The Rich Roll Podcast - Harvey Lewis: The 47-Year-Old High School Teacher Who Ran 450 Miles and Broke a World Record
Episode Date: February 8, 2024Last fall, Harvey Lewis captured the international spotlight at Big’s Backyard Ultra in rural Tennessee. The high school teacher broke a world record, running an astounding 450 miles in 108 hours—...more than the distance from DC to Boston. But—I implore you—don’t let his humility deceive you. Inside Harvey roams a myriad of animalistic tenacity ready to be unleashed. A beloved teacher at Cincinnati School for Creative and Performing Arts, Harvey redefines human capability with 27 years of ultra-running experience, 115 ultras, podium finishes at Badwater 135, and a five-time USA National 24-hour Team member. Today, we explore Big’s, including Harvey's readiness to run through another night, his approach to sleep deprivation, spirit animals, transcendence, and mindset. Harvey guides us through his coach-less training and the motivations behind his extensive running feats, racing for the Brighton Center, a Kentucky non-profit supporting families.  Additionally, Harvey’s fiancée, Kelly, provides exclusive insights into his personality and kindness, sharing charming details like stopping for lightning bugs and hosting popsicle parties. She discusses her ultra-running experiences and participation in Netflix's Squid Game Challenge. I immensely admire Harvey. He embodies humility, champions gracefully, and exudes a delightful presence—a hero the world needs. Show notes + MORE Watch on YouTube Newsletter Sign-Up Today’s Sponsors: CamelBak: Get 20% OFF with code RICHROLL 👉camelbak.com Bon Charge: Enjoy 15% OFF with code RICHROLL 👉boncharge.com/RICHROLL Squarespace: Get 10% OFF 👉squarespace.com/RICHROLL Plunge: Use code RICHROLL for 150$ OFF 👉plunge.com AG1: Get a FREE 1-year supply of Vitamin D3+K2 & 5 FREE AG1 Travel Packs 👉DrinkAG1.com/RICHROLL
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Even when it seemed like there is no chance, I was determined to not stop.
That last day, every second mattered. I basically had to be hyper-focused and be
really calculated about what I did with the time I had. I don't care about any of
these punches anymore. You can hit me another 100 times. I'm not going to stop. This 47-year-old guy with a full-time job
just did something absolutely unfathomable.
You ran 450 miles over 108 hours,
four and a half days.
The Biggs Backyard Ultra.
Basically setting an entirely new bar
when it comes to human capability.
How we see ourselves is one of the most important things in the world.
I've been running ultras for like 27 years now.
I didn't even know that was even feasible.
We are all so capable of such incredible feats.
No matter what your pursuits, we mostly can go so much further than we ever see ourselves going. What is the engine that gets you through four and a half days without sleep
and is continuing to propel you?
Harvey Lewis back in the house.
Wow, it's like a dream.
So good to see you.
I can't wait to get into all of this.
You're such a delightful presence.
We had fun just chatting with you and Kelly, who's here as well, who might pop in a little
bit later.
We'll see.
A lot to unpack, but let's start with when I saw you last, which was a couple months ago in rural Georgia at an event called Running Man that our buddy Jesse Itzler put on.
You showed up for a day.
You joined us on stage for a panel.
You traveled from your home in Cincinnati.
You had been teaching.
Were you teaching earlier that day or the day before?
The day before.
The day before.
You came out, showed up, did the deal, happy to be there.
Then you went back home to Cincinnati to teach
because you never miss a class.
And then you traveled to Bell Buckle, Tennessee.
God knows where that is.
Bell Buckle, Tennessee, God knows where that is, showed up for another round at Biggs Backyard Ultra and towed the line with just three hours of sleep. Is that correct? Do I have that right?
Yeah. The sleep aspect of the three hours happened later in that week. It wasn't tied to the Running Man Festival, but it was a busy week.
And it was a busy week also with teaching and my mother moved to Maryland. So then I had to move
some final items out of the house on like that Thursday night before the next day where I went
down to Tennessee after my classes. And so it was a busy week.
You know, I was in the first day of the race.
I was thinking, did I maybe push a little too much
going down the running man?
Not exactly an equation to set you up for success
at, you know, perhaps the biggest race of your career.
Maybe, yeah, maybe.
You're like stacking the deck against yourself.
Maybe, but, you know, the thing that was so powerful was getting to be down there with you guys.
And it was such a cool experience going in the saunas.
I had such a great time doing the sauna.
And then just being in the sauna and, like, meditating on what's coming.
in the sauna and like meditating on what's coming and just the energy that we had down there with like the panel and the questions from Chris just really set me off with a lot of positive energy.
The people we ran into down there that were at the festival, they just were excited to be out
there participating. For me, it was electrifying to get me going
to the next weekend.
Yeah, a little love letter to Jesse
and his compadres with the All Day Running Company.
They put on this extraordinary event
that was a couple hours west of Atlanta,
like near the Alabama border.
And it was essentially Coachella
for people who are into running
on this incredible plot of land
where there was all kinds of food trucks
and experiences and a main stage
with all types of panels.
That's what we did.
But in addition to that,
like musical acts and running races of all kinds.
And everybody was sort of camping in tents
on the perimeter of this field.
And the kind of highlight of the whole thing
was the world's largest sauna
that was literally like, you know, bigger than this.
I mean, it was, I don't know how many square feet
this thing was, but I think there was something like
over a dozen of the ovens or whatever you call them inside saunas and people lingering around in that and then going back and forth between that and all these other kind of saunas that were peppered around the field and these cold plunges.
I don't even know.
What is it?
I can't think of anything else to compare it to.
Really?
It was wild.
I mean, it was crazy. And yeah, and then you had the giant sauna and
then you had some smaller ones that were even hotter. And I just remember going into the really
hot sauna and then going directly from that to get into the cold plunge. And I don't know,
do you do a lot of the cold plunging? I do now. Yeah, I've got one at home and I've got a sauna now also.
That's a recent addition.
I love it.
So you just got those two?
It's fantastic.
I've had a plunge for a while.
They've been a great support to me.
And they just released their own sauna.
So we just had that hooked up and online.
So it's pretty great to have that at home.
It really is, you know, sort of physical benefits aside, like
mental health wise, like it's really been a great addition to my routine.
I agree with you so much.
There was also like a trailer that was a cold room.
Yeah.
You know, like only Jesse, you know.
He is a character.
God bless him.
Yeah. I mean, he goes to nth degree.
For sure. I texted him earlier and asked him if he had any questions for you.
So I wrote those down.
I'm going to hit you up with those.
And we should definitely FaceTime him at the end.
Oh, that'd be a blast.
But in any event, that's still, you know, an energy expenditure on your part to show up and be around a lot of people and, you know, give everyone your love and all of that.
be around a lot of people and, you know, give everyone your love and all of that. I mean,
it's the side aspect of your part-time job, not to mention your full-time job as a high school teacher. But I remember leaving that event and, you know, I needed a day of rest after that,
you know, and I just went home and got back into my, you know, daily routine. And you had all these
other things that you had to take care of before you showed up at this enormous race to throw down just this absolutely all-time legendary performance.
Yeah, it's hard to say, but that whole event definitely brought some momentum into Biggs as well.
And it was the energy from the people that I just took in so much positive energy.
Well, let's not assume that everybody watching or listening to this enjoyed our first episode
and spend a moment to just explain what this whole Biggs Backyard Ultra thing is
so that everyone understands what we're talking about.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So basically, this is a race that began in this rural area of Tennessee that was created by the iconic race director, Laz Lake, Gary Cantrell.
He basically came up with this vision about 50 years before he put it into action when he was back in high school.
And he dreamed up, well, I'm not the fastest person on the track team,
but I sure can run a long time. And I think if I could just have a race, he was thinking to himself,
where every runner had to cover 4.167 miles, which equates to 100 miles over 24 hours,
then I think I have a chance of maybe winning. So self-serving this idea.
Les is probably the great characters of all time in sport or just in general. I mean,
he is an enigma and fascinating for so many reasons. People may be familiar with him from
the Barclays Marathon documentary that I think it's on Netflix.
It's free now.
Oh, is it free?
You can look on YouTube.
It used to be on Netflix.
And it's The Race That Eats It's Young.
Right.
So, I mean, it's a classic, almost like a cult-like following of the film and stuff
and like around Barclay.
Laz is full of many contradictions and mysteries.
Laz is full of many contradictions and mysteries.
And he's just an absolute wizard when it comes to his writing.
And with this race, he puts out usually a new post every hour.
I don't know how he manages to do that.
Where he'll describe what's happening in a race.
He'll take some element of it. And it's really interesting to read how he puts it out into his own words.
He's sort of a mashup between a backwoods survivalist who's living like off the grid,
mixed with this kind of philosopher king sensibility to him that is confounding
because he doesn't appear to be someone with that type of intellect.
But I think, wasn't his dad like a NASA scientist or something like that?
Yeah, his dad was a NASA scientist and he helped to engineer the landing for the lunar module.
Wow.
Yeah. And many people might assume that he's just like a hillbilly living up in the hills,
but he scored a 36 on
the ACT. So he had a perfect score. So he's quite a mind. And he was a coach for a long time,
wasn't he? Yeah, he was an accountant and he also coached with the local sports teams for years and
years and years. And one of his greatest dreams in life is to give a million dollars in charity.
And I don't know his entire accounting for that,
but I wouldn't be surprised if he's already surpassed that
with the race that he put on during the pandemic,
this virtual race across Tennessee.
He had over like 20,000 people sign up for it.
But he's really someone who gives a lot to the whole like ultra running.
But he's really someone who gives a lot to the whole, like, ultra running.
He just adds such a layer of additional, like, races. Like, I mean, he's got all these, he's got, like, eight different races, and they all have some unique element to them.
Right.
So, the Biggs is a race that takes place on his property, right?
It's like, it's 150 acres that he owns.
So he basically, he doesn't have to get permits or anything like that.
It's like on his own private land.
Right.
It's actually named after his dog, Big.
Right.
Who he rescued, a big giant pit bull.
Dog had showed up on the front of his land shot.
And when he first saw it, he thought there's no way this dog is going to survive.
And he ended up living to be 16, which is really old for a big dog.
He just passed away last year.
But this race that began in 2011 has now spread to 73 countries.
And there's more than 400 backyard ultras across the globe. And in addition
to that, now more people hit running 100 miles under 24 hours in the backyard format than all
other 100 milers last year combined. It's astonishing, but also not surprising,
because it is a brilliant conceit. Essentially, you're running a four-mile-and-change loop
on the hour, every hour.
Everybody starts at the same time,
and people kind of fade away
when they can't make the one-hour time cutoff
until there's just two people left,
until that one person falls off,
and then there's a winner,
and the winner has to then stop.
They can't continue,
which is an added little interesting quirk
because if you win a backyard race,
the other competitors aren't quite sure how much was left in the tank.
So even if you said, oh, I did this many laps or whatever,
you can't really gauge whether they were able to go further,
which creates a little bit of a question mark
when you line up with the world's best for this kind of thing, right? And then the second thing
that I think is really interesting is that, first of all, everybody gets it. Like you can understand
this. Like even if you have no connection to running, you're like, okay, I understand it.
you have no connection to running,
you're like, okay, I understand it.
It's sort of like a game show.
It lends itself perfectly to a format like television where it's gamified in a certain way, right?
And this year there was a live stream.
I think there was when you won two years ago also, right?
Yeah, yeah.
Two years ago, Solomon actually set up a film team.
And then this year, a videographer from France, Fabian, he actually had a whole team there. So, I mean, it was, it's quite incredible. They had like drones. And honestly, I really just loved having the opportunity for people to be able to see the race transpire.
Yeah. to see the rays transpire. And so once we entered into the woods, there were only maybe three standing cameras
that were not, you didn't really even notice it much.
Once in a while, there would be someone with a camera
would kind of run into the woods, falling behind you.
It was nice to know that my students and my family
could see what was happening
versus just hearing third-hand what was going on in the race. So like, I felt like I
was connecting with people back home by having that there. And most of my ultras, like throughout
this entire year, there's not been any other ultra I've ran where you have that sort of like
video coverage, which. Which was amazing.
Yeah.
So the coverage from your point of view
was relatively unobtrusive.
And you had had this experience two years prior.
So you knew, okay, this is being documented.
But the live stream was handled extremely professionally.
Like they did an incredible job.
And I don't know how much awareness you have around this,
but as somebody who is watching from afar
and kind of following along on social media
and checking in on the live stream,
there was a groundswell movement that took place
probably in large part due to Jesse's
just unbridled enthusiasm
because he was on Instagram constantly on stories. Like you got to, everybody's got to check out this live stream. You have no connection to running, let alone ultra running,
were hopping on board and sharing stories
and spreading the word about this event
that was taking place as it was sort of mounting,
like as it progressed,
like not just on the last day,
like on day two and a half,
it felt like it really hit like a pivotal threshold
and it became like a mainstream thing.
I don't know how many people were watching this live stream,
but it was a lot.
And I just noticed the larger world
jumping on board to celebrate this incredible thing
that they'd never heard about before,
which of course, after your victory,
translated into all kinds of mainstream press. Like you got an article on CNN
and in the Guardian, like that must've been surreal to you because this is an event even amidst,
you know, ultra events that is so rooted in the history and the organic nature of what ultra
running is. Like this is, is hey man there's no frills
here there's no prize money this is not utmb like this is like as you know backwoods as it gets by
design by laz's very design and yet it captured the imagination and the fascination of the world
it was something i'm speechless about even now. The race format is like nothing I've ever seen before
in the sense of like,
it just causes like this growth
of like people following it each day,
more and more people follow it.
And I mean, once I got home in Ohio,
like there were people coming up to me in my city
and saying like, I don't run,
but I got addicted to that.
