,
hey kids, you know, I'm'm tall but there's gonna be a lot
of people around i don't know they're just really excited and can i just say that's part of the
that's part of this wider sort of sphere that what you're doing and what you're doing talking
about it here with you know you've already said 650,000 people listening every week.
And the journey that you're going on and what's happened and the ups and downs of it, but actually the process.
And, you know, you're inspiring your kids, you're inspiring people listening to this.
That's just the most incredible thing to be doing.
And hopefully that, again, fills your heart with just incredible joy
yeah it does you know seeing the excitement on the kids faces i know that will matter you know
if as people say at some point in the race when your mind is saying you should stop you can't go on
yes i'll i'll i'll draw my internal resources
i've been doing a lot a lot of thinking about this marathon you should probably tell and i
guess a lot of it's coming out of the moment because you're here
but i'm gonna finish that marathon i can see that i can see
that in your head i can see it as you and you you i can see your i'm not gonna finish it
at the expense of everything else if something happened that i thought i was gonna
you know bust my knee if i continue okay i'm not gonna be stupid i will
you know pull myself off the course and go okay it wasn't meant to be this year yep but but what's really helped me and i did an instagram post on this which people
really liked about a week and a half ago maybe we can talk about it is i've got clear on my goals
not other people's goals not the newspaper's goals, not what people write about and running magazines goals. That's
all fine. But I really wasn't with my goals. And I've done a bit of self-inquiry as to what do I
want out of the marathon? So I've got four goals in my head, which are unique and personal to me.
It doesn't mean no one else can have them. It just means these are my goals. I want to do it
mostly nasal breathing because I've been studying a lot of nasal
breathing i've spoken about it a lot on the show i know what it does to our body physiologically
it will keep me in the aerobic zone there's all kinds of reasons so i'm going to see if i can do
that i want to finish with a smile on my face which i'm sure i hope everyone can do or aspires to do.
I want to do it in my Vivo Barefoot Minimalist shoes because I've been wearing barefoot shoes for eight, maybe even nine years now. I really like feeling connected to the ground.
I'm not advocating people go and suddenly do that. Just to be really clear, I've been wearing
these kinds of shoes for a long time. Yes, it means I don't have any cushioning but I've been learning to run this way so for me
that's something I want to do and the fourth thing is I didn't want the training to not allow me to
do my job that I love or spend time in my family the way I want to. And it really hasn't.
And that's what I'm really, really proud of. It's not gotten in the way of my work. I'm not saying
everyone can do that. I've just been very, I think I've trained smart. And again, I will give huge
homage to my coach for helping me. I think she goes wrong and look, I wouldn't run this week.
You've got too much on. Your
bucket's full. You're going to put more strain on your body. So I feel, I don't know if I'll
manage to meet all those four goals. I'd like to think I'll finish with a smile on my face.
Even if I'm crying inside, I'm sure I can put on a smile for the ends but the point i'm trying to make you is that people ask you what time you're going for
this has been really hard for me because i've always been really competitive and i don't think
it came from a good place in the past if i look at those four goals which one of those four have
got a time at the end of it? None.
So this has been a real struggle with me because part of me wants to look at the time,
but part of me is also going,
Rangan, that's a narrative you've grown up with
since you were a kid,
that your time matters,
that it's important.
It says something about who you are.
But I've come to the realization a few months ago,
my wife and my kids do not care one jot. If I do that marathon in two and a half hours
or six and a half hours, they will not love me even 1% less. It doesn't change my ability to
do my job the day after. And I think why I'm so passionate about
getting this message out there, Hugh, is because I really so strongly feel that many of us walk
around and we absorb other people's goals and we think they're ours, but they're not. And therefore
we're trying to live up to something that's not ours. You can't compare yourself to Elliot Kipchoge.
A, he's one of the most talented athletes compare yourself to Elliot Kipchoge. A,
he's one of the most talented athletes probably ever to walk the earth, but he's a professional athlete. He can run, he can get coaching, he can rest when he needs to rest, right? And I feel,
what do you think about a focus on times? Because I'm not saying it's always wrong,
because for some people, it's a great motivation tool for them. But when you look at that time, let's say four hours, 4.30, five hours,
it doesn't tell you anything else about that person's life. Was that person running a marathon
in five hours, and they were single, and they were in really good health and they had nothing else to do apart
from work and train or were they a single mum working two jobs also caring for a relative
and actually just getting on that start line was one of the most incredible things they've ever
done you know it doesn't tell that story and and that's why i'm so keen to try and get this message
out that you can do it, but do it your way.
