The Rich Roll Podcast - The Unspoken World of Male Body Dysmorphia: Ultrarunner Tim Tollefson's Journey To Healing
Episode Date: September 4, 2023We tend to think professional athletes live perfect, charmed lives. Genetically gifted, they effortlessly conquer physical challenges with confidence, propelled by physiques unattainable by mere morta...ls. From the outside looking in, Tim Tollefson is one such example. One of the world’s most successful ultra-runners, Tim has a slew of impressive race victories to his name. These accomplishments matched with his winning smile and handsome looks would lead anyone to believe that he’s an exemplar of strength and health. But behind it all, Tim has waged a private, two-decade-long battle with body dysmorphia and disordered eating that not only compromised his athleticism, but completely debilitated him, producing a never-ending cycle of anxiety, loneliness, and self-hatred. Today Tim shares his experiences and the path he’s forged to reclaim his sense of self-worth and balance in a world (and sport) that pushes us to extremes. He opens up about his decision to go public with his struggles, the role of social media in perpetuating negative body image, the tools he uses to uphold a positive relationship with food and his body, and the power of community in the recovery process. If you are struggling with an eating disorder and are in need of support, please reach out to the National Eating Disorders Association. For a 24-hour crisis line, text “NEDA” to 741741. In a world inundated with diet speak, honest and authentic conversations about food and loving our bodies are more important than ever. I have so much respect for Tim’s strength, courage, and vulnerability. This one is powerful. Show notes + MORE Watch on YouTube Newsletter Sign-Up Today’s Sponsors: BetterHelp: BetterHelp.com/RICHROLL Indeed: Indeed.com/RICHROLL AG1: drinkAG1.com/RICHROLL Squarespace: Squarespace.com/RICHROLL Plant Power Meal Planner: https://meals.richroll.com Peace + Plants, Rich
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The Rich Roll Podcast.
I was so unhappy, lonely, isolated, terrified.
I got to a point where I couldn't see a future
and it's something that was so shameful,
I can't like, you know, talk about it.
No amount of guilt will ever change the past.
No amount of anxiety can shape the future.
I'm not of the belief that had I figured this out,
I would have been a better performer.
I just think I would have been happier
throughout my entire career.
We tend to think professional athletes
live these perfect, charmed lives.
Genetically gifted, they seem to effortlessly conquer physical challenges with confidence,
propelled by physiques unattainable by mere mortals.
From the outside looking in, Tim Tollefson is one such example.
One of the world's most successful ultra runners, Tim has a slew of impressive race victories to his name.
Accomplishments matched with a winning smile and handsome looks that would lead just about anyone to believe him to be this exemplar of strength and of health. decade-long battle with body dysmorphia and disordered eating that not only compromised his
athleticism, but completely debilitated him, producing this never-ending cycle of anxiety,
of loneliness, self-hatred, and the inability to even show up for the people he cared about most.
Now, while we've become accustomed to addressing food disorders with women and with girls,
there is a certain stigma or taboo that persists when it comes to how these conditions,
despite their prevalence, afflict men, most of whom suffer in silence,
reluctant to even ask for, let alone receive help, which is why Tim's decision
to come out publicly to discuss what he's endured and his path to healing is just so
powerful and important and why I wanted to have the conversation you're about to hear.
I got a few more things I want to say about Tim before we get into it, but first.
about Tim before we get into it, but first. We're brought to you today by recovery.com.
I've been in recovery for a long time. It's not hyperbolic to say that I owe everything good in my life to sobriety. And it all began with treatment and experience that I had that
quite literally saved my life.
And in the many years since, I've in turn helped many suffering addicts and their loved ones find treatment.
And with that, I know all too well just how confusing and how overwhelming and how challenging it can be to find the right place and the right level of care.
Especially because, unfortunately, not all treatment resources adhere to ethical practices.
It's a real problem, a problem I'm now happy and proud to share has been solved by the people at Recovery.com
who created an online support portal designed to guide, to support, and empower you
to find the ideal level of care tailored to your personal needs. They've partnered with the best
global behavioral health providers to cover the full spectrum of behavioral health disorders,
including substance use disorders, depression, anxiety, eating disorders, gambling addictions,
and more. Navigating their site is simple. Search by insurance coverage, location, treatment type,
you name it. Plus, you can read
reviews from former patients to help you decide. Whether you're a busy exec, a parent of a
struggling teen, or battling addiction yourself, I feel you. I empathize with you. I really do.