I didn't get any work done.
A lot of people are like, man, I was supposed to work today.
I'm watching this show like it's a Christopher Nolan movie or something.
It's so funny.
And then people come up, they're like, man, I would go to bed and I'd wake up the next morning and you guys are still running.
morning and you guys are still running. And so, yeah, this particular race format, it just causes this continual build, build, build of more and more people kind of seeing what's going to
happen now. It's sort of like if Mr. Beast was designing an ultra race, right? This would be
it, right? I'm sure your students are all Mr all mr beast fans right definitely or it's the ultra distance version of squid game basically right yeah nobody dies well i guess they
could but like you know nobody's trying to kill anybody and we have kelly here who actually
was a contestant on the reality tv show version of squid game yeah and i was saying to you
beforehand like there's a weird Venn diagram overlap between you two
because there is some shared DNA with,
you know, somebody who would sign up for something like that
and what you do.
Yeah, yeah.
We definitely train together
and we have like these kind of quirky ways
we do training sometimes.
Like for the Squid Game,
we kind of anticipated that there would probably be this red light, green light game.
So we would be out running in the neighborhood and hopefully the neighbors weren't watching.
But we like, I'd be like, all right, red light.
Then she'd have to stop and like hold her pose.
And then, yeah, we have fun with it.
It's nice to have a partner that's like kind of share some of the ventures together.
some of the ventures together.
So you ran 450 miles over 108 hours, four and a half days,
and completed this race just before seven o'clock on October 25th.
Previously, two years prior, you had done 85 laps, right?
Yeah.
How many miles was that?
354.
354.
You won that. We talked about that last time.
But this is a big difference. 85 and 108 laps? Is that? Yeah. 108 laps, right? Well, that's right.
That's not an incremental improvement, RV. It's wild. You know, it's very interesting. Like this race actually happened from 2011 to 2021.
No one had gone over 300 miles.
This year, 22 runners went over 300 miles, which is incredible.
What do you make of that?
The whole equation is it's important to look at every single runner.
So we had 75 runners from like, I guess, about 45 countries.
And so it's really important that every runner matters
in terms of the final distance that's able to be achieved.
And it's wild how that's the case, but it is
because the more runners who make it further,
it pushes more runners further and the next runner is further.
So we had six runners who made it to 400 miles, which is really phenomenal.
And then we had Ihor who made it and pushed me to, as an assist, to 450.
Right.
I want to talk a little bit about him.
He certainly is deserving of quite a bit of celebration. And he's young,
like he's like 27, I think. Yeah, absolutely. So in many ways, perhaps the heir apparent to
this little subculture, right? It'll be interesting to see how he develops over the years.
And he's Canadian-Ukrainian, right? Yeah, right. He lives in BC. Actually, we did a race together in Alberta in August.
It's the Canadian Death Race.
And it's just an iconic place on the planet.
Grand Cache is about 4,000 or 5,000 people.
And you go up and down about three pretty sizable mountains.
But he beat me in that race by two hours.
Right. but he beat me in that race by two hours right yeah and he almost he he just missed the the
record on the course which is an old course the old ultra by just minutes and it's pretty much
because they had a mismarking on the course which caused him to miss that i saw a quote where laz
said something like it was a standoff at the very end between the clearly stronger runner, meaning him, and the guy who just won't quit, meaning you, right?
Right.
So how did you emerge victorious?
I know there's an interesting story around the lap that preceded the final lap that involved a little mental hijinks.
There's so much to the whole thing.
Cause probably at some point we'll want to talk about the sleep deprivation.
No, we're going to get into that. Yeah. But yeah, that last day was just a matter of seconds,
like every second mattered. And so when it got to like, we were beyond the world record and there were like four or five
runners still left, then I knew I basically had to be hyper-focused and I had to be really
calculated about what I did with the time I had. So, I mean, I was just finishing laps at that
point, like by maybe five minutes, like, so 55 minutes. And in
this course, in this race, of course, that gives you five minutes to possibly do what you want to,
and you have to be back in the corral when the whistle goes and ready to go again. So in that
four or five minutes, I was like laying down and putting my feet up, getting ice on my body because it was a warm day.
And I was even taking like 60 second naps, like not every hour, but I did take a couple of 60 second naps because I was so tired.
I could literally just fall asleep and it felt like gold to me.
I was like, wow, I get up 60 seconds later.
I'm just so thankful I could get
60 seconds of sleep. Yeah. So when it got down to Bartos, the Polish runner and Eeyore and I,
there was like three of us. Then, you know, there were some signs I saw of Bartos, just a phenomenal runner. He said something to me. He said, like, I wanted
to go home. You know, he said, like, at one point, and I knew he was kind of, like, on the edge of,
like, he went further because I think he said at one point, I'm just going to go one more lap.
And then he, like, I said, oh, you're still here. It's like another lap beyond that. So he kept
going. But I could tell, like, he was really starting to feel it. And after the race, people told me that they had seen that he had said some things in front of the camera, but I didn't know any of that.
I was just so focused on just getting myself reset with that five minutes and like not falling down on the trail that I was not like entirely like,
I was just focused on making it just keep going.
I wasn't like really reading everything he was saying at the time.
But the lap previous to the victorious lap,
didn't you sprint off the line and, you know, try to like,
you know, screw with him a little bit, like by putting in like a huge effort all of a sudden?
Well, no, maybe like that was the last lap I think I went off, but maybe I did do it that lap too.
I basically got in front of him. In this course, there's like a 300 meters, 400 meters on the road before you
enter the woods. So I went off the line pretty quickly, but he caught up to me going down this
hill on the road. And then he was in front of me and I passed him going up the hill.
And then when I passed him, I ran really fast back through the starting gate. And at that point, you know, I was really determined
to give it a strong lap. And part of that was I wanted to reset anything I wanted to do for like
the road laps because that was the last trail lap. But also part of it was to send a message that
like, I'm still here. You know, I'm not going anywhere.
And that was kind of my logic.
And he had a little trouble.
So when he got up there, I don't think he saw me run through the camp really fast.
But I know he like had stopped for a moment and was just like maybe teetering on the idea of like, you know, what's my purpose of continuing at this point?
And Laz said to win, go get him.
And then he went.
And to his credit, he ran a very strong lap
and came back around.
And so, you know, we wouldn't have gone out to the road
had he not put in that effort.
He almost caught me on the trail that lap, nevertheless.
So why do you think that you were able to beat him?
Ultimately, you're saying?
Well, you know, one of the interesting things about that, in that whole race, that was the first lap I finished first.
Across the whole 107 laps.
Like, I had never done that in that particular race at that day.
That's interesting in its own right. Yeah, it is. There's had never done that in that particular race at that day. That's interesting
in its own right. Yeah, it is. There's a psychology to that. Why did I beat him? It's hard to say
exactly, but I was determined to not stop. I mean, everyone that went there had some idea of
wanting to go really far. And I would say at least a couple dozen people wanted to win the race and had
similar ideas that I did, but I just never lost that idea, that vision. I just, even when it seemed
like there is no chance, like all the odds are stacked against you. Especially for example,
in like day one and day two, like I was really feeling tired. Day one, when you said was your
worst day. Yeah. You felt the worst on the first day. Yeah. Well, actually day one and day two, like I was really feeling tired. Day one, when you said was your worst day. Yeah. You felt the worst on the first day. Yeah. Well, actually day one and day two, like were, I was more tired
and I knew I was more tired than any previous year I'd done the race. So like knowing where
you've been before. That's got a rent space in your head. Yeah. Right. Yeah. So then. You're
not supposed to feel this bad this early. You're not supposed to feel like, I'm like, well, I
remember the 2021 year. And when I was in day two to feel like, I'm like, well, I remember the 2021 year.
And when I was in day two, I was just kind of like, felt like I was almost floating.
And I remember this year and I'm like, oh my God, I'm feeling kind of tired here.
You know, it's like, I feel the tiredness.
Maybe I should have gone to running man.
Maybe I should have gone to running man.
Maybe I should have been like moving things on Thursday night.
Maybe I should have taken a day off from work versus driving down
after work on Friday. There were a lot of things that kind of went into my mind in the night before
the race. One of the three worst sleeping nights ever, I only got like three hours of sleep. And
I woke up at like 2 a.m. and I just laid there and I just, my mind was like thinking about everything. I couldn't calm
my mind down and I couldn't fall back to sleep. So I went to the starting line knowing that I only
got three hours of sleep going into the race that I will need the most amount of sleep of in my
whole life. So that is not a good omen per se. And then in the first three days, I didn't sleep at all. Like I actually laid down
and I really believe there's a true physiological and mental impact from just laying there with your
eyes shut. I could say maybe it's like 60% or a little more than that of the same benefit of
actually sleeping. Because if you're awake, it's different than just laying there with your eyes
shut. But I couldn't sleep at all for three days.
And so it wasn't until the fourth night, John Noel and I, another American runner from our team,
he and I were running together and I was doing like 55-minute laps.
And we just got to this point where I was able to like fall asleep for like two minutes.
And it just was like,
oh my God, this is the best sleep I've had in my whole life. Like just sleeping for two minutes
because going for three days with no sleep. Was that by intention that you weren't going to sleep
for the first three days or that's just the way that it played out? No, it was just the way it
played out. Like I practiced sleeping. I talked to Todd at the Running Man Festival and he had some really
great ideas about how to like, you know, breathe before you fall asleep. All these things were
really like things that I should have done better to practice that element leading up like for a
couple months. But yeah, in my training at lunchtime, I'd go and lay down for five minutes
in my classroom. You're trying to train yourself to fall asleep quickly.
Yeah, I would fall asleep.
I could literally do it in my classroom.
I'd fall asleep, three minutes, bam, get back up.
Even on runs, I did running.
I'd go to the park.
I'd lay down in the middle of the park for three, five minutes and get up.
But when it came to the race, I was just so worked up. And then after like
day two, I'm drinking like Tailwind and Coca-Cola and drinks that have caffeine in them. So I mean,
that probably also like added an element of not being able to fall asleep. It was my dream to
fall asleep and like sleep more than ever before. Because there's another story I'll share about it in Australia
with that whole madness of not getting enough sleep. Go ahead, go share it.
Okay. So basically I was in Australia this summer and we did this incredible race, Tim Walsh,
dead cow golly. Tim's got this ranch in the country of Queensland, goes back to 1877. So it's kind of ironic that a rancher,
he has like a cattle farm, would recruit a vegan from America to come and run in his race. But
yeah, he was just a phenomenal guy. His race attracted runners from New Zealand, from South Africa, and the top runners from Australia.
So the race went to a new world record, which was kind of interesting because this was just
a race that no one had really heard of outside of Australia too much. And we were able to push it to
Phil Gore beat the Belgium record and Sam Harvey was his assist. So those two guys,
and I was the third runner. What happened to me is I made it to 375 miles and I was again,
struggling with the sleep. And also I had gotten really dehydrated in the middle part of the day.
So for about 10 hours, I hung on by literally like strings, just getting myself into the corral with like minutes to go.
At 375 miles, I finally tapped out and I told our runners, we were out in the middle of the woods
on the road. I said, you guys, best of luck to you. As soon as they went off like 50 meters,
I started the greatest hallucinations I've ever had in my whole life. Like the most incredible, I never
had anything even remotely close to this. I mean, I had seen shadows that my brain interprets as
other things, but this was a whole nother level. It was like stranger things. Like the grass became
grass people. There were the trees were alive. The whole forest, like the sounds like were super acute.
And then I would like sort of fall asleep
for like just a millisecond.
And I wake up like this as I'm standing there.
I wasn't scared.
I was totally aware of what was happening,
but it was just like everything
was an absolute hallucination.
Right.
That was just strange.
I'd never experienced that in running.
Like your brain's releasing its DMT into your system.
It was unreal.
Were you running while that was happening?
No, I had paused.
I was just walking and kind of like talking to the woods.
Oh, my God.
Actually, if I go back to that place ever again,
I'm not sure I'll ever go back to that again.
I think I can actually run through that.
I think it would just be like a wild experience,
but I could just still run through that whole thing. You're like a psychonaut exploring the
outer edges of sleep deprivation. Right.
Showing up only on three hours of sleep,
then not sleeping for the first three days
of this whole thing,
and then all told,
like your cumulative sleep for the entire bigs?
Four and a half days,
not counting the three hours before,
would have been like maybe like 20 or 25 minutes.
25 minutes total for the whole four and a half days, four and a half days. Yeah.
Something like that. And I didn't have even a single hallucination like during that whole
period. I don't know what happened. I mean, I didn't, in 2021, I would sort of hear sometimes
noises, like someone's running behind me or I would see some sort of light and I'd like
interpret it as like a dog or whatever. I didn't even have that. Like in this one, I had like no hallucinations.
But on the fourth night,
I did start to go into this like phase
of being like sort of running, sort of dreaming.
So I would fall asleep and like trip a bit
and somehow I didn't ever fall down on the road.
This race, which I didn't mention
if someone's just tuning into this for the first time,
you've got 11 hours on a trail
and then it has 13 hours on the road. The nighttime, you're on the roads at night.
Exactly. So on the trail, the trail is more difficult. There's 450 feet of climbing.
You have rocks and roots and you have areas that if you fall, you're going to possibly hurt
yourself pretty good. On the road, you have basically maybe 150, 180 foot of like climbing and descent.
And you have an out and back of 2.1 miles.
So if you fall, you're just going to scratch your elbow, your knee or whatever.
In that mode, I was starting to like go into a different mental state at times.
With John running next to me, I would start to say things that didn't make sense.
I was like, I don't have streaming services.
I remember saying that.
I'm like, why did I say that?
And John would be like, what are you talking about, Harvey?
