Lex Fridman Podcast - #205 – Zach Bitter: Ultramarathon Running
Episode Date: July 29, 2021Zach Bitter is an ultramarathon runner and coach. Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Ladder: https://ladderlife.com/lex - Belcampo: https://belcampo.com/lex and use code LEX t...o get 20% off first order - Noom: https://trynoom.com/lex - BetterHelp: https://betterhelp.com/lex to get 10% off EPISODE LINKS: Zach's Twitter: https://twitter.com/zbitter Zach's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/zachbitter Zach's Website: https://zachbitter.com/ PODCAST INFO: Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ YouTube Full Episodes: https://youtube.com/lexfridman YouTube Clips: https://youtube.com/lexclips SUPPORT & CONNECT: - Check out the sponsors above, it's the best way to support this podcast - Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lexfridman - Twitter: https://twitter.com/lexfridman - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lexfridman - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lexfridman - Medium: https://medium.com/@lexfridman OUTLINE: Here's the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time. (00:00) - Introduction (07:34) - The marathon mentality (14:43) - The psychology of quitting (25:49) - Variety in ultramarathons (33:04) - What does it take to run 100 miles? (38:27) - Leading ultramarathon events (42:09) - Training and race strategy (44:39) - 100 Mile world record (48:41) - Foot strike variability and cadence (51:29) - The 11 hour barrier (54:57) - The most beautiful thing about running (1:01:19) - Zach's training regime (1:06:06) - MAF 180 Formula (1:16:31) - Training plans (1:31:30) - Marathons vs. 100 miles (1:40:31) - Zach's diet philosophy (1:55:19) - Fueling for race day (2:02:34) - Training while fasted (2:06:11) - Embracing the chaos (2:07:41) - 100-Mile treadmill WR (2:11:51) - The legend of Bert Kreischer (2:16:16) - The Transcontinental Run across America (2:33:51) - Who is the greatest endurance athlete of all time? (2:41:04) - Shoe technology in running (2:54:14) - Human limits (2:56:49) - Zach's biggest obstacles (3:00:34) - Advice for young people
Transcript
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The following is a conversation with Zach Bitter, ultra marathon runner and coach who held multiple world records in the 100 mile run and other ultra-angirance events.
He is currently training for a run across America, which for now is planned for September this year.
Like many of the things Zach has done in the past, this is a big, fascinating challenge. Quick mention of our sponsors.
Ladder, Velcampo, NUM, and BetterHelp.
Check them out in the description to support this podcast.
As a side note, let me say that Zach
has been advising and coaching me on my own running journey.
I want to mention that Zach sent me
some running shoes from Ultra,
which I think is a company that sponsors him.
When I put those shoes on,
I feel like Zach is watching me, and I get that extra motivation to make him proud. And by that,
I mean, I want to put a lot of miles on those shoes. Running is something that has always been
difficult for me, but I love it because it is difficult. The hardest part is I'm left alone
with my thoughts for one or two hours.
Some thoughts are dark, like thinking about mortality, my own, and that of others.
Some are self-critical, like personal weaknesses or dreams not realized.
Some are simply human feelings of loneliness, personal, and existential.
And yet, they're the moments during a run when all that fades, and I'm
left empty of negative thoughts and full of appreciation for the beauty of experience
of nature, life, the whole thing. This is why I return to running. Not to get in shape,
but to face myself and to run through it. That's why I'm inspired by people like Zach
and by Deva Goggins and
others like them who seek to find the limits of their body and mind.
As usual, I'll do a few minutes of ads now, no ads in the middle, I think those get in
the way of the conversation. I give you times, so if you skip, please still check out the
sponsors by clicking the links in the description. I hope you don't skip because I do try to
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it just as I have. This show is sponsored by Latter. I often meditate on my mortality, often talk
about it. I think this is both honest and clarifying for who I am and what I want to do in life.
and clarifying for who I am and what I want to do in life. If you have others in your life you love and you do the same you should consider getting life
insurance. How is that for a stoic inspired pitch for life insurance? Later can
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I've been actually reading excerpts from the ancient stoics. I like the crisp minimalist
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of this whole thing. And they do so kind of with a different style with different ideas, but
it all comes back to the same place. We all die, which is why you should go to ladderlife.com
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Lex. This show is also sponsored by Bel Campo Farms, whose mission is to deliver meat you
can feel good about, meat that is good for you, good for the animals, and good for the
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This episode is brought to you by NUME, N-O-O-M, which is a behavior and habit-changing system
that helps you get fit and lose weight. Go to trinumme.com slash Lex to take a short
survey about yourself, and it'll generate a custom program for you
This includes helping you find why you want to do it. That's a very important question
It will help you find the small goals along the way and it'll guide you 10 minutes a day to better habits
I think forming long-term habits is everything I've been forming the habit of
forming long-term habits is everything. I've been forming the habit of running and exercising every day recently, sort of getting back on the ball. That's, it's such a pain when you
have to decide every single day whether you're going to run or not. If you form a habit, no
matter what, every single day you run, for me, that means at least five minutes of running.
Like, I never literally run for five minutes, but that's enough. If I just come out there and I run like a half a mile, that's enough. So go to trynume.com
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Obviously, I'm a huge fan of podcasts, so I'm also a big fan of talk therapy.
I think talking, sort of communication between two human beings,
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Lex. That's BetterHelp.com slash Lex. This is the LexFreakment podcast and here is
my conversation with Zach Bitter. Where does your mind go when you're running an ultramarathon?
Are there a lot of positive thoughts, negative thoughts, demons, inspirational things, maybe
no thoughts at all?
Yeah, that's the really interesting part of the sport, I think, because you can essentially
what it is when we're looking at like the 100 mile distance or anything that's like all day long,
is you're going to have the full range of the full spectrum of emotions of mental processes,
both kind of positive, negative and in between. So it almost feels like you've lived multiple lives,
or full life maybe, as it was way to say it,
in that one time period.
So it's like a, it's almost like a simulation
of what you may experience in a long period of time
and a very condensed period of time.
And I think that's just a weird mental process
to reflect upon and that's what kind of draws people
back to it.
But I mean, it's a battle too, because if you're looking at it from a performance standpoint
versus an experience, you obviously want to minimize the negative mindset stuff.
You want to try to keep those emotions and those thought processes at a low.
And I think when you can keep yourself from letting those thoughts creep in, you end up
having better races.
And it can spiral in either direction.
Like I noticed, there's kind of like this scenario that occurs where in the beginning,
like a negative thing creeps your mind, it's like super easy just to slap it down.
And so you get out of here.
I've did the training, I'm fit, I'm feeling fresh still, you know, everything's going well
at this point in time.
You get a little further along in the race and you're starting to feel a bit
of the fatigue. I mean, a little bit of self-doubt creeps in. You start asking yourself, well, you know,
maybe I should have done one more long run or did I not quite taper long enough and those things
can kind of spiral into a negative way. And if you let it keep going, it keeps going all the way to
like, why am I here? Why am I doing this? This is stupid.
Yeah.
All the way to like,
there's another one of these two weeks from now,
I'm gonna drop out of this one and sign up for that one instead
and then you just find yourself
in the exact same situation.
So you kind of have to go through the process, I think.
It's why I think the, there's kind of a,
I wouldn't say it's a rule of thumb necessarily,
but something I think is fairly valuable.
If you do 100 mile of the first time, make sure you get it done, even if it means like
you're death marching is what they'll call it in the alternate community to end of the race.
Just to say like you got that full experience, you experienced the highs, the lows, the
full thing, the starting, the crossing the finish line, that release of emotion when
you're done and all that stuff.
So that when you go back to do it again, you have like a template to build off of, then
you know, or you just have some data to pull from about how your mind is going to work
as well as your body.
So that you can start practicing, well, what do I have to do to kind of keep my mind from
spiraling in a negative direction, or how do I catch some positive momentum and kind
of keep sending it that way and things like that.
And that just I think you just add to that over a career of running them or a series of running them and it's sharpens.
It's kind of like any sport with that where you always have this balance between the youthfulness that you may have earlier in your career versus the wise intelligence that you have maybe near the end of your career.
In terms of wisdom, is there mechanisms by which you kind of observe the negative thoughts and let them go?
So you have people like the David Goggins, who kind of, he seems to almost his mind into, there's the weak David that he hates. And then there's this strong one. I mean,
there's like a very contentious relationship there. So he basically says like, I refuse to be
that person. And he's almost like angry at that person. He's almost like sometimes literally yelling
at that person, the weak version of themselves. And then there's another more sort of Sam Harrisy approach, which is like just observe the thought and let it go.
Maybe knowing that this too shall pass, like no matter what,
this moment will not last forever and kind of sort of accepting the natural flow of things and
taking one step at a time and allowing whatever the negativity, whatever the pain you're experiencing, just to pass, even if it means a death march.
Which one is more effective for you?
Would you say generally speaking to the population is more effective?
Yeah, it's a really good question.
It's probably unique to the individual.
I wouldn't argue that David is finding success with his approach. Some may
argue it's an extreme version. Sam is obviously thought about these things. I see those guys
as two ends of the spectrum in just the way that they come across in general, where David's
really at you a high energy and Sam's calming calming, soft presence and he's just going to slowly
methodically lay it all out there.
And I think there's value in both of those.
I think most people are probably going to get a benefit
from pulling some from each.
I mean, there's times where I need to kick in the ass
and then it's like, have the strong Zach tell the
weak Zach to get moving. But there's also times where, you ass and then it's like, have the strong exact, tell the weak exact to get moving.
But there's also times where it's just like,
a subtle voice entering my head about,
I don't know if I feel quite right now,
should I maybe pull back on the pace?
And I think that little subtle voice
is best approached with a subtle positive voice
where it's more like, okay,
well, let's think this through here for a second.
You're 40 miles into 100 mile race, you spent four months preparing for it. with a subtle positive voice where it's more like, okay, well, let's think this through here for a second.
You're 40 miles into a 100 mile race,
you spent four months preparing for it.
You know from the workouts you did
that you're ready for this,
there really isn't any real reason for you to slow down
or to fall off your goal or your pace
or reassess what you're doing.
Let's just give this another mile or two,
and then we can reassess if we need to
in order to kind of figure out
if I'm doing the right things or not.
And I think like in that situation,
you definitely probably want to lean
more towards the same hair approach with that
because there's really no reason to,
it's almost like the same thing you see,
like just training and even nutrition to a degree
where like some folks they just want to be kind
of like drilled, they want to be like yelled at and said, get going, get doing this and
that helps and that motivates and that helps them stay accountable.
Other people need some softer love with it where it's like, you know, this isn't necessarily
your fault, your fault.
You were put in this environment that kind of created an atmosphere of
lethargy and maybe porn nutritional choices and things like that. And like, so, but it's
correctable. So we need to step away from that and we need to kind of start heading in the direction
that we know is going to bear fruit down the road. And that person may respond better to that.
So I think both of those guys have great value with their approaches. They're just probably
polarins of the spectrum. And I think most people are probably great value with their approaches. They're just probably polar ends of that of the spectrum.
And I think most people are probably going to benefit like anything, right?
You get the polarizing ones and those are going to work great for the polarizing people.
But then most people are going to fit somewhere in the middle.
So they're probably going to be able to kind of pull from both of those if they're able to sit down and kind of like
assess which one's going to work better in which situation.
So the quitting thing that you mentioned, the like the final stage, which actually I get to
much quicker than you seem to, which is like, why am I doing this? I get there with basically
anything I do. It's like, this is probably the stupidest thing I've ever done is the feeling I
get often. And then immediately you have these excuses, they're like, there's all these other better things you should be doing. Or the other alternative of
that, like you said, I'm not prepared enough for this moment. I'll be much more prepared
in two weeks for the next event. So like, why, let's try this again. Let's start over.
Let's start over in two weeks. How do you deal with that quit?
Like, so maybe do you still go through that process and by way of advice for people that
are more sort of amateurish like me? How to deal with that quitting voice?
I think a lot of times when the quitting voice kind of comes in, what it does is it kind of just, it comes in
with the added disadvantage, I guess, in this situation of being kind of a narrow-scoped
view where you're looking at like what it's doing to you in the moment or how you're feeling
in the moment versus how are you feeling about the whole process.
So one thing that I started doing in 2019 and I think I don't think it's
necessarily, I think I think I think this was a big reason why I had one of my best racing seasons
in 2019 that I had had to that date. It was part of it was I started I think putting a little more
emphasis on the big picture versus putting emphasis on like this is one opportunity or one day of work
and this is one one emotional kind of flare up
But how does that actually relate to my general broader picture?
So when I decide to do a race or an event or something like that
It's often four or six months out ahead of time
You're planning to like kind to do a series of workouts
and a flow of things where you're going through the process
of getting fit, getting ready,
preparing for the specifics of the day
and all that stuff.
And then you get to the race itself,
with the event itself.
And it's very easy to look at that
and think that's an isolation.
I'm gonna run 12 hours today.
I'm gonna run 100 miles today or whatever it ends up being. And it's a lot easier to quit when you think to yourself, I'm 40 miles
into 100 mile race. You know, that's just a 40 mile run, which sounds kind of silly.
I think to most people, but in perspective, when we're talking about the ultra marathon
running community, you know, it's a lot easier just to say like, well, you know, I'll scrap
this 40 miles and try again. It's a lot harder to say, I'm going to scrap the
entire last four months, the entire reason why I was doing it, the countless hours I
spent in there. So I think I just try to reposition it of like, I'm in a bad place right now,
maybe in my head or I'm hit in a low point here, but I'm 99% of the way towards the goal
I set up four months ago when I add
in all the work I did leading up to that.
So I think it's important to ask yourself why, because I mean, there are times when you're
doing something and you ask yourself why and you don't have a good reason.
And then maybe it is advantageous to step back and really reflect on that and decide, is
this something I actually want to invest time and energy into?
Because someone like yourself who is very much
into a variety of different things,
it can be easy probably to overextend
and get, I mean, I'm a very curious person.
So there's like 100 things I would love to do
if I wasn't doing what I'm doing.
And I know I'd enjoy all of them.
So at a certain point though, you have to say,
okay, which one is gonna be the most meaningful for me?
And if the answer keeps coming back to saying,
I guess this is still the most meaningful to me
out of that hundred things that I could otherwise be doing,
then I know that I'm in it for the right reason.
And I just need to identify some of those things.
Like, well, why did this one take the top spot
out of the hundred things that I could have picked from?
And keeping like a list of those in your head so that when you get to that point where you start
saying, why am I doing this? Why am I here? You just have those kind of ready loaded in your head to say, well, I already took inventory on that before I started this.
And I knew this voice was going to come at some point, whether it's early, middle or late.
And then you just remind yourself kind of what you were thinking when you had a little more of a level head.
Well, there's something about the thing you mentioned when you mentioned the death march.
It seems extremely valuable to just never quitting.
Like in the moment, if you decide to do something, like never quitting, even if you do go through
the process and realize that it's not the wisest thing to be doing
within the full context of your life.
Like once you decide to do it,
it seems like never quitting prevents you from
sort of having that escape clause
from other things in your life.
So I've quit on a few things in my life
and I think I still, I deeply regret that
because it opened that door.
It's almost like a muscle.
I don't know.
So I think I'm, I don't know, I'm maybe everyone is,
but I think I'm kind of a quitter.
You know what I mean?
Like I'm really good at coming up with reasons to quit.
My mind is really good at that. And I I it feels like I have to come up with
Like really work hard to make sure that there's no quit
That never allow myself to quit no matter how stupid the thing I'm doing is I don't know if that any of that makes sense
but it just
Maybe to rephrase this whole thing. Do you think is good to live life by the ethos
of never quit?
Yeah, that's a really interesting thing.
And I think it actually resonates with a lot of ultra marathon runners because there
seems to be a trend when you have someone who's been in the sport for a long time where
there's a point where they start the sport right and they're like super excited about everything. Everything's new.
It's very easy not to quit because you're like, oh this is the first time I've
ever run a 50 case, the first time I've ever run a 50 miles, the first time I've
run 100 case, the first time I've run 100 miles and so on and so forth. And when
you're doing that for the first time, I think there's a heightened motivation to not quit because you don't want your first attempt to be a failure.
And then you get a little further along and you start reflecting on the landscape and all the
opportunities that are out there and you find yourself quitting on an event. And there does seem
to be a trend where once you do that once, now all of a sudden, like you described perfectly,
that quit pops up in your head maybe a little sooner
the next time, or maybe a little bit before.
And I've certainly had these experiences
in my career as well.
And what happens, I think, if you stick with it,
again, I think it is important to assess whether you really
want to be doing what you're doing.
But if you start recognizing that about yourself in a certain activity where it's like, I think
I might be pulling the plug early on some of this stuff.
I think you just need to kind of get into a position where you just, at that point, you
need to make a decision, do I want to keep doing this if the answer is yes.
You hold yourself accountable to not quitting.
And eventually what will happen is you'll find yourself in a position where I'll use ultra marathon for example where you're just clicking on all cylinders for that day
and you still get those scenarios where doubt creeps in your mind, you have these low points.
But for whatever reason when those low points come, you're able to push through them better
than you would have in the past. And then you push through maybe two or three more than you did
after you had quit the time before.
Then it's accountability time, right?
Because then you have to look back at that and say, well, why did this time was I able
to be mentally more strong and kind of push through those extra opportunities to quit
when I wasn't before?
And it can be easy to look back and say and live kind of like retroactively in the
sense where you're like regretting, well why did I drop out of those races? Why did I do this
wrong there? And I just think that's where you have to kind of catch yourself and say no, those
things happen to me in order to put me in a position where I decided, well this time I'm not going
to quit no matter what, you know, minus my leg falling off. Like I'm not to quit. And then you put yourself in position to have that day where you push through more times
than you ever had before and you just redefine what you're capable of.
And then once I think you do that, you start looking at those earlier lessons as lessons.
You know, were they failures on paper at the time?
Probably.
But can you pull things from them to learn as to like well where is your actual threshold?
Where is the limit actually for you and then kind of start redefining that stuff?
So I think like the never quit mentality can be good in certain situations, but I don't think it's necessarily like a
like a holistic thing where you need to be in something where it's never quit always do more Because then you end up in a situation where you find this like margin of diminishing returns,
especially when it comes to training and workouts and things like that, where there are times where
often there are times where you want to actually quit a little bit before you would have to,
because the stress that was required to elicit a growth response has already occurred,
and the just to do more is just going to require more recovery time to get back and do it again.
Yeah, this is the tricky trade-off.
Living by the never-quit mentality, you're not going to achieve optimal performance.
In your head, you might.
It seems like when you look at the full arc of human history, the people who do great
things are more leaning towards the never quit. Like,
I feel like at any one moment you're more in danger of quitting than you are of being
suboptimal. So like, in terms of advice, it just feels like never quitting is always
the right advice. Unless you deeply know the person.
Maybe this is like wrestling mentality.
I've seen too many, and because I'm annoyed
with the current culture, telling me to relax
and have a work life balance and all those kinds of things,
which all have deep truth to them.
But the reality is there's not enough people that walk out to me and slap me and say, get truth to them. But the reality is like there's not enough people
that walk out to me and like slap me and say,
get your shit together.
Like, don't quit.
Work harder.
I think we need to hear that more.