And look, I, again, I think that's just such a great life lesson, which is we do absorb so much
pressure from external and have to live up to, you know, you talked about my father, my mother,
do I have to live up to that or people, you know, what their friends have said that they should do
or what somebody else did.
No, I mean, that's the great thing about the marathon being such a leveler. And, you know,
just have that inner strength, have that belief in yourself. And that, you know, you can, as your
coaches said, finish it. And by the the way anyone can have a coach by joining
a running club so in reality that accessibility might not be as good as your coach but they
absolutely can do that so they can go on the internet they can research stuff so it it you
know i'm not criticizing people for trying to run a time i I'm just going, there's enough pressure on society, full stop for us
at the moment. I mean, just ridiculous amounts at the moment. So it's one of the reasons in terms
of the virtual event that we did in 2020 and the fact that it is incredible. There'll be 40,000
people on the road from Greenwich to Westminster, but there'll be another 40,000 doing the 26.2 miles in their community, doing the virtual event their way in 23 hours. They've
got 23 hours, 59 minutes and 59 seconds to do it in. And that again, for me, just makes the marathon
even more powerful, even more helpful, even more inspirational.
And it just takes away the pressure for so many people where they've got crowds.
Some people get agoraphobia.
They don't want to, or claustrophobia.
There are too many people around them for whatever reason,
but they could do it their way.
And I love the fact that we are together we run is what we're doing doing both virtually and on the event on the day from Greenwich to Westminster.
One of the most incredible things I think for people watching the London Marathon is the variety of people taking part, the different shapes, the different ages, the different sizes.
shapes, the different ages, the different sizes. And I think that's what's incredibly special about the event. We're going to put this podcast out just a few days before the ballot opens
for 2022. So for people who are thinking, all right, I'm thinking about it. I hear what you guys are saying,
but it's still not sure whether they should put their names down in that ballot.
What would you say to them? Just do it. It's as simple as that. I think it's the first step,
going back to what we talked about, the first step. If you take that first step and put your
name in, you might get a place. And if you do get a place, then you've got to go now. I've got,
you know, people will find out at the end of January, beginning of February, 2022.
What a great way. You've then got another nine months with which to ease yourself in to the fact you're then going to be running that 26.2
miles in October. So, and that's a journey that you'll go on. And as you say, it does not have
to be pressurized. It can be that you're going to start walking a mile. That's what you're going to
do. That's your first thing that you're going to try and do is walk a mile or walk half a mile. That's what you're going to do. That's your first thing that you're going to try and do is walk a mile or walk half a mile. But it's that, you know, we know that if you have an event
at the end, if you've set yourself a target to complete it, not in a time, just to complete it,
then you are much more likely to do it and then try and find somebody else. I mean,
Chris Evans got you involved. And that's what I love.
Chris is just so enthusiastic.
Him and Vassos and how many people they're getting involved
to get that realization that it is accessible
if you put your mind to it.
It's about comfort zones, isn't it?
It's about putting yourself outside that comfort zone
to see what happens.
And speaking as someone who feels incredibly grateful to have a place, because my cousin got a place in 2018.
He's not got in on the ballot since.
He's just each year waiting and waiting to see.
He wants to experience that again.
And I know how lucky and fortunate I have been to be given a place.
So I do not take that for granted.
But I'm so glad Kristen Vassos challenged me because had she not,
I would not have been on this voyage of self-discovery.
But I had to say yes.
I had to have that date on the calendar.
And then I had to learn around it.
And I think that's the power, isn't it? You know, put your name on the bar, you may not get it,
but if you do, then suddenly you've got to ask yourself a few questions.
Yeah. And I mean, you probably, you know, in terms of, I know you talk about this a lot in terms of the importance of sleep, the importance of the right food and nutrition but again these are all things that on the on the journey you're on you'll sort of realize
because you'll feel the difference when you're running you'll feel the difference in your legs
and your muscles and it is then just about looking after yourself holistically and you will end up in
a much healthier place i believe at the end of that journey.
You have something called the Spirit of London Marathon Awards.
And I'm interested as to what they are.
And what are some of your most memorable stories from the marathon? Yeah, I think, you know, we've talked a lot about the feeling of running that 26.2 miles and the spirit of the
london marathon is about people that have really shown that feeling have had a have done something
that is connected with the world with britain um and you know, it really is just incredible, just some of those stories
where people have, you know, their story has blown up. So an example would be in 2017, I think it was
the Duke and the Duchess of Cambridge and Prince Harry talked about,
I mean, the marathon became the mental health marathon. It was, they took 12 people with mental
health issues and they were followed on a TV program on this journey that they went on.
that they went on. And there was one particular woman who, her story was just quite incredible. She had lost her baby aged one and five days later, her husband had then committed suicide.