It was just this flow of thought that you get in the dreamlike state.
That's very interesting. It's like you're dreaming, but you're awake. And so like
your flow of thought is just uncontrolled. Like it was, I was not in any control of my flow of
thought in many times in that fourth night. And in fact, at about five hours into the fourth night,
I said to John, I was like, how many of these laps have we done?
And he's like, I think like two. And I was like, yeah, I think two as well. And then we looked at our watches. Wow, we've done five of these and we forgot like where'd they go? I don't know where
they went. So that was something totally new to me. I mean, I've been running ultras for like
27 years now. I didn't even know that was even feasible to do something like that.
And I mean, I saw somewhere in a publication where, you know, you get some like different
feedback from different folks. And someone said like, well, Harvey, it really was impressive what
he did with some of these things, but like that sleep stuff was just total luck. And I was like,
well, you know, the funny thing is, is like, really none of this is really genetics or luck.
And I was like, well, you know, the funny thing is, is like really none of this is really genetics or luck.
A lot of it really is building up like your endurance.
And like when I first started doing this when I was 20, I ran a 24 hour race.
And I can remember like the hardest thing of that 24 hour race was surviving the night. I remember getting up 1 a.m., 2 a.m., 3 a.m.
And it's like something that is like having a car on top of yourself.
And you're like trying to just stay awake
with everything you have.
And so it took many years.
In these backyards, I can remember going back
to Courtney and I in 2020,
where I tapped out at like 270 some miles.
And that was like a large part of that
was building up like the ability to endure
like that sleep deprivation as well. Could you have imagined then that there would be a day where
you would go 180 miles further than that? No way. No way. I mean, honestly, when I first came to
that race, it was so funny because they're handing out the race numbers. I just remember them saying like, yeah, well, maybe, like it was just meant as a joke.
Like maybe someone will, yeah, I think it's going to go to 300 miles.
And like everyone's like, no, no, it'll never do that.
And I remember back to when I was running these 24-hour races and I thought I would really love to run 130 miles.
And that seemed like some giant Mount Everest so far away. It was insurmountable
for myself at 20. Like, I mean, that was, I ran 81 miles, like in that 24 hour race. And I mean,
it took me five years to get to breaking five hours in a marathon. It took me another like
14 years to get to breaking three hours from that point.
So it's been-
17 years to qualify for Boston.
17, you got-
Your whole life is an ultra.
It's like a life's commitment.
It is.
It's not just showing up and suddenly you have this capacity or this prowess that you didn't even know that you had.
You've been working on this for the better part of your entire life. Yeah, it's been a long journey. It's definitely been an ultra experience. And I love
like the Count of Monte Cristo and like that hammering through that tunnel. And like we all
have tunnels in life and we all have something to hammer through. And just that's where I was at
when I finished, when I was on my last loop in the bigs this year
and I was coming back and I knew at the moment
where I actually saw there was no EHOR
and I was like, I cannot believe
that this was a dream that I had for so long
and for this whole year,
it was something I really just envisioned so strong,
but it was like the
probabilities of getting there seemed so infinitesimally small. When you thought about
like all the competition, all the runners, all the things that could go wrong, I just had to like say
a prayer and like just slow down and like just soak in the energy of like my surroundings and then just be grateful
for having that opportunity. What do you extract from that about human capability?
That is the place that we are also capable of such incredible feats. And no matter what your area of specialization or what your pursuits,
we mostly can go so much further than we ever see ourselves going. And it's so important where we
see ourselves. How we see ourselves is one of the most important things in the world.
So, I mean, for example, I always envisioned myself as, well, I'd love to be a fast marathoner,
but I always envisioned myself as being like, maybe for a long time, it was like a four hour marathoner. And then somewhere
along the line, I thought, well, I started seeing myself as maybe a 330 and then maybe 315. And then
I, well, maybe I can be a sub three hour. And I was like, well, wow, maybe I can be, so I got to
245, 58. And now I'm like, you know, I I'm not sure if that's my pinnacle or maybe I can actually go further than that.
Even though I'm at my age right now, 47, it seems counterintuitive.
And I have my PRs from four years ago.
Maybe it is actually possible if I concentrate my energies and also adopt the knowledge that's available to make that happen.
Is that on the bucket list to try to go back to the marathon and just throw down and see
what you can do?
I think I'd love to do that.
Yeah.
I'd love to do that.
I think this year, I'm not sure about this year.
I've got a lot of things on the agenda, a lot of races, but I would definitely, I wouldn't
want to sacrifice the ultras I'm doing now, but I think it's actually possible, which
I've done in the past.
I've always gotten faster in the marathon. At the same time, I'm getting faster in ultras.
A lot of times people think, oh, it's not possible because if you're working on 100 mile race, no way you're going to get faster in a 5k or a marathon. But I think it's actually possible to
perhaps have them work side by side. However, for like getting sub 245,
I'll probably have to dedicate myself
for like maybe three and a half months
or three months to real specific training.
But yeah, I would love to do something like that.
Maybe like hit 50 or-
It'd be super interesting.
You could literally just discard the weekly long run.
Like I got the endurance part covered.
All I'm going to do is go to the track like three times a week
and just throw down 400s at race pace or whatever
and just forget about any distance stuff whatsoever
and just fine tune some speed and try to get your tempo up to par
and then just show up.
I think I'm going to your side cold plunge.
I think I'm gonna need it.
Yeah, some cold plunging might be involved.
I gotta ask, and I'm sure you've been asked this many times,
but again, back to the quirk,
like when the other guy doesn't show up for the next lap,
you win, but the story that isn't quite told
is how much further you could have gone.
Could you have kept going?
And if so, how much further do you think you could have run?
How many more laps, loops, whatever you call them?
Laps, loops?
Yeah, you could, yeah.
Yeah, it's laps.
Yeah, we call them actually yards.
Yards.
Yards, technically.
Yeah.
Yeah. You know, I got into this incredible space in the fourth night. Like, uh, I felt like I found some sort of frequency with running and I feel like there's a mathematic equation to it. And it's like with pacing, if you hit a certain pace mark in your marathon, uh, you can go so much faster than if you miss it by like your mile
splits by even like 10 seconds, you can throw that off. So I feel like I hit some sort of frequency
where I just felt like I could go forever. But there are so many things that can go wrong as
well. So by the time I hit that fifth day of running on the road, I definitely felt like it was possible we could have just kept on going that whole night.
Because only major impediment possibly at that moment would have been like sleep deprivation.
But I felt like it was possible.
So we maybe could have gone back to the trail for a fifth day, I guess it would be.
Yeah. So then you have the back to the trail for a fifth day, I guess that would be. Yeah.
So then you would have the element of the trail again.
And so like that can be tricky.
Like, I mean, I didn't fall at all the first three days that I can remember.
But the fourth day I fell a bunch more.
And I started falling like the more towards like one, two, three in the afternoon.
Because your depth perception gets thrown off from the sleep deprivation.
Yeah.
I was wearing my road shoes on the trail.
So I also, like, beat my road shoes up at that moment because I had worn them through the night
where I, like, fall asleep and, like, on the road.
But I was also wearing them on the trail.
So that probably also didn't help things.
But yeah, you could entirely knock yourself out by falling on some rocks or something like that,
like Mori Mori did like in 2021.
And then also in 2021, I fell down on the third day and like just fell poorly on my hand.
I'm really good at falling.
I fall a lot, but I fell and on my hand. I'm really good at falling. I fall a lot, but I fell and broke my
hand. So this time I was really good about my falling. It just, you have to be so careful
because there are any particular points. If you're not getting enough nutrition every hour,
then you're just going to like, you're just not going to be able to go. So, I mean, you have to
like constantly be aware of your like nutrition. You have to be able to go. So, I mean, you have to like constantly
be aware of your like nutrition. You have to be aware of like, uh, your pacing yourself. You can't
get like overly carried away. Like I was maybe showing at the start of the lap, I wouldn't want
to do that, like a sprint through the whole loop, you know? And one trip on a route. Yeah. Then you
can go down and you're out. You could. Yeah. So you have to be really conscious of what you're doing.
So I feel like it is definitely possible
that we could have gotten back to that fifth day.
And then I feel like it's possible to go beyond that too.
So I really didn't see any finish.
I was just going to go into the last person.
So, I mean, I was prepared to just go as far as it took.
You're not going to lay a number on the table here. 550? What are we talking about, Harvey?
As far as-
600?
I think that a lot is possible. I think it may be possible to even do something like that,
for sure. Yeah, I think it's possible.
Wow. A lot of athletes in these multi-day events suffer from all kinds of digestion problems.
The stomach gets upset, they can't hold calories down, and that ends up, you know, basically,
you know, toppling the best of them. But you didn't seem to have any kind of issues with that,
despite taking in something like 40,000 calories or however much food you ate
over the course of this four and a half day period.
Like to what do you attribute that?
And is that also something that you practice
and try to train and prepare for?
Most definitely.
Like I can remember being out on the course
and hearing other runners like squabble
about digestion issues.
Like maybe, I don't know what percent, I heard at least 10%
complaining about some digestion issues. So it is a big, big, big impact to be able to like consume
300 or more calories every hour. And then, I mean, 40,000 calories across four and a half days,
like that's a lot of calories. I mean, that's an incredible amount.
I don't really practice it in terms of my monthly routine of training. It's like these races
help to inform that. So doing bad water in the summertime where the temperatures are over 120
degrees, I get a real good sense of what I can consume at any temperature possible. And I've done races ranging from like Badwater in 2021, I think it was like close to 128, to like the Arrowhead 135, which, you know, that race can get down below zero quite far.
So it's like more than 100 and some degrees of like temperature range.
And with Biggs, the plant-based foods make such an incredible impact. Like not having the dairy
or the meat, it's easier for my body to digest things quickly. So I'm able to digest more
calories quicker. And if it's warmout, that's where it's also definitely going to
help you even more because I don't have like any issues with like the speed of digestion and the
inflammation too. Like that's another thing. I know, you know, at least another runner,
they had to actually change their shoes because their feet swelled up. Because their feet swelled up so much,
they had to borrow another European shoes for size 14 and a half.
I think that they started in like a 12 size.
So, I mean, it's like,
I don't know if that was entirely attributed to like the nutrition,
but I can say when I do see other runners,
like I know that they talk about like swelling their lower legs,
near their shins and ankles. And I didn't have any type of swelling in the race. During the race
point, I had no swelling that was visible. So like that has an impact on like minimizing your
risk of injury and also like impacting your performance.
I try to eat foods that are easy to digest. So I'll eat like lots of fruits, but I also have like soups with noodles.
I'll have like avocado wrap with like hummus.
I have like lentil soup.
So I'm also getting protein in there.
If I'm only running like a 100-mile race, I'm like have zero care about like really all the dynamic of like the makeup.
It's more important like the number of calories.
I'm getting like salt and fat.
But in these longer races, I'm also being more mindful about getting protein and like a race over 100 miles,
like especially bigs that I'm trying to eat something more than just a gel or like tailwind.
I'm also trying to get like some real food in me, maybe as much as like every two hours.
But I know a lot of runners would have difficulty doing that if they didn't get practice with that.
But I've just been doing it for years and years and years.
So, I mean, maybe if I think back to when I was doing that in my early 2000s, I would come back and just be like, oh, my stomach
is like roaring. But I've conditioned my stomach to be able to like just eat a burrito from Chipotle
and then just go. Yeah, it's like kind of wild how you can condition your body and your mind to adapt.
Talk to me a little bit about the recovery. We're not that many years distanced
from a period of time in which conventional wisdom was,
if you ran a marathon,
then you should pretty much, you know,
take the rest of the year off
because it's gonna take a long time
for your body to bounce back.
Then we enter this world of ultras
and then the idea being like,
well, if you're gonna run run a 50-mile race,
a 100-mile race, like maybe just do that once a year. You, my friend, competed in 10 ultras this
year and not just like, we're not talking 50-kilometer races, we're talking insanely long
distances. And you seem to have this preternatural ability to bounce back and be right back on your
feet, back teaching, back running into your daily routine without more than a blink of an eye after
a race like this. So walk me through what is going on here. I've kind of gotten a full formula,
but movement is really important. So for me, like the day after a race,
I think even getting out to walk for like 20 minutes is like dynamite compared to if you were
to not do anything at all. So some sort of movement is critical daily to our self-existence.
I know this from like breaking my neck back in 2004. From that experience, I didn't take any painkillers after I left the hospital.
And I was feeling a lot of discomfort, especially the first like week.
But what I found was like not moving was far more painful than moving my body and walking.
So walking is actually like lotion to your body. It is incredible. So
with these races, I do like a one mile run after the race to kind of keep my run streak,
although that kind of- Like the same day or you mean the following day?
The next day. Okay. All right. Thank you.
And then I basically am not going very fast. I mean, it's a slow mile. It's like usually over 10 minute mile.
And then I'll like just build onto that.
So if it's like a shorter race,
like maybe a hundred mile race,
maybe I feel pretty good
and I'll just go run like, you know, three or four miles
or I'll run to work three miles,
run home from work three miles.
I have like that run streak to work
is like 10 and a half years now.
Without missing a day. Without missing a day. 10 and a half is like 10 and a half years now. Without missing a day.
Without missing a day.
10 and a half years.
10 and a half years.
Of running to and from work.
To and from work every day. I love it. I honestly say like, well, if someone were to offer me,
if I'd have to give it up for a Ferrari, I would like not take the Ferrari. I love the Ferrari.
It's very nice car.
I have a hard time seeing you in a Ferrari. That feels like very, you know, anachronistic.
No.
We saw one last night.
We were having a debate about what kind of car it was.
I was like, that's a Ferrari.
And Kelly's like, that's not a Ferrari.
But the motion is like lotion.