And I remember that from the wrestling rooms,
like that when you're pushed that way,
when you're forced to the very limit
and you don't quit,
that makes better humans.
I think people need to get that in their life.
I think they need to have situations
where that becomes kind of the reality for them
so they can see that avenue, experience that avenue,
where I think it's maybe to the extreme
as if it becomes like your entire life philosophy where
like every little thing you do is never quit.
Well life is short, Zach.
Like why?
I mean, this is the problem I have.
This is probably the programming thing too, is over optimization is dangerous.
It's like every once in a while.
I mean, you're, you do this kind of stuff.
You're not, for example, with a hundred mile run,
you could just be doing that for the rest of your life
and do the most optimal hundred mile run ever.
But you keep taking on new challenges.
And there's a lot more chaos in that.
And there, it feels like the muscle of never quit
will be much more important than the optimality
of your training.
Yeah, so there's probably a couple sides to me with that kind of a thing where for one,
I think when we talked about the Y, so I think the Y can kind of shift a bit and it probably
will, if you do something long enough or evolve maybe is a better way to put it.
And for me, one of my big drives and one of my big passions within
ultra running is to, first of all, find an event that I really, really love to train for
and participate in. So for me, I feel like I've kind of identified it to a degree and that's
kind of runnable 100 miles. So once I found that, it became more of a driver for me to see, like,
well, how fast can I run
100 miles in a very controlled environment?
So let's eliminate whether, let's eliminate, you know, elevation, let's eliminate, like,
having to wait extra long to get crew or support and that sort of thing.
And that's how you find yourself on a 400-meter track, around 100 miles.
But for me, like, the important part of that is that I can control the
environment enough where if I come back year after year, I can retest myself and have a
decent ability to kind of say I improved or I regraster, I stayed stagnant. And then I
think that's a big driver for me. But one thing I've recognized within that is if you
just keep doing that, like if I could probably pick three flat runnable
100 miles a year and optimally prepare race, recover, and repeat without like
burning myself out. But one thing I think I learned also in 2019 was that
sometimes you kind of need to step away from some of these really really kind of
important markers in your performance
or in whatever you're trying to do,
and take a step away from it and try to do something a little different
in order to kind of hit the reset button on just like,
what I would call just like your mental energy
to be able to continue to do it at a high level.
So, almost like happiness.
Exactly. Well, and here's the example. I mean, I love running in trails too. Most
people would consider me a flat road track runner, runnable, ultra runner. But I like to
do trailer runs too. So, and at the end of 2018, I recognized that I had been kind of pushing
the gas pedal on trying to run fast 100 miles for quite a while without really a break.
And that where I was like, okay, I did one.
Now, I'm going to take a brief off season, but then I'm going to ultimately build up and
peak for another one.
I might introduce some fun trail races in the context, but they're going to be B races,
they're going to be training races, time on feet type of stuff that are going to kind of
mimic like a long run essentially.
And the main focus, always in the back of my mind, was getting on the track
and seeing how much faster I can run 100 miles. And that just kind of energy that it takes
to continually think about that. I think the motivation to keep that stope high enough
to really meet your full potential fades if you don't step away from it for a little
bit. So I took essentially half a year away from runnable stuff and just decided,
I'm going to prepare for the San Diego 100 mile, which is like a much more elevation,
technical trail type of an event. Is it a trail run? Yeah. It has a trail 100 mileer,
actually just kind of just outside of San Diego. And yeah, it goes through, it goes over
part of the Pacific Crest Trail and stuff.
So it's very different than running on a runable surface. So to give you some contacts, like I ran,
was it, I think just under 17 hours for that race, whereas on a flat surface, I can run 11 hours
and 19 minutes. So just the environment alone added an extra, you know, five plus hours to the day.
So it's just a different experience, different skill set.
What it did is it allowed me to step away from focusing on splits on a track, running flat
stuff, preparing for things specifically for a flat environment and start training for
something that's more climbing and descending, more technical running skill sets and things
like that.
And the cool part about it was, first of all, when you step away from something and enter
something a lot different, I mean, it's still running.
There's still a huge advantage I had from the running I had done in the past.
It was going to put me in a good position to be successful.
But there was a much higher or much bigger range of potential improvement for me.
So through the like, you know, four plus months
I spent preparing for that race, you know,
I noticed, oh wow, I'm getting faster on this climb
or I'm getting better at descending this technical trail.
It was one of the most fun races I've run actually.
So it was kind of a cool experience.
I ended up taking the lead at like 93 miles.
So you're racing racing like you were trying to get first.
So still a race. Yeah.
So what was the enjoyable aspect of it? I don't think I've recognized it so much while I was doing
it actually. It surfaced afterwards. I mean the enjoyment of the race itself is like when you find
yourself in a position where you're sitting in basically second place all day long and then you take
the lead at 90, I think it was like 91 or 92 miles. It's like, yeah, that's kind of a cool way to race.
It was like 91 or 92 miles. It's like, yeah, that's kind of a cool way to race.
But afterwards, I recognized a few things
just about kind of pacing and how to maybe
pace the first half of a 100 mileer
versus a second half.
I also recognized shortly thereafter
once I finished recovering and decided
my next event was gonna be a flat runnable race
that wow, I really was way more excited
to do the workouts that I needed to do
to get ready to run a fast flat 100 mileer.
And I don't think that would have been the case
had I just tried to do another flat fast 100 mileer
earlier during that year and end up in a situation
where like I maybe had like normalized a suboptimal
like a outlook on like something that I had just done so many times already.
And I recognized that, just every workout I did, I was like, I did this workout a year ago,
and it was not nearly this much fun. And then the interesting thing about these track hundreds,
too, is you find yourself doing your peaking phase where you're running, your long runs, which
from here, usually around 30 miles or so, and I'll do them on back-to-back days.
And, you know, I try to replicate the environment I'm going to race on, so I'm fine myself on a
400 meter track. And it's like, when I started doing that again, I just felt like I was super
motivated to go out there saturday and sunday and do those back-to-back long runs and see the progress
and then head over again the next week and do it again. So I had some of my more enjoyable long runs which are going to be the most specific to the race day environment that I had
in quite some time and I think that was really beneficial and kind of putting me in a right
spot to be able to push through barriers on race day and put me in position where quitting
was going to be much less of a likelihood given the enjoyment I had in the months leading
into the race itself.
Yeah, even the thought of quitting. Yeah. Yeah.
So you mentioned the track.
You've also ran a hundred miles in the treadmill.
And the trail, a hundred mile broadly, if we zoom out,
what does it take to run a hundred miles?
For most of the world, that seems like a crazy distance to run.
So maybe it's interesting to ask, not only is you're setting the world record,
but purely running.
What does it take to run that far?
Yeah, I mean, I think people probably overestimate
what it takes in terms of just getting it done.
I think this is consistent in just running in general.
I think the marathon was always a big one with that
where people thought like, well,
you have to do this
training or you just literally won't physically be able to
complete a marathon.
And then we got into an era of kind of like running as more of an
enjoyment thing versus a performance thing.
And then you'd have people running granted much slower.
I think if you look at the Boston marathon, average finishing
times, it goes from like, or maybe it wasn't the Boston
marathon.
I might have just been marathon in general, went from like three hours to five hours or something like that.
So it's like, people I think got past the fact that
you can only do it if you're optimally prepared to,
well, I can do it and maybe not meet my full potential
if I'm gonna like not do much training,
which I would necessarily advise,
but I mean, I've talked to people who've basically
run a hundred miles, sometimes almost off the couch.
And it's like, to me, what that says
is just the human body is incredible,
and what it can tolerate above and beyond
what it's been exposed to, if it has to,
or if it feels like it has to.
So that's the basic sort of getting from point A,
from the start to the finish.
It's the human body and the human mind
is capable of doing it without much preparation.
But then you start to increase the goal of performance and you try to get actually a good,
like the most out of your body that you can, how does that start to change then?
That's going from fun to performance.
Yeah, I think once you start putting marks or goals on outside of just finishing, that's
where it starts getting interesting.
Because now you can maybe go on with multiple goals
where like if one falls off due to something
that you didn't expect,
then you have another one to target.
But you can always build those up and try to think,
well, I wanna run faster than last time,
or I wanna break a course record,
or an age group record, or something like that.
And that I think is just gonna be a little bit
of a different mindset
because now you're looking at every little thing from what do I need to do to prepare as well as what do
I need to do to be efficient on the day itself.
So like transitioning aid stations and things like that, or do I want a pacer or not, or
does this race allow someone to, like, hand me a bottle at a certain spot, or do I have
to be in specific areas to get that type of stuff? And what I ended up doing is it ends up bringing a lot more variables to the table.
And I think it's interesting because there's always going to be more variables on the day
than you are able to account for. So at a certain degree, you have to kind of find yourself in a position
where I'm going to make sure I take care of the big ones or the ones that are like obviously I need to be ready for like my fueling strategy,
my hydration strategy, my pacing strategy, what workouts are going to put me in a position
to physiologically have this process go as well as possible. How am I going to like, you
know, hold myself accountable in an aid station transition. So I'm not like having a ton
of non-moving time versus moving time.
And so there's these like big variables that you're aware of and you're trying to optimize
over the space of variables.
So you get to start to play with that when you're looking for performance.
It's almost like moving from checkers to chess, right?
You have like, or maybe even like connect forward to chess or something like that, where
it goes from just kind of like, well, one foot in front of the other
and when I get to the next aid station,
I'll just eat whatever looks good, drink whatever,
you know, quenches my thirst
and then move on to the next one to like,
well, which one of these food products
is actually gonna make me move
a little faster than next aid station?
Or, you know, which one of these pacing strategies
is gonna get me to the finish line faster than the other one
and that sort of stuff.
So, it gets more complicated, more interesting, and in my opinion anyway.
Also, there's a breaking point with that too, because like I said, there's an endless
number of variables you could account for, and as a distance gets longer, that list gets
longer too.
So, you find yourself in this position where you have to, at some point, say, okay, I've
accounted for everything I can reasonably account for.
Now I need to be in a mental space where when something happens that I wasn't able to account for,
I'm able to respond to it with the right decision and keep going and not dwell on it.
Because that's another thing, I mean, you're running slow enough when you're doing 100 miles where,
if you make a mistake, you can sit there and just fixate on that mistake and say,
why did I do that? That cost me 10 minutes, blah, blah, blah, blah.
When in reality, what you need to do is that happened.
Everyone else out here is gonna have a situation like that
at some point, mine happened now.
I need to figure out how I can move forward
at the fastest sustainable pace
and not think about what happened back there.
And that's where I think it gets really interesting.
What would you say it takes to set a world record
in the 100-mile error?
First of all, I think you probably have to focus
on that specific event.
I mean, there's the interesting about ultra running
where it maybe deviates a bit
from just other endurance sports is there's such a wide range.
I mean, we talked about a little bit
when I talked about the San Diego 100 versus
kind of a flat, runnable stuff.
So can you maybe paint a picture of what are, there's a huge
range of different kinds of ultramarathon events. What are the like the big ones in your
mind? So marathon, we know the distance from marathon. There's 50K. What are different
kind of, there's a hundred mile that in your mind, like kind of these islands were people gather off.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So there's a few that really stand out.
I would say the three biggest ultra marathon's right now,
even from a historic, maybe not necessarily a historical standpoint,
but in modern day ultra running is going to be the Western States 100.
That's the biggest most competitive 100 mileer.
It's on the trail side of things in the United States.
Then there's ultra-trail mount block,
which is probably the most competitive 100-mileer
on the planet right now.
In previous years, it's been debatable
as whether Western states are ultra-trail mount blocks
more competitive, I think, in the most recent few years,
you're just seeing a lot more of the bulk
of international talent on the trail side
of the sport heading over that way.
And then you have the road running side of things where the Comrades marathon, which is
technically 56 miles, but they call it the Comrades marathon, is going to generally be the
most competitive ultra marathon.
The weird thing is the distance thing, right?
Because most people in the think of endurance sports are thinking about precise distances,
like five kilometers, 10 kilometers and all that stuff.
And then you get into the ultra running world and it's like sometimes it's the event.
So like the Western state.
Of course it's much more important than the distance.
Right.
Yeah.
So the Western states 100 is actually 100.2 miles, which isn't that big of a deviation
when you think about it, especially when you figure like tangents are going to probably
account for more than 0.2 miles on a 100 mile race.
But the ultra-trail mountain blank, you know, that's listed as a hundred mile,
but it's actually I think like a hundred and four 105 miles. So, you know, it's more, there's
different cultures too. So the United States is definitely more motivated, I think, to try to get
as close to the exact distance you're going to hear maybe a little more grumbling if someone says,
I signed up for this 100 mile and it turned out to be 103 miles versus like over in Europe,
they don't really care too much about the distance.
They're more interested in a specific route or a loop.
It's consistency important in terms of the exact length
of the route so you can compare performances
from previous years or they a little bit more flexible.
Like they redefine the trail from year to year.
Yeah, I mean, it's definitely hard to compare.
I mean, there's events that take, for example, I would say the
best ultra marathoner in the world today on the men's side is Jim Wumsley. The reason
I think Jim Wumsley is the best is because he is the most versatile and not only the most
versatile, but he's arguably the best at almost everything up to 100 miles. So there's a
race called the Angeles Crest Hunter Miler. The trail has drastically changed from when they originally had that event. And it's
a different time of year, so it's much warmer on that course. And Jim's not the kind of guy
who would sit back and say, like, I can't chase that record. But I think Angela Crest,
when he looks at the segments and the pacing for that one, he's like, that one is maybe not even
the same event anymore.
So you have that.
You have some that are a little more controlled and a little more kind of like preserved, I
guess you would say, but I think it gets really rare on the trail side.
I mean, comrades is going to be very comparable from one year to the next because that's a road
race.
And that's where you get, you maybe get like the split in the sport from people who really
want that kind of like, I want to compare myself to someone who ran this course in 1970 versus like someone who just says
I want to be competitive today and you know maybe the weather is going to be 30 degrees
different from one year to the next on this course.
But if I beat everyone on this day then I'm the champion of that big name race like
Alta Dremont Blanc or Western states 100 and my legacy will be cemented because I won that big race
and it doesn't matter when or how the course was
or what the time even was to some degree.
When you were optimizing for trying to set the world record
and the Hunter Milder, were you doing like analysis of maybe,
like what were the variables you were looking at?
Is it more in the realm of the actual race day, the track, what it looks like versus the
variables of the training leading up to the race?
I mean, it evolved a bit.
I think as I learned more about just what is required to really do that stuff.
So, there's some variables you can control for.
I try to control for as many
as I can. The big one that kind of stands out that you can't necessarily control for is,
it's pretty rare where you get an event where they're just doing 100 miles on a track. It's usually
like, like, an event of like a series of different events where there might be like, some people out
there doing 50k, some people out there doing 24, some like the event I did at there's six day folks
out there. They're trying to see if I can get in six days.
So you have like this much wider range of pacing
just due to like the distance.
So you know, track protocol is always like you pass
on the outside.
So if you're running one of the faster paces of the day,
which when you go on up to six days,
you're gonna, and you're doing 100 miles, you're probably gonna be running faster than most people out there, then you know, you just on up to six days, and you're doing 100 miles,
you're probably gonna be running faster
than most people out there.
Then you just end up running more
because you end up running in lane two
around the turns,
sometimes lane three around the turns.
So it's down to those little details
that have a big impact.
Yeah, so I had to build that
into my pacing strategy.
I also have to build into the pacing strategy
like relative non-moving time.
Wow.
You know, I did a race just recently,
I was the US track and field 100 mile road championships
and I did not stop once other than,
I guess I technically stopped in the AIDS station
for a few seconds to grab bottles and get myself wet
because it was like 94 degrees that day.
But I didn't stop at all during that race
from what I would say is a long period of time
where we're getting up
to like a minute, but that's pretty rare,
even on the track.
Like when I ran 11 hours and 19 minutes,
I think I stopped three times for maybe a total of like,
I believe I have to look back for sure,
but I think it was like three to four minutes
or something like that.
So you gotta figure that into your pacing strategy,
especially if you're chasing a specific time,
because you know if I'm pacing for, you know, at the time, the world record was 1128.
So if I'm pacing for, say, 1127, 30 or something like that, and I don't
account for that three minutes of stoppage, then I might run the exact pace I
had planned on, but then I'm a minute off of the world record.
So the 1128, we're talking about 11 hours, we're talking about 100 miles.
Can you mention what the world record was?
What kind of world record you said?
Can you tell your own story here of what you were able to accomplish?
That world record that I broke, actually just recently got re-broke by a guy over in Lithuania,
Alex Sorkin, phenomenal race.
I mean, he's won the 24-L World Championships. He's won the Spartan Tathon, which is another big historic ultram, phenomenal race. I mean, he's won the 24L World Championships.
He's won the Spartan Tathong,
which is another big historic ultramarathon,
it's 153 miles, so it's getting a little more lengthy
than some of the stuff that I've traditionally done.
He ran 11, 14, I believe it was 56 or 57.
So his pace was 6.45,
per mile, mine was 6.47 and a half
in terms of just like the pacing strategy.
I mean, it's just really cool because for me, the motivation with chasing the world record
was, it was multifaceted.
I think there was, as I kind of moved through, because I mean, it took me almost six years
from the day I decided I wanted to chase that time to the day I actually did it.
And through that five to six years,
I think I merged from just like my number one goal
was to try to break the world record, too.
My number one goal is how fast can I run this thing?
And then ultimately, what needs to be done for a human
to break 11 hours in 100 miles?
Because I think that's going to happen soon.
I think it's going to happen in the next few years.
What pace would that be?
Sub-11 would be, I think it's like 6.35 right about per mile.
You're moving quick, but not so quick that you're void of being able to think about everything
as it's happening.
So what's the pace in terms of if you look for each of the one mile segments for the 100
miles, is it pretty steady, like in order to break 11 hours, would it be pretty steady,
635 does it go up and down?
Do you speed up at the very end?
Like what's the pacing?
If you were to, and maybe how much variability is there in the pacing for an optimal performance
here?
Yeah, so if you're talking about someone,
let's say that there was someone,
well let's just take me, for example,
let's say that we could just like,
we had this infinite knowledge and we knew for a fact,
a perfect performance for me would produce to 10.59,
but I'm not going a second faster.
And I need to do everything right
in order to run a 10.59.
I would definitely want to either have a slight negative or slight positive split.
I think there's a range in there where being a little bit faster, the first half and the
second half isn't going to necessarily change your outcome or being a little bit slower
the first half and a little bit faster, the second half isn't going to drastically change your outcome or being a little bit slower the first half and a little bit faster
the second half isn't going to drastically change your outcome.
So that's what you're referring to the split is you're looking at the first 50 miles
and the second 50 miles.
And you can break it down as tiny as you want.
Like I think when you take out the outlier laps where I stopped to use the bathroom,
which would have been that like three to four minute non-moving time that I talked
about before, my splits were really tight.
I had a couple that were, it was weird because that track that I did that on was actually
400 and some weird number, like 400 and 38 meters or something like that.
So I actually ran my numbers based on that.
So they're, normally I'm dealing with 400 meters and then it's a little more clean as to
what my lap splits are going to range from one event to the next.
So we're talking about running 100 miles on a track.
Yeah.
And so then you can be really scientific about getting the pacing right.