And she unbelievably felt she wasn't worthy of anyone's love.
She didn't feel connected to the world.
And the journey that she went on in terms of building up her confidence through running that 26.2 miles, the story that got told was quite incredible.
And that is Rhian Burke.
That story that was shown on TV and the spirit that she showed, showed the true spirit of the London
Marathon. And, you know, I feel incredibly proud that the London Marathon was the end vehicle for
that campaign of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge and Prince Harry about mental health, something
that we as a society didn't talk about.
You know, it was very easy to understand if someone had a physical health issue,
you've got a broken arm or you're limping or you've got a bandage,
but to understand mental health and how they have changed society in that way
and that the marathon was part of it.
And this, you know, the spirit of london marathon is about
that it's about um you know just the first winners if you go to dick bids leaning simmonson who you
know you know these were the elite runners and they finished that first london marathon hand in hand
um and talk about setting the marathon off in a way that you couldn't possibly have written i mean
if someone had said that these runners the best runners in the world are going to
duke it out over the roads of London and then finish hand in hand.
But there are just incredible stories every year.
And the spirit of the London Marathon is where people are brought together.
You know, whether it's Michael Watson, who the boxer and he did it in eight days.
I think it was in 2003, the same year that Paula Radcliffe broke the world record.
There are just these stories.
It's worth your listeners just looking them up because they're moving stories and they
are the reasons that people ran and the journey that they went on.
And I believe that the marathon for each one of
them has helped them on that journey i mean it's incredible to hear these stories these individual
stories i guess there's going to be 40 000 stories each year right because each individual
whether it's their first marathon or their 20th marathon,
there's something about that distance, I'm sure, that teaches you something new every time.
Because each day is different. You will have slept differently coming up to it. You will have
eaten differently. Your life circumstances will be different. And therefore, the you that shows up will also be slightly different each time. And so it's
incredible to hear that. And as you were saying that, it made me think that when your father
thought about the event, co-founded this event in the late 1970s or early 1980s, a long time ago,
mental health would not have been on anyone's agenda, whether it's for a physical activity race,
whether it's in society. I guess back then, the view would have been a marathon is about physical health whereas these days we're
discovering that arguably more important than that is its effects on our mental health yeah
i mean i think you know that you absolutely that you know they absolutely never thought about it
in 1981 i mean my father died in 2003 they certainly
weren't even thinking about it in 2001 um so that really as i said only happened from 2017
but also i don't think that the you know we have gone through 1 billion pounds having been raised
by the runners for good causes having run the london marathon one billion pounds. And I don't think he and John, I mean,
John died a lot, a lot later than my father. But I mean, they, John knew that we were getting to
the billion. And he was immensely proud of it. But my father would never have thought of that was,
was possible. So I think it's just grown in this incredible way that the community has, you know, Britain and the world has helped it to grow.
I mean, it's an incredible statistic that to think that this event has raised more than £1 billion.
That really answers one of my first questions, which is why should we care about the London Marathon?
You know, why does it matter more than just those 40,000 people who are on their own journeys on that particular day.
And I think that's quite clearly there, shows the societal relevance. But what happened there?
Because there was no thought towards mental health when it first started. There was no
thought from what I understand to charity when it first started. So what happened? At what point did the
London Marathon start to become associated with charities? Was it from the crowd? Was it an
individual? Or was it from the organisation itself? So it actually came about because
trying to get businesses to enter the London Marathons. There were some bonds created by Dave
Bedford, who was a previous race director, and they were bonds for businesses to get guaranteed
places. And for whatever reason, businesses didn't decide that was the right thing that they wanted
to do, but charities did. And they sort of, I think, amplified something that, again,
is just a uniquely British thing, which is sort of the fancy dress piece. I mean,
you might be smiling. I'm really hoping you are smiling as you come down that finish tray,
but be very careful. Do have a quick look around about who else is around you,
because one of my favorite memories, think um uh was uh i think
it was andrew strauss running the london marathon and uh a full gorilla um out sprinted him down the
finish line this guy dressed in a full uh gorilla suit and this is why it's such a leveler it's like
you know one of the greatest cricketers in the world and then this this guy obviously was absolutely
all out.
I think Andrew was just sort of sauntering to the finish line.
This gorilla comes shooting past him.
So his finish photo was probably Andrew Strauss
with a gorilla next to him.
So I think there have been so many things that have happened.