It's real critical.
Like movement is so important for our bodies,
whether you're able to do it at a higher level with yoga
or you're just simply making a walk, like that's powerful in itself. So, I mean, that's another
thing with like, I think ultra running and top athletes in different genres. I don't think that
walking is too valued, like in terms of like, maybe I'm wrong, but I don't see a lot of runners talking about hiking and walking
all the time. But for me, I feel like walking, I try to incorporate some level of walking,
especially when I'm training for like a big race, like walking in the woods is really fantastic.
And I value that. Or walking with a group of friends in the city. We have like a Thursday
where I get together with some of my friends that aren't runners and we just do a walk.
I have like a Thursday where I get together with some of my friends that aren't runners and we just do a walk.
It's really nice.
Like that was one of my best training buildups to bigs was getting together with my friends
who are not runners and like doing the walk with them.
Because some of them, my one buddy, Charles, he's a professor, economics.
And he's been struggling with some of the health issues over the last few years and trying to get his weight down.
And so for him, it was really powerful
to be able to get the walk-in.
And for me, it also was powerful for me
because I'd already done all these miles running
and getting that walk-in was like getting that last pump
in like a bench press.
It was like, give me that extra little extra.
It's like that 1% that makes an impact. In terms of the training, how structured is it? You run
to and from your school every day, and then you're competing in these ultras, which are part of the
training, I assume. But is there a program? Is it periodized? Do you have a coach? What does that
look like? Or is it just something that you figure out and go on feel?
It's like the Wizard of Oz and that guy behind the scene pulling up.
Yeah.
No, because honestly, I don't have-
You don't have Chris Howth sending you a program telling you what to do every day?
I've never had a coach in my life.
You've never had a coach?
Never had a coach.
You and Courtney.
I have no coach. Every day?
I've never had a coach in my life.
You've never had a coach.
Never had a coach.
You and Courtney.
No, no.
And I think in some ways, Courtney and I are very similar in some domains when it comes to training.
I don't have a definitive plan for each day.
I kind of leave it flexible.
So, for example, today, I had no plan.
I just know I want to get out there and use the time I have.
And so this morning, I woke up. I kind of both woke up about 4.30.
And I was like, oh, you know, hey, I'm in this beautiful place.
I'm just, honey, I'll be back in a few hours, a couple hours.
And I went up the mountain.
I didn't know I was going to do like the mountains above Agora Hills this morning.
But it was just perfect for like getting into the Barkley S and being
nighttime, dark still, and like getting some like vert in. It was phenomenal, but I didn't have it
on my agenda. It's just like trying to work with what I have. However, like I do know week to week,
I know like I want to get this many miles or I want to like build this much climbing in. So I have like a
weekly plan. And then I have with races, I'll have like a pyramid plan in my mind like that. I'll
kind of trace it backwards. So I say, okay, like two or three weeks out, I want to be at this point.
And then I build it backwards and I say, okay, where am I here? Okay. So I might get from here
to that point. What do I have to do to get from here to there? And then, so I'll just gradually build up the mileage. And I'll also be
thinking about like each race, I want to simulate what's happening with the race. So for bigs,
it was like combination of half the time trail, half the time road. So I can't just focus only
on one or the other. I have to be strong in both. And also I don't have to be that
fast. Like for bigs, it's just about being out there and surviving the longest. So getting used
to running at not the fastest time or doing the walking with my friends, like I'm not doing that
right now in my routine, although I wish I could, but just tweaking things so that it fits whatever
race you're going after. And that's one
of the things I love about ultra running so much is that it has such diversity. There's so many
things you can explore. You could go for a really fast race on a track or 50K or road race, or you
can go out and do a stage race in Mongolia or something. I mean, there's all sorts of things
you can do. So I've never had any coach, but I
have people that are like, have inspired me. Right. Including yourself. No, come on. No, it's true.
But there is a level of intentionality that you're bringing to it. And to your point about the
similarities or the shared sensibility that you have with Courtney, you know, I look at the two
of you, and I think I maybe talked about this last time you were on,
but I see very similar personality types as well.
You're both incredibly affable, grounded, humble people
who are grateful to, you know, be doing what they're doing
and almost seem bewildered by their own success on some level.
And I can't help but think like, what is that about? Like what you do and what she does together?
I mean, you guys are at the top of the mountain in terms of, you know, human capability and ultra
running. But I have to think also that behind the scenes, there's some sort of hidden engine here that I'd like to
know a little bit more about. But I think your dispositions are so generous and I think it
dispels maybe somebody who doesn't know so much about this world, dispels their preconception
that in order to do the kind of things that both of you do,
that you have to be this really hardened person who's a take-no-prisoners type of personality.
And you're not that. Like, you're a very kind of loving, open, you know, graceful, gentle human being what is that about well courtney is much more humble she she is she
is i greatly appreciate like the compare you know compare me at any way to courtney because
courtney is uh just the best in the world in so many domains and true and you ran 450 miles okay so keep going go ahead I think like the basic one
of the things about Courtney and I is that even if we weren't like winning races or even finishing
the first front half of the group I think we would still be out there enjoying the experience. We're both very competitive people, but we also, I think that
the base energy which we operate is that we just love the whole piece. We love running. We love
the people. We love the nature. So, I mean, I feel like, and there's a lot of people that have those same energy forces that propel them.
But I feel like that for us is not just about being the first runner.
We're both very competitive and we strive to be the best we can be.
But I hope that even someday, you know, hopefully it's many, many years and decades from now,
but someday when I'm finishing in the very back, I'll still be out there and enjoying it.
You know, having fun with just whatever that endeavor is or venture is.
Like, it's just an adventure.
So I think that to me, there's more important things in life. It resonates with me. The adventure of it all is something that is priceless to me.
There's nothing. So I'm just grateful to have this experience. It's just for the young person that's under my layers that was chunking goonies, that was working for years to get under five hours in the marathon.
I never saw myself as a strong runner in middle school or high school.
Yeah, I never saw that.
I wasn't as disciplined with things.
I didn't know that it was even feasible to grow into that sort of mode.
I guess I took it as like more genetics or that it was just not feasible.
To your point, a lot of people share that sensibility with ultra running.
The appreciation of the community,
being outdoors, nature, pushing yourself,
like all of that stuff is not unique to you,
nor to Courtney.
No, no, no. So I guess, you know, the question remains like,
what is the differentiator for you?
Is it the accumulation of all of these experiences
and the level of discipline and intentionality that you've kind of brought to this experience incrementally over a long period of time?
What is the difference between you running 450 miles and the person who craps out at 300, 250, whatever?
Like, what is the secret weapon under the hood? If I pop the hood, you know, into Harvey's soul.
I'm very driven.
Like with the running.
This is the hidden thing.
It's like behind the smile and the affability is,
this is what I'm getting at.
There has to be some kind of killer instant deep down under there.
You trying to hide from everyone?
I'm not as.
Where's the darkness? I'm not as i'm not as where's
the darkness i'm not as pacific as courtney she is she is there's no darkness there i tried i
tried to find it i couldn't i couldn't unearth it but i am bad i use my imagination in sort of uh
some wild ways at times and like uh you know like i i have like the honey badger spirit animal
you got a couple spirits yeah i have a couple this race i was. You got a couple Spirit Animals.
Yeah, I have a couple.
This race, it was a Honey Badger.
The Honey Badger just never stops.
It's a choose-your-adventure Spirit Animal.
You swap them out.
I do.
Yeah, it depends on the environment,
but it only happens for my big A races,
so next one would be Barkley.
But it's the Honey Badger, the Mongolian Horse,
because the Mongolian Horse just keeps on going.
And I would be like, in the midst of the race, I'd be like going like that because it relaxes your face.
It helps relax your shoulders.
It actually has a technique that the horses use.
Oh, that's why they do that?
That's why I think so.
All right.
I'm making that up.
An anecdotal theory.
Yeah, it's my theory.
But the runners would be near me and be like,
Harvey, what are you doing that? I'm like, that's smart. I'm just like relaxing myself. It's like
I'm a Mongolian horse. Yeah. And Courtney has like a dragon like thing, but I'll have to let
her tell you that because it might be a secret. Yeah, I've never heard that. Yeah, dragon fire. Did you just divulge something that was
pretty? She could tell you. It was a technique, but- You also have an unlikely spirit animal,
a third one. Do you know what I'm talking about? The dragon? No, no, no, no.
Well, there's a monarch butterfly. Yes, thank you. Yeah, so the first day in Biggs, I actually kind of took on the monarch butterfly because Anthony from Quebec is a friend of mine, and he ran from Quebec to Mexico to draw awareness.
He and his wife are attorneys.
They took time off from their practice, and they wanted to draw awareness about the plight of the monarchs.
Because that's their migratory pattern. They fly
from Canada to Mexico, right? All the way. Yeah. I mean, it's incredible on a single life cycle
to go all the way from Quebec to Mexico. They're trying to get people to plant milkweed. There's
like a loss of perhaps 90% of the monarchs. And there's also a group that come up here to
California too, that there's a real loss of these.
But anyways, I saw a monarch on the first day when I was running and that was absolutely, that gave me a little spike of like energy,
you know, just like, just to make that connection with my friend Anthony
and like monarch butterflies don't seem like the proper spirit animal
for this sort of engagement.
Yeah, it's a very counterintuitive spirit animal.
Yeah, because they kind of go like this way for 15 minutes.
But what's interesting about it is that it's this tiny, fragile thing,
and yet it can go all the way from Canada to Mexico.
So it's defying your expectations,
which kind of plays into this personality type of you
being this kind of affable guy who is living your life, who has this capacity
that he can unleash at any moment and defy everybody's expectations.
That's the magic of it. And there are some other things too. So the week before the race,
I think I went to Whole Foods on Thursday night with Kelly. She came down for a night
from Circleville. And anyways,
I ran into this old lady back by the cereal aisle. And she kind of reminded me of my mother. She had
this real fancy hat on and she was lonely. I felt like, you know, and I wanted to just strike up a
conversation. And I said like, oh, I love your hats and this and that. And then we got to the
checkout aisle and this lady happened to be behind me and I was wearing my two times you gear.
And it has a big X here. And she looked over at me and it's like, you know, a week before Halloween.
And she's like, are you an X-Man?
And I was like, well, kind of.
I'm a 2X man.
Yeah, 2X.
So then amidst the race, I have to be honest, like on the second day, I did have like this sort of moment where I just just was envisioning myself as Wolverine.
And I'm like, all these other runners, because there's 75 runners,
it can be really intimidating that all these people are very strong
and look fast and all the other things.
And I'm like, you guys are all gone.
It's bad of me to say, but yes, I had that moment.
Why is it bad for you to say that?
You feel guilty
owning your space and planting your flag. Yeah. So I'm just like, yeah, everyone,
you guys are all, you're in for something coming. Yeah, it was bad. The storm is coming.
In the form of Wolverine? In Wolverine, I'm like, yeah, in the terms of running,
like I'm just going to run you two down.
There's an interesting psychological thing about the alter ego.
Like, when you step out of the frame of who you think you are
and you step into the, you know, exoskeleton of a superhero,
there is an energy boost with that.
Like, it is a common thing, whether conscious or otherwise,
that, you know, tons of high performers do. I mean, there's a difference between
David Goggins and Goggins, you know, or Mark Cavendish and Cav or James Lawrence and the
Iron Cowboy. There's a million examples. And I think there's something very intentional about
having that moniker or that archetype that creates like another gear for a performance
that the Harvey might not be capable of,
but the Wolverine or the Monarch Butterfly
or the Honey Badger or the Mongolian horse.
You gotta use like every single tool in the toolbox.
Right.
Yeah, so it is a wild thing
because when I'm in my classroom,
I mean, I'm trying and I give my full effort, but wild thing because when I'm in my classroom I mean I'm I'm trying and
I'm I give my full effort but there are days where I'm like I want to step into my character
that comes after four days it was like I build into this different being of myself at times
where it's like I'm very calm and subdued and relaxed and then but there are times where I was
out there on like the fourth day and I don't then, but there are times where I was out there
on like the fourth day
and I don't know who else was running near me.
I wasn't cussing at them,
but I had like a soundtrack
that sounded like David Gagin's like a bit.
So I get into like different modes.
It wasn't complaining.
It was just like psyching myself up.
Yeah, just getting myself psyched up.
It is an interesting thing.
I think using your power of your imagination
and creativity. And like when I didn't put myself in that Wolverine character, like every day,
it was like that second day. And I sort of smiled, like laughed about it. And it just actually like
was entertaining to me. It was like just kind of fun. And it also kind of propelled me.
Later that night, I probably felt maybe I was
really tired. Like on the second night, that was one of my tougher points. And I like said to my
buddy, Randy, because you're only allowed to have one crew member there, but my buddy Judd was doing
a DJ event in Indiana. So we were allowed to have my crew trade on the third day. He's like, I love you, Harvey,
but I'm out of here. I got to go spin some records. Yeah. He's like, well, my one friend,
Randy had to go to Dennis appointment. My other friend, Judd, he had to come from like doing that.
But Judd is an amazing crew person. I always say like with these events, the crew is like
quintessential in so many ways. With Randy, he also like was able to say something
powerful. So like the second night, it might've been like, maybe it was even the third, start of
the third day. It was a simple point he said. He's like, one of your team members, Kevin,
he was on the USA team the year before, and he was also running the race. He's like, the film crew
asked him who they thought would be the last person to survive. And Kevin's like, you know, without a doubt, Harvey.
And so my other buddy told me this.
It caused some sort of physiological change even in me.
Like I felt like that fatigue and tension I was feeling, like that was going through my back and I was just feeling really tired and a little bit stiff.