And you're running on the inside lane or is there some kind of tricks to this?
Are you alternating directions?
Yeah, they'll switch directions at most events every four hours. So you'll do four hours
one way and then they usually put a cone out and once it hits like, like let's say it hits
four hours, you finish the lap, you're on and then you do a loop around and then you start
the next, your next lap. Would you say you take the exact same number of steps? Like when
you're really in the
groove, when you're taking the pacing, are we talking about that level of precision or is it a
little bit more feel? You mean like foot strike frequency? Yeah, like frequency, then over the
distance to the lap, would you say it's so precise that you're like you get in this groove where it's
like perfect. Yeah. Gosh, like you're making me wish I would have strapped more like a foot pod to my feet.
But like, yeah, so I think like, my guess is it's pretty
precise.
Like, is there a video of this?
Sorry, I keep interrupting.
Is there a video of this?
Cause I've actually, this is now three years ago,
build a computer vision algorithm that counts foot strikes.
Oh, really?
Yeah, fun.
Yeah.
I'm trying to understand, we'll talk about that.
We have the same definition of fun when I've got my, find myself on a track for all day and
you find yourself counting foot strikes. I was trying to understand if there's how much
variability there's in extreme like elite performers within a particular race, but also across races. It was just interesting to me
from a robotics perspective,
if like how much variability there is in the human body
in the way they use legs to move quickly.
I think my guess would be that at the individual level,
it's gonna be pretty precise.
Assuming the pacing is consistent.
So my pacing on that day, I ran two minutes faster,
the second 50 miles, and I did the first 50 miles.
So my splits were very even, most of the day.
I actually ran it to my fastest miles at the end.
So there's gonna be probably a slight variance
from my fastest miles to my slowest mile
in your cadence or your foot strike,
but probably not by a huge margin,
but you might have a pretty big variance
with one person to the next.
So you get someone whose gate is just a little bit different.
So like for me, I supinate, which means
I kind of come down on the outside of my foot,
and I'm kind of more of a mid four foot striker.
So that's kind of kind of impact my cadence to a degree,
whereas you might have someone who is kind of more mid
to rear their foot or heel
striker and they might pronate where their foot kind of rolls in. So that person may have a
little bit of a different cadence as well. So you get someone, and I think you see this in Elite
Marathoning too, which is going to probably just be a much larger data pool, much more
probably precise from just like a number of opportunities to study this.
I think even their range is from one person to the next can be drastic, but to the degree
of 10 to maybe even 20 steps per minute or something like that from one person to the next.
Most people, the faster they go, the higher their cadence is going to be, the slower they
go, the lower their cadence is going to be.
There's going to be probably a range of optimal lowness and I don't know what, probably a optimal highness to.
Then that, if you can just linger on the 11 hours, the person, first of all, would you like
to be the person that breaks 11 hours?
And second of all, the person that does break 11 hours, like, what would it take?
And third question is, is it even possible in your engine?
Yeah, I mean, I would definitely I would be lying to you if I said I didn't want to be the first person
to break 11 hours and a hundred miles. I think that'll be would be a cool like barrier to be the one
to usher that in. But with that said, I think I'm much more motivated in seeing it done. From the sense that, like, I think I,
when we're talking about records,
it's something that is inevitable
that it's gonna get broken.
So, I mean, we were talking about happiness
before this, right?
So, I've contemplated this in the past
where I was thinking to myself, like,
if my motivation is to break a world record
or any record for that matter, course record, and have that be my defining reason or my defining motivator,
I probably need to do an assessment of what I'm kind of where my mind is at and
where my focus is at and just reflect on how I'm behaving in life because it's
going to get broken, right?
I mean, I could run 1050 tomorrow.
And in 10 years, chances are that's no longer going to be the world
record anymore. Someone's going to be faster than that.
So if you're living to hold on to a record versus living to try to
move the sport forward, which anytime you break a world record,
you're moving the sport forward.
Then you have to look at that as like that was my contribution,
and whether I contribute again or not
is kind of besides the point.
What you want is that your performance,
your contribution brings new people into the sport
who are excited, motivated, and they can make their contribution,
and then we can ultimately see, well, how fast can someone run a controlled environment, 100
mileer.
And that's what I really want to see, because I think I've gotten so much enjoyment from
the sport.
I mean, I've gotten so much enjoyment from the sport.
I've been able to turn it into a career.
And I think there's, there's, all the people who can do the same thing.
And it's not necessarily going to come at the expense of my career, but it's going
to bring more attention to the sport.
It's going to bring more interest in the sport.
It's going to open the sport up to people who maybe otherwise would have never thought
about it, seen it, considered it.
And to me, I think that's like a much more rewarding goal than saying, I want to break this
record and I want to hold it for decades or I want to die with this record.
So I never have to see someone go faster than me.
Well, that's the progress of human civilization
was down on the shoulders of giants
and we keep creating cool stuff.
Well, and it's the other thing is just like,
if you're honest with yourself too,
it's, I mean, we're seeing this right now
in the running world where new innovations come in,
new technologies come in, new nutritional approaches come in.
And then we see like the new crop of folks
have advantages that the old crop didn't have. and it can be easy to look back on that and say like, hey, well,
You know, if I would have had that product or if I would have done that I would have run this but then you're getting into that negative, you know, thought process again, which I generally try to stay out of it.
Take the came and if I had fire, I would have done it.
Look at these idiots up there with their cars.
If I would have had a car back then, I would have been.
Rule the world.
Let me just zoom out briefly and ask you about kind of beauty and love.
What's the most beautiful thing about running to you?
Why do you love it?
I think there's kind of a couple directions to look at it through, or lenses look at it through.
There's like the in the moment, right?
There's always gonna be that run where you're clicking along
and things just feel great.
You get some endorphins and you get the, you know,
the quote unquote runners high and that sort of stuff.
And that's like just like this great feeling
that you can kind of tap into on the like real like,
like in the moment type of
level.
You know, you've, my wife and I talk about this because she's a competitive ultra runner
as well.
And you will, you will have a day where, you know, we'll take a forced day off or something
like that.
And it's necessary, right?
It's going to allow the enjoyment to continue.
But you get into this like routine of I wake up in the morning, I do this run and
that kind of gets my day started, that gets my energies up, I get that runners high afterwards.
You remove that from the equation for a rest day and you just start like, oh, man, I don't
feel like I never got started today.
Like, yeah, it's just this weird thing.
It's almost, I think it's funny because non-runners don't always like necessarily recognize
it because for them it's the complete opposite.
They're like, if I can get away from not having to run today,
that's gonna be a good day versus...
Yeah.
But it's one of those things that I think gets more addictive
than more you do it.
So that's purely from the running perspective.
There's this joy of the runners high of the post
after the run, you feel like you can take on the world
to that kind of thing.
Yes, and I think that's one of the drivers
from just the quality of life standpoint,
and in the moment, immediate gratification standpoint.
But then there's like, I think the bigger picture stuff
or the longer term stuff.
And for me, that enjoyment is like just the process,
like of, okay, I'm starting at this fitness level.
And I'm gonna do these workouts
and by doing these workouts,
I'm gonna see incremental progress from them.
And then that's another kind of like,
kind of short term gratification
that's maybe a little longer than the day to day,
but still like shorter than like a career
or a build up for a particular race,
where you're saying, you're seeing yourself,
like, okay, maybe I'm focusing on short intervals right now. And on week one, I covered this much distance in three minutes, but by week four,
I'm covering this much distance. And you can just see that progress. It's almost like in
elementary school when you get the gold star for reading a book. It's like, did that gold star
really mean anything? I don't know, but I felt great when they gave it to me. Yeah.
It's something about just finding improvement.
I mean, people love to see improvement, I think.
So that's where I think you can also get some value.
And then we'll be saying, like I started here
and I got there.
And then I think there's also just like,
what I would call this maybe more the cherry on top,
which is like, where you express your work,
which is the race itself, where that's gonna be kind of the thing
that kind of like shows up on the end result and where it kind of identifies whether you
did things right or wrong.
Yeah, so there's a sense in which training is a kind of preparation towards race day
and race day being the thing where you get to be the artist.
You get to create this piece of art and they might suck,
it might be beautiful. I mean, I see in the grappling world, I see competition that's
the same way, when I feel the best about it, which is like, sounds pretentious to say,
but like, I'm trying to be the best version of myself in this particular day of competition and to do something that I'll be proud of in an artist way, not in
a kind of some kind of numerical way, but like as a holistic sense, like do something cool.
Like in grappling, that means for me, that means like not stalling, like taking big risks
and trying to dominate another person in the context of grappling and do it
like push myself to limit both cardio wise and technique wise and just play
Play beautifully. I mean you see this in kind of chess. There's systematic chess players
And there's people that allow themselves to have those moments of genius where they take the big risk that eventually pays off or doesn't.
And that to me is art.
That, I mean, there's art within running, there's art within chess, there's art within grappling.
And you got a chance.
Like all the training is more like science.
And then it feels like the competition days are art.
Yeah, I think that that's a really cool way to look at.
And I think it's when you really open up the perspective of that too,
it's like, even obviously, you know,
having a great day like winning the tournament or, you know,
getting further than you were expected to or beating someone who you've never beat
before or something like that, or in the running perspective,
like achieving that goal time, that sort of stuff.
Obviously those are kind of like the ones you,
when you're honest with yourself, you really want,
and you're gonna probably get the most satisfaction out of.
But even when they don't go wrong, like maybe like with your grappling tournament analogy,
the, you know, maybe the guy you're grappling against does a move on you and you're like,
I was not prepared for that move.
So now the enjoyment becomes, okay, back to the drawing board.
Now I need to find out what do I do when that happens to me next time.
And that's where I think the why comes in again, same thing with running.
Maybe I make a mistake and eat something I didn't really want to eat or thought was going
to work but didn't work and it costs me more time than I gained by having it or something
like that.
And then I go back to the drawing board and say, okay, well, I can't do that.
That didn't work.
Or if I'm going to do that, I need to be more prepared to be able to do it.
And I love that part of the sport.
Just the rearranging of things and adjusting and tinkering.
There's some sense in which the mistakes and like the flaws give us meaning.
Because like if everything, if you weren't able to find mistakes and something you've done,
it feels like the life would be void of meaning.
It's a lost opportunity too.
Like, when I look at even my 100 mile race of 1119,
I can find spots in there where I was like,
oh, you know what, I could clean that up a little bit.
Maybe if I do this differently.
And I mean, that's gonna get me, you know,
a little bit faster.
If I sat back and said, hey, well,
things went great that day.
Cool, let's see if we can replicate it.
Then, you know, I probably run 11, 19 again.
So can we talk about training a little bit?
Yeah.
What does your training look like?
Year round, day to day, hour to hour, like optimal, maybe you want
to pick a race in the context of what you want to discuss that.
But and also people should follow you on Instagram.
You have a lot of kind of interesting, like little glances into your training process
and into your training thinking, which is quite fascinating.
But if you look at an optimal training process, what does that look like?
Yeah, so I think if we were looking at it from a philosophical level or an approach level,
I think there's some things that carry over from regardless of the distance.
I think working on your weaknesses and things that are least specific to what you're going to do on
race day, but are still going to be important things in terms of improving your
ability to perform on race day or maximizing your potential with the things
that are specific you do first. I say that but there's a caveat with the
nerds, but I think maybe even more specifically with things like our
ultramarathons or hundred
miles where you want a really strong aerobic foundation or a base before you really start
I think structuring things towards a specific one.
For me, I think a target for me is oftentimes getting really fit at what my pace would be at my aerobic threshold, or what a lot
of people may call a maximum aerobic function.
The running world is weird where we have these terminologies, where there's sometimes multiple
words that essentially mean the same thing, but one is from an actual physiological reaction
and one is just a feeling and stuff like that.
You mentioned time on feet versus time in optimal
physiological state. Like how important is it just to get like running done versus like
running in a particular pace? That would depend on the event. I would say to a degree.
And there's contradicting the ideas about like kind of how to structure it. I think a
lot of times like you do want to, time on feet in most cases,
it's just going to be like, I'm running easy, whatever feels easy that day. That can be different
from one day to the next. I might feel great and that produces a much faster pace than if I feel
really miserable or something like that. That's why I think a lot of this running, well, they'll do the whole perceived effort
or perceived exertion.
And you're looking at kind of understanding the response your body has to a certain effort
level and you're supposed to target a certain effort level in order to get a certain response.
So to maybe simplify that a little bit or make it a little clearer, I think I focus on essentially like short intervals.
I focus on longer intervals or tempo runs.
I focus on like race, pace, intensity, which is a lot of times what I'll build my long run
around.
But also like those are kind of like the small pieces to the puzzle.
Those are the options you're working with.
Yeah, but I'm going to always try to work with those options on top of a massive aerobic
base, which is going to probably be like 80% of the work.
So how do you build that massive aerobic base?
What do we talk about?
Distance.
Distance.
And essentially, so I like to call it micro-stressing because you're going to always
start at a different spot depending on where you're at as an individual.
I'm going to be targeting my aerobic threshold.
I'm going to get right up to it,
but not necessarily cross over it.
It's been popularized as maximum aerobic function
as kind of a training philosophy.
That philosophy in itself,
I think maybe is a little more holistic
where they're saying, do this basically all the time.
And by doing so, you're going to raise your aerobic potential by so much that you can
kind of like race yourself in a shape at that point.
And this would be maybe more specific for shorter distance or endurance runs where you're
not going to race yourself in the shape of 100 miles.
But for five days, you might do like a huge base building phase where you're going up
to that maximum aerobic function or that aerobic threshold and you're
watching your pace come down at that. So the rule there is
basically like if you're seeing improvement, that's the sign
you're looking for or which would just be your pace dropping
at that heart rate or at that intensity. And if you're seeing
that continually go down your heading in the right direction,
if you start seeing it go there opposite way, you're probably overreaching or you're
trying to do too much of it.
So that's kind of dictates how much the dose, I guess you'd say.
When we talk about max aerobic function, we're talking about heart rate as the ultimate,
as the really important metric here.
So maintaining a particular heart rate during the run.
Is that the measure that, how do you know you're in the right place?
Yeah, yeah. And then that's where it gets a little tricky because like, unless you go
into a lab and get your aerobic threshold tested, it's really hard to have like an exact
number on it. You know, Dr. Phil Maffatone with the maximum function process, he'll say 180
minus your age is going to give you your, yeah, that's the Maff 180 formula that I thought
was fascinating for it's like in the same way, E equals, E equals MC squared is fascinating,
that there could be a formula that captures
like optimal running.
Yeah.
So that for people who don't know,
that's 180 minus your age.
If you train at that heart rate,
if you run at that heart rate,
you're going to progress a lot.
And here's the advantage of that.
I think like with any of these things,
you wanna look at it through where the advantage is here,
and I need to account for those, and then where are the potential disadvantages?
And then decide, for me as an individual, do these advantages outweigh the disadvantages
and what's the alternative approach, and is that going to produce more advantages or
less?
So with maximum function, here's some advantages.
Like it is low enough intensity where you can train pretty consistently at a fairly high volume
with a very low injury risk with very low things that are going to maybe lower your
quality life, like muscle damage and things like that.
It's a more efficient way in the sense that you're going to be prioritizing fat metabolism,
which I mean, if you're looking at Dr. Jeff Gepholic and Dr. Dominic Diagostino,
some of their research and things like that,
like they're gonna show that, you know,
that's gonna be a little cleaner way to go about things
from just a recovery standpoint, a breakdown standpoint.
So they could be like a, what they call like a fat adapted
athlete, so you can go to your fat stores for energy
if you're applying this map. What
is the call for the math 180? Is that a good, is that a good, what are your thoughts about
in general for yourself and for the broader population? I think the math 180 formula is
about as good of a formula as you're going to find in terms of capturing as many people
as you can get away with capturing with a kind of a universal thing.
Like any of these things, I mean,
it's more likely kind of on a bell curve
where like the bulk of that 180 minus
or eight is probably gonna be a pretty good,
at least starting point to kind of figure out where that is.
There's some other things you can maybe use
to kind of check it that I like to do.
If I'm, let's say I just, I didn't 180 minus my age
and I went out and I started running and it was like I'm running along and I'm just like my breathing is labored.
I'm struggling to get a sentence out without gasping for breath. Well, that's my body telling me.
I'm probably not actually at my true math number or my true underneath my true aerobic threshold.
A aerobic threshold and maximum of function. You should be able to do that for hours
and you should be able to breathe pretty efficiently.
And talk. Yep.
Carry a conversation.
Other people will say,
another way to kind of gauge it,
if you can breathe in your nose and out your mouth,
that's not necessarily the best way
to do on a performance standpoint,
but it can be a good kind of governor
that will allow you to,
if you can no longer breathe in your nose
and out your mouth
You're probably going too fast actually technically be at your math pace or under your math pace
Yeah, I had a actually when I was in better shape. I had trouble getting to that math number
I found myself like I that would be doing way to which work like
It's too hard to do it was too hard to get to that number. I was running a much lower heart rate
like 10 to 20 what do you call that beats lower and that's I was still for myself
Happy with the pace. It was good pace and yeah, and I was felt good as smiling and enjoying life and yeah
I did and in the moment I take myself to that level of like the the math 180 level
That's like that's like, that
felt like a real work on it.
Yeah.
And it felt like I can't do that for five, 10, 15 miles.
Like I, I started feeling it like this is a one or two mile thing.
No, but I think his answer to that, I feel Mephton's answers, maybe you're supposed
to like, what, maybe do some more sprints or something like that or build up
your, maybe like, I'm too weak, ask it or wise to like, yeah, like that's assigned the need to
work on some stuff. You can't just keep enjoying life. There's two ways to look at that, I think,
and I think you're you're right on. I think that what the advice from that, from that kind of a
process would say is either you're doing
too much of it, so it's getting too hard for where your skeletal muscle system is currently
at, for that particular activity.
So it can be different, too, like if you're cycling versus running, that's a little bit
of different mechanic where it can be different, where you could take a super fit cyclist and
then put them on, the bundle volume, they're gonna be able to tolerate
relative to what you're gonna do
when you remove like impact forces and things like that
is gonna be lower if they haven't been practicing
that activity.
So for you, you're prioritizing like wrestling
and mixed martial art, or not mixed martial arts,
but jujitsu type stuff.
So running is maybe kind of that secondary activity versus the primary activity.
But, yeah, so what they would say is probably like maybe instead of doing that, let's say
you were doing that for like 30 miles a week or something like that and it was getting
too hard to continue, they'd say, hey, come back to 20.
Get used to 20, get comfortable with 20.
Then let's get you up to 25 and 30 and kind of just like inch you along
One of the intuitions I had about
The ways I was failing at running is the form was probably not great like the the way to get
To those 30 40 miles
Is to get the form right maybe I was doing two big of steps not the so like
Playing with the different gate playing with a different gate, playing with a different
kind of the form.
The economy, the efficiency, yeah.
So that was the intuition, like I was doing something wrong, but I suppose that's the benefit
of these kind of formulas, it challenges you to think, like, how can I improve this
kind of stuff?
Well, and it also, it simplifies it so much that you're forced to, right?
You're forced to optimize within that real strict parameter versus, am I doing my short
intervals right, but my long runs wrong, or am I doing my like long intervals right, but
my short intervals, and then you just kind of complicates things when you start throwing
a lot of stuff there.