Like when we talk about the virtual, the marathon,
it's like the fact that we believe that we'll have something like 80,000 people
around the world, both in their own communities and on those roads from Greenwich to Westminster
doing it. That's an incredible thing that we could not have imagined in 2019, that that's
what we'd be saying is happening the next time the full London
marathon happens, 889 days later.
We would not have imagined it.
So I think what we've been quite good, the team has been great at doing is developing,
listening and developing the event.
And it is the most popular marathon on the planet.
developing the event and it is the most popular marathon on the planet 450 000 people applied in 19 in 2019 for the 2020 event how many applied for it was actually for i think it was 456 000
people from um applied in six days to do it to do the 2020 actual london marathon the one that
didn't actually um happen um nearly half a million
people applied for 40 000 places how many applied for this year
oh uh some more amounts it wasn't as many because we didn't have the in 2020 we didn't have
um you know people doing the actual in-person event and i think it's it it's that bit where you
get the connection the humankind coming together where you know that's what it inspires people so
much what do you do about that as an organization because as awareness keeps growing year on year
as people i guess the learnings of the past two years or so, you know, we've all learned things about ourselves,
about what makes us tick, what do we miss when society shuts down, you know, what are the things
we truly value in life. And if more and more people think, yeah, I want to come together
as a community, I want to be on those iconicondon streets putting one foot in front of the other
you're already struggling to meet demands with nearly half a million people applying so what
happens as more and more people enter that balance there's going to be more and more disappointed
people and and look it is a very it's a it's both a great position to be in but a difficult position
to be in um and i think you know we do say there are other marathons other than London.
And there are some great other ones in the UK in terms of the Manchester Marathon,
the Brighton Marathon, Edinburgh Marathon.
And it isn't just about marathons.
It is just about, you know, you've talked about Park Run.
Yeah.
Well, I see a lot of similar.
talked about parkrun yeah um and well i see a lot of similar as you talk about the marathon you talk about you know the back of you know that the back of the pack the bus there the tail
walkers i've heard you talk about volunteers before which we'll maybe get onto next i'm hearing
a lot of similarities to parkrun i mean yes i don't know whether you've had paul cinton hewitt
um and interviewed him who founded parkrun i'm not at paul yet i've had nick the ceo of parkrun
nick pearson yeah excellent which was great yeah so and still i remember one of the most
impactful things he said to me on that podcast was park run is a social intervention masquerading as a running event. Yep. Or something
to that effect. And that has stayed with me. Yep. And, um, you know, I'm proud of the journey. I
was a director of park run in its early stages. Right. Um, and before you took the job on the marathon yes um before i took the job at the marathon
um and um uh i started one on christmas day in in about 2007 or something so it's the bushy park
and and then i think there were maybe three at the time there was bushy park Wimbledon, and one other. And I do remember saying that this will be seen as even more important than the London
Marathon.
And that's a pretty bold statement to make, especially in the position that I'm in.
But it is that community.
It is the fact that they are going on every day in communities around now the world.
What Paul has done, what Nick is doing, what Tom Williams is doing, what that team is doing
is quite incredible to get people on that journey, those first footsteps.
And it is, you know, it's like you talk about the back of the pack when we had our back of the pack issue, which is we let down the runners at the back.
And those are the runners that we're actually trying. Those are the people who are participating
that we're trying to inspire the people that this is not normal to do 26.2 miles. So how can we
genuinely create an amazing atmosphere for them? And that's what we're hoping to do with the party bus, with the tail walkers.
But yeah, parkrun is quite incredible.
And I just think that we link together in a lovely way.
I agree.
I mean, for me, it's not about which is the most impactful. I think they're both doing incredible things in their own way. You know, Parkrun has been transformative in my own family life. You know, it's something we've used to at least collectively do at the weekends together.
I know as a doctor, I've got many patients whose lives have been transformed by parkrun,
not only those who want to run it. I've got many case studies that I think about in my head now of people who I encourage to go and volunteer. And the volunteering was transformative for their
mental health. How important are volunteers to, I guess, all sporting events,
but in particular the marathon?
Yeah, I mean, quite simply,
they couldn't happen without volunteers.
We will have about 4,500 volunteers around the route.
And again, people come back year on year.
It is quite incredible because as you say the
benefit that you can get how you're helping other people the benefit you get just by giving your
time um and your positivity to helping someone just direct them in one place or helping them
on the route giving them jelly babies i mean that's probably one thing that depending how your nutrition strategy goes on the day,
you might well be. I'd always remember one year and I really hadn't done the training and I knew
it wasn't going to go very well. And basically from the last six miles, I was stopping and eating
jelly babies, crisps, cheese sandwiches, you name it, anything.