It was like that just went away, and I felt this new energy, and I wanted to live up to that
expectation there. Also, it felt really good that Kevin said that. It was really
such an incredible compliment for him to say something like that about me because my mind
was always teetering on like losing that faith. And I was always trying to keep that dream of
being the last person going the furthest cemented together. But there were many times where I had to
really fight to keep it from crossing over the other boundary. Keep that positive mindset
that it's still doable. When I'm going for three days without sleep and I'm feeling more tired than
the previous year and it's like, but then by the time I got to the fourth night, it seemed like I
got to that frequency where I was so hell bent on being the final person, I lost a sense of fatigue to a degree. Those things became
less visible to me. My brain was so hyper laser focused on being the final outcome that all the
other things just didn't matter anymore. I was like- You transcended fatigue.
I transcended fatigue. You were in a different state of consciousness.
It was a different state. I went through a metamorphosis where it just left me.
I was like, I was fighting it.
Like it was like when I was in with Jesse
in the cold plunge after doing the hot sauna
and I got in that cold plunge.
I'm not the best at the cold plunge yet.
Like I'm in there for 20 seconds
and I'm like, just like this. And Jesse's just like this and Jesse's like just relax into it just
relax into it relax your breathing and I mean I only made it like 30 some seconds or whatever but
um the whole experience you're kind of transcended over to bigs with like you get to a point where
you relax into it and then it it's like, you're anticipating
like the punch coming. But once the punches have come, you're just like, well, I fuck it. I don't
care about any of these punches anymore. You can hit me another a hundred times. I'm not going to
stop. So it just pulls you. And that's where it really attracts me to this because I can't get to
that sort of place and running a marathon or running a hundred mile race.
This takes you to a whole nother place I've ever seen before.
Yeah, that's so wild.
Yeah, it's something that can't even be described in words.
Like it's so experiential.
It's like trying to explain to somebody what your ayahuasca trip was like,
right? Like you are a psychonaut in that regard. Like it is as much, if not more,
a venture into the beyond of, you know, the brain's capacity and the relationship between
consciousness and physical activity, like in a new and different way that isn't just about the typical conversation around like walk me through your mantras when you reach that point where you can't keep going.
Like this is the PhD version of that where you're almost on a different plane and a different relationship with your own body and level of self-awareness because the fatigue is so profound.
It's like a point of opportunity to like,
I feel like there's some sort of,
there's a enlightenment that does come from like this period
and like exploring those spaces of the human mind.
spaces of the human mind.
So what are you returning to report back to us mere mortals about what you learned from that?
You know, what is this doing for you? It's part of our DNA. Like I feel like, you know, as humans, we are driven to the unknown.
There is a point of death. So, I mean, things are not, you cannot infinitely go forever.
But in a human evolution and in our time on this planet,
humans have experienced those points before.
I mean, you look at like feats of survival,
the six days, the man trapped under the rock.
I've lost his name right at the moment, but-
Oh, the one they made the movie about?
Yeah, yeah.
He had to basically break his arm off?
Yeah.
I mean, it's just an incredible story.
Or someone lost at sea for weeks.
I mean, it's like, those are far more remarkable,
but it's like pushing to that same,
that we have more in us than we realize.
And like the very interesting thing was like after the race, I sat down, we had like a little
celebration and I did some chat on like with a live feed. And then I walked over to the like
tent with my buddy Judd and another friend next to me. And I mean, I walked, but I was relying on them a bit too.
Like, I mean, I was definitely like,
and my body was like, yeah, we're done.
We're done.
This is it.
But the thing that's wild is that my mind,
I really believe I could have just run
through that whole night.
And I think that it's possible
that maybe we could have kept going through into the next. And I think that it's possible that maybe
we could have kept going through into the next day. And then how far beyond that, I'm not sure.
But in terms of my body, my body was just cooperating. Like at that point, my body
surrendered to my mind. My body just gave up and it said, I'm tired of resisting this brain.
And it says, we're going to go.
We're just going to go as far as we have to.
And there's no debate about it.
We're just doing it.
But the minute the race is over and you're like, I'm done, everything probably shuts down.
Then it goes back to the body gets majority control.
And then it's like, no, we're going to lay down.
Then we're going to take our time.
We're going to go to the restroom over there.
We're going to take one minute to walk to that restroom.
On the subject of higher planes of consciousness
and the kind of transcendent aspect of this,
it feels like a natural race for you to pursue
would be the 3100.
Is that on the list?
Did we talk about that last time?
Maybe we did.
I can't remember.
Have you ever had a guess on from that race?
no well I had Sanjay Rawal on
who made the documentary about it
and I know people who have competed in it
it's not a backyard format
but it's not dissimilar
it's like a stage race
you have certain hours where you can run
and you just run around the city block
that's only a mile loop right? and how do you say the city block. That's only a mile loop, right?
And how do you say the name again? It's Shri Shinmoy.
Shri Shinmoy. Yeah, because I think that he is a fascinating character. I mean,
he pulled airplanes by himself. I didn't know about this.
Yeah, like he's the one that developed that race. He's since passed away.
Yeah, but he's like the patron saint of running, especially in New York City. He's since passed away. Yeah. But he's like the patron saint of running,
especially in New York City. He's had a major impact on running culture dating back to,
you know, the early seventies, I think. That's really interesting.
As a sort of spiritual leader. And who's the guy, the New York road runners? Well,
there was Ted. And then who's the guy who ran the New York City marathon in like the seventies and
eighties? I can't remember his name.
But I believe, I could be wrong, but I believe he was heavily influenced by Sri Chinmoy.
And there's such a strong running culture in New York City.
And I think you can't understand the origin of that culture without understanding Sri Chinmoy.
He was like this spiritual guru who had this philosophy that
running was a path to transcendence, the ascetic nature of running. And that's the origin of this
race, the 3100, where you run around the city block in Queens, totally nondescript, like not
urban, but not suburban kind of city layout until somebody gets to 3,100 miles.
Right.
And hopefully self-transcends in the process of that.
All right.
So this has to be on your bucket list.
Yeah, it would be.
It's in the summertime.
So it's almost possible to do with my teaching schedule.
But I did learn from like the Appalachian Trail
that when you do a really long adventure like that,
even with my methodical way of eating plant-based foods,
movement, hot and cold treatment,
it's difficult to bounce your body back in six months.
It takes maybe six months or eight months.
So it would take some time,
but I love the exploring. That does sound like it could be, it's a lot of time. It's a lot of
time commitment. For sure. I mean, it's basically like your whole summer or your fall. I think I
was in New York City, I think it was October,
and it was going on while I was there.
So it goes into the fall.
That would cut in.
I mean, you're very committed to not missing a day of teaching.
Well, I do miss days, and I think that everyone in my school is very,
like the rest of the staff are probably like,
Harvey, how do you get to take all these times off?
But I take it on paid leave. And fortunately, Harvey, how do you get to take all these times off? But I take it unpaid leave.
And fortunately, like I do get the time off, but I usually take maybe two weeks to do races in a year.
That race is like also involves, I would feel like I like having crew members also for these big events.
And that would be a major commitment to be away from Kelly.
for these big events.
And that would be a major commitment to be away from Kelly.
And, or to have,
I don't think she's going to want to come longer,
like a few days or a week maybe
to that kind of a race.
But you know, she could shack up
at a nice hotel in Manhattan
and pop in every couple of days,
just make sure you're still alive.
Yeah, there's actually right now,
I have on my Instagram under stories,
the opportunity to vote
for one of my races for 2024.
And like going back to 2017, when I did bigs for the first time, the reason I decided to do bigs is I put four different races out there.
I had like a six-day race, a stage race in Oman.
Maybe it was like Leadville and also bigs.
And bigs won like with 80% of vote.
So that's why I did that race the first time.
I would never discovered it had like people not vote for it.
Here's what's going to happen.
You're going to do this again.
And I'm going to campaign.
I'm going to lobby for the 3,100.
And then you're in big trouble.
I'm in big trouble.
Right.
But let me ask you this.
So you have a full-time job teaching.
We talked about that at length last time. And ultra running is also a full-time job. I don't think it would be fair to call it a part-time gig. Like you're very serious about this, obviously. You're at the pinnacle of your career and performing, you know, at the highest elite level, but your life is full.
but your life is full.
And I'm interested in how these two worlds nourish each other,
because I would have to assume that
if a brand came to you,
I don't know, you know,
shoe brand or an apparel brand and said,
Harvey, we just, you're the best.
We love you.
We think that you are the hero that we need
and the ambassador that we want on our roster.
And we're going to write you this enormous check, and we want you to just run. Would you take that deal if that meant that you
had to retire from teaching? Well, I have this amazing shoe company already behind me with
Newton's. Honestly, I am so, so loyal to them. I've already been offered something that maybe exceeds that by quite a long distance,
but I've been with Newton for over a decade.
Let's say it's a non-competing brand.
I know you love Newton.
It's great.
I love my Newton stuff.
You know it was $100,000.
Let's definitely love on Newton for sure.
Let's say it's a food brand or Whole Foods comes to you and says,
we're Amazon.
Just name your number, Harvey.
Right, right.
Would I do that?
We know you like that Ferrari.
You can have that too.
Well, honestly, I would probably be open to doing that for like a leave of absence.
So like for a year or maybe for a few years.
But then again, like after I,
I really love the teaching aspect.
So if I went that direction, I did that,
then I would want to also be doing something
like relatable to youth as well.
So then I would have to like start a program
like Ray up in Quebec.
He's a hop.
He has a hop, yeah.
Yeah, Ray, he has like a really neat adventure.
He takes kids several times a year
to like these remote places on the planet.
And then they broadcast what's happening
for like lesson plans
with like Canadian National Geographic.
And it's like, then he's into the classroom.
So he's impacting more than just a single classroom.
He's impacting classrooms all over.
So if I had a dream, like I would absolutely, absolutely love to be able to impact more kids and be in more classrooms.
That's where I would be.
Oh, I'd see the opportunity with that.
But with my school, SCPA, it's a really amazing place.
It's a very diverse, like art art school, like, what your children have.
And it's hard to replace that.
But if I were to have an opportunity where I could do something in that respect of, like—
You could scale the impact.
Scale it to a larger group.
That you're having on young people.
That I would 100% be in.
Or if I could do, like, a sort of running travel TV show or something. What's the status of that? Because I know you're trying to make
this happen. We got to talk to Kelly on that. She's kind of helping. I want to bring Kelly on,
but I have one more thing I want to talk to you about before we do that, which is the why behind
all of this. I'm sure this is another question people ask you. Why do you do
this? What are you getting out of this? Why do you have to run so far? And I just know in the course
of kind of sharing your story and the stories of other people who are on the outer edges of,
you know, this world that amidst the celebratory, you know, kind of response that you get,
there's also some pushback from people who
are like, why are you sharing this? This is unhealthy. This isn't good for anybody. Like
these people must have some kind of psychological problem. Like why, you know, like, like there are
better people to celebrate. There's something not right about this and maybe you shouldn't be
promoting it. Right? Right. I'm sure you get a little bit of that coming your way. Oh, yeah, definitely.
So what's the why?
And, you know, what is really driving this behind all of it?
Yeah, I mean, is it Maslow that has the hierarchy of human needs?
Yes.
Like sort of paralleling that.
Like, I mean, I feel like there's a hierarchy there.
So, I mean, at the base level, it's like there's like a physical element to it,
like a chemistry, like a dopamine impact, I mean, at the base level, it's like there's like a physical element to it, like a chemistry, like a dopamine impact, you know, like from like running, what running brings you positive health and brings like positive, like, you know, feelings both while I'm doing it as well as like in the afternoon when I'm like reflecting back on that experience.
when I'm like reflecting back on that experience.
But then there's like the social aspect.
Like, I mean, I've met people that have overcome numerous life challenges
because of running.
And it's like, part of that is also that social dynamic,
like what they get from like being a part of something.
So there's that social dynamic that's large. And then you get the sort of like elation that comes from like beating yourself, like to push yourself to another level and to continuously be, even when you're in your 60s, your 70s, or like my friend, Mike Fremont, who's 102 in February.
Right. Friend of the pod. Still kicking.
Still kicking.
Out there, getting it done.
He does pull-ups every night on his way to bed. It's like, and he wears your shoes.
Not my shoes, An. He likes his An's.
Yeah, he wears An's and he collects the little pebbles.
He's got a little jar that's about this big,
like the pebbles he's collected from the shoes.
That gets stuck in the sole, yeah.
He likes to bring it back to the shoe store and give them back.
But it is like a love.
There's like a spiritual element to it as well.
Like once I recognize the highest points, it's like, I feel like a
closeness with the energy of the universe. I don't know what to say. I can't really describe it,
but I feel that like power sometimes when I'm like in an event, like bad water out in the middle of
the desert. And I can see, you know, for as far as human eye can see. And I just like take my body and just,
it feels so primal to be moving across that landscape
and doing things that my younger self
was thought was like absolutely insane.
So that's something.
But then there's also at the very high level,
there's also like this giving back.
So like this year we actually
teamed up with the Brighton Center and like, we didn't finalize everything. That was another thing
I was working on the last eight days before the race. The last eight days before the race, I was
like, we have been talking about it, but we didn't finalize the details. And we're going to aim to raise a hundred thousand dollars, which was far,
10 times more I've ever raised for any group. I got to speak to the people working on the ground.
This organization helps like over 20,000 people in Northern Kentucky, greater Cincinnati.
It's like family planning, right?
It's everything. They have shelters. They have like food banks. They have like
help people get their first houses to overcome addiction.
There's all different facets to this organization, but they're non-profits.
And so it was, at that point, it was also another drive,
knowing when I had my friend Tracy Outlaw,
who does all my social media, like in these races
and is a really good storyteller, but he was relaying to me that we were up over $15,000
and way over 20,000.