And they have treatment options for you. Life and recovery is wonderful, and recovery.com is your partner in starting that
journey. When you or a loved one need help, go to recovery.com and take the first step towards
recovery. To find the best treatment option for you or a loved one, again, go to recovery.com.
dot com. Okay, Tim. Today, Tim shares his experiences, his challenges, and the path that he's forged to reclaim his sense of self-worth and find balance in a world and a sport that
pushes us to extremes. He opens up about his decision to go public with his struggles,
He opens up about his decision to go public with his struggles, the role of social media in perpetuating negative body image, and he shares some of the tools that he uses to overcome negative self-talk and reform a positive relationship with food.
We also explore the power of community and the importance of seeking support in the recovery process. If you suffer from an eating disorder or know someone who does,
this episode is just appointment listening.
Towards that end, you can find a list of resources in the show notes
for today's episode at richroll.com on the episode page.
In a world inundated with diet speak, quick fixes, protocols, and diet optimization,
shrouded in tripping and vernacular about weight loss, weight management, and shame,
to which I'm not immune, honest and authentic conversations about food and loving our bodies
is, I think, just more important than ever.
I have so much respect for Tim's strength, his courage, and
his vulnerability for coming forward. I really want you to hear and receive his message because
it is powerful. So here we go. This is me and Tim Tollefson. So happy to have you here, man.
Excited to talk to you. You've been on this journey with mental health,
with body dysmorphia, with disordered eating,
and you made this decision to go public
with this struggle and your recovery process.
Initially through the documentary that you made with Kouros,
which I found to be very impactful and courageous,
the level at which you were willing to be vulnerable, and I'm sure has been, you know,
impactful for a lot of people. So, you know, let's just start there, like laying yourself bare,
you know what I mean? It was terrifying. I hated it. And, you know, it's funny as an athlete and a dreamer, I had always kind of visualized that someday I might make the rounds in media and, you know, be on Good Morning America or sit with you.
But it would have been after winning UTMB or having some big accolade next to my name.
The perfect set of circumstances.
Yeah.
And so that's how I always like, you know, kind of wrote that story.
Yeah, and so that's how I always kind of wrote that story.
But I think this is actually more poetic and kind of in line with where I am at,
where it kind of is a deep reminder
that we're so much more than those accomplishments.
And I mean, I'm actually really,
Lindsay was asking me like, are you nervous?
And I said, no, like I'm pretty psyched
because for the first time in my life,
I'm gonna give, or we're to have a chat where I don't feel
like I'm holding this huge secret. Right. It's much more stressful if you have to show up and
wear this certain mask and answer questions in a certain way that's going to further this image
that you're trying to project. And it's a lot more relaxing when you're like, I have nothing to hide,
ask me anything. And it's just whatever it is, it is. Yeah, you're not defaulting to those like,
you know, perfectly crafted answers you've preloaded
because you know how to dodge questions.
And I think it's sort of that act of self-preservation
where you're embarrassed or shameful of something.
And it's not that you don't wanna be honest,
but you don't feel that you can, right?
So you have this secret life
that you're trying to basically hold, like at the same time as holding up this image.
Right. And the lock on that cabinet is shame, right? And it has such a powerful grip as a
motivator to keep things quiet, keep things private. And the fear that kind of lives behind that drives your life.
Yeah, and I think shame is a very powerful emotion
to basically make you, I don't know,
kind of like retreat from society or relationships.
Sure, yeah, you isolate.
Shame grows in the dark and yeah,
you withdraw from humanity because it's too anxiety ridden
to sort of hold that mask up and be around people.
It's exhausting.
And yeah, so you have stepped out into the light.
Yeah, and I think that was, I mean,
part of what I've learned in some of these recovery
or the aspects of recovery,
is that I have to learn to sit with anxiety
and not reduce it.
You know, and I think that's part of the,
like, body dysmorphia and OCD stuff.
You know, there are therapies that treat you,
like, in CBT or others,
like, that you want to, like, diminish the anxiety
and how do you, like, breathe through it.
But in, you know, these compulsive disorders,
you need to learn to sit with it.
Let that anxiety course through your veins
and recognize that the fear that's causing you
to maybe do these compulsive acts isn't actually there.
But like that obsession and the compulsion
are linked through the anxiety.
And so we're not trying to remove the anxiety.
We're just basically trying to acknowledge it
and tell it to get the hell out of here.
Right, so the difference being, yes, with compulsive disorders or addictions, there is this
unbelievable drive to change your state. Like it's so uncomfortable to sit with whatever you're
experiencing that you will literally do anything to take yourself out of that. And it's on autopilot, right?