I was just shoving in my face because I'd hit the wall.
And but yeah, the volunteers are the lifeblood of the event. And as you say, whether it's that happens in London 2012 and the Olympics, our volunteers were just absolutely incredible.
And that's what made the Olympics so much,
was the volunteers, the crowd.
It's these people.
It's not, I mean, yeah, you're incredible running on those,
one of 40,000, but it's that you're bringing other people together
to experience that incredible high.
That's what makes it such an amazing day.
You get runners who come year on year uh i know there's
some stories i think there's is it 11 people who've done every single one the last time in
part of my research this conversation i was like 11 people every single one that's incredible
do you get volunteers who keep coming back each year and want to volunteer
every event or is it kind of fresh new blood every year or are there
some sort of stalwarts who are always there and it's part of who they are it it is actually both
and i mean one of the big things that we're also trying to do is is is make the marathon more
diverse um bring more communities into it you you spoke earlier about a um a single mum who's holding down two jobs
and uh who's got a couple of kids and she's managing to do the marathon
those are incredible stories and we need to make more of them yeah i agree those are the stories i think that for those people who go
i'd rather you than me mates um why would i do a marathon i ain't got time for that
i think those are the stories that will inspire more and more people i guess from more and more
diverse backgrounds as well i mean what's that like for the marathon? Do you have a flavour of, obviously London is an incredibly
diverse city. Running, I think in the past might have been seen by some, which is quite ironic,
given if we look at who's dominating, you know, running, whether it's sprinting or long distance
running in the world in terms of which countries they come from. But many people, I guess, in the past might have thought of it as more of a white middle class sport running.
Is that something that the marathon had to contend with?
Is that something you've actively had to go and go, no, we need to get more diversity?
Or is that something you've always managed to attract?
So mass participation sports events, you're absolutely right. Generally
are middle class and more white. And do we need to do something about it? Yes. And that actually
is one of the huge things that we're trying to change at the moment. How can you genuinely make
a sport that is incredibly accessible in the sense that you can do it from
your front door most people own a pair of trainers most people own a t-shirt so actually you can go
out in a t-shirt pair of leggings running shoes but how can you genuinely going back to that
single parent if they're looking after the kids who else is going to look after the kids? How can you really make it something that truly becomes accessible to the whole of society? And we're on a journey at the moment. And we have some great members of the team who are going out into different communities.
going out into different communities.
And this goes across, it's not just running,
it is cycling, it is swimming.
I mean, we just put on last weekend,
we had an event called Swim Serpentine.
Linford Christie has just learned to swim.
And there he was with Linford Christie.
We had Minnie Driver.
I mean, you couldn't get two amazing celebrities,
but Minnie was used to swimming.
She swims in the Pacific, she was saying,
but Linford's just learned. And there he was, 1992 Olympic gold medalist, having just learned to swim swims in the Pacific, she was saying, but lymphos just learn. And what, you know, there he was 1992 Olympic gold medalist having just learned to swim in
the Serpentine. So we need to do that for the London Marathon. And there's a lot of work that
we're doing going out into communities to change the circumstances that exist at the moment.
It's interesting. You said earlier on something like what you see is so important.
The idea that what you see in front of you in many ways defines what you think is possible.
I know as a parent it's something I'm very aware of, particularly when I think about
my kids and the opportunities they're being exposed to, comparing it to my own upbringing.
Then you think about diversity and yes, my dad was a doctor, so there was certain privileges afforded through that. But we were an immigrant family to the UK. If I think about my upbringing,
one of the reasons I'm so drawn to nature now is because
nature didn't play a part of my childhood. You know, mum and dad came from India here to give
their family a better life. It was about do well at school. That's how you get ahead. That's how
you get a secure job and you can look after your family. There was no talk about getting out of
nature to relax and for your mental health. There was no talk of going for a run at the weekend or, you know, I didn't see my mum and dad go running or
putting their running gear on. So it sounds so almost trivial, almost trite saying it like this,
but it just didn't really feature for me. so in some ways you you don't feel those events
are for you yeah yeah because you don't see it around you exactly and if i compare that to my
kids of course they're seeing us do parkrun they're going to see daddy do a marathon and so hopefully
their idea of what's normal is going to be completely different.
So you say your team's working on this. Is it working? Are things changing? Do you know any
of these diversity splits at all? Yeah, I do. I do know an awful lot of statistics on it. And
London is the most incredible city in terms of diversity, which is 40%. And this is the last census,
2011. The new census for 2021 hasn't come out. London had about a 41% ethnic community diversity
in terms of the London Marathon. Where do we sit at the moment? Around about 10%.