And that gave me more motivation as well.
So, I mean, we ended up raising now over $44,000.
So, I mean, it's like knowing that that was connecting with other people and knowing
that we were impacting other people, it impacted me. And like that, that was also like motivation
in it. And also like, I really love to like influence our culture around health. In Ohio,
culture around health. In Ohio, we're not really at the same level of California. We have even higher obesity rates. I feel like there's fewer options for healthier foods, especially in rural
areas like Circleville, where Kelly and I live. I live half my time in Circleville. And so I kind
of like, honestly, like when I'm running to work
and back home from work and I'm racing the buses, I kind of consider myself like a human billboard.
So it's like trying to get people to move beyond like, you know, what they can do to, you know,
take the people that are more sedentary and get them out and like walking. I mean, I try to do
that with my students. That is something that I
try to do. I try to encourage people to eat more whole food, plant-based foods. You know, even if
they're not going to like, you know, become vegetarian or vegan, like, I mean, if they're
incorporating more of that into their nutrition, you know, my mom had a stroke when she was like
54 and she almost died. And as a result of it, it impacted her speech and
her mobility for the rest of her life. And fortunately she is still alive at 84, but for 30
years, it's been a different experience. Like she, you know, she does not have the same abilities
and it's very frustrating for her. So, I mean, much of what happened to her at 54
could have possibly been different
had she been eating differently
and had she been, had a routine
and had less stress in her life.
You know, those things,
absolutely I don't believe she would have had the stroke.
So I feel like, you know, DNA does play a role
and it does impact us, but we can also fight
back. And like, we can also, you know, I have an end date as well, but it's like the quality of
life. Like, I mean, my buddy, 102, Mike Fremont, he's still doing pull-ups at 102. I mean, that's
remarkable how many people can do a pull-up, I mean, across the whole population.
That guy's unbelievable. 102.
102. I mean, he came to my classroom, he walked up all four flights of stairs.
I mean, and like, there are a lot of people who come into the school that don't do that.
They are 20 and 30 years of age.
So, I mean, to me, like, I'm only one person, you're one person. We have a whole
bunch of people out here and ultra running and like different like activities like this.
But I feel like if I can influence a few people or more people, that would be the best thing in
my world. Like, you know, just to have more influence and getting people that higher quality
life. So it's not an inconvenience.
It's far from that.
All right.
Answer complete?
Yeah, I'm sorry. That's the end of your answer?
I'm sorry.
I gave you a long answer.
No, I want to hear you out.
Right.
And you can get Kelly up here
to hear the honest truth of it.
Trust me.
Trust me, all right?
That's coming.
She's coming in hot in a minute.
But before we get to her,
I'm not gonna let you off the hook on this.
If I heard you correctly,
your answer to the question of why you do what you do
and push yourself in this very specific way
is because of the community social aspect of it,
your love of nature,
this feeling that you get from pushing yourself and aspect of it, your love of nature, this feeling that you get from pushing
yourself and kind of suffering and, you know, the kind of downstream impact that that has on your
life, the spiritual piece to it. Then we have the fundraising piece. And then there's this
role that you can play in terms of influencing the health of others. All very laudable wise.
And yet I'm feeling like we're not quite there
in terms of getting to the bottom of this.
I think that all of these goals could be pursued
short of running 450 miles and not sleeping for days on end.
You could go to the Turkey Trot
and maybe run the New York City Marathon every other year
and still raise money, enjoy the social peace,
get out in nature, have a spiritual experience and the like.
If I was gonna create my own Maslow's hierarchy
of these whys, I think I would put,
in terms of like your pure honesty in answering this
question, I would put the spiritual piece and the suffering piece at the top here, because those are
the two that I think might be inching a little bit closer to the answer of why you go as long
and as hard as you do, because all of these other goals can be achieved short of you practicing five minute naps
in between classes and, you know,
spending every commute for the last 10 and a half years
running to and from school.
All of the, like, it's very extreme, right?
Admittedly.
I get it, bro.
I love you.
But to the person who is the person who's posting,
like, I don't understand this.
Like, this is like, let's go a little bit
deeper here. Let's get into the darkness. Like what's the real push? Like what is the engine
that gets you through that third day and into the fourth day and into four and a half days without
sleep and is continuing to propel you beyond your enjoyment of nature. And it's cool
to hang out with some other people when you're running around in the woods.
Well, I mean, I just- And I'm not saying you have to know the answer to that.
Yeah, you're so good with like diving in and peeling back the layers.
You did that last time.
Actually, I had a couple, at least one epiphany in the last time we met
that was something I didn't even quite get until I left that space.
But I want to just go as far as humanly possible. And I have this aching desire to want to always go further
and to push myself into like some zone that doesn't make sense.
But I don't know, you may have to get Kelly up.
She may give a better answer.
And let's do that.
But I will offer this.
And I think,
and please correct me
if this is at all off base,
I think there's something
inside of you
that owns and knows
that you're very good at this.
Like,
it's not the normal person
who,
you know,
a couple days into this
decides like,
who looks around
at the other competitors
and says,
yeah,
these people,
they're not going to beat me. Like, and just knows it. And maybe that's Wolverine, but that's also
Harvey. And so I think, you know, that you have this in you and you know, it's special.
And there's something really beautiful about honoring that. And that's okay. You know,
and it is exciting to see if you can go further than anyone else
and to explore the outer edges of what happens to your body and your mind
when you go further than anybody else ever has.
I'm still exploring it.
I think you're right.
You've said things that are true.
You're absolutely right.
There's more layers to it.
But I'm also sort of multifaceted
in a sense that I may be feeling one area. At some time, I might be having that hunting phase
where I'm lured myself in the back and I'm just observing every single possible detail of every
person at a level that no one realizes is happening. And then there's other
times where I'm just in there and enjoying like a great conversation. And like, we're totally
working as a team. Like the third night, there was like seven of us that ran many of the loops
to finish as a unit at 300 miles. And like, for me, running as that unit
brought me such incredible gratitude.
Like, it's a pretty cool, that's a pretty cool thing.
It was so cool because there were some of these runners
that were like, they were on their way out.
But because we like worked as a team
and like I called the go, when to go and when to slow.
Like I, so like we would like run to a certain point and I said, okay, now we're going to like
walk for like 20 seconds. Relax yourself. You guys are doing, I just say, you guys do amazing.
Keep moving. Okay. We're going to get this. And I said, okay, uh, we're going to start running again
when we run. And I was just like speaking to the group most of the time and like just calling
it out. To me, that was fun. It was like being like a commander of a group. But as myself,
every single person there added energy to me. It was like animals moving in nature. Like, I mean,
animals moving in nature move more efficiently than individuals. So like there was a strategic element
to that as well. I wasn't thinking like, you know, taking out the person next to me. I was thinking
of all of us are moving further together and we're like actually working as a unit. And this is
freaking amazing that we get to 300 miles, you know, three years earlier, no one had even made
it to 300 miles. Now we had 22 people make it to 300 miles and seven of them were in our group.
So it was so cool. That was probably one of my favorite experiences of the whole race
was running in that unit. Yeah. Yeah. That is cool. It was fun. All right. Let's get the truth.
Let's get Kelly up here and we're going to put all your bullshit to the test. There you go.
and we're gonna put all your bullshit to the test.
There you go.
Kelly, welcome.
Thank you.
Thanks for joining us. It's an honor to be here.
Have you ever done a podcast before?
No, not like this.
All right, well, welcome.
Let all of this like disappear.
Nice little surprise.
I'm delighted to have you here.
Let's just begin with,
if you're giving Harvey a report card
on the veracity of what he shared,
like what's the, how's he doing?
What do we not know?
What hasn't come up?
Who's the real Harvey here?
I would have to give him a C plus.
C plus there, what?
Scathing.
I thought it was like at least A minus or something.
Maybe B minus.
B minus.
No, he's,
I think he's still figuring himself out a lot so
when he kind of i feel like dances around questions sometimes and you do a very good job at bringing
him back to the original question i think a lot of it is he is still searching for what's inside of him. There's also a reason why I'm still with Harvey
after over 10 years.
I want to understand this.
And that's a compliment.
You guys have a unique relationship.
We do.
I'm still trying to figure him out, I guess,
is what I'm saying too.
And I think that's one of the biggest attractions
is I learned something new about him almost daily.
So if you had to answer the why question or if somebody asks you, like, why does Harvey do this?
Like, what's beneath the surface here?
I would say that when he talks about wanting to make a difference in other people's life, I would say that is pretty much the number one reason.
I can see that.
It truly, truly is.
I've never met anybody, and he's never said this.
I'm just saying this from what I take from him.
I seriously think he just wants to leave this world a better place.
And anything he can do to bring more goodness, positivity,
if he can help others discover what they're capable of doing,
that's his life goal.
Like that's what he wants to do.
And certainly running further and longer than anyone else.
It's just as good a way as any other.
It's a good place to start.
It's the only stage I got.
Yeah.
Yeah, well, that's the card you're playing, right?
It's a good card.
Yeah.
And I think you are correct when you say that he's this like lovable, you know,
kind human.
Me and my daughter joke, we always say we're going to get a bumper sticker made that says
I break for lightning bugs because we have gotten whiplash before because we've been
driving on a back road and a lightning bug flies
in our path and he's got to break really hard. So we don't, I don't do that all the time now.
Yeah. The Harvey that people see is they see runner Harvey and school teacher Harvey. People
don't get to see Harvey as my partner, which is, I mean, it's who he is, but it's like a whole other
piece that nobody gets to see. And what is that like? I mean, you, I mean, you's who he is, but it's like a whole other piece that nobody gets to see. And what is that like?
I mean, you're an ultra runner yourself, right?
So you understand this lifestyle and you're engaged with it just the same.
And you have this unique relationship because you don't necessarily live together all the time.
Right.
Yeah.
So we've been together for over 10 years.
We don't live together.
We live about an hour and 45 minutes apart. And I can honestly say that Harvey's training has never impeded our relationship, which is huge.
Is that because you're training with him or because he's so conscious of it. And when he says he doesn't have a plan when he gets up for like what he's going to do that day, he's serious.
That is where we differ in training because I am more, okay, Monday I've got to run this many miles and I've got to run at this pace.
And Harvey is more like, okay, so I'm feeling like 20 feels good today, but I'm going to do my 20 here, here, and here. So it doesn't affect any of our plans for
the day. I don't feel like training has ever impeded us. And in the 10 years that we've been
together, he drives to Circleville every weekend. And in over 10 years, never once, never one time
has he said, Kelly, I'm really busy this weekend and I've got a lot of stuff to do
and I'm not gonna make it up to Circleville.
That is huge.
Yeah, that's interesting.
And what, yeah, so those are-
My heart is warmed.
My heart is warmed.
In fairness, money through Friday,
this guy is like running all the time
and like teaching and that's pretty much it, right?
I imagine it's fairly monastic during the week for you.
Yeah.
So I kind of really consider it as like I 100% live in two different places.
I live with you, you know, three nights a week and in Cincinnati, four nights a week.
And so, yeah, like for the last like five or so years, I've been really involved with
also taking care of my mother.
So that would be a couple of nights a week in Cincinnati. And we just moved her to Maryland to be near my sister.
But otherwise my teaching day, and I do a lot of like running related stuff. You're right. Monday
through Thursday, every other thing like friends and stuff like that. And that's another thing that
people don't see of you is that up until just October, two days a week, you were driving 40 minutes round trip to go care for your mother and not just stop in.
Hey, mom, how are you?
Mom, let's get up and let's go for a walk.
Let's go to the store.
Let's go out to eat.
Let's socialize.
So two days a week, you also were doing that.
Yeah, I was busy.
Basically, I need to
abandon this quest that I'm on to
uncover the darkness here.
This is like...
Harvey is as you see him.
Right? And more.
Which is... I have hope for
humanity. Thank you for
that. I do. I truly
do. I really feel like
he is everything that everybody sees and so much more. Thank do. I truly do. I really, I feel like he is everything
that everybody sees
and so much more.
Thank you.
That's very sweet.
Well,
we were going for the record
for longest engagement,
but we actually like
have put a date
on our wedding day now.
Oh, wow.
June 1st.
Yeah.
So we're actually
getting married,
but we've really been like
practically,
we've been married.
Yeah, you've been together for 10 years. What took you so long?
I know, right?
You're just turning that engagement into its own ultra?
Take our time. But we actually met in the North Coast 24-hour race. We met in a 24-hour race. And
Kelly is always very supportive of me. So I couldn't do the types of things I do
without her encouragement,
being on my team, even if she's not there.
She may think that some of my ideas
are a little delusional at times, perhaps,
but she always supported me.
So when I was doing that Big's Backyard,
another thing that gave me oomph, I mentioned some of the things already, but like judges like telling me,
hey, Kelly and Carly, our rescue dog, are out running this morning. And just by the fact that
they're out running, you know, and I'm on my fourth day, like I could like kind of connect
with that energy. And it just, it definitely made me feel better. It just made me feel like, you know,
well, we're both running in different places on the country,
but we're both like, it's a connective energy,
which is really nice.
And what's your relationship to ultras and racing these days?
Like, what does that look like?
I've been running ultras for, let's see,
I think my first one was in 2011.
Yeah.
That sounds about right.
And I think we met in 2013.
Yeah, so I've done 24-hour races, 100-mile races.
I ran Badwater in 2022.
You had a remarkable experience with Badwater
because it was like just making it each cut off
by like literally a minute.
By seconds.
Like seconds in some places.
And I mean, she hallucinated.
She had like every reason was there to like have quit multiple times.
Yeah.
But I did have an amazing crew.
And he had this phenomenal crew.
Phenomenal.
And it's something about Kelly also is like her training doesn't necessarily always come together.