So whether that's through a substance or a food
or withdrawing from people or gambling
or some kind of weird, you know,
obsessive compulsive behavior,
it's all a coping mechanism,
a defense strategy to remove you from that discomfort.
And recovery is about, as you said,
sitting in it and realizing as much,
like, cause when it and realizing as much,
like, because when it comes up,
you literally feel like you're gonna die, right?
It's like life-threatening.
And to learn that feelings are just feelings. And even though it might feel like it's gonna kill you,
the one thing you can count on with feelings
is that they always change.
They never stay the same.
And you have to kind of build that muscle over time.
Yeah, and even though, I mean, now I'm 38
and I started therapy when I was 35.
I feel like I, you know, I'm an adult,
but sometimes emotionally,
I feel like I'm still very stunted.
And, you know, like I remember first time in therapy,
like talking about emotions,
like I could name happy, sad, angry, nervous,
but then like I got this emotional wheel from my therapist and
I don't know, like dozens and dozens and dozens of, you know, descriptors on there. And, you know,
just kind of that, that entire quiver of different emotions. Like I just had to never really
processed or been able to identify them. And I think what you're saying that leads to us,
if you can't process your emotions, we tend to either harm ourselves or sometimes other people in response to it.
And so I think with my, through this, you know,
through some of the treatment,
I realized that the more I spoke about it,
the more I opened up to Lindsay or my family
or, you know, that chorus documentary,
which was absolutely terrifying to do.
Being someone that's afraid of other people's opinions,
like that drives a lot of my stuff. Like just that fear of being made fun of or ridiculed or not being enough. I think that was
a sort of an act of confronting that anxiety demon of being so afraid, but recognize that I came
through it. And not only was I okay, like I probably connected with more people as a result of it. Sure, of course.
I mean, that one act, I mean, I had more responses, like thousands of people reaching out, men, women, you know, people across the spectrum, like either thanking or saying, hey, I deal with these things.
And I mean, I didn't have the energy to respond to all those people.
So, like, you know, I felt bad about that.
I didn't have the energy to respond to all those people.
So I felt bad about that.
It was like, in my, I guess, athletic life,
I've always made it a point to respond to every DM or comment, because I just feel grateful
that someone's taking notice.
But in this one, I didn't have the energy to do that.
And so part of me, but I was able to acknowledge
and let it go and like, hey,
people don't expect a response.
And I think, because I've been in their shoes where you feel seen or heard if someone else talks. And I think that was what really,
in combination with the, hey, this is part of the, you know, part of the healing process.
I also recognize if I can make one person feel less alone, then it will all be worth it. Because
I mean, I am a pretty like genuinely like happy-go-lucky guy and I love life,
but I got to a point where I couldn't see a future. And I know that's the case for a lot of people.
And you feel isolated, you feel alone, you feel like you're the only person that's ever gone
through this, had that thought, sat with that emotion. And I just recognized if my, you know,
overcoming this fear that I was building up in my
own head is something that was so shameful, I can't like, you know, talk about it. Then if that
can allow someone else to feel empowered enough to go seek help or talk to a friend or talk to
their parents, then it'll all be worth it. And yeah. And of course it is, you are experiencing
that there's this, you know, baked in irony It is. You are experiencing that. There's this baked in irony
because in the process of making that film,
to your point, I'm sure it was terrifying
and you're thinking you're gonna be judged
and all your perfectionism and OCD
and the fear around external acceptance
and all of that just starts lighting up your brain like crazy.
But ultimately, the connection that ultimately you're seeking that is the reason why
those maladaptive, you know, thought patterns come up is achieved through the vulnerability
and the courage to, you know, to kind of speak your truth. And that's what truly connects people,
right? So it's bizarre. It's like everything inside of you is saying,
this is the wrong thing to do.
And yet ultimately it solves the underlying problem
that those defense mechanisms
are trying to protect you, you know, against.
It's a very like counterintuitive, strange thing.
It's strange.
And I think there is a level of,
I don't know if the right term for it,
but almost like performative vulnerability
where, you know, you know
that there might be that response.
But I have found,
because I've engaged in that kind of stuff over the years
where, you know, I might say something
knowing that like people might feel sorry for me
and then they're going to like, you know,
be there to like coddle me.
But like something like this,
I think I knew it was, it was so uncomfortable.
And I, like, I knew that I was,
I was more in that,
if we had that Venn diagram,
more on the side of like,
this is what I need to be doing.
I don't think vulnerability is easy.