Now that's wrong. So what are we doing? We started an event called the Vitality Big Half.
what are we doing? We started an event called the Vitality Big Half. And that is actually,
it has real targets in terms of community entries, going into running crews,
going into different groups and inspiring activity. Because going back to this bit,
if you do not see it, you do not believe it. And, you know, I know I come from unbelievable privilege, right?
Unbelievable privilege.
And what actually motivates me is to take that privilege and do something positive with it.
And that's what the London Marathon can do.
I had an incredible meeting last week with a school, Art Global Academy in Southwark. And the teachers there, the commitment that they had to the kids who,
in lockdown, so few of them had computers to be able to have online learning. They didn't have
a table where they lived, right? The only table they had
is the desk at the school. And they were recounting to me the trauma of the mental health
that is now happening for school kids that had no issues before from the last 18 months,
whereas the ones that had issue, it's become off the scale and yet through sport through
activity through helping people to control some part of their life through sport if we can make
it accessible it will help and we have to change society and make it more equal. And we have to change the London Marathon to be more inclusive.
Yeah, that would be amazing.
I know there's anything at all I can do to help with that.
You doing it is helping.
I mean, your heritage, as you said, you're a tall man.
I don't know how tall you are.
I'm going to guess about 6'4".
6'6 1⁄2". 6'6 1⁄2", wow. advantage um as you said you're a tall man i don't know how tall you are i'm going to guess about six four six six and a half six six no wow um uh not the typical marathon runner's heights not the
typical no absolutely not uh yes that's definitely not i think they say the ideal marathon runner's
heart is about about a foot smaller than you for the idea um but um and again i think this is about partnerships how can we genuinely break down
these barriers and you know go back to what the london marathon was in 1981 less than five percent
of the finishers were women now it's 45 it will soon be 50 it has a power to help change society. And we need to use that privilege to kickstart a really important part of, again, bringing humanity together. most about you Hugh when researching this conversation was your passion
but also your incredible I think honesty and humility because you say yeah you may have had
a privileged start in life but you're also very open about where the marathon currently is and where you want it to get to.
And whether you admire and respect that, because it'd be easy to, I think, to hide from that and not be so open about that.
But I think it's really powerful because, you know, nothing is born perfect. Everything requires work. On a human level,
no change ever occurs until there's awareness. We need to be honest, we need to have self-awareness
and only then can we take the steps to actually make change. And it's no different from an organization like yours
that without the honesty and self-awareness,
there's no way you can change and make it more diverse.
But what would your dream be, I guess,
where in 2021 now, let's fast forward to 2030,
what would you like to see for the Londonondon marathon at the end of the decade
uh look it's a great question we and and i'm very sort of data focused and um
uh so what do i want to see by 2030 so i have, and this is what the team, so firstly, a vision for a kid's
event the day before the marathon with 50,000 school kids running the last 2.6 miles of the
marathon, where every school kid is getting paid for coming to the marathon.
And that money is going towards computers
or sports equipment for their schools.
And that these schools are,
so kids are being rewarded for running that 2.6,
not having to pay anything,
they're actually getting rewarded for doing it.
And I want to see that the marathon has helped this happen in cities around Great Britain
and that the London Marathon, we already as a team have an incredible head of schools,
a guy called Ben Cooper, who is trying to get the Daily Mile in London schools. And I believe we should be getting that happening in
every school in Britain, that our kids are having that 15 minutes of exercise every single day.
And, you know, you take your kids to park run. I take my kids to park run. But again, that's a privilege that we have and we are able to do. We need to get, you know, there's some terrible statistics. One in 10 of our school kids go into primary school obese. One in five come out obese.
One in five come out obese.
So whatever's going on with the education system, whatever is going on with the health of our nation, we are going, walking into a time bomb of ill health, of bad mental health, of bad physical health.
And if we can together, and thank you for saying you would like to help us on the
journey, because I will come back to that, I promise you. We can together, if we really work,
we need to get government to start going. It is not acceptable that that's how society has allowed to happen. We need to make some positive change.
And yeah, what do I want to see?
A London Marathon that truly represents London's amazing or Britain's amazing diversity.
Because it is not just about London.
It really isn't.
This is Britain's marathon.
It is the world's marathon.
But we need to really inspire
all communities to get involved. It's pretty inspiring thinking about that.