And for most people, especially when they're first getting started, you know, you can't
overcomplicate it, or you're just going to like or you're just going to do a bunch of half-right,
half-wrong things and then not really know where your progress or your deficits are necessarily at.
So I do think this is an amazing approach, especially for people who are just getting into it and
building that foundation where I think maybe you want to deviate from that a little bit, especially
when you start getting to these events that are operating well outside that intensity.
So you take something like, let's say a race that takes you in the neighborhood of around
like 12 minutes or something like that, then you're going to be running significantly faster than
your maximum of function pace. So most of the research is gonna say, at some point in time,
you need to get around to practicing the pace
at which you're gonna perform at.
And really fine-tuning the mechanics,
the efficiencies, how it feels, how to judge it,
how to pace it, at the pace you're gonna try to compete at.
So there's obviously like a large range of targets there,
when we talk about the endurance world in general,
where you have these shorter events,
like five kilometers, and then you also have a hundred mile races which are going to typically be
quite a bit below your maximum heroic function, especially on these trail races. I need to admit
something. So I don't measure the runs at all in terms of time. I get competitive with myself.
So I kind of decided that running for me is going to be this thing where I just go by feel is it possible to be that kind of runner and
You know still have running as part of your life and be a good performer and running
I actually think that's that's where you want to get to the problem is most people have a hard time getting to that because
They'll go out and they'll run with a friend and match their pace or they'll go out and they'll say well
I want to run this pace,
they'll target that pace, or target a specific heart rate,
which is not necessarily how they maybe feel good doing it.
So I think, I mean, obviously, I think,
when you put a race on the calendar,
if your goal is performance, it's a little harder to just say,
well, I'm going to run whether it feels good today,
because eventually you have to get around
to doing what's specific. But from just say, like, well, I'm going to run whether it feels good today, because eventually you have to get around to doing what's specific.
But from just a fitness standpoint, health standpoint, enjoyment standpoint, I think it's
totally fine to go out and say, I'm going to run what feels good today.
And maybe someday you will feel like at the end of the run, I'm going to do a couple of
sprints just to get some, you know, that, because it does, that one's a hard one to kind
of jumpstart, but once you do it, and you realize how kind of good it feels maybe to throw
on a few accelerations at the end of a run, and then you say,
oh, wow, that feels pretty good to do that.
I feel a little more accomplished.
That's right, that's a forcing function.
But I like to finish runs with sprints anyway.
Okay.
Because you're there.
You don't need to, the timing,
I'm afraid of the time, becoming a drug.
But the flip side of that is a useful tool
to get you to learn the right form, the right feel,
like what it feels like
to have to be in good shape and then you can throw out the time.
Well, I think too with with feel running and what I mean by that is that kind of back to that perceived
effort thing where like you do enough of it and you start being able to recognize
like I can go out and if you said okay run you know 60 minutes at your aerobic threshold
I could go I could know where that is on my heart rate.
And I could go out there and just say like,
okay, I know what that feels like.
And go out and run that feel.
And I'm gonna hit that spot.
Like, I bet you if we looked at my heart rate data
after they'd be right in there.
And I wouldn't have to look at some of that's just experience.
Some of it's just understanding like when,
like noticing the physiological responses
when you cross over versus step a little
bit too below it, you can get yourself daydreaming and forget I'll do this sometimes too, or I'll
be tired, because I'm kind of like you too, or when I'm getting really fit, especially
with my foundation, like I got a, you know, I'm moving pretty quick at my aerobic threshold,
so like if I start daydreaming too much, I can notice, oh, I'm drifting back a little
bit, and I look down at my heart, I'm heart rate, oh yeah, I'm 10 beats under.
So it does take a little bit, I think, just awareness,
but it's also not necessarily something where
you have to be so exact that you're hitting
things in the exact heart rate all the time.
There's usually a range and there's even like
some fluctuations where like if you've been healthy
for a year or two without any injuries
and you've been fit that you can probably add five beats to your maximum roll function if you're using
that as kind of your target from the 180 minus your age formula.
So let's try this, lay this out for yourself.
But for others, you offer ready made plans for people, you know, depending on the, I think
the key that thing there is the distance.
Maybe you can elaborate.
But what does that plan look like usually?
What are the key options?
Is you already kind of mentioned?
And how does your week look like?
How do a lot of people's week look like
in terms of splits?
Are we talking about, in terms of rest days,
in terms of how often did you speed work versus longer
distances mentioned, long runs?
Like, is there something you could say that's generally applicable about the structure
of these plans?
The ready made plans, I definitely follow like a philosophy, and it's going to be like
kind of like a lock step in that.
So for those, like, there's always gonna be a sacrifice
when you do like a ready made plan
because you're removing the individual context there.
So for folks who are like really wanna get into the weeds,
I usually do like a personalized coaching plan with them
where we sit down and we actually look at their strengths,
their weaknesses and really kind of go in
from that perspective and fine tune it.
And it also like, it avoids a situation where,
oh, my ready-made plan says,
I'm supposed to do this run today,
but I don't feel great today.
So what do I do?
I mean, some people are fine with that
because they're aware enough of the process
that they can adjust at themselves.
Other folks just need a little more support.
So that's kind of the difference there.
But in terms of the structure of it,
it kind of goes with an approach
where Ogo is saying, you build this foundation, you're going to spend,
usually anywhere between eight to 12 weeks, just building up your aerobic foundation,
you're going to be doing a lot of stuff that are kind of at, I call them base runs,
but they're basically your maximum aerobic function or you're up to your aerobic threshold type stuff.
And they're really going to get really fit with that. And once they kind of have that foundation laid, then it's time to get into the specifics of whatever
distance they're doing. So if it were, it'll differ, it'll be like if they're doing,
right now on those plans, I think I've got 5K, half marathon, marathon, 50K, 80 to 100K,
and then 100 miles. So if they pick a 5K plan, the order of operations is going to be
different than if they picked the 100 mile plan. You're going to see some of the same workouts show up in that plan and just going to be different
areas of it.
So once they're really fit at that foundational level, then if they're doing say a hundred
mile plan, they might start doing some short intervals, which on my plans, I usually range
between 30 seconds up to four minutes.
It's kind of that short interval range.
Can you describe what you mean by short interval. It's kind of that short interval range. You can just probably even buy short interval,
it's like a sprint and a rest.
Yeah, yeah.
So I'll use basically, like I'll use like a basically
a 12 minute time trial, and that's gonna kind of like
dictate for them what the intensity and the pace
is gonna be for some of those.
When they're under a minute, they'll push past that
a little bit, but usually when we're up to like above a minute and certainly up to four minutes, that like whatever pace or
intensity that they get for that kind of 12 minute time trial, where they're just seeing
how far they can go in 12 minutes is going to be kind of like about where they're going
to target for those intervals.
So then those intervals are going to be structured.
Let's say they're doing two minute intervals.
They're going to do two minutes at that intensity that they could do for 12 minutes at a time trial. Then they're going to do
a two minute really easy job or maybe even walk just to kind of bounce back. And they're going to
repeat it. How do you figure out how far you can go in 12 minutes? Is that just a trial and error?
You build up to it? There's formulas. What? Yeah, there's some newer formulas that are probably a
little less brutal,
where you kind of, I haven't really dove into these that in depth yet.
I know that you can kind of replicate it
by doing a very short interval and then a slightly longer one.
And then another one where at the end one,
that last one will kind of indicate what it is.
And so you're doing less of it to get the same answer
to the question.
But sometimes I think when it's someone who's new,
I'd rather them just do a 12 minute time trial
because it's easy for them to execute in the sense
that it's pretty clear.
You do a warm up, you do some strides,
maybe some dynamic stretches,
and you just run as hard as you can for 12 minutes
as evenly paced as you can manage.
And I mean, if it's just gonna produce the data
I'm looking for.
And I mean, it's just also.
No matter what happens, it'll produce the data.
I mean, you can screw it up, I guess.
You can go way too fast, then you have this scenario where
like, oh, it looks like your, you know,
your first two minutes were drastically faster
in your last two and then it's like,
oh, we may be screwed that one up.
But, but I mean, really, like you don't even need to do the time trial technically.
A lot of times you can go off of feel like what we described with the threshold stuff.
And it's a high enough intensity where you can start to kind of like your body is going to
limit you to a degree
where if I said we didn't do the time trial
and just started doing the intervals,
we could figure out that,
you know, if they're doing them right or not,
if we see a scenario where,
oh, it looks like these first two intervals
were significantly slower than the last two.
Chances are we're still not quite dialed in
in terms of what the intensity is
that you should be targeting for those.
And as you do a few of them,
you just get to know the pacing of it a little better.
And then you start seeing more even splits.
So like, you know, their first two-minute intervals pretty close within a couple of seconds
of their second, or, you know, I guess we'd be looking at distance if we're doing time.
So like you went approximately the same distance on that last one as you did the first one.
And then we're just looking for improvement over time.
So you know, we might spend four, six weeks focusing on improving that.
We're still going to include foundational running volume where you're going to be running
like an easy pace and enjoyable pace in the interim.
There's going to be some rest days.
That's going to be where the levels come in.
My level one plans are going to be four day a week training plans.
Level two are going to be five day.
Level three are going to be six day with one day off. You can obviously operate outside of those. Those are just the ones that I put up for
the ready made when I'm coaching people kind of personalized. We just, we look at like what
their history is with running, their schedule, all sorts of stuff because oftentimes people
get hung up on like, well, what are the leads doing? What are the professionals doing?
What are the Olympians doing? It's like, well, it's like, well, the Olympians are doing
is they're waking up and they're living and breathing everything
around this one race that they're gonna do in four years.
So it's like, we need to step away from that
if you're working 10 hours a day
and you got kids and all this other stuff too.
So there's a lot of variables that make it more interesting
to coach someone who's actually like not an elite athlete
or someone who's a professional athlete, I should say.
But yeah, so they're gonna do that stuff, those shorter intervals,
for probably about like four to six weeks, if they're doing, if they're doing a longer race, like a hundred miles, if they were doing, say, a 5K, we'd start bringing those workouts in near the end of their plan, because that's gonna be specific to their race pace.
That's gonna be the intensity that maybe they're doing for, you know, like a 3K or a 5K or something like that. So it's going to be more relative to what they're
going to use. So it follows that philosophy of weaknesses and least specific stuff early.
And then we start phasing closer to most specific stuff and strength says you get kind of near
to the end of the plan. And then the distance of the time that you're going to spend out doing whatever event it is,
you're going to dictate how those kind of get ordered in there.
I wonder if I could ask you for some sort of advice.
Maybe you almost, maybe look at me as a case study of a particular runner and then see how
it can plan stuff out. So which context to give. Okay, so I have been, first let me say how much
we're currently in Austin, I want to say how much I love Austin for many reasons. First and foremost,
people are super kind and just like, there's so much love that I've experienced immediately when
I came to the city versus many of the other cities I've been in. It's not quite as welcoming and full of kindness
immediately. I really love it here in Austin. And because I've been going through a bunch of
stressful stuff, I just kind of gave myself a chance to say, okay, I'm going to stick to a diet
of carnivore or keto, but I'm going to eat as much as I want. Because primarily because just barbecue
was part of the love I was getting here.
And I was like, either a resistor just given,
and I decided to give in and actually use this as an
opportunity to relax and have fun for the past three,
four months plus whiskey and so on.
And then the training kind of all,
I also let go of the training a little bit
just to relax, to really focus on the work, focus on the love I've been getting, all those kinds of
things. But now, I just kind of want to set a goal for myself to get back into both competing and
grappling, but also doing a hanging out with David Goggins and doing a conversation with him,
but almost this is my own personal kind of race that I'm looking forward to.
And in terms of distance, that means running with David,
something like a marathon plus plus.
It's like, it's unclear what plus so my goal would be to continue eating carnivore,
which is a whole other topic that I'd love to talk to you about.
I feel great psychologically, sort of in terms of mental performance in my work when I
eat Carnivore.
And physically, I love it.
I've never felt any kind of need for carbs to improve performance in my running or anything
else.
Combine that with fasting, intermittent fasting, or eating once a day.
I just, that's when I feel
the best. What else? I also feel best. And this is something you can push back on. I
feel best when I just run every day, like no breaks ever. And usually the same way every
day. So like, I know this is suboptimal. It'd be interesting to hear your opinion of just how suboptimal that is.
So, I think that actually lays out like where my mind is.
I'm happy eating carnivore once a day.
I like running every day.
The goal is to run a marathon in two months, ish, two months plus, and then about three
months to do a bunch of competitions and grappling.
Okay.
With those parameters, I think like you actually probably would be a great candidate for
a maximum of road functions training strategy.
Like, you want that consistency where I'm going to do the same thing each day.
You don't want to beat yourself up so much any one day that you can't get out and do it.
The next one, that's the sweet spot with maximum rule of function, is the trademark there is that you can keep going
and keep doing it again and again and again
because as long as you're not going out one day
and trying to do twice as much as what you're ready for,
for that one.
So the key for you is going to be picking
the right starting point and then building from there
on what that day kind of entails in terms
of how much running you do.
So where you could maybe get creative would be if you decided that it's a hard fast rule
that you run an hour every day, seven days a week.
But we find out that to run your maximum aerobic function means you probably are better off
sticking to 30 minutes.
Then what you would maybe do is you would run underneath
your maximum aerobic function for the first 15 minutes
in the last 15 minutes.
Maybe throw some of those strides in there
if you wanna do that at the very end.
And then that middle 30 minutes
is gonna be maximum aerobic function target.
And then maybe after four weeks, you start noticing,
you know what, this 30 minutes
isn't wearing me out near as much as it used to.
I feel like I could easily push past that.
Well, let's up that to 40 minutes of that 60.
You're always staying within that 60 minute parameter
that keeps your schedule consistent,
your routine consistent.
I'm wearing a heart rate monitor
to sort of as I run to monitor it.
Sure, yeah.
You could do that.
You could go perceive deferred.
I like to use them in tandem in the sense that early on,
I'll maybe look at my heart rate a little more often,
especially for shorter length.
There is, heart rate can get messy the longer you go.
So I end up maybe stepping away from heart rate a little more
than some will at a certain point,
because I'm ultimately going to be usually training
or working with someone to run a race that's really a race that's really long and they get cardiac drift dehydration,
heat, things that are going to make the heart rate super messy.
Yeah, but your probably, your ability to measure perceived effort is exceptionally good.
Mine is actually really weak.
Okay. Heart rate then.
I need to do the still the work of connecting heart rate to the perceived effort.
Yep. And that's exactly what I would use heart rate for then.
And you'll get to a point probably by like in the first couple of months where you,
you can still lean on heart rate if you want, but it'll be kind of one of those things where you
you keep looking at you're like, oh, wow, I can guess it.
And you play a game with yourself too and you can say, well, how close can I guess?
Yeah, you'll get it. So like for me, what all do the run and then I'll look at the heart rate
afterwards and be like, oh, cool, I was right there.
Or I remember feeling like I was speeding up a little bit
there and the show is right there on the heart rate.
I also love something we haven't talked about.
I love push up some pull ups that like body weight workouts.
Again, it's mostly mental.
I just enjoy the mental challenge of it.
I also like, it makes me feel like if all I'm doing
is running, it makes me feel like if all I'm doing is running it makes you feel I'm not
like
one dimension. Yeah, one dimensional. I mean, there's some aspect to running that's
not to be like hippie-bottom, but like you know, you're you're with nature. You're running in
it's like we're born to do this thing and in that same way I feel like when I'm doing push-ups and
pull-ups I feel like I was born to do that kind of stuff.
Like it's like this body weight exercises have that way about them.
It doesn't have that dumbbell feel or doing bench press or squats.
Squats would wait.
When you're just doing squats body weight,
we're doing pushups and pull ups body weight,
even just basic abs stuff, core stuff, body weight.
I don't know, I just love the way I feel doing that.
So it's usually, I forgot to mention that part,
combined that with the running afterwards,
doing some basic body weight stuff.
Yeah, and I think like you're gonna get from,
if we're not looking at it from like specifically,
like training a pace in order to get both the,
skeletal muscle adaptations as well as the cardiovascular benefits,
you're probably tapping into some of the higher intensity stuff
with that body weight stuff.
Unless you're doing, I guess,
no rest, it's very quick.
So is it, you get pretty high heart rate from that?
Yeah, very high.
Higher the running, yep.
So you're checking that box there
from just like a lifestyle, enjoyment, fitness,
overall fitness standpoint.
I think you want to keep you running more aerobic than because you're getting that,
and you're probably getting it from like you're grappling workouts too, I would guess. So,
there's just not as big of a need for you from a big picture standpoint to be doubling down on
that stuff with your runs as well. And it sounds like you prefer not to.
That's right. So I mean, what about the distance of marathon versus a hundred miles? Is that
big difference? What's a good goal to work towards? Is it marathon and the rest of it just takes
care of itself? Yeah, so you want to do a marathon and then ultimately do a hundred mile after that?
Is that what you're saying?
I have no idea with the guy.
Oh, so he's gonna tell you spot on what you're doing,
so you have to be ready for anything.
For anything.
My own personal goal is to feel somewhat challenged
but comfortable running a marathon.
The longest I've ever run is 22 miles,
but there's been many stretches of my life where I would regularly run
like the long run would be close to 20 miles.
So, you know, and then I was comfortably running 10 miles four months ago. It was like forever ago.
Until I injured myself a little bit by running in the snow and stubbing my toe to where it was like,
you don't realize how much you appreciate your toes until you stop them.
That big toes were all that power comes off.
And so it was surprising how long it took to heal and how essential it wasn't how unpleasant
running.
How much I hit running with it.
And then I kept like coming, trying to get back out there, drawn to think, I think it's
okay. And no, it's not okay.
You really need to let it fully heal.
At least that was my experience.
I couldn't just suck it up.
It was making a worse every time.
That was one of those injuries that could really feel.
Even though it's so small,
it was essential.
So is there any difference between the goal of marathon
or 100 miles?
Would you say should I be prepping for a hundred
miles if that's at all a possibility?
The big difference is going to be like you're dropping intensity significantly by going up
to a hundred miles versus a marathon.
So the maximum roll of function I think is actually going to feed into that maybe a little
bit better.
It's probably going to be a little closer depending on where I mean it all varies a bit
because like people people focus on specific distances
and they'll get very efficient and very adapted to that.
So it's what makes running kind of messy
where you'll get, for example,
the average person can hit their lactate threshold
for probably about 60 minutes or something like that,
whereas you get these elite marathoners
who've been basically spending their entire life
preparing for a marathon race, they can push almost up to their lactate threshold and
after lactate threshold for almost like two hours.
So it gets a little messy when you start looking at it from that lens, but you don't
really have to worry about that too much because you're not really focusing on being
the best possible 100 mile or the best possible marathon or you could be.
You want enough overall fitness that you can just do either one of them without absolute
misery because you did the couch to 100 mile.
Exactly.
So I think like for 100 miles the biggest difference I think given your context is just
like the more physical things you are doing the better prepared you're going to be for
the 100 mile.
So it's almost given your context,
I wouldn't say irrelevant, you wanna be doing running,
but you're gonna be doing that
once you put it in your program,
it sounds like it's gonna be pretty locked in.