I think it is hard.
And if it's-
If it's not hard,
you're probably not actually being vulnerable.
That's probably right.
You're still like-
There's performance vulnerability.
There's a lot of that out there, right?
Especially on social media.
And figuring out
how much to tell of your story or that.
And like everyone, I have a challenging relationship
with social media and I perpetuate it
because over the years,
I've carefully curated the image I want to see.
And that fed my, by dysmorphia,
where I would check in with what I posted.
And then if I'd see myself in the mirror,
it wasn't that exact frame that I hand selected
where gravity was like working perfectly to make me.
That perfect stride that, yeah.
And then I like, in reality, I'm like,
that was a hundredth of a second.
I was comparing myself against my own thing.
So I contributed to all of that negativity
that would just spiral in my head.
Right, well, all the incentives in your world
like line up to kind of make that situation
more exacerbated.
Yeah. Yeah.
And I think there's something unique about,
first of all, like being an athlete and suffering from this
because you have to be competitive
and you have to show up with your game face
and there is some masking that goes into
how to be competitive and on the edge
that you want and need to be amongst the elites.
But then on top of that,
the bigger issue being that you're male.
And I think the conversation around eating disorders
and these types of compulsions with women
is much further down the line.
There's not as much sort of shame and hiding
in the conversation around how this impacts women and girls than it is with men. And I really think
that's a big reason why I think it's so important what you're doing, because I think this is
something that is massive and hidden among men. And you can see it beneath and behind
so much of the diet tribalism
and the nutrition wars that we see on social media,
which I'm not immune from that
as this like plant-based person, of course.
But whether it's like vegan, keto, low carb,
intermittent fasting, time-restricted eating, like all of these approaches
in the kind of manosphere are shrouded in language around optimization and performance.
But in reality, I think behind that, for a lot of people, it's about weight loss,
weight management, it's about body image. And it's a way for men to kind of hide
that they're suffering from a version
of what you have endured while looking outwards to the world
as if they're like a biohacker or something like that.
When in truth, there's a lot of insecurity
and shame and guilt because just like women,
men go on Instagram and they see all these guys
with idealized figures
and most people don't look like that.
And even the people that do look like that
probably only look like that temporarily
or with the right filter and lighting and all the rest.
Yeah, indeed.
Agreed.
I think there,
and I'm hoping this is a generational thing
that we start to see kind of dissipate,
but there is that notion of boys don't cry.
You know, and I definitely,
I mean, I wasn't explicitly raised that way,
but I think, you know, people I was around like friends
and like, you know, it's kind of, you know,
the undercurrent that you notice.
And I just, I don't think I really had honest conversations
with anyone close to me until I was probably in my thirties.
You know, it was just kind of internalized things.
And I- About anything you mean in general,
like just, just the emotional,
you, you being in touch with your emotions
and the truth of who you are.
Yeah. And I, I think, I think a lot of that is I,
and I don't know where it began, but I,
I always thought that, you know, maybe that was a weakness.
Like somehow I connected those dots
and like, I was was gonna just be tough.
I was gonna like, you know, bury it, swallow it.
You know, I could grit through anything.
And, you know, I unfortunately do that with injuries also
where I still get afraid of like telling Mario I'm hurt,
you know, my coach.
And, you know, that should be easy now.
Like I've been doing this for 20 years,
but like I almost view like getting injured
as a weakness or
it's an, you know, it's an inadequacy. And I'm afraid to tell people that. And I think with
emotional stuff, it was similar. I, I just, you know, internalized everything. And the more you
internalize things, the more that echo chamber gets deeper and deeper inside your own head.
And as you said earlier, you know, shame and all these other, you know, like emotions that we don't wanna take root, they just feed in that darkness.
And I think that unless you give voice to these things,
it's easier for it to kind of,
the ruminations to kind of take really deep root
and it's hard to then dig those out.
I wanna do a little what it was like,
what happened and what it's like now
in the parlance of recovery.
But I think it would be helpful to first kind of define what we're talking about. I wanna do a little what it was like, what happened and what it's like now in the parlance of recovery.
But I think it would be helpful to first
kind of define what we're talking about.
When you say body dysmorphia or eating disorder or OCD,
what are you saying specifically?
How do you define those phrases and words?
I think it's also important, and I'm sure you have a really astute and
intelligent audience. I have a graduate degree in my own experience, and I'm a licensed physical
therapist and a pro runner, but I am not a psychologist. So I can speak from my end of one.