And I guess by articulating it and by putting it out there, it opens up the possibility
for actually that to happen. I mean, I'm an optimist, although it's
hard sometimes to maintain that optimism. I would like to think that that is possible when you have
a good team, a great desire, a great focus, a great goal, like a clear goal, what you're aiming for.
Just to sort of go to a slightly different area. One thing that's
fascinating for me is that the Beresha family, yourself and your dad, have been involved with
two of the most important athletic feats in human history. So Roger Bannister running the four minute mile, showing people for the very
first time that a human being can complete a mile in under four minutes. Your dad was one of the
pacers and you have been involved as well, haven't you? I think with your team in Elliot Kipchoge's
successful attempt to break two hours. So talk to me a little bit about that.
What can we learn from you Roger Bannisters, from you Elliot Kipchoge's who are smashing through
previously thought limits on human potential? Oh, I think we can learn an enormous amount
from each of them in different ways and
i mean just yes we're talking about running but i mean just bring in emma raducanu and what she did
um in the u.s open um with such joy on her face um and such positivity and um sort of this bit where elliot talked about no human is limited and um
that's what you want to go back to to roger bannister it was deemed to be physiologically
impossible for someone to run under four minutes for a mile back in 19 back back in, in it for nine years between 1945 to 1954, it had been, that's
10 years.
So 1946 to 1954, it had been deemed physiologically impossible to run under, um, four minutes
for a mile.
And there he was training as a doctor.
Now, uh, so he was training as a junior doctor and you will know firsthand how difficult that is.
And he goes out and does something that is said to be physiologically impossible.
And it goes back to he managed to fit that in.
And what did he do?
He had a great coach.
He surrounded himself with other people, Chris Chataway, my dad, and my dad, you know,
that probably inspired him to become a gold medalist.
He was, Chris Chataway was a world record holder.
He, in 1950, I mean, bizarrely, actually,
he was the first sports personality of the year, Chris Chataway.
And the year that Roger Bannister won the, broke the four-minute mile record,
one of the, broke four minutes the mile he uh um chris chataway because he beat a runner called vladimir
kutz at white city stadium 100 000 people watching and live on tv whereas roger no one was on no one
on tv and it was about 8 000 people at track but i digress it was you know, I think Roger just showed what you can do with your life.
I mean, he was just the most incredible man.
And the four minute mile was a small part of what he did.
And Elliot has this unbelievable Zen-like quality.
has this unbelievable zen-like quality. And what he says, and when he says it,
there are just some absolute nuggets. And, you know, what he did, yeah, we were part of the team.
And as you say, the London Marathon team of 80 people who are passionate about trying to help people to be the best they can be,
whether it's the everyday athlete or the absolute, you know, goat, the greatest of all time,
Elliot Kipchoge. And it was an incredible experience to be part of that team. So Dave Brailsford led the team, Valentin Trau, who is Elliot's manager, and myself, we're sort of a leadership team.
And then you had these incredible teams operating to find paces, to look at the new formation, to go into wind tunnels.
You had Ben Ainslie Racing as part of it, looking at the whole wind.
You had our operational team getting the course, resurfacing it in places, changing the banking on a roundabout. I mean, it was just the level of detail that was gone into the nutrition.
Every water bottle that Elliot drank out of was discarded, picked up, and then weighed afterwards.
So they knew exactly the amount of liquid that he was
taking in his body if you look very closely there's a great film out at the moment you look very
closely actually one of the first things they do when he finishes crosses the line jumps on a scale
because they were weighing him afterwards the level of detail um i saw an early copy of the
film incredible isn't it yeah i think everyone should watch it yeah yeah so yeah it's it's look it's a an honor to be part of that sort of thing um it doesn't come around too often um
and yeah i think that whole family connection it was was lovely for me to um just be part of the
team that that that helped elliott show the world what he said, which was no human is limited.
I guess that's the point of the London Marathon, isn't it?
You just mentioned it's about helping every single person
be the best that they can be.
So Elliot Kipchoge breaks two hours with this incredible team of help,
looking at all the kind of small margins everywhere. Okay, great. That allowed him
to be the best that he can be. But that's maybe not relevant for me, or for you,
or for the single mum, or for the busy executive? Or for the school teacher?
For the school cook? The cleaner? Their ceiling or their potential is different. Not better,
not worse, just different. And that's this overriding message I'm getting through from you,
This overriding message I'm getting through from you, Hugh, which has given me tingles because I haven't experienced it yet.
I'm days away from going on that part of my journey for the first time. I know I'm going to learn about myself.