You're gonna want to also,
like if you view it this way,
it's probably gonna be more mentally beneficial to where,
hey, today I did my run, I did my body weight exercises. I did some grappling practice
You know I spent three hours working out today
Yeah, if you think of it like that then you know you're you're moving your body
You're doing things that are active for a good chunk of the day
Especially relative to most people so that's gonna actually be very helpful for you
The the problem or the the battle to get over is gonna just be like the relative to most people. So that's going to actually be very helpful for you. The problem
or the battle to get over is going to just be like, you know, you're going to break down
physically running 100 miles. I mean, you're going to break down physically running a marathon
too. So like, you might just have to push through a little more discomfort, like from a physical
standpoint, compared to be if you decided, I I'm gonna do everything I can in these next 24 weeks
to be able to run a full 100 mileer.
Would you say it's physical or is it mental discomfort?
Like, I mean, isn't everything physically uncomfortable?
Like, what do you train for if you're training for the chaos
of, so it's not necessarily the hundred miles, it's
the chaos of the unexpected, which might include a hundred miles, but it might also include
a thousand push-ups.
In my case, so like, you need a bit jack-of-all trades, it's what you need to be.
But also like building up the confidence, or maybe not, I don't know, how do you survive
a thousand push-ups?
It's a combination of confidence that you have to know that you can do that kind of thing,
not necessarily the actual number, but like doing crazy stuff.
And the second is probably, the base strength and endurance, and also just the
practicing that process of not quitting. I feel like that's one of the things
I really need to do in the running space.
It's like doing slightly unpleasant things
where I'm practicing that, like,
bringing my mind back and saying,
nope, I'm gonna keep doing it.
And part of the running every day has that benefit
because some days you really don't feel like running
and doing that then, you're practicing that muscle
of doing it anyway. I don't know if there and doing that then, you're practicing that muscle of doing it anyway.
I don't know if there's something you can say
in terms of advice, how to practice
the like doing something unpleasant every day.
Yeah, frequently.
Yeah, what I would do with that is I would try to make
the unpleasant thing be different
from one day to the next, if you can.
So the fear I would have with making running unpleasant every time would be it
becomes like a negative feedback loop in your physiologically potentially as
well as mentally where if the entire running process is miserable you're
going to be miserable when you step on that starting line whether it's a marathon or a hundred miles. So you've changed yourself that running equals miserable. You're gonna be miserable when you step on that starting line, whether it's a marathon or 100 miles.
So you've changed yourself,
then running equals miserable.
Well, and here's the thing,
like, if you look at just like,
here's where the literature says on paper
are like the, you know, dozen workouts you should do
in a training plan.
And this is how you should structure them
right down to the minute.
And you just say, like, I'm gonna give everyone this
schedule and they're gonna do this
every time rinse and repeat. My biggest concern with that approach is you are potentially putting
them in a position where the training is so boring and so monotonous that like if they hit a road
block mentally they're gonna fall apart very quick because they've already exhausted themselves
mentally just trying to do the same old interval every time, doing the same old workout.
It doesn't necessarily have to be one specific plan in its entirety.
It could just be the mix of things within it.
Rather than, if I just said, we're going to do three minute intervals, this entire short
interval process, or two minute intervals, or four minute intervals, or 60 second intervals. By that sixth week, they might be so sick of that that they're not actually
maximizing the potential within that because there's no flavor there. And then they're
also actually getting less out of themselves than they would if we just got a little more
creative and said, okay, let's mix this up and let's do four one minute intervals, then
take a little bit of a break, and then we'll do three minute intervals,
or at least changing it up from week to week,
so that they have something different showing up,
even though we're addressing the same kind
of physiological adaptation.
So I think what you want to do is you want to introduce the misery,
you want to be able to test yourself to the degree where,
like, when you can recognize these points,
if I don't want to be here, but I can do it and push through it.
But recognize that like there's not necessarily
gonna be one event that you wanna lean on to get that from
because you wanna make that one event so miserable
that you don't wanna do it when it comes time for the challenge.
So if you can possibly say like,
okay on Tuesdays, the push-up workout,
I'm gonna go 10 push-ups more than I want to. I'm going to
get to that point where I'm like, there's no more and then I'm going to do 10 more and
you're going to make that one miserable. And then maybe on, you know, Thursdays, you
decide to do like some of those sprints or something at the end where you do a few of them
and you're like, okay, this is where I'd be comfortable to stop. I'm going to do two
more of them because I know I don't want to do two more of them, but mix that up. So
you're not, so at least you're getting enjoyment from some of it and not just getting complete discussed from the entire
price. Yeah, there's actually quite a lot of ways that I can introduce miserably to the
bunch of the running get creative, including, you know, even just like stuff outside of the running, like taking
freezing cold showers, those kinds of things, just introducing random kind of chaos into the Indian system or having conversations with
people as an introvert, terrifying.
More podcasts.
More podcasts.
So, now starting the training and Zach, you've been kind enough to also kind of be willing
to help me out throughout this process.
So I look forward to where that goes.
It's kind of fascinating.
On the diet side, you're one of the many things that make you fascinating is that you've played
with diet as well.
And you're somewhat famous, I would say, for doing low carb or playing with low carb or
meat-based diets.
Can you describe the potential, like, work, how you're thinking about that has evolved and the potential
beneficial role of a carnivore diet or a keto diet or a meat-based diet in training as an
ultra marathon runner. Yeah, and I think like where a lot of times things get confusing for
people here is the context of it, too, where it's like they want an answer as to what do I
eat for endurance sport. And so, well, endurance sport is quite wide-ranging as we've talked
about many, many times here. So, there's going to be differences, I think, in just like what
you want to maybe next to their prioritize, both for the event you're doing and the intensity
that's required for it, the training that's required for that event, and then also the individual
component to where I think this one
all often gets overlooked where we tend to say like,
well, we've got all these Olympic medalists at the marathon
and below distance who are eating a moderate to high
carbohydrate diet.
So everyone needs to do that if they want to reach their potential
in, say, the 3K to the marathon.
And in a perfect world, say the 3K to the marathon. And, you know, in a perfect
world, maybe that would be true, but there's a lot of other variables that often get forgotten
then that could positively or negatively impact that decision choice. So I think Dr. Jeff
Volok is done a great job of kind of highlighting this in the sense that, you know, when he works
with people, he works with people in the health sphere as well as the performance sphere. And, you know's one of the main guys at Verda Health who's they've got like a 60% a success rate with working with folks with the type 2 diabetes
to reverse their type 2 diabetes
And I mean that's an astounding when you think of just any nutritional protocol. It's success rate
They're all incredibly low. They're very very low And the big difference with his is the coaching aspect of it.
Like they give support,
so these people have someone to turn to
when they make a mistake
or if they're thinking about doing something differently
or they don't know what to do,
rather than just kind of throwing it all up in the air
and quitting, they have a resource there.
And that's probably a big reason why
that's the success rate that they have with that,
is they put those support mechanisms in place. that picture needs to be carried in to the performance
world or the running world, too, where, you know, we may have just been identifying that,
you know, Olympic distance athletes that can tolerate a very large portion of their diet,
come from carbohydrate is gonna just,
it's gonna filter those ones towards the Olympics.
Filter those towards the Olympics.
Interesting.
Yeah, and that doesn't mean that like,
if we would have taken, say, the gold medals in the five came,
put them on a low carb diet, they'd run faster.
They probably wouldn't, because we may have already selected
that that person's thriving on carbohydrate.
What I would be interested in is like,
let's say we have someone with equal talent,
but got weeded out along the way potentially
because for whatever reason they just weren't able to tolerate
like both the training and the nutrition requirements
that they're being told to do.
So the coaches, there's a culture where the coaches
would really push a carb heavy diet
and that in itself would do the filtering process of
people that are not, it was filtered out to people that are not able to tolerate carbs
as part of their training.
I mean, I might be an example of this actually where, you know, you take someone where they,
for whatever reason the carbs aren't working for them, like it's unsustainable for them
to continue that path or if they do, they might have a shortened career.
So they might be able to eat out a few really good years,
but then they're not gonna be the person,
they're like, wow, that person's 38
and they're still competing at the Olympics type of a person.
And you know, you put them on a low carb diet.
If you can control everything else,
like their entire lifestyle is based around training and racing,
then you know, they may still have better potential by introducing carbohydrates at a higher level,
but if that's not going to be sustainable for them as a person, then what's the point
kind of at that unless they want to be a spark in the pan, so to speak?
I just feel good eating meat performance-wise.
Well, I think there's that group too.
And they may just not be the Olympians.
Yeah, and so we're not talking,
I guess this conversation has several layers.
One is for the Olympics,
and one is for like,
what is it?
Active athletes, they're like amateurs,
whatever category I put myself into,
like people that
exercise regularly. And then maybe people, and then there's people who like exercise
rarely. So on all of those fronts, I mean, do you think it's possible to live a happy,
active life eating meat only, or mostly meat. Yeah, what have you learned about this?
Yeah, I think so for some context,
I followed what I would call a low carbohydrate diet
for the last 10 years, and just like kind of a training,
I'd periodize it to a degree where there are parts
of my training where I do bring back
a little more carbohydrate, and there's periods
of my training, especially like the offseason
where I'm very low, and I might be in that ballpark of ketogenic,
strict ketogenic, or no carbohydrates for periods of time.
And what kind of food are we talking about?
What's a strict low-carb diet?
I've ranged everywhere from mostly plant-based low-carb keto
to mostly animal-based.
I've very rarely gone much more than two weeks strict
where I'm strict carnivore
or strict plant based or anything like that.
Like we're talking probably more like 95% at the peak in terms of any type of like longer
lasting from my personal experience of like being like either in like the animal food camp
or her like the plant based camp kind of of a process. So I've tried all of them, things that stayed consistent over the 10 years as a kind of
the macro nutrient profile that I've done throughout the course.
So one didn't win over the other and it was a meat base versus plant-based?
Oh, for me meat base definitely.
I mean, I was my highest meat consumption in 2019 and that was by far my best racing
season.
Yeah, we keep coming back to that year.
That was a good year for any reasons.
Philosophically and nutritionally.
Yeah, 2020 happened, and now I haven't had a really good chance to improve.
Hopefully I've got some more in the tank.
That's strange. There's most athletes that competed your level
and have more carbs integrated into their diets.
So what have you learned about using meat in high performance?
I think it's maybe less about the meat
and it's more about like what is it replacing?
So if we step away from like me specifically
and just like the people that,
because I mean we're getting to the point,
I get it's anecdotes, but like that's what we have at the moment because there's, I mean, there is actually a study
being done on, like, I think, I guess they call it hyper carnivore where they're like,
I think above 80% of their intake from meat.
And they're looking at a few different things there, but.
It's so weird and I keep interrupting, but it's so weird that it sounds unhealthy, hyper
carnivore.
Yeah.
But it makes me feel really good.
So I-
That's the individual thing.
Yeah, it's the individual thing.
There's countless people now who, like,
and I'm not saying that they could not have found
another route, myself included.
Like, in 2011, when I switched from moderate
to high carburetide to low carburetide rate
and saw some very noticeable differences in the way I felt,
the way I performed in all
this stuff.
That doesn't mean that there wasn't another path.
I just did not find that path.
The fact that I found a path that was producing the results I was looking for is really all
that matters in my mind.
I don't really care if there was a parallel path that works just as well or you know something like that
Because ultimately we only have one shot at everything. Yeah doing so like it'd be great if I could go back and try four or five different things
Well, the annoying thing is that the the body adjusts to whatever the heck you're doing
So you can't it's hard to do good science even on yourself. Yeah, I've referenced my 2019 racing season a few times
And it's like it'd be silly for me to put all of the emphasis on my nutrition plan for that because it's also comes with
two decades of endurance training. So it's possible and it's very likely that a huge portion of that success was just the culmination of a lot of work over time from the training side of things.
I does think like anytime you hyper focus on one area or pick a couple variables and just target those, you find yourself in a position
where you are, you're putting other things in the most uncharitable light possible. So,
then you have this situation where like it's actually a combination of a variety of different
things. So where are the big movers? And you know, for me, nutritional shift was pretty clear
that that improved my sleep in my recovery. And I mean, people can say, well, there's the placebo effect, which is a very real concern,
but, you know, for me personally, a 10-year placebo effect would be a quite lengthy placebo
effect.
And I do think it's individual, though.
I emphasize that a lot because I mean, I've worked with tons of people with this, and I
do see a range from person to person.
I've worked with people who come to me
and they're like strict keto
and we raise up their carbohydrates a bit
and they're like, okay, I feel way better doing it this way.
And I've worked with people who they come to me
moderate carbohydrate, but they're interested enough.
They wanna try a lower carb,
so we, you know, we'd titrate them down.
And I've had it clients where I'm like, okay,
I'm gonna give them this workout.
And they're going to wish they brought back a little bit of carbohydrate.
And then they go and they nail the workout.
And I'm just like baffled that because they're different from me.
And every time, you know, when you have your own personal experience, the first, the kind
of guttural responses, oh, if I had done it, what I got this way, why did it go the complete
opposite way for them?
And you kind of have to just kind of step out of your own
perspective a bit and say like, okay, well,
they're different, you know, for whatever reason,
they're getting along like this.
I've had like several moments in my life
where you kind of realize the body is weird
and it's weird than the average advice.
Like one of them is how well I perform
for my own standards when I fast. First of all,
intellectually, but that's more known and understandable, but physically. The fact that I could train
like 90, 20 hours, 24 hours, and then do a hard, like, jujitsu session for like two hours,
hard. It's incredible to me.
Like this makes no sense,
because I used to eat like many times a day.
Of course you have to eat.
Like you don't want to eat too close to the training session
was my thinking, but you definitely need to load up
on carbs like three hours before
like in order to have enough energy.
The fact that I could not eat and have like incredible focus
but also athleticism, like both endurance and explosive.
I mean, Gigiets is a special thing. It's like more like chess. It's not like powerlifting,
no, not powerlifting, Olympic lifting, or it's like true explosiveness. But that's fascinating.
And it makes you wonder like what other things are there to discover about yourself.
The annoying thing about food is it's delicious.
And so it's hard to do good science on yourself,
like to do, you know, for two weeks or a month,
to do like, strict no carbs, and then maybe next month
you add 20 grams or 40 grams of carbs and see how you actually feel,
not like in that moment, but over a period of several weeks.
And then doing everything else right,
with, based on best available science,
like with the electrolytes and the vitamins,
but then also remove all the humans from your life
that affect you positively or negatively,
because you might feel amazing,
because you're hanging out with cool people,
and then, you know,
like removing basically all the variables.
It's kind of fascinating.
And you kind of all of us land in a place
where we find something that worked for us.
And then we maybe use some of the placebo effect
to help us out, to stick in that place.
And then I suppose that's the way to live life.
I guess it's possible to find the optimal for any of us,
but Carnivore is an interesting,
new kind of caveat and you challenged
to the nutritional community,
because more and more people seem to be doing
well under Carnivore.
Yeah.
Well, the nutrition community is probably,
we just got done like dealing with the vegans,
now we got this opposite end of the spectrum coming at us.
But I think, well, I mean, with this all tells me is like, there is, for one, like, in
our food environment, like the failure rate of any one approach at a population level is
going to be incredibly high.
I mean, it's why we have, you know, what is it, like, 88% of the population has some sort
of like metabolic syndrome.
And it's like, you know, it's because
there's an endless quantity of everything
that you can get your hands on for relatively cheap.
And I think that that presents a problem
if your mindset is gonna be,
we need this set of parameters for nutrition
and everyone needs to adhere to that or you're wrong.
And it's like, well, tell that to the person who went carnivore and cleared up
some crazy skin ailment or something like that.
Or, that's a weird one.
Yeah.
Like where the carnivore seems to treat depression.
It's like mental stuff.
It's fascinating.
There's all these stories.
Again, it's anecdotes, but it's like.
The mental one, I think, may, I'm stepping out a bit on a limb here, but I want to say
like some of the research of Dominic Diagostino and Jeff Allick was looking at the ketogenic
diet, which a carnivore diet is basically going to be a part of a ketogenic.
I mean, you could always go like way too high on the protein, I guess.
But most people that I see doing carnivore, they're
cognizant enough that at least if they're doing it for therapeutic reasons, they're not
going like 50% protein, 50% more. They're more like 70, 30, 80, 20, something like that.
And I think you do see some work with the brain and so the mental stuff. I know some
of the... I'm not sure, I know some of the,
I'm not sure if this was part of the DARPA funding
that Dr. Day, Dominic D'Aggostino had,
where they were looking at things like mental stuff,
like post-traumatic stress disorder
and that sort of stuff with like a strict ketogenic diet.
So I wonder if some of that,
like the depression related stuff has to do with that,
where now like their body is just feeling the brain
differently than maybe they were in the past, but that's just, you know, wild guesses on my part.
And I'm deviating from the conversation, but like, no, that's brilliant. In terms of your own
story on food, can you say something? I think we're kind of referring to diet broadly. Can you
say something about how you like to fuel your, like, whether it's race or great training sessions,
like, maybe the day before, let's go even that far,
during and maybe a few hours after.
Okay.
It'll be a little different for racing
than it will be for like a big workout,
just because the interesting thing about all
tour running is just like you never do the race.
Even like most endurance races, you're gonna cover the distance,
you're gonna replicate the race almost up to it.
In training, whereas with 100 miles,
you might replicate a third of it.
So I'll walk you through kind of my approach
for like a 100 mile race,
and I can tell you maybe what I would do differently
on like a training day.
But yeah, so for where the community is in agreement is that you do want to be very good at
burning fat for ultramarathons.
I mean, there's just like the intensity is low.
If your ratios are skewed very high towards carbohydrate metabolism, then you're going to
have to defend your muscle glycogen through tons of carbohydrate consumption.
And that's just gonna be very hard to do
over the course of an entire day,
even at low intensities.
So it's a fuel tank thing.
I mean, it's like your leanest endurance athletes
have way more fat than they do glycogen stores.
When you're doing low intensity performance,
you wanna be burning high levels of fat
and sparing that muscle glycogen.
What I tend to do is I wanna start the race burning really high levels of fat and sparing that muscle glycogen. What I tend to do is I want to start the race burning really high levels of fat.
So I'm going to, I'll maybe have some carbohydrate the night before for dinner, but then I'm going
to lean into the overnight fast breakfast the morning of.
I'm going to stay away from carbohydrates for a hundred mile or anyway.
And I'm going to have something like something that's pretty like the high energy low volume. So
like I'll do like an S fuels a life bar. They've got like what's in an S fuel life bar?
Are we talking about carbs or talking about protein fat protein fat protein bar and it
makes that's awesome. Yeah. So it's not as low carb. Yep, yeah, they make, S-Fuel's makes a whole product line
that's like kind of positioned for a low carb athlete.
So they have some products on their lineup
that offer some carbohydrate,
which is perfect for me because I do introduce
some carbohydrate on racing
in some of my bigger training sessions and things.
But the majority of their products are low carb.
So like they have like,
you know how you get like the powders that
you put in, like your drinks that are like, high carbohydrate, you know, sports products,
they make a version of that that's like fat based.
Oh, cool. You can mix in with water.
Yep. Cool. Yes. They've got like a creamer version and then a fruity flavor version.