But for whatever reason, she is very strong with executing the race.
It's like some people, they train really, really amazing and get all together and then they get to the race and it just doesn't happen.
I'm the opposite.
She's the opposite.
Like her training can just be raveled.
I mean, before, oh, my God.
And I'm like, wow.
And it's not necessarily
like maybe some injury happens or this or that, but then you get to the race and you are just
like a machine. You're like, I'm going to finish. I know. And then I'm always like, wow, what,
I wonder how I would do if I could actually like have a solid training block.
Yeah. That's so interesting. The person who's so regimented about their training, though, tend to be the people who are less resilient when things go wrong in the middle of a race, right?
Because it's a control thing.
And to have the wherewithal to go into a race knowing that your training wasn't great and still execute is illustrative of somebody who has a tremendous amount of resilience.
That's cool. And you touched on-
Nope, no joke.
No joke. No joke. I mean, I seriously, and I had been out there for years prior to me even
applying and running. So I knew what I was getting myself into, but then there was this
small part of me that thought, maybe it's not that bad. Maybe it really, the hype of the heat and, you know, just all of it,
maybe it's not that bad.
Oh, my gosh.
No, it's terrible.
The whole thing is terrible.
It was so hard.
It was so hard.
And I have experience with ultras.
And the biggest thing that threw me for such a loop out there was the depth perception.
So you would run for hours and
hours and hours and the mountains would never get closer. Or this little line that goes through this
mountain over to the side is still there. 20 miles later, I look over, oh my goodness, there's that
line. So the depth perception is the one thing that really threw me for a loop panamint coming
off of towns past you see panamint in the distance oh yeah it's like it takes forever to get to it
well good for you i want to talk about the squid game thing but before we transition to that just
so we're clear nothing else about harvey that that we need to know?
That the passerby
wouldn't understand?
Or any
fast ones that he pulled
in the middle of the interview where you felt
like, no, come on,
Harvey. It's okay, honey.
Yeah, I'm thinking. I was making
so many mental notes
when I was listening. I do like, oh, what did Rich say? He said something and I'm thinking. I was making so many mental notes when I was listening.
I do like, oh, what did Rich say?
He said something.
And I'm like, okay, Harvey, come on now.
And I can't remember what it was, though.
Shoot.
Yeah, maybe it'll come to me in a minute.
But yeah, I gave him a C+, a B-, somewhere between there.
Because I think you're still figuring things out as well.
And what drives me, what drives you? I'm still trying to figure out what drives you.
So were you surprised when I won that race, the 450 miles?
Good question. That's good.
Like when you were watching this from afar.
Okay, hold on. This is coming back now. This is coming back now. Okay. So Rich said to you,
and I, if you remember correctly, right when we were having lunch prior to coming here,
I asked you the exact same question.
I said, but those other people that are out in the race,
they also think they're going to win.
They're also going for the win.
You're also going for the win.
What makes you different?
And you asked that.
You said, what differentiates you from the others?
They could be looking all around saying, I'm taking you all down.
You, you're all done.
And you're looking at everybody as the Wolverine and you're taking everybody down.
So what makes you different?
And I asked you that exact same question before we came here.
And you still, you cannot.
That was on like day two of the Wolverine.
Yeah.
But, you know, a lot of people ask me about Harvey's training.
That's what people typically want to know about.
You know, how many miles does he run a week?
How often does he do hills?
What's his speed work like?
I can't answer any of that.
And he probably can't either because.
Yeah, it's interesting and refreshing, you know, especially
on social media, it's all about what's your morning routine and, you know, exactly what is
your zone two. And all these people get really obsessed with the minutiae of the lifestyle habits
of high-performing people. But in my experience, a lot, not all, but a lot of the most elite people
in their respective disciplines and fields
have a very different relationship with those kinds of things. It's much more intuitive in
nature and not regimented in the way that one might be led to believe if you're watching a
lot of reels on Instagram, you know, from people who are not elite telling you what they learned
or what you should do or should not do
with respect to certain things.
And I think there's,
I don't know what the lesson in that is,
but I think there is a lesson in that.
Yeah, and I think it's your mind
and it's your psychology
that I think separates him from others.
Well, Laz said it,
you're the guy who won't give up.
So I think it's more honey badger than monarch
on some level. Like it's that, you know, like not a death grip has a pejorative kind of connotation,
but like you're latching onto something and you have the tenacity to not let go until you achieve
your desired outcome. I think something else about you that a lot of people
may not know is that for as long as I've known you, he may have had, he may have a goal going
into a race, whether it's like a distance or a time goal. I've never seen him disappointed.
I've never seen him upset over like, oh, if I would have just done that, I could have,
I could have gotten this time. Or if I would have just done that, I could have maybe, you know, been in
second place than third place. He celebrates every single thing he does, everything. If he doesn't
hit a goal in a race, I don't think he looks at it as a failure. I think he looks at it as,
you know, moving forward. If I want to do something different, I can just tweak something.
But every finish is a
celebration to him. Would you say that's right? I think for the most part, I mean, it's, I try to
find like some positive in everything. And then, but also like, if I don't do as well as I want to,
that's actually can be really powerful as well. So for example, like with Australia, I like
finished third and like things fell apart in a way.
Like, you know, with the going through the deep hallucinations and it was powerful because it caused me to want to grow.
So like after that, I actually changed some things.
Some things real small.
Like I started taking cold showers the whole month leading up to Bakes.
I did cold showers and I'm still doing them now.
Like only cold showers.
Tell the truth about cold showers.
What's the truth, honey?
The truth is you only take a cold shower on the days you don't take hot baths.
Yeah, that's true.
Okay.
I do take hot baths.
Right.
You get me.
See, there we go.
We got to check some balances here.
This is what I was looking for.
Right, right.
All right.
Keep going. But, you know, it's like that actually motivated me to elevate like the, you know, different things within my training, like mileage a bit more.
like thinking through what did I mess up with in terms of like maybe my nutrition
or like my motivation,
my mind, where my mind traveled to,
my pacing, all the strategies.
Like I thought those through finishing third in Australia.
And I set an American record doing that,
like finished with 375 miles.
So I was like, I was grateful that I got that.
And I was also grateful to see Phil Gore get the new record because I felt like I was like, I was grateful that I got that. And I was also grateful
to see Phil Gore get the new record because I felt like I was a part of that. So even though
I finished third, I was delighted that Phil like overcame and got the world record. Like I felt
like I was a part of the team that helped him get there. So like, for me, that was beautiful. It was a
celebration in Australia, but it's like everything we do, sometimes things don't go the way we
expect them to go. And that's okay. Cause then it determines how we take that event.
It determines where we'll go with it. You can like take that and let it destroy you. You can
beat yourself down for something you did, or you can take that and let it destroy you. You can beat yourself down for
something you did, or you can take that and say, okay, I'm going to use that to motivate myself to
work harder, to like learn new tactics, to like grow into. So, I mean, I feel like that is an
important element. Yeah. The two lessons that I extract from that are one, when you make it about
something more than yourself, i.e. celebrating your friend or having the gratitude for contributing to his record,
that ameliorates the sting of defeat because it's not about you and your ego.
It's about more than that, which keeps you in the sport longer
and keeps it fresh and interesting and encouraging no matter the result. And then the second lesson being this capacity or reflex to develop the muscle of
being enthusiastic about what you learn when things don't go your way and being stoked about
it. Like, oh my God, it didn't go my way, but look what I got out of this and I can apply this next
time as opposed to the self-defeating, you know, kind of impulse to beat yourself up
and feel bad because you didn't reach your goal.
And I think those are lessons that are applicable
no matter what you're trying to achieve in your life.
And as a cross-country coach,
finding that why,
finding something that's bigger than you,
because you'll always give yourself permission to quit.
If you just leave it up to you,
you can almost always find a reason to say, you you just leave it up to you, you can almost always
find a reason to say, you know what, this is really uncomfortable. Like I'm going to back down.
But when you have something that's bigger than you, it's harder to let other people down.
So I always encouraged my athletes to find something that was outside of them that they
could rely on when it got tough out there in a 5K or when the weather was, you know, not ideal and they still had to race.
So I think finding that why and finding that reason that's, you know, bigger than you is.
And also you touched on it earlier when you said about like when it gets bad,
you find like Harvey being Wolverine or a spirit animal.
I used to have my athletes like really do some research and find somebody
that they find, you know, either a great athlete or somebody that they think very highly of. And,
you know, when it gets tough out there, that's when you're going to kind of let yourself go
and think, okay, so what would so-and-so do, you know, and how would Harvey Lewis run up this hill
or how would, you know, whoever they admired, how would that person tackle this hill? So I think
getting out of your own body is something that I feel he does really well at. And I just think it's
kind of the key to pushing through hard times. Yeah, for sure. Let's talk about Squid Game.
Okay. So Squid Game was the international phenomenon on Netflix, the show that swept the world and rewrote the ratings books in terms of, you know, audience share.
I mean, the whole world was talking about that TV show.
Then there was this reality show, game show concept that you found yourself involved in.
So I need to know what this is all about.
Because this is like, this came out of left field. I saw Harvey shared a video and I was like, wait,
what? Yeah. And the interesting thing about it is we recorded it in January of 2023. So I couldn't
talk about anything until now, until it was released. So I've been holding on to all this, you know, information for a year now.
So yeah, Squid Game came out in 2021, I believe.
And it was the most watched Netflix series to date.
And it was shown in 94 countries.
And then in 2022, they decided they were,
Netflix was going to produce a reality show based on the original Squid Game.
So it was called Squid Game The Challenge.
And it was going to be all the games and everything was going to be based on the original one.
So it was kind of cool to be involved with it.
It was the largest casted reality show in the history of TV with the largest prize pot of $4.56 million.
Did they have all the cash in like a lucite cube hanging from
the ceiling? Yes, they did. How did you get involved with this? So this is how I got involved
with it. I'm not even really a big TV watcher, but we did get started on Squid Game when it came out
and it's kind of dark and I seem to kind of be drawn
to those psychological type of thriller type shows.
So I loved it.
I don't know.
Harvey is not really...
No, I liked the show.
You did.
I loved the show.
You did, yeah.
The Korean culture and all that.
And the competition.
Yeah, so anyway,
they started casting for the reality show, it was my 20 year old son that
actually had sent me the link and said you should apply for this and i think what happened he went
to apply for it but you had to be 21 so the next best thing would be his mom you shot one video
just one video so he sent me the link on a whim i sat down came back from running i just got back
from running like four or five miles i was like like, oh yeah, I've got this link. Clicked on it, filled out the
application online. I shot one 60 second video, like in one take. And I watched it and I'm like,
yep, good enough. Send it on. It's just those things I thought, oh, I'll send off. I'll probably
never hear anything. Within 24 hours, a casting agent from LA had texted me and we did a phone interview
and then it just kind of snowballed from there.
So it was a super in-depth process.
The whole vetting took from August of 2022
until December of 2022.
Just the vetting part.
Yeah, so four months.
Full background check.
Full background check.
Psychological tests.
Psychological evaluation, social media check. A lot of stuff. Big deal. So it was filmed in London in January of 2023. So they flew 456 of us over to London, where we were isolated three to four days prior to filming in our hotel rooms. So we weren't allowed to talk to each other. We could only come out of our hotel room like three times a day to get our, pick up our food. And then we started filming. They put
us all on these coach buses and bussed us to the middle of this field with these two big old
military hangers. And that's where it all started. Wow. And they took you through the challenges
just the way they unfold in the show without the dying
part yes without the dying but they try to simulate it as best as they could so we had we did have
these um like ink packs on so if we were to get eliminated they would uh activate our pack and it
would explode so then like you know this dark ink would kind of bleed out onto our shirt.
No spoilers.
Everybody should watch the show.
The show's doing really well on Netflix.
Like we're recording this in December, but I checked maybe a handful of days ago and it was like in the top 10 shows still.
So a lot of people are watching this show.
Yes.
Are you getting like stopped?
Do people recognize you now because you're on this TV show? Well, you know, I teach middle school.
So, of course, my middle schoolers are like,
hey, there's that teacher that was in Squid Game.
Unbelievable.
So that's fun.
Yeah, and I have got stopped at a local pharmacy, actually,
when we were getting ready to leave.
They were like, hey.
So, yeah, it was interesting.
It was fun.
Yeah.
You had a good time.
They're casting for season two.
Oh, they're doing it again.
Wow.
Would you ever do a body show?
No.
I don't think so.
No.
I always said no.
I'm publicly exposed enough.
Right.
I don't need any more of that.
I'm fulfilled with this form of media, I think.
I'm okay with this.
That was the first time that I had applied to a reality show. It's gotta be disorienting to go someplace, be isolated, sort of like you're
on jury duty and you just get bossed around. You have no control over your life. Yes. And also
because it's reality TV, of course they're manipulating things and you realize like, oh,
this isn't a documentary.
This is its own entirely unique thing.
But the sets were amazing.
I mean, when you would walk into a set, it was literally like stepping onto the set of the movie Squid Game.
I would assume that on some level you were cast because of your background in endurance athletics. How did that come into play for better or worse as a contestant? I think without giving too much away,
I think it helped and it hindered me in some situations, but definitely when I was there,
all I kept thinking is like, I ran through Death Valley and it was 124 degrees yeah no one
else here did that nobody else yeah I'm the honey badger monarch wolverine in this scenario
that cold hangar for quite some time yeah right yeah so that was difficult there were people that
were passing out near you yeah there was a couple people passing out in that particular scene. Wow. Yeah, the conditions definitely in the first game was, it was rough for sure.
It was cold.
It was very cold.
Yeah, and you'll see it in the first episode.
All right, well, it just bumped to the top of my queue.
I'll check it out.