But like you, I believe that everyone has got their own
marathon. For some people, their local park run is their version of a marathon, or I guess even
their version of a two-hour marathon, right? For someone, depending on your physical health,
just getting rounds, the 5K park run at your local park,
that may be your version of a marathon. But it speaks to this idea that we all have unlimited
potential and we all need help to be the best versions of ourselves.
And that is it. It is about help. It it's trying to get help it's being open to help
um and we will only ever be the best we can be if we get help and it doesn't matter whether you're
really a kipchoge it doesn't matter whether um you're the single parent someone's got to look
after your kids when you're not there so someone's got to help you and. And it's trying to work out what you can control. It's trying to work out what you want to do.
And yeah, it's not about measuring yourself against these gods of the sport.
It's just about doing it for yourself and having it in your heart that you just want to achieve something that will be positive,
that will build your self-esteem.
Because too much of society just takes away people's self-esteem.
And the marathon can really, really help build it and bobby said it
so perfectly in that text um uh at the start about the feeling which is just so incredibly positive
only a few days to go for me hugh any advice for me before the big events uh i think um don't do anything new is the is the
first one so so you know you've been on the journey for 18 months um uh i always say to
people if you're used to having a beer beforehand or a wine or whatever you do beforehand before
you run or that's what you do just do that just
because otherwise you start worrying you know you'll be playing all the things through in your
head about what's going to go on the next day so so firstly just try and do what you're used to
doing that's the number one thing um try not to get carried away at the start. You know, you'll have the crowd, you'll have people.
I always remember my wife, I wrote a training program for her and she was doing it.
I think this was 2009 before we had our first child.
And she'd done her best half marathon and she wanted to put this pressure of a time on her.
And I said, fine, and sort of wrote her, sort of said, we'll pace it this way.
I only found out she had, honestly, she said it was one of the,
this is now going to put your listeners off.
She said it was one of the worst experiences of her life.
But she only found out about three months later, um, that she basically ran a
PB for the first eight miles.
So she just got so carried away by the crowd and what was going on.
It's a bit downhill.
It's like, so relax, um, uh, don't do anything new and absolutely put your name on, on your
vest, on your t-shirt.
Um, you'll want your name changed by the end of it i promise you
because you'll be sick of hearing it um but um i have heard i have heard that uh don't go off too
fast yeah i've heard in fact helen said to me many times whether it was a london marathon or any other
event biggest mistake you get carried away with the adrenaline you start going out too
fast and you pay for it later so uh thank you for that advice here i've got to say i really enjoyed
uh this conversation i really appreciate you making the journey up to the studio um i think
what you and your team are doing is absolutely incredible. I'm so delighted that I'm going to join that journey of other fellow London marathoners,
whether people who compete or they watch or they give to charity.
The podcast is called Feel Better, Live More.
When we feel better in ourselves, we get more out of our life
have you got any final words of wisdom for people listening to the show wow
i i think just trying to have fun in life generally. You feel better when you're smiling. You feel more positive
when you're smiling and enter that ballot. It'll open on the 2nd of October, the day before the
marathon. Even though if you think you can't, I promise you, you can. And I just want to thank you so much for inviting me here.
I think what you're doing in terms of just promoting health and, um, you know, I love
you're trying different things, the nasal breathing, um, the barefoot running. I know
you've got the Vivo shoes on, but, uh, you're experimenting with with with different different parts of it and doing it in in a natural
way um and i think that everyone should just do it for themselves and um and then one last thing i
just want to say because you made a commitment on air with chris evans that got you here um you said
you would help us in increasing the diversity
of the London Marathon.
And Rangan, I would just so like
you to help us to do that.
We will be on that journey together.
And I'd just love to hear
your story afterwards
and see how it felt for you.
But thank you so much
for inviting me here.
My pleasure, for sure.
I'd love to do everything
I can help to improve
the pickup and the diversity. And I have no doubt this will not be the last time we speak on the
podcast together. But I guess for now, I'll see you on the start line.
Really hope you enjoyed that conversation. As always, do have a think about one thing that you
can take away and start applying into your own life. Perhaps you feel inspired to join your local
park run. Perhaps you feel inspired to go for the 2023 London Marathon. If you do, the ballot to get
a place opens on Saturday, the 1st of October 2022. Just go to
the London Marathon website or click on the link in the episode notes for this episode in your
podcast app. Honestly, it was a fantastic day. And if you're thinking about it, I'd encourage you,
why not go for it? Enter that ballot and see what happens. Thank you so much for listening.
Have a wonderful week.
And always remember, you are the architects of your own health.
Making lifestyle changes always worth it.
Because when you feel better, you live more.