So you can like replicate the taste and the feel of drinking like a, like, you know, sports
drink. That's awesome. I know it is. Well, that's so much of it too,
because people are like,
I don't know, I just like to have my gatorate or whatever.
Right, yeah.
So, well, you can have it now,
just it won't have a lot of stuff.
And you can see you can bring that kind of thing with you.
Yeah, so I'm leaning on a lot of those liquid calories,
like those low volume high energy fat protein stuff
the morning of,
so that when I start the race,
my body is gonna be encouraged to start out burning high levels of fat.
Once I get going, probably about 45 minutes in, I'll start introducing small amounts of carbohydrate.
So at that point my body's been revving pretty high fat metabolism and by introducing some
carbohydrate in the context of the, you know, let's say my 100 mile personal record,
I'm running approximately nine miles every hour,
so I'm probably going through about a thousand calories
in an hour's time.
I'm gonna start just like defending muscle glycogen
by burning super high levels of fat.
At the heart rate, I would do for that.
I'm probably burning somewhere between 80, 90% fat.
12 hours of that, you can chip away at your muscle glycogen
to the point where you don't necessarily want to go
zero carb.
So I'm basically just trying to defend what I know
I'm going to be burning from the carbohydrate side of that
80 to 90% fat, 10 to 20% carbohydrate by taking in.
Usually, I've gone as low as about 15 grams of carbohydrate
per hour and as high as 40 grams.
And the reality is somewhere in between is probably the sweet spot, but 40, I can get
away without any digestion issues.
So I'm not really concerned pushing up to that during a race since I'm only concerned about
performance on that day.
Is the car the problem or is it fiber?
Oh, just going about 40 grams?
Or just because you mentioned digestion issues.
One of the things for me, one of the cool things about fatty protein and protein or fat
is my stomach just feels a little better.
Yeah.
So carbs introduce bloating and just not feeling great.
Yeah, and I think the funny thing is if you look at the position paper for ultra marathon
single day events, and it's very limited in the sense that then it's not anyone's fault.
It's just that we don't have a lot of great research on 100 mile races.
It's really hard to study what's going on when someone's running 100 miles, but they'll
say moderate carbohydrate diet is recommended, but they'll also say that it's like something
like 60% of participants are going to report some sort of like digestion issue during the
event.
So then it kind of becomes an issue of do you want to flip that coin?
Do you want to flip that coin?
It would be the 40%.
Right.
Exactly.
So for me, what I found is like I can push up to 40 grams without getting any digestion
issues.
Do I need 40 grams?
Probably not at least not based on kind of the numbers that would be like that I would see on,
like if I went and actually got a metabolic cart test
or something like that.
But it's possible, I mean, if I had a really good race
that I would get close to burning that per hour,
most folks that are following a moderate high carbohydrate diet
are gonna be recommended to like 50 to 70 grams
during a single day ultramarathon event.
And you'll see some recommendations
up to like 100 grams,
not so much for ultra marathons,
but just in general for like a performance standpoint,
which I mean, it's one of those things
where it's like application versus like what you can do
in a lab for one hour is gonna be a lot different,
especially when you're stretching out distances well past that.
And there's, I'm diverting a little here, but I mean, there's an approach of training
your gut so you can be able to tolerate that much carbohydrate, which you can do, and
you may have to if you're going to follow a high carbohydrate diet.
But again, we go back to that practicality standpoint of if you're a professional Olympian
who's living and breathing performance, and you're burning two to three times, you're resting metabolic rate on some days.
Like you may be able to actually consume 100 grams
of carbohydrate per hour during your training sessions
and just barely stay on top of your nutritional needs.
Most people who are running ultramarathons
aren't gonna be probably training
much past 10 hours per week.
And they're probably not gonna have the, I'll call it, they're a dietary budget to tolerate
100 grams of carbohydrate consumption during their workouts and still be able to stay healthy.
And, you know, so I think that's kind of like a bit of a non-starter for the majority
of people.
Unless we want to talk about like a tiny percentage of the 1% of
Top performers. So maybe you can talk about the training like feeling yourself during training as well is there and also
As part of that is it possible to train mostly fasted?
Because as a side comment at let me just say I like again not
Let me just say I like again not
Anywhere not even like one tenth of your level of performance But you know I try to push myself and I just feel much better when I'm fast
It's a water and maybe some salt for longer runs for anything over like 10 15 miles, but no food
Yeah, I think I mean I like to train on empty stomach
I do most my my biggest training session using the morning and usually what will determine
whether I eat something or not before.
That is like how much 20 deep that day in order
to stay on top of a debilit training in the next day.
So I'll usually do something similar to what I do before a race
if I need to kind of stay on top of calories for the day.
So I'm not like at noon with like no calorie intake
and like 5,000 calories to try to consume
before I go to bed that night
and get out and do the same thing the next day. But yeah, I think in a, in a, if I were,
if I were doing what you're doing, like if that were my lifestyle, I think I would do almost all
my runs fasted. I don't see why I would be eating a lot before it because it's like, I'm just
introducing something that could, especially if you're noticing, like, here's what I'd say.
If I was doing that and I was like,
while this runs sucks and then I introduced something
beforehand and now my run was feeling great
and my progress was getting better,
that's what I would maybe consider having something before.
But if you're running both those self experiments
you're noticing, yeah, if I eat something before I go
and this workout, the workout's less enjoyable,
I'm not noticing any increased improvements on it. Again, it's a little messy, like we said before.
It's hard to really, you can't go back and try it a different way on that specific day.
But I think most people, if they're just like, they go at it with like, no bias in the sense that
they're like trying to make one work versus the other, you can get at least a good enough look at it. And if absolute peak performance in one activity,
one very specific activity isn't your goal,
then it's like, do you really care if one has a 2% performance increase
that you won't even probably notice?
Because there's other variables that will clearly overpower that 2%,
one way or the other.
And there's some benefit in terms of freedom and letting go of like having to think about
some of these variables.
I see sort of fasting is even if it's like a hit on the performance, it's worth it to
just not think about it.
There's some really nice aspect to just putting on shoes, not caring like what shorts you
wear or like what you're outfitted, not being optimal.
In every way, just not caring, just enjoying the purity of just running, no matter what,
just enjoying the natural aspect.
There's a side to me that sometimes just craves a lifestyle where I have such a small
house and only what I need and just a handful handful of food products that I know I enjoy
and work well for me and I don't even have the distraction of the other stuff.
There's like a, there's like a, there's almost like a weight that comes off your
shoulders when you can, when you think, even just thinking about it like it's so simple.
So the reason I, I'm mostly a minimalist like that, the reason I have stuff is I realize like
you probably have to fit into society and if you want to have other people in your life,
you should probably get used to having stuff.
Yeah.
Because most people like stuff.
Right.
Yeah, well, yeah, there's that side of it too.
And there's a whole, you don't want
to ostracize yourself too much.
And I think anything you can kind of like,
you can manipulate that a little bit
where there's things that are like not specific to,
that's gonna negative impact the people around you or your experiences with them. So there's
a balance like everything I guess.
Yeah, I mean, that's why I drink, I think I'm much do you all fly and drink vodka, whiskey,
sort of alcohol, because I don't feel good about it the day after or sometimes multiple
days after. So I know it's not good for me.
So I do a lot of stuff that's good for me. We talk about exercise and diet and all those kinds of
things, but the alcohol almost symbolizes embracing the chaos of life, the wild and the amazing
things that could happen. And I think that's really important because if you optimize everything
about life, then you go to miss most of
the fun stuff that happens in life. So it's not all about the optimization. It's some of
it. Like everyone has different things on what they, how they introduce that chaos in
a controlled way. For me, alcohol is that because I'm okay drinking not too much. So
I can control that aspect. Even though it's unhealthy, it introduces
just the right amount of fun.
That's a whole bracelet.
Yeah, and I mean, it is one of those things
where it's like, I'm gonna benefit now
and pay later a little bit too, where like,
and hey, if you go and you go out with some friends
and drink and you have memories that last a lifetime
from that experience and you paid for it
for a couple days after,
then maybe that's a fair trade off from life experience.
And part of the vodka thing is I need to honor my ancestors.
So it's like you have to, you know, you can't,
you can't turn your back on your past.
Let me ask about the, the Hunter Mile world record
on the treadmill.
So for most people running out of treadmills really boring.
So that's kind of their experience of it.
That's probably the first thing that would say that seems like really boring to run a
Haremau's in a treadmill.
Would you say it's boring?
Like what were some places your mind went to make that happen?
So this one is interesting to me because I definitely recognized the boredom and the
difference.
The question I can't quite answer, I think, with it is like, could I have remedied that
with better preparation?
Because the scenario that put me on a treadmill for 100 miles was, you know, it was March 2020,
based on the cascade of every race on the planet got canceled.
And I was in a position where I was going to be doing a run a bull 100
mileer on a track in mid to late April.
So I had like the majority of my training under my belt.
So I was like kind of putting the finishing touches on that.
And I said, oh, great.
Here we are.
Like, you know, what do I do with this fitness? Do I just scale back and hope the events come back and fall and then peak
again? Or do I find something to use this fitness for? And the treadmill was the closest
thing to what I had been training for in terms of just like a mechanical, like flat running
essentially, that I could, that I could think of. And my thought was, okay, well, I'll just livestream myself on a treadmill
and see what happens.
It ended up turning into like a quite a big event.
But so you don't usually incorporate treadmill running
into your running into your training?
I don't not incorporate it.
I just don't incorporate it in the way that would be
necessarily conducive to,
dealing with the mental aspects of being on a treadmill
for a hundred miles. Was it that different than being on a treadmill for 100 miles.
Was it that different than running on a track?
It was from the sense that here's the way I describe it,
is when I'm on a track, it's a controlled environment
and everything can be very uniform,
but there are tiny little micro adjustments and pace
that I'm doing subconsciously
that give me the sense of control.
No, I might run the exact same split, but there's a fraction of a second,
or a fraction second faster than a fraction of a second slower,
that equals the same outcome.
It gives you that sense of control.
You're determining how fast you're going.
On a treadmill, you're responding to the belt.
The advantage is you can set a pace and know you're hitting it.
The disadvantage is you're being told what to do by that machine
and that gets very frustrating.
I felt like I wanted to step off.
You get to certain points where you're just like, even stepping off, what I noticed,
I learned this on the day of actually, I noticed there's something where it didn't really
matter how long I'd get off.
I'd get off to use the bathroom and that was a little bit of a longer break.
I had a hiccup during my event
where we ran so much power through one end of the house
that the screen on the treadmill was blacking out.
So I ended up jumping back and forth on treadmills
for quite a bit in the beginning.
And I noticed even turning it off,
stepping on the other and starting the other one up
gave me like a handful of seconds between,
was enough of a mental break of just that
release of being told what to do to reset.
So maybe if you were in the future, you would figure out what exactly how much she's needed
to have that method break.
I never actually thought about that.
Obviously for you, but also for people like me, like amateur runners, that's the source
of frustration with the treadmill.
That there's sometimes a small adjustments and pace that we do running
Not on the treadmill on the ground that feel like essential. Yeah for that feel just like you said that experience of control
Like feeling like you're a control somehow that's really I
Don't know that somehow liberating in the way that a treadmill can be just a source of frustration
I don't know, that's somehow liberating in the way that a treadmill can be just the source of frustration.
The funny thing though about the treadmill is I actually like to do faster workouts on
the treadmill, like long intervals or something like that or tempo runs because for that,
for that type of stuff, sometimes for those, I want to release the brain power required
to hit that pace and say, you take care of that.
And for that, it's fun, but those are over quick, so you don't really run into the times.
Yeah, that's fascinating.
For like precise control of pace, you've also during that stream got to interact with
the greatest athletes of all time, but a pressure.
What's your, he's actually doing, I don't know if you're paying attention to this, but
I guess he has a goal of running 2000 miles this year.
Yeah.
I've got, and she has's talk to Joe Rogan yesterday
about this, which is fascinating.
I think he's a little bit doubtful of
a birth ability to be the ultra performer
that he so naturally is.
Yeah.
What's your thoughts about birth as a runner?
What's your advice to him?
And what was your interaction like
as part of this treadmill challenge with him?
I love Bert because he's such a nice person.
I mean, as a guy who's just accelerated in popularity over the last few years, like he
is like super kind.
So for folks who are curious, like I've met Bert a couple years earlier and I just randomly
asked him, like, hey, I'm doing this live stream thing.
We're doing it for Fight For The Forgot
and we're trying to raise some funds for them.
Would you want to come on the live stream for a bit?
And I thought maybe he'd come off like five or 10 minutes.
And I thought that would be amazing if he did that.
He'd have come on for like over an hour.
He said, he went past his slot,
sat in the next slot and just started talking
with some of the other guests.
And he's just,
Bert is definitely like, I feel like he's as unchanged from like his popularity
as one can get away with.
And it's just like his lifestyle, I think, is very unpredictable in the sense that like,
if he wants to run like X time for a specific race, that's gonna pull away from his lifestyle so much to focus on that.
Luckily for him, he's actually a great athlete.
Like it's under that layer of...
A fat? Yeah.
So for people who are not familiar,
Burkresha is a comedian who takes off his shirt often,
has a elegant layer of fat around him.
He's also a party animal.
So he's a weird balance of like healthy and unhealthy. Yeah. So he drinks a lot during, I think there's something to debate about that, but certainly after his performance is, but at the same time, he's into kind of the running thing.
And he does quite a bit of treadmill running, I think. So and like I said, has this challenge of running 2000 miles this year.
So it's fascinating to have somebody who so fully embraces
life and the full joys of life as represented by the
huge amounts of drinking and partying and just being a wild man
but also at the same time like being at least
curious about this challenging yourself in the physical realm. It's kind of fascinating. It reminds me of
One of my favorite comedians like Eddie Isard who has been doing those challenges
Basically off the couch just running them
Amerathon a day kind of thing is fascinating
to see the
purity of those challenges when like exercise hasn't necessarily been deeply
ingrained in your life and you kind of just embrace the challenge anyway and take it on.
And that's another way of looking at it because we've been talking about running as a performance,
like optimization thing where training is such a huge part of this process. Like race days, just the cherry on top.
But there's for some people where the race is the cake.
Yeah.
It's like they just take it on as a pure challenge as the as the thing you
haven't really trained for as a thing you haven't, you don't understand the intricacies
of, but you take it on anyway.
And that that reveals something about the human spirit as well.
Yeah.
And there's definitely like a switch that flips when you in your mind
decide I'm going to do this. Yeah. Where then all of a sudden it goes from like,
you stop thinking about, oh, that's not possible. So like, well, I'm just going to do
it. And I think Bert highlights that perfectly in a lot of cases where like he's,
he's maybe not even thinking it through enough to get to the point where it's like,
he gets the point where he thinks this is not possible, where most people would look at him and think,
huh, I don't know if I can actually physically accomplish
that task.
Birds just like, oh yeah, I'm gonna do it.
And my thing that I thought with Burt was the 2000 mile thing
is we're gonna find him at the end of the year
with like 36 hours to go on 100 miles and he's gonna get
to do it.
That's right, that's what's gonna happen.
And it's going to be hilarious.
So speaking of things that are insane
and like taking on challenges that don't seem,
like you didn't think through.
You're thinking about running across the country
in a challenge you call the Transcontinental Run.
Can you describe this challenge
and what the heck you're thinking?
Yeah, yeah, so this is, you know,
one thing that is exciting about Ultramarathons,
I think in a lot of places, especially early in someone's
Ultramarathon adventure, if they decide to do that
as a, you know, part of their life is,
you have like these early years where you're doing things
for the first time and it's like so cool and scary
at the same time to think,
today I'm gonna run 100 miles
and for the seven run before is 50 or something like that.
And you just know you're gonna do something
that you've never done before,
you're gonna experience things,
you would have never been able to predict.
And it's like this really interesting, unique,
like human experience, I think.
So for me, I spent most of my career at this point,
like doing, I got through
that phase and a lot of the events I'm really interested in. And then it was like, now
let's repeat it and see if we can do it better. And you get into that mindset for a while,
which is also a fun mindset. But there is that kind of like a desire to kind of have
that a human experience again of like, you know, not knowing what could happen or is
this doable type of a thing, but still doing it and figuring it out along the way.
So I would describe the transcontinental project
as something like that.
It's not anything unique to me or anything new.
There's been a lot of people who've done it before.
But essentially, it's a route, there's different routes.
There's one kind of main one that's done for like,
that is used as the record route more or less
that you go from San Francisco to New York.
And essentially you live out of an RV while you're running. So you run as much as you can during the day, then you go from San Francisco to New York, and essentially you live out on RV while you're running.
So you run as much as you can during the day,
then you go to bed at night,
and then you get up and do it again.
And you're handling all the logistics
in the process of trying to make sure you can get up
the next day and do again,
what you did the day before,
which is gonna be the biggest difference.
So for me, I've done all single day ultra marathons
where you're gonna to ring yourself dry.
At knowing the next day or week or however long you need,
you're going to be able to just kind of like shut everything down
and let them catch back up, whereas with this,
like, you know, you're doing it again and again and again.
And you know, the record is by a guy named Pete Coslin,
who average just over 72 miles a day,
finished in 42 days, six hours and 30 minutes.
And I mean, just like 72 miles, 73 miles,
and then like next day again, next day again,
just knowing every day when you finish,
you spend a whole day running, and then okay,
I'm gonna go to bed, I'm gonna wake up in the morning,
I'm gonna have to do this again,
and then, you know, have that happen for six weeks,
and that's if it goes very well.
So the luck I assume is a big part of this.
Yeah, for sure.
I mean, there's just so many variables that are uncontrollable on this type of an experience
just because, I mean, you go over this year as maybe you hit a storm.
You know, you try to time it.
Most people do it in start and September, so you can get over the mountain passes without
a big storm coming through.
But that also gets to these coasts before it's like the middle winter.
So like September, early September start is kind of ideal.
But you can, you know, I mean,
Pete was very fortunate from a weather standpoint.
I think he made one big mistake.
We had a little to aggressive beginning,
had to take a full day off.
So he actually averaged from a moving day standpoint,
closer to 75 miles per day.
But yeah, I mean, there's gonna be things
that I can't prepare for, won't know if it's gonna happen.
You know, a lot of that will get,
a lot of the logistical stuff will get leaned
on with the crew. That's the hardest part right now is just getting all that put together
where it's like, okay, I need to have the RV ready, I need to have all the stuff. We need
to have the places figured out where we're going to stop. The people that can dedicate that
much time to an activity like that, there's a lot of moving parts
even before you start the adventure itself.
When are you, you're taking the San Francisco to New York?
Yeah.
When are you doing the run?
September 1st is when, you know,
barring anything like catastrophic between now and then.
This is really exciting, but I mean, this is incredible.
So you, you'll probably have a bunch of people
just randomly running with you.
Are people going to be tracking while you're located? Yeah, so I'll be documenting everything because I mean my hope is that I'm doing it primarily
to raise awareness for Fight for the Forgotten Justin Ren's charity. But with that said,
I think I am capable of, if I have a good experience chasing the record or going after the record
or at least getting close to it. So you're gonna try to beat this record?
Yeah, I'm gonna go out with it.
I'm gonna structure the process in a way
that leaves that door open is the way I would describe it.