We've been gone a long time, and I got to let you guys get back to your life.
But I do want to kind of end with a couple quick questions.
I mean, Jesse, as I
mentioned, you know, shared a few questions. One of the things that he wanted to know was,
you, Harvey, being the superman of running, how do you handle lazy people in your inner circle?
That is a great question.
Because you're a very compassionate man.
Yeah, yeah. So, I mean, honestly- But you're not a great question. Because you're a very compassionate man. Yeah, yeah.
So, I mean, honestly—
But you're not a lazy man.
No, no.
I try to find, like, a little way to try to, like, nudge people in a positive way.
So, it depends on the situation.
Like, if I'm in school, like, I know I have to be careful with kids and, like, leave them with more positives.
I have friends growing up that had a teacher say something like, you'll never amount to anything.
Like, that's outrageous, like, for someone to say something like that.
I want to be very encouraging with my words, like, where I, like, am dealing with, like, students.
Like, I want to, like, nudge them in a way that, like where I like am dealing with like students, like I want to like nudge them in a
way that like motivates them. Now, if it's one of my close friends and they're being lazy or someone
in my inner circle, I do try to like, I'm just like, we're going to go do some, some walking.
This is where I say he does it in a manipulative way.
Manipulative, honey. With a
smile on his face. Right. I know. For example, if I'm tired and I'm like, oh, you're not lazy.
You're never lazy. I don't ever say that. I just feel like being lazy. I swear in the next two
minutes, he will say something like, so I talked to Mike Fremont yesterday. No, honey, I did not
say that. You're reading into that wrong.
I would never say that about you, honey.
And I swear, this is how Harvey does it.
It's like, that's the nudge.
That's the nudge.
Passive aggressive.
Sometimes.
I don't think so.
In a good way, right?
All right.
That's a good answer, though.
I'm satisfied with that answer.
Okay.
In the Hollywood movie of Harvey Lewis's life,
we're going to play a little casting couch here.
Who plays Harvey in the movie?
This is my question, not Jesse's.
Are you asking Kelly?
Well, you should take a take.
Don't tell me you haven't thought about it.
That's so bad.
Well, I mean, honestly,
I think Matthew McConaughey is like,
he's just hilarious. I love that.
He's got the right energy
for you. Yeah, he's really great with
that. So, I mean,
I would like, I mean,
yeah, that would be incredible.
But,
what do you think? Kelly, who's playing Harvey?
You're the casting director.
He's so dynamic.
He can transcend
different characters
like
his way
and way.
that's a good one.
Sometimes I think of like
John Heater
from Napoleon Dynamite.
Oh,
there we go.
There's a knuckleball
in your direction.
I love Napoleon.
I know you do. I know you do.
I know you do.
So that's fine.
There you go.
A little bit of a different energy from the McConaussance.
Yeah, yeah.
I don't know that Matthew McConaughey is this way.
But I say that just because of like, he's kind of quirky and even him and the movie
about, oh, it's a baseball.
Oh, bench warmers, bench warmers.
That's it.
Like he just
has this quirkiness. And that's a side that a lot of people don't see of you that I love. And it's
this, I don't know, like you just say weird things. Like you say things like, hey, like how
many times have you came? Do you guys want to have like a popsicle party or something tonight?
A popsicle party.
And my kids and myself, we're like... I don't think I've done
that in a little while. We're like...
I love popsicles.
Is it 1950?
What else? Oh my gosh. I can tell you
so many things that he says and my kids
look at me and they're like...
You know, Mark Wahlberg, I think he'd be
pretty good too.
He's going to have to trim down a little.
I'm going to have to work on...
You're going to have to beef down a little I'm gonna have to work on you're gonna have to beef up
I saw the Napoleon film
and
that was actually quite
an amazing film too
but there was a preview
he's in this new film now where he's doing
these adventure races and he's got this dog
it's coming out in the next
few months and I can relate in the sense of
our dog. Carly is my number one training partner, our rescue dog, Carly. A lot of people don't know
that our dog, she has got such incredible energy and her mindset. That dog will never turn.
She defends the front of the house. there could be a tyrannosaurus rex
and she would just go straight after it without a doubt and it's like this dog is like this tall
but it's from her pound days like she is just amazing and like for her running is an absolute
gift every time we run she's like she just loves running so much like i don't know anybody on the
planet that likes running as much as carly. So when we run together,
we're out in the country in the middle of nowhere
and we're just having so much fun
just running as hard as we can
at times or just cruising along
and it's just a blast.
So Wahlberg, because
he did this movie.
Yeah, I like his film.
I got two.
I thought about this a little bit.
One would be a younger Billy Bob Thornton.
A little dark.
He's a little,
some darkness there though.
You know,
I don't know if that matches up.
So I would balance that out with a young Ron Howard.
Cause there's a little Rishi Cunningham in you,
I think too.
Yeah.
What do you think?
Yeah.
I mean,
those guys are incredible.
McConaughey. Yeah. What are you going to do? Yeah, I mean, those guys are incredible. But, you know, McConaughey.
Yeah.
What are you going to do, right?
I know.
It's so bad.
Well, you know.
All right.
It's so bad.
Final thing.
I spend a lot of time thinking about the nature of change,
why some people are able to change, others aren't,
why some are able to set goals and achieve them and others struggle.
How do you think about, you know, we've talked a lot about human capacity and the fact that we all have latent potential within us that goes untapped.
And you're kind of on the outer edges of trying to see where that limit might be for yourself.
And that speaks to the broader issue of all of our capacities. And I
think that's your greatest influence is getting us to reimagine what we might be capable of in
our own lives. So to the person who does struggle with this, who's trying to level up or shoulder
responsibility for a positive change in their life, Like, how do you get that person activated
and on the right track towards sustainable positive change?
Right now it's really timing
because we're coming to the end of the year
and moving into the new year.
And every year I like to,
it's kind of like your month that you take away, I think,
and reset yourself.
It's kind of like your month that you take away, I think, and reset yourself. I like to really put out there a list of goals that I have for the year ahead. And it can be a couple goals. For me,
it's like 10 or 12 goals. And those are the real points I want to really invest time in,
finding your routine. So routine is so critical.
Whatever you start for two days, three days, it's not yet a routine. But once you get into like that
second week, you've established a new routine. So just start with having some time alone with
yourself in a place that you can really get into that deep thought. And you can
start this any time of the year, but having, maybe it's easiest to start with a few goals,
but start with those goals and then show up, show up each week. If you miss a week, that's okay.
Like yoga, for example, Kelly started yoga and she's been having trouble with her back.
That's kind of led to her knee.
And like that yoga, like doing that once or twice a week has been super powerful.
And like, it's really helped to alleviate some of your discomfort.
And, you know, we miss yoga maybe this week or last week, I don't remember.
But then, you know, it's not going to stop us from like the next week of picking that back up. So finding those powerful routines, I'm a person that's like ADHD. I also
sometimes run from like being a type A, like super dialed in with every single thing having to be a
certain way. But on the other hand, I also see the power of the routines. So like every Monday
going into bigs, I had started the yoga and like the yoga is really powerful because
it's not something I routinely do, but in the like five or six weeks leading up,
it was also helping with like the mental aspect. And so putting down those goals,
I feel like writing them down is so powerful.
And even telling someone you trust is so powerful
because then it holds you more accountable
than if it's just in your mind and it's sort of fleeting.
When you write it down
and then it's somewhere where you see it,
like it might be in your calendar, your planner,
or maybe somewhere on the wall, it's powerful.
I feel like having something
that we're driving towards each year that involves some level of growth somewhere with relationships
or with work or with our athletics or wherever it is, that's really something that will give you
more back. And so that's where I would start with it.
I think with people like that are struggling with getting a routine, because I think it starts
before that. It's easy to say like, you know, get into a routine of doing this, but something else
comes right before that. And that's taking the action to do it. And I think a lot of people are
waiting for motivation or they're waiting for that feeling
of like, well, once I feel like I want to do this, you know, then I'll start.
My biggest thing that I've taken away when I've coached students and adults is don't
wait for the motivation because that's a fleeting feeling and we can't always control the way
we feel.
So you have to just show up.
And that's the one thing I think you have to
make that commitment to yourself with yourself that even when I feel like I don't want to go
here, even when I feel like I don't want to get out of bed 45 minutes earlier than normal,
I'm going to make that commitment to myself right now that I'm still going to do it.
And that's where I think a lot of people falter when they come to like having to create a routine or make a routine or set goals is that they're always like, but I don't feel like doing
this. But then once that routine gets established, that's when you feel euphoria and you feel good
and you feel better about yourself. So I think that would be mine would be that, you know,
having people understand that you don't always have to feel motivated to go do this and you're not.
Very good advice, yes.
In fact, how you feel about doing the thing really shouldn't have anything to do with the doing of the thing itself.
I beat this drum all the time.
Mood follows action.
I beat this drum all the time mood follows action or to quote Dr. Andrew Huberman action first thoughts feelings and perceptions follow 100 but we do have this instinct where we want to wait
until we feel like doing the thing and we also want to know how it's going to play out we want
to know what that roadmap is going to look like and where and when the
destination will be arrived upon. And you don't get to have that. That's a privilege that doesn't
exist. So developing that reflex to action or that inclination towards action, irrespective of how you
feel about it, is the thing that gets you out of bed when you
don't want to get out of bed or out the door when it's freezing cold or raining or, you know,
choose your adventure. Absolutely. So, yeah. You agree with that, Harvey? I'd say so. Yeah. It's
like, I don't know. I struggle with this with my students. I want all my students to succeed.
And then like, like my buddy, Greg Armstrong, he's a science
teacher down in Tennessee. And I just, he gets kids out in experiential learning. I mean, he's
taking kids to Africa or to Central America every three months. And he even built an amphitheater
in the back of their school by hand with his students.
I mean, it's like those sort of experiential learning, they have like a powerful impact when you get to go and like interact with someone who's like living in a developing country with no access to water.
And like they're building these well water with the run for water.
It's like that has
some sort of spark that goes even beyond these yeah yeah that's it yeah i think that's a really
that's an insightful kind of caveat to this whole thing i mean i think what kelly's talking about
is how do you develop the resourcefulness to welcome discomfort into your life and and you're
really speaking to the idea of how do you get
somebody really excited about the journey of learning and expanding the aperture of your
life experience, right? And as somebody who's every day dealing with young minds and thinking
about how do I get this person interested or excited about this material, there's an emotional
connection that you have to create. And immersive experiential situations
are obviously going to engender that.
And there is something lasting about that
that can then create a trajectory for a young person.
So I think that is a really insightful thought.
I think we did it.
I think we did it.
I think we're done.
Thank you so much.
How do you guys feel?
Yeah, I feel amazing.
Honestly, it was a blast.
It was a total surprise.
I know.
We had no idea that Kelly was going to hop in for a couple questions.
Thank you for leaping in the chair.
You never did this.
You never have.
Good.
It's therapeutic.
It is very therapeutic.
Let's get honest.
It's like a dream, man.
He really is an amazing person.
I mean, he mails me letters.
He'll mail me a card in the mail.
Like, I'll just go, honey, you are...
You are not lazy, honey.
I would never...
And all those things.
No, you do...
It just keeps getting better.
Harvey and Steve start looking better and better.
I thought you were going to come on here and I was like, come on.
Let me tell you.
Napoleon Dynamite.
And then you just shine a brighter light on this guy.
I know, I know.
But I really, I mean, I do know, I mean, there are some other things like, but for the most
part, no.
Yeah, we'll be on vacation.
And like a month later, I'll check my mail and I'll have like a postcard from where Harvey
sent me a postcard while we were on vacation together.
Like, I'm having a great time with you
in wherever we're at.
And I'm just like, who does this?
All right, well, hurry up and get married, you guys.
Harvey, congratulations.
Like just, you know, so much respect
for not just these extraordinary athletic feats,
but really how you comport yourself as a human being
and the way that you exude the values
that are important to you.
And, you know, I really do think it's heroic
and it is the type and archetype of hero
that we need now more than ever
in this weird divided world that we find ourselves in.
And what you do cuts through that noise.
You know, it really is a signal in the noise.
And I appreciate you.
I'm here to support you. You are my spirit animal. I'm not going with the monarch or the honey bat.
I'm going with the Harvey. And I said, you're a hero. Like, honestly, like I remember listening
to your podcast as I'm out there running long runs and just, you have been able to do things
that are amazing. I mean, the fact that you've had like the number of people you've had on this, just the realm of different like backgrounds.
Like it's just incredible.
So, I mean, it's like I ran into a runner this morning, like up on the mountain.
I was coming down.
She was going up and Kimberly from Virginia.
And she's like, oh, yeah, I love Rachel.
I love Rachel. And what he did, oh yeah, I love Rich Roll. I love Rich Roll.
And what he did for his daughter was amazing for her birthday.
That's right, he just celebrated her birthday.
Yeah, so I mean, it's like you're hitting people.
After our episode, the last one,
I went to Cyprus like for spring break,
like a few months after that.
And like in Cyprus,
there were like all these people in Cyprus that had,
oh yeah, we love the Rich Roll episode. Oh yeah. And so it's crazy that, can you imagine that you
have people in like over a hundred countries like listening to you? It's great. Freaks me out a
little bit. It's really wild, man. I get all up in my head or whatever, but this is a team effort,
obviously, as you can see, Everyone just sees the black curtains.
That's it for today.
Thank you for listening.
I truly hope you enjoyed the conversation. To learn more about today's guest, including links and resources related to everything discussed today, visit the episode page at richroll.com, where you can find the entire podcast archive, as well as podcast merch, my books, Finding Ultra, Voicing Change in the Plant Power Way, as well as the Plant Power Meal Planner at meals.richroll.com.
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