I'm gonna try not to do anything
that would potentially put it in a situation
where that becomes the primary goal
just because I wanna make sure
that the reason I decided to do the first place
was for Fight for the Forgotten.
So I wanna make sure that I don't end up two thirds way across the country with a broken leg
and I'm like, hey guys, I guess the donation buttons turned off.
So folks, I don't sacrifice that goal. But also there's a community aspect to it that I feel like
are you going to, I mean, so you're going to document and post.
But are you going to also,
is there a safety perspective here?
It's like the four is come thing.
You might have large numbers of crowds
that run along with you for a while.
You're worried about that kind of thing.
I wouldn't say I'm worried about it.
I mean, I think there's probably,
there's remote enough spots along the way
where you'll get some alone time more likely.
I don't necessarily mind if people want to jump in.
There'll be some people that will definitely want to do that
and they can come in.
But the reality is like, it's probably not gonna be a scenario
where there's like, you know, 40 people following me
at all times.
You say that now.
Yeah, you never know.
Just wait for this podcast.
I do.
Yeah, and then if Joe finds out you're doing this, then we're really in trouble.
All right.
So, I mean, what are the things that you think will be the hardest for you?
And also, like, how do you train for this kind of thing?
And what are the hardest things you anticipate and how do you train for them?
Yeah.
So, the way I'm looking at this is it's much less about performance from the traditional
sense where I need to be able to be X fit. I think I need to be injury proof. That's what's
going to be a detriment. If you think about it, like, if I manage to average 9-minute mile pace
for a day, that would be 80 miles in a 12 hour timeframe.
So I'll easily have 12 hours of moving time per day.
Nine minute pace, I think is slow enough
that it's not an unreasonable clip.
So like, when you, I mean, obviously there's things
that slow you down or I'll probably take walking breaks,
stopping breaks, you gotta stay on top of nutrition.
That's the other big thing too.
I'm probably eating like anywhere between 10 to 15,000 calories a day, which is, you know, I can
probably count on my hand a couple of occasions where I've eaten that much in my life. So
now I gotta do that for six plus weeks in a row. I said, and you don't want to have any
stomach problems. I was trying to minimize the amount of stomach problems. So would you
estimate about 12 to 13 to 14 hours of running every day? Yeah, that's probably like from
the first step to the last step. It'll probably be somewhere around, like say to 14 hours of running every day. Yeah, that's probably like from the first step
to the last step, it'll probably be somewhere around
like say 14 hours, 13 hours or something like that
would be a pretty good estimate.
And then getting rest.
And so, and then minimizing the risk of injury,
which could be as small as like literally
uneven services resulting to like stepping the wrong way.
I mean, that's gonna be a lot of steps.
Yeah, yeah.
So the probability of injury,
are you worried about that kind of stuff?
Can you strengthen the ankles
or those kinds of things that prevent possibility of injury?
And that's where I'm putting a lot of my focus in is,
I think like just being running fit
is gonna be, like generally speaking,
is gonna be important.
I think just from a lifetime of running is going to be a huge advantage.
A lot of these like kind of like mechanical movements are going to be very established.
It's just going to be about can I tolerate that volume of it?
I think that I'm doing more strength work.
I think this is something where it's like maybe adding five pounds of lower body muscle
is going to be an advantage versus a disadvantage when you're looking at power weight ratio because I just don't really
don't I never need to be running a 648 mile for this adventure. And so I'm
looking at that. I'm doing a lot more of that stuff focusing on that. The
training is changing a fair bit where it's more polarizing versus kind of being
I mean I've always had some polarization in my training, but this is even to an extreme where like I'm going to do some simulations where, you know,
I go out and do two or three days where I target the exact thing I will be doing on the Transcon.
You were on Instagram posting about the simulator runs, so you legitimately, like trying to
perfectly copy what would happen one, two or three day segment on that run. Yeah, just to kind of start to weed out where are the potential problems. So let's say I do a two or
three day simulation where I'm averaging 70 miles a day and I find out at the end of three days,
there's a really weak spot here. I need to address that or I need to find a way to make that not a
weak spot. I think that's the only way to really get as close as you can to avoiding injury. Have you done that yet? Have you done a two-day, sunny month? Like even that's
incredibly difficult. I haven't yet. I'm going to build up two of them. Because that's the other
thing too, is I don't think you want to be so aggressive with that where you get injured trying to
figure out how not to get injured. So what I'm going to start, what I just started last week is I've,
it looks really weird on my training schedule just started last week is I've,
it looks really weird on my training schedule because like last week I ran almost 150 miles, but I took two days off.
So it's like usually for me to get to 150 miles,
that's a seven day training week.
So that's the way I'm doing it.
Like I did, I did a day where I did, you know, two like just over 20 miles separated
with by just a couple hours and within that couple hours, I did like a three mile walk.
The following morning, I woke up and ran,
I think it was like just over 36 miles first thing
in the morning, just to get an idea of just like,
what does it like to be?
I mean, this was in Phoenix too, so it was 100 degrees
for the majority of that.
It just suffered and rest,
yeah, suffered again, how that feels.
There's enough precedent with this sort of an activity
where everyone I've talked to so far has told me
there is gonna be this kind of gradual decline
in the early stages where you're just like,
okay, it's getting worse, it's getting worse, it's getting worse.
And you hit a point where you're just like,
it hits kind of rock bottom,
and then it starts to kind of gradually improve.
So you kind of have to let yourself get,
it's weird, I think I can maybe
eliminate, I'm trying to find a way to eliminate some of that by doing the simulations. Whereas
I, from what I've seen, I haven't seen a lot of people do the simulation route yet. I've
seen people just do like a lot of training and then say like, okay, I'll, I'll spend the first
seven to ten days adapting to this and then I'll get comfortable within this environment and be fine.
Whereas I'm gonna try to get to a point where like,
some of that is already kind of cleared up
before I start, but not so much that I'm like adding
like an extra essential week to the trip
with worth of running.
What do you think would be the hardest simulator run
leading up to like, we do three days?
Yeah, I think I'll probably try to do three days,
somewhere between 70 and 80 miles each. We'll be kind of like the goal.
I'd be in August, you think? How close to? Yeah, I would like it to be in August, like early
August would be ideal. I think like maybe the first week in August because that gives me kind of
three weeks to let things kind of settle down from that. But then it's crazy. This is incredible.
It's actually interesting because like if I did, let's say I did the simulation now,
the problem with that is like the adaptations just the breakdown and the strengthening would likely
be gone unless I did it again.
So I want to inch up to it so that, and get close enough to the starting date so that I'm
still kind of holding on to that adaptation when I start it.
So then those first few days maybe aren't quite as miserable.
And you said, if everything goes amazing
and you're challenging, the record will be like a 42 day run.
Yeah, so that's what the record is,
it's almost exactly six weeks.
And that's at 72 and a half miles per day.
So.
Will you be posting online and like,
yep, yeah.
Instagram's gonna be a big one.
I think I might do a few like YouTube stuff
along the way too.
Yeah, I'm still iron out exactly how much I think at minimum I'll do some Instagram stuff.
I think I'll go live on Instagram a few times during the day when I take walking breaks,
partly just to kind of, I think keeping people in, I mean, it stays true to the goal of
raising awareness, but it also, I find when you bring people in, there
is an added pressure to that, but there's also this sense that I've learned from the treadmill
experience since we had a pretty big production for that in the sense that, as much as you
can turn on a camera in your own house, but I remember thinking we had like 30 people
lined up to come in and guest speak during that and there's
Points of that where I was like you know you get that voice you talk about the beginning where it's like, you know
Maybe you could quit like do you really need to run 100 miles on a treadmill?
Is this really gonna be valuable for you? Yeah, and then you think about oh, you know what?
There's you know Courtney DeWalt or one of the best female trainers to ever exist is
Taken in 30 minutes to an hour out of her day to come on in two
hours to help me amplify this event.
And do I really want to be sending emails out to these people saying, hey guys, I know
you were gracious enough to block out time of your day.
I think there's a little bit of that to do where you're jumping in with the community that
is following along and saying, here's how things are going.
Show them the best, the worst and everything between, and then ultimately have that hold you accountable
a little bit too. It's like hard to get up in the morning and not go back out. I don't know how
you are, but I had to, whenever I did any kind of physical stuff, like the 48 hour challenge or
just any kind of running, I hated turning on the camera. I hated it. Like, because you have to like smile and be friendly and stuff.
Well, I'm just gonna be super miserable if I'm miserable.
Well, that's it.
So like, exactly.
In some sense, that's what people, you know,
you're gonna get a happy Zach or an angry.
Exactly.
It's like you make him bets.
And I'm sure there'll be some days, maybe not many,
maybe very few, where you're truly happy with yourself.
Like for some weird ecstatic reason, maybe if you get over the hump, whatever you mentioned, that this dip,
I mean, it's fascinating how much suffering this actually entails. I wonder.
Well, and one thing I'm gonna to definitely try to leverage to my advantage.
And one of the reasons why I think fight for the forgotten was the charity that really
triggered me to decide to do this.
The Transcontinental route was something I learned about early in my ultra running career.
And I thought to myself, I want to do that someday, but it was one of those kind of far off-distance
things that it never really like actualized in your mind until you put a date down or, you
know, mentioned it on the Joe Rogan experience or something like that.
And then it's like people want to know when is this happening.
And, you know, what I try to think about is, you know,
the reason Justin identified the Pygmy tribe was because
they were super forgotten where, you know, we think about just like
some of these third world countries where
it's a scenario of like some people that's easy for us here in the US to think to ourselves,
well why don't they just industrialize? Why don't they just like start to innovate a bit?
Why are they so primitive? What's wrong with them? And in reality, when you scale things
down to the degree where you need the entire day because of the situation
you're in, just to take care of your basic needs of water and food, you never get the
opportunity to even build a real establishment or build on that.
You need the free time or you need a portion of your population to have the free time available
to innovate.
The Pygmy Tribe just hadn't had that historically.
In fact, they weren't even considered humans
by the local government for quite some time.
And the people that really pay the price
in some of these situations are the women
because they're the ones that get saddled
with the water gathering and things like that.
So the reason that Justin picked wells to build
was because he thought to himself,
if we can get them wells,
then now these women don't spend all day walking and caring water. Now they can just get that water and now we have half the
population freed up for other things. Now maybe they can start farms. They can build some housing
and stuff like that and it just exponentially improves once you take care of some of those big
key early things. So when I'm thinking about like, you know, do I really need to go out here and travel
on the 12th of the day? My mind's gonna hopefully go to, well, if one of those women woke up in the
pygmy tribe, one more and decided, you know what, do I really need to go get water today? I'm
saying, well, yeah, you do. You really do have to. Yeah, you're running for that. Yeah, and that
will give you fuel, hopefully, but yeah, I mean, the reality is always there where I don't have to do it.
Like, they do have to do it.
So, you know, but I think just keeping that perspective, it puts us back to the beginning
where it's, this is one of those situations where I think it's like a no quit situation.
You have to put yourself in a no quit situation here because it's you know, it's just bigger than you
I can't wait to see like the dark places you go. I mean there's some yeah the the quit situations and
Hopefully we get to have a glimpse of those because I think those are really inspiring when somebody is
Both gets broken by them because you know how tough you are
But also is almost broken and overcomes it.
I mean, that's just fascinating stories. I can't wait. I know. Does Joe know you're doing this,
by the way? Yeah, I sent him, sent him a note a while back because he was the first spot I
mentioned it on. So I think he knows. I'm not sure if he's following about the exact starting day
or not. Well, no, you're probably think you're crazy, MF for doing this, but I think you'll love it. I
love it. I think the world will love it. Ridiculous question. Who's the greatest endurance
runner or endurance athlete of all time? Oh, that's a good question. I think I'd probably go maybe two directions here.
I think a helle gaborlassy is one of the best
in my opinion because just, I mean, 27 world records,
like not all the different distance,
but like breaking and rebraking and that sort of stuff.
not all the different distance, but like breaking and re-breaking and that sort of stuff. I mean, he ran two, what was it?
203, 59 before the shoe technology came in that is estimated at anywhere between a two
to eight percent performance advantage.
It's not even a two hour marathon, two, zero, three.
Yep.
Two hour, three minutes.
Yep.
Yeah, so he did that with the old shoe technology, which essentially dates back to anything.
If you were a Nike athlete, it could date back to as early as, I think, early 2016,
is when the first prototype started showing up. So if you're before that in your career,
you were using your guaranteed to be using the old shoe technology.
And I mean, just the range of it, too. And yeah, it's hard.
I mean, there's a...
Does he have a marathon on it, purely?
No, he did everything.
That's why I picked him, I think,
because he went everywhere, everything
with 800 and is like, if I had a national level.
800?
Yeah, at a national level.
I don't, he wasn't competing at like Olympics
or anything in the 800,
but he was, he was mostly like, 5K to marathon.
Yeah. Yeah, so just incredible.
I mean, I could go a totally different direction too.
I think like Steve Prefantane stands out
in as an American runner,
just because if you look at it outside
of just like performances and stuff like that,
I think he, like you can't find an American male runner
who probably didn't get some motivation
or some catalyst into their running journey
from a pre-fantane story.
What would you say is inspiring about pre-fantane
like from the philosophy, from the technique, from his story?
I think there's a few things,
I mean, there's a lot of things which is why he is we is.
It's one was just his attitude about it
where he wasn't like this picture-ask runner.
I mean, he was obviously talented, but you know, he had the perfect story of like he wanted
to be good at something.
He like most American kids tried football.
No hard work was going to get pre-fantane starting in varsity for football.
Starts running, fell in love with the mile.
His college coach told him,
no, you're not gonna be a mileer.
You're gonna be a 5K guy.
And he popularized the 5K in the United States
with three mile in some cases.
And I mean, the way he would race,
I think is what really made him interesting for folks
where he was just like all guts runner.
Where he's like, I mean, one of his famous quotes was like,
if you beat me, you're gonna have to bleed to do it
because he's gonna be an all guts race.
And in a sport where it gets very tactical at times,
especially at the like Nash,
or I shouldn't say national,
but at the like competition level,
the championship level where it's like kind of more
of a sit and kick approach a lot of times
where everyone's kind of waiting for someone
to make a move, like pre was going to make a move really early.
Yes.
And this idea of leading from the front, which I guess is tactically really a bad idea.
Well, from a, from a running a PR standpoint, it's a bad idea in most cases.
But so race, I guess, is not just about the PR.
So race, winning in a lot of cases.
And that's what he thought was going to put him in the best advantage to win, I think. It's just the run from the PR. So race, and a lot of cases, and that's what he thought was going to put him in the best
advantage to win, I think.
It's just the run from the front.
I mean, what do you, because you mentioned this, the Hunter Mali, you ran, you were in
second place, and then in 90s, you were able to get to the first place.
How hard is it to run when you're in first place?
You know, I think this is really different.
Some people thrive under it, where it's like for them,
like I talked about Jim Walms before,
I think he loves being in the front.
If he's in the front, he loves it.
That's where he's excited.
That's where he knows he's doing what he's doing
where he's pushing his limits and things like that.
Pre was probably the same way.
And then I think there's other folks
who are much more comfortable kind of saying,
let's let things settle down here a little bit.
And then I'll make my move when it's time to make my move, or they think of it as,
and this is a very important, I think, lesson for the average ultra runner is just like
knowing what you're capable of is going to be an important piece to the puzzle because you can
like, you can try to say, I want to run faster than I'm capable of
in an early part of a 100 mileer,
but then you're gonna pay for it at the end.
So really unless you're trying to go for the win
and that's a tactic that you think is gonna produce a win
versus trying to run your fastest time,
you gotta run within yourself, within your parameters.
Obviously there's a big question about
where those parameters are in a lot of cases,
which makes ultra marathon even more interesting
because it's like, there's so much unknown about it. It's like, well, maybe you can go faster,
and we just don't know yet. So there's in the face of that uncertainty, there's something admirable,
like it was with pre-fantane, where you take the risk, and run faster than, you know, you think you
might be able to run in terms of pace that you can hold.
So push the pace that's possible.
Yeah, explore the unknown.
Explore the unknown.
It's like a pioneer spirit, right?
Yeah.
Next frontier kind of a thing.
But I mean, pre-fantane also lives
the other air angles with him too,
where he was like in the amateur era
where to be an Olympian, you couldn't be pro.
So he's turning down, I mean, the guy was on food stamps
and living in a trailer because he wanted to run at the Olympics and there was a lot of like politics involved
with not being able to take, take sponsorship money and things like that, which has changed
since then. But so he was huge in the movement for that to kind of like, you know, have
a situation where now as an athlete, you can finish, in most cases, finish college, sign
a big contract with,
you know, a sponsor and then also still competing the Olympic Games and go to the events that are
actually ones that are going to likely catapult your career in most of the Olympic distance and
endurance events. So, so he just revolutionized the sport and then to add even more flavor to the
whole thing. I mean, he died of very premature death. He got a car accident and died before
he would have likely probably metaled at the
Olympics.
And there is a tragedy.
The fact that he didn't.
Yeah.
Only his fourth place at the Olympics, the prior, his first go of it.
It was kind of one of those things where it's like fourth place at the Olympics is the
first man looking out, the first woman looking out.
And for a guy that had as much hype as him, I think, like a medal was something he really wanted to take home with him there.
And especially how that race went, I mean, yeah, I don't know.
It's tragic, the whole thing, but that's one of the things that makes Olympics amazing
is the tragedy of it.
Like, one race decides the story of a lifetime, which is like, yeah, that's why it's, that's
why it's amazing, even if a lot of people get hurt because of it.
Tragedy makes the triumph special. Right. Yeah. And it makes, I mean, it makes life like a movie almost
where everything's all sunshine and rainbows and it's not as entertaining to watch. Yeah. No adversity to
overcome. You mentioned shoe technology.
How much has shoe technology advanced
through the past few decades?
How much has it changed running generally,
but also running like ultra marathon running?
I would say an ultra running,
it's had much of a less of an impact
because ultra running is still
heavily skewed towards the trails.
So the technology, at least from what we know,
isn't necessarily translating over to these massive,
very trained, certainly not the technical terrain and things like that.
Now on road race, it's flat stuff, like the track stuff,
the roads, the, I guess you get a runnable trail,
where it's basically crushed limestone, more or less.
You definitely get an advantage from it.
And essentially what happened is,
in this probably dated back actually before 2015,
Nike decided, well, their development team
was ahead of the curve.
They've developed this new foam,
they call it like a Peabock foam,
and they realize that
when you step down into a shoe, the reason racers a lot of times would wear these flats is
because they're trying to take out any of that lost energy into the foam in the shoe.
Well this foam that Nike came out with is so good that it actually returns way more
energy than the average foam did, to the point where, like when they test these things
on like force plate treadmills and things like that,
it's like a, depending on the person's gate,
and some of the things is like a two day
percent improvement in performance.
I mean, we've seen records just across the board get broken
since this came out.
Oh, distances.
Basically, yeah.
Yeah, I think from, at least from the 5K
up through the marathon,
and I mean, we've seen some insane improvements
in the marathon, I think, like, the women's marathon
went from what was considered relatively untouchable,
like 216 to 214.
And I mean, like it was like 218,
was like just world class.
Like if you can run a 218 marathon as a woman,
that was like, I mean, it still is to a degree,
but then you know, you now you have someone run a 2-14.
Like I'd say.
And you attribute a lot of that to the shoe.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think there's probably other things that come in mind too.
Like now that people know there's a performance advantage from a mechanical standpoint, it's
also a confidence thing where it's like, oh, no, I can probably try going five seconds
for a mile faster.
And maybe they could have anyway.
And they just now they think they can, so they are.
So there's probably a little bit of that
that's just adding to it.
Do you think there's a lot of extra innovation
that's still possible?
Like what, if you can do this kind of big leap
with the little innovation of foam,
is there other stuff that you can do
or for the innovation of the materials
that make up the foam?
Yeah, so they can definitely go much more advantage.
They put a cap on it, essentially.
So there was a, there's also a carbon plate element
to this two where they put like this carbon plate
in there in between the foam.
So like, I believe when when Kipchigee broke,
well, when they did that, that kind of the sub-to-hour project,
he actually had on a shoe, if I'm not mistaken,
that never got to market because they put down
some parameters on it after that one came to market
where it was actually stacked up to,
I can't remember how many millimeters it was an insane amount,
and they had like, I think maybe even three layer plates
in there.
And that was a Nike shoe he was wearing?
Yeah.
Yeah, so what makes it kind of controversial or difficult
is Nike came out with these prototype. So prototype for people don't understand shoes, Yeah, so what makes it kind of controversial or difficult is
Nike came out with these prototypes so prototype for people don't understand shoes like these companies They'll develop a shoe and it usually takes like somewhere in the neighborhood of like probably
18 months to hit the market
So if you're like a sponsored athlete or work for the company you can get your hands on these shoes before they actually come to market
So we had an issue, I think.
This wasn't necessarily a big of an issue in the ultra running community, but in the track
and field, Olympic distance stuff was a big issue because you had Nike athletes having
these prototype shoes before anyone could get them.
And then you had athletes responsible by these other brands who couldn't wear them even
if even when they did come to market.
So then we had this like chase to catch up
where other companies are starting to make
their own version of it.
And now we're getting to a point
where most companies have a version of that shoe.
But we had a huge transition phase
that impacted the Olympics big time.
I mean, here's an example of it.
There was an athlete
caregoucher. She was not she wasn't like the athlete wasn't when they came out with
this shoe and she ran the Olympic trial marathon and got fourth place the first person out.
And two of the people had ever had that shoe on and she was maybe a minute or two. I'd
have to look to see exactly. But it was within the performance advantage range.
And so you could argue that she was the first person
in modern running to lose an Olympics
but due to a technological disadvantage.
Wow.
And it's like, I mean, it's one of those things where like,
it's a transition, right?
So there's gonna be bumpy road and there's going
to be people that get caught in that transition that it's unfortunate for. But it's also like
once everything does catch up and every shoe company has a version of this, there's still problems.
I mean these are incredibly expensive shoes. It's like a $250 shoe. So it's like at what point do you
tell like a wealthy family with a high school kid that you know you can get that $250 shoe. So it's like, at what point do you tell a wealthy family with a high school kid that you can get
that $250 shoe, and then you go,
this kid's family can barely afford a pair of shoes
for them much less of $250 pair of shoes.
Where do we draw that line?
And that sort of stuff.
Also, just, here's the other big one.
2 to 8% is a massive range.
What if you're on the 2% versus someone's on the 8%.
No chances are if you're blowing a record out of the water,
you're probably closer to that high end percentage
versus someone who's maybe getting incremental gains
you're probably closer to that lower end.
So is it fair to have a piece of equipment
that has that big of a range when we're talking about
less than a percent determining these races
when all is held constant?
Those are fascinating philosophical questions
that I think it's nice to solve that for the shoe
or to raise those questions for a shoe
because the more complicated place
where they will be raised is probably like genetics,
engineering, all those kinds of things.
Yeah, we'll get a lot more complicated.
So it's nice when you have a particular piece of technology
that's just like right there. It's a shoe.
We can understand who can study it.
Right.
We may be coming on the precipice of human-powered sport performance as no longer being something
that we look at as this pinnacle of.
I don't maybe entertainments the wrong word, but is that a pursuit?
Do we end up just going in different direction?
I mean, I think it's like,
it's so hard for us to think about that right now
because it's so part of like the culture
and the lifestyle of the average person
where like sport is a hobby of theirs
as well as a passion to follow.
And it's like how complicated it is a need to get before
people lose that interest.
And there could be a future where most of the Olympics is eSports.
Somebody told me that eSports is in the Olympics.
I've been meaning to look this up.
Which is, you know, like what video,
this video games are in the Olympics.
Yeah, yeah.
It could be as like a trial that they're doing.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
If this is true, I'm trying to real time look it up.
But if this eSports I'm trying to real time look it up. But if this esports joining Olympics in 2024, wow.
So that could be just a, that could be a fun side thing, but it could be a first step
into a complete transformation with sports mean.
You can control video games better, they control, for genetics and humans.
Well, in reality, we've been dealing with this problem
in other areas, just with the performance enhancing
side of things, with drugs and all that stuff too.
And anyway, that conversation's flared back up
with track and field two where we are seeing a lot
of records you've broken.
A lot of it probably is to shoot technology.
But in 2020 with the COVID stuff,
you have all these out of competition testing protocols
that a lot of these top tier Olympic athletes are getting
to try to eliminate, like if you just do
indoor competition testing, like there's potential
for people to do things that are gonna give them
a performance advantage, but not gonna show up on that
test on the day of or after their race,
where now you have these like limitations
of being able to test.
So do we have a group of athletes now who decide,
oh, I'm not gonna get tested in 2020,
do the COVID restrictions, this is the time to dope up
and then hit some stride and some records
and then taper back off when they get this thing fired back up
again.
So there may be some of that as well.
And I mean, that's always been an ongoing problem.
And so the boost you get from performance enhancing drugs
could be tying you relative to the stuff we have in the future. Right. Yeah. So you might be the last generation of like
natural, unmodified humans that we're running. Maybe that's already over. Who knows who's
modified that? That's true. You might be leaving through that transition to the new Nike shoe, but broadly defined
Yeah, so you'll be in some sense in the history books as
Humans used to run without any modifications. It used to destroy their body and let it recover and then do it again And he used to be impressed with a within 11 hour
100 mile
Time when we could do it it under an hour now.
Yeah, yeah.
So, but nevertheless, the four-minute mile
was incredibly aggressive.
I really love the 11 hour mark for the Hunter Milder.
And the two-hour marathon by most people
for the longest time will thought to be impossible.
You know, there's still people that think it's impossible with underserved constraints.
So, Elliot Kupchoggi of Kenya, as you mentioned, ran a one hour 59 minute, 40 second marathon,
but he had, like you said, the prototype shoes and he had the pace
setters.
Yeah.
I don't know how essential that is, but it seems quite essential.
Do you think it's possible?
First of all, what do you think about that accomplishment?
And he is one of the greatest, if not the greatest marathon runners of all time.
What do you think about that accomplishment?
And do you think it's possible to run a two hour marathon without any assistance? Yeah, I mean, I think there's
no question about a regardless of technology. He's world class, if not the best. I think
he could go under to or someone equivalent to him could go under two hours with the shoe technology.
Probably what it will take is it will take a fast course that has very few tangents
because like turning on a course they estimate it adds about a percent to the distance.
So when we're talking about a marathon, you're getting up to a quarter mile extra running,
that alone could potentially put you down near to flat based on what we're talking about a marathon, you're getting up to like a quarter mile extra running, you know, that alone could potentially put you down near,
near to flat based on what, you know, we're seeing.
Cause I mean, Kipchike's got a, was it 201 40, I believe,
this is his actual world record, where it's actually like,
you know, certified.
So I mean, he's right on the door knocking,
knocking on the door there.
Yeah, the prototype he had since then, they put in a regulation
where you can't stack a shoe for the roads
more than 40 millimeters.
So you can only have so much of that energy returning foam.
And you can only have, I think, one carbon plate in there now.
So that puts a little bit of a ceiling on that technological thing.
But who knows what else will come out in that?
And to be honest, who comes out with it?
Because the fact that Nike came out with this technology
is the reason why it's being allowed to be used.
If that would have been like,
you know, another running company that came out with it,
I'm sure the regulations would have been slapped down
on it immediately, and they would have probably
just thrown it out altogether.
It would have been-
That's politics.
Oh yeah.
Well, you can go super negative with that and say,
hey, this is terrible or this is super nefarious.
When in reality, it's like you have a company
that has billions of dollars and is interested
enough in the sport that otherwise
doesn't generate a ton of revenue to pick up a big tab and support like track and field
and things like that.
But with that, you want to be the guy who says,
yeah, thanks for the millions and millions of dollars,
but we're gonna, all those years and money
you spent on that phone, you wasted it.
We're not gonna let you use it.
But if you're another company who revolutionizes the sport in potentially a negative way,
maybe you say no to them. So it gets interesting. That's the way. That's how it always happens.
Yeah. There's really no way around. I think Film Effatone, I think, is him that he wrote a book
about a two-hour marathon. What are the limits? How fast could we run? And I think he puts it like an hour and 42 minutes, something like that or 40 something minutes.
It's kind of an interesting question of what are the limits. Do you think? Do you think we'll just
keep pushing the limits of what humans are capable of in the altars in the marathon? It's just like the way
the way of sport. I think ultra for sure because that is a fastly growing sport, it's just like the way of sport. I mean, I think ultra for sure,
because that is a vastly growing sport,
and there's a lot of potential for a much bigger pool
of talent to pull from.
That could really push the needle down
on some of these performances and things like that,
especially as it becomes
more popular.
If people start realizing, or I shouldn't say realizing, but if a scenario happens where
like, oh, I'm one of the best endurance athletes in the world, I make more money running
ultramarathons than I do running the marathon.
And you know, all of a sudden we see every record get broken in the matter of a couple of
years.
But the, for the marathon, I mean, it's going to get faster, I think, but the, for the marathon, I mean, it's gonna get faster, I think, but like, to
what degree is so hard to know?
It's very hard to know.
And it's the one hour and 40 minutes seems like pretty fast.
That's very fast.
We for folks for some perspective, they're the current world record is like in the four
forties, her mile, her mile, Like just add a little flavor to that.
You're basically sprinting.
Yeah, I mean, go out to a track and run one lap
as fast as you can and then reflect on what time you get
and realize like the world record for the marathon
is that lap at just over 70 seconds per lap.
So minute and 10, just over that. but you're doing it 26.2 miles.
So over a hundred times, it's mind-boggling. But watching other kibchogi, just, first of all,
he was like smiling at the end of it. So there's an extreme efficiency here too. So he's not,
he's able to just find the right way to maximize efficiency.
It makes it look easy.
I mean, that's true for basically every Olympic athlete.
When you watch gymnasts, they kind of make it look easy.
Yes.
But there's like tens, if not hundreds,
of thousands of hours behind that training.
Yeah.
Just to be comfortable enough to even attempt
some of the moves they do in gymnastics is my body.
Well, that one is super awesome
because how tragic it is, like,
one little slip up in four years of work.
And it's all gone.
Not just four years of work from any of them,
it's like a lifetime of work.
And they're teenagers.
And they're teenagers.
And they get dedicated everything to it.
That's what makes the pursuits of humans so
fascinating. We kind of talked about this a little bit already, but is there
something that stands out to you as one of the hardest things you've had to
overcome in all the either training or the competing that you've done? Has
there been moments that kind of stand out where you're proud of yourself that
that you were truly tested and you overcame it.
I think I'd be more inclined just because it stands out
to me much bigger than anyone like hard decision
or outcome I had from a particular race
is just like the trajectory of like,
doing what I'm doing now is so much different
from what I would have ever expected.
I mean, I was talented enough runner where I could make the state meet by my senior year at a small division three school and you know
competed a division three college and be pretty modest to talent
comparative to my to my peers at the top level of division three
to think that like I'd be doing anything that was revolved around running as an occupation is I still second guess that that's
actually occurring makes me wonder about the whole simulation theory.
It's like who's got my joystick in one of these.
But they got cheat codes.
Yeah exactly.
Yeah because I mean I went to school to be a teacher and I really loved that
profession I taught for about five years and then I got to a point where, you know, some of
it's just perfect timing to like the sport gain enough popularity where there's enough money in
it where like I could start a coaching business, I could get sponsorships and things like that
and actually look at it and say financially I can make a go of this or at least risk it. But
there's such a fine line between like deciding to do that or kind of staying comfortable because,
I mean, I was at the perfect teaching spot for me.
I was at this project-based learning school
and just outside of Madison, Wisconsin, loved it.
One of the hardest decisions I left to make
was to step away from that to pursue running
and more holistically.
And I mean, I almost did.
I had a co-teacher who was, I was thinking myself.
I knew that it was like a decision.
I was gonna have to make the next few years,
but it was such an easy decision to say,
well, wait, one more year.
And he was just like, he was a little more of a free spirit
than I was certainly at the time.
He's like, dude, what are you waiting for?
Just go, just go.
Why are you here?
Like after I told him that,
he like every time we'd come into school the next day,
and he'd be like, why are you still here?
But I mean, there's like tongue in cheek for sure,
but it's hard to know that you're gonna be successful
in that kind of leap given year.
Like, you know, because it's easier
when you're like an ultra performer early on,
but to have the faith that you can accomplish something.
In some regards, it's a blessing in the sense that failing would have been fairly predictable.
Whereas if I always wonder, I mean, I think of these, especially the big sports, baseball,
football and basketball, and you get guys who, guys and girls who are identified in early
high school as being the next.
And it's like, what kind of pressure is that to think like, well, if I'm not literally
one of the best players in the NBA in 10 years, I failed.
It's just mind-boggling.
I think if I'm not one of the best at one of the most competitive sports on the planet,
in what is an athletic, I think an athletic state of an NBA basketball player is
probably one of the most athletic human beings on the planet. And to know like in a teenage year
that your success bar is being the best one of the best in the league or the best ever and that
conversation is floating around everywhere you look and see versus being able to kind of quietly
fail and go back to teaching. This makes it a little more digestible.
I think you have a little bit more freedom to be great.
Right.
Just nobody's expecting you to be.
Is there, from that, is there advice you can give to young people today?
High schoolers, college students, taking on, trying to figure out their career, trying
to figure out their life, advice on how to succeed in either.
Yeah, I think one thing I was always interested
when I was teaching was you'd have students
who had interests, they had what they were good at,
and sometimes those ran in Unison with one another
other times they didn't,
and it was always interesting to me
when you'd have a student who was like,
I'm really into like guitar or I'm really into skateboarding or something like that
where it's like pretty small, like,
success rate on that avenue versus what you can maybe accomplish by focusing on
just something that's a little more standard.
And I think like really like besides the likelihood of it becoming something
you can turn into a profession or not, you should just ask yourself, like, is this
something that I want to spend my free time doing? And because if
it is, then you want to keep that in your life, because that's
something that's rewarding, motivating, it might be the
catalyst that gets you out of bed in the morning and you know, go
to another job in order to go do that thing afterwards. I think
nowadays we're getting to a point where like the your reachability from even
a really small like unmonetized thing previously is now an option where if like you live in
a city where there's only two other people interested in your topic of area.
So you're not going to turn into a job now with the internet.
You have the world at your disposal.
So that two to three people in every town can turn into thousands, tens of thousands, hundreds
and millions of people.
And if you really focus your time and energy into that thing, then who knows where you can
go and how much more enjoyable your life can be if you're able to turn your career into
a passion of yours.
So I think that is something I I would tell people folks on that. See the
thing you're good at and you kind of sparks that flame and go with that. Even if society
doesn't really want you to, like it's non-traditional and odds are low of like traditionally defined success.
Just do that thing. I've struggled with that.
It's like, it was always clear, especially like in school,
there's stuff I'm actually good at
and stuff that the world wants me to do.
Right, yeah.
And I kept doing that.
The world wanted me to be a plumber
when I took that test myself.
Where are you?
Yeah, all right.
But even like academically,
just going to university and academia,
there are certain ways, even in, I would say, even in the thing
you want to do, the way you do that thing, the world will want you to do it a certain way.
And even just like finding your way of doing that thing is really powerful.
For me, the way I do research, the way I learn is different than colleagues of mine. And I realize that I really
like to follow things I'm passionate about versus sort of the rigor of studying, like
the fundamentals all across the board and building up in castle on the fundamentals, like
layer upon layer. There's a bunch of details in the way I pursue the very thing that I currently
do that's different than others.
And it took me quite a long time to accept, you don't need to do it the way everyone else is doing it.
Not everyone else, but majority people are telling you to do it.
Because one is beneficial to do it different, because then you'll more likely stand out.
And two, why the hell are you doing it the way it's not working for you? Yeah. Yeah.
I saw that all the time when I was teaching,
I was dual certified.
I was, my certifications were in history
and Broadfield Social Studies.
So, like, econ, psychology, history, all that stuff.
And then I also had a certification of special education,
which was, you know, people think of special education
a lot of times as like, oh, it's the, you know, the K2 is not smart enough to do the regular thing. When reality, it's like,
I mean, there is some, you know, there's obviously like, you know, like certain things,
like Downs and Rumin stuff like that, but like, there's also like a huge population of groups of
both like gifted and talented on one and the spectrum where they're incredibly smart and they're like the geniuses,
but for whatever reason, the standard method of learning
does not click with them, does not work with them,
and then they just need a slightly different path
or maybe a drastically different path,
and they're gonna just flourish.
And you have kids that end up falling on the other end
where maybe it's really difficult for them
to be able to read at the speed of other students,
but if you give them this specific direction, they can just thrive in a certain area.
And just seeing that like the, you know, that there's multiple ways to do stuff,
and there's not necessarily one path to the end is I think such an eye-opening thing to learn,
especially if you learn it. Maybe that's what I should answer the question they're asking me with,
is keeping an open mind as to what paths are forward and know that, you know, opening thing to learn, especially if you learn it. Maybe that's what I should answer the question. They're asking me with this.
Keep an open mind as to what paths are forward
and know that maybe just because even if you look
to your left, you look to the right,
and all your classmates are successful doing it one way,
it doesn't necessarily mean that's gonna be the way for you.
Yeah, so that could lend you in eating a meat-based diet
running across the country.
Like the incredible madman that you are, Zach, I'm a huge fan.
I've told you many times during inspiration to many.
I'll be there checking in every day.
If you somehow make it out, the starting line,
on September 1st, I know Joe Rogan and millions of others
will be as well.
So I'm excited to see all the suffering
that you're gonna go through.
I wish you the best of luck.
And thank you so much for talking today. I really, really appreciate it.
Well, thanks a bunch of likes. It's been an honor to come on your podcast. I've been a fan of it
for for quite some time. And I thought about wearing a white suit, but Michael Malisarty took care
of that one. So it was all the way up. Well, and I think it would be really good for the ratings
of this conversation. If you end up dying during that run. So I'll do my best.
So everything that could happen will be positive for the world.
You're saying I should try to average 100 miles a day.
100 miles.
Well, I think you're going to push yourself to, again, it's not the main priority, but it's
trying to beat that record that's probably going to take everything you have and that
that's truly inspiring.
I wish you the best of luck, man.
Thanks a bunch.
you