But that's what we do in recovery anyway, right? Like we're here to share our
experience. We're not here to provide medical advice. Yeah. And I think especially with the
eating disorder stuff, it's a fascinating illness. I mean, there are a lot of different
kind of branches of it, but in general, it's a competitive disorder. So I've even found myself that I listen to other people's recovery stories or they, you know, kind of recount what happened.
And my brain latches on to like trying to find hacks of how to like double down on what I'm dealing with.
And so, you know, I try to be very careful with the way I describe things and not romanticize aspects too much.
You know, because unfortunately, that is kind of true to that disorder.
And it's really interesting that it,
of all mental illnesses,
like especially anorexia nervosa
has the highest mortality rate of any mental illness,
like even more than depression, which it,
I mean, that's really powerful to think that,
you know, like it's like, you know,
cause as you said earlier, we all have issues with food, you know, so it's kind of like, hey, like, oh yeah, I count my calories or, you know, like it's like, you know, cause as you said earlier, we all have issues with food, you know? So it's, it's kind of like, Hey, like, Oh yeah, I count my calories or, you
know, I'm afraid of overeating or like that Thanksgiving dinner did me in, I, you know,
unbuttoned my belt and, you know, and so those are normal. But I think with any disorder, it's when
it becomes debilitating, intrusive, you know, all encompassing and you, it's creates so much
anxiety, you can't get away from it.
But so I guess from my experience, like eating disorders, like I've, I've kind of, I don't know,
tried on different hats in the eating disorder, you know, kind of, I don't know, in the, in the fashion show of eating disorders. Like I had a bout in college where I was dealing with anorexia.
I'm now actually clinically diagnosed
with OSFED, which is other specified feeding and eating disorders. Because the big three are
anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, and then binge eating. Those are kind of like the three big guys,
like people have heard of those. But I think what clinicians found is that the diagnostic criteria in the DCSM-5 is so specific to meet that
classification, it was leaving a lot of people that were
suffering out and then you can't get access to healthcare.
You know, if you don't have an app,
like an adequate diagnosis.
So like to say disordered eating is sort of a catch all
umbrella for anything else that might fall between the cracks.
Yeah, because I think eating disorder
versus disordered eating is like,
maybe this is a bad analogy.
A clinical diagnosis versus something's fucked up over here,
but we just don't have a name for it.
Yeah, and maybe this is a bad analogy,
but like a binge drinker versus an alcoholic.
Like, okay, I went on a bender
and like I displayed some of these behaviors,
but you can choose to stop.
You can like go on with your life.
The alcoholic can't, you know?
So maybe there's some sort of parallel there.
Yeah, I get that.
So, you know, with someone suffering
from an eating disorder, like, you know,
an anorexic, it's not that they don't want to eat
or they know they can't eat,
but there's something like in their brain
that's like basically gone haywire
that they aren't able to.
And even as they deteriorate.
But I, and through my experience in the medical model,
like I'm thankful that my therapist knew how to,
you know, I don't know, not game the system,
but like treat it appropriately.
We were like, I was probably gonna get denied
cause I didn't fit one of those, you know, three big ones.
And, you know, for all intents and purposes,
I'm a healthy white male, you know, a pro athlete.
Yeah, you're not, you're not like,
you're not, you know, stumbling in at 85 pounds
with your hair falling out.
Yeah, so, you know, why would an insurance
want to pay for my eating disorder, you know, treatments? But so I think that that's a bit of
like the, you know, disordered eating. I think everyone probably experiences disordered eating
at some point, you know, and as you said, the fad diets that promotes a lot of disordered eating
behaviors. I think though, if you have someone that's predisposed to developing an actual eating disorder,
that's where those fad diets are dangerous.
Right, because you can just hide behind it
and perpetuate.
I'm intermittent fasting for 22 hours a day.
Right, actually you're just not eating.
You're just not eating.
You're not eating and you're doing it out in public
in a way where nobody can say anything,
but in reality, what is actually going on here, right?
Yeah.
Right, and so how does OCD and other kind of compulsive disorders,
perfectionism, people-pleasing, all of that,
like how do these things,
because it's all a soup, right?
And on some level,
the longer I've been doing this
and the longer I've kind of been in this world,
like it all feels like the same thing.
It just shows up in different ways,
whether you're a heroin addict or an alcoholic
or a gambling addict or a love addict,
there's something inside of you, something happened to you,
or you're wired in a certain way
where you feel not at ease with yourself
and you don't like how you show up in the world.
And it's so uncomfortable that you develop
these little things that you do
to make you feel safe and okay.
And often they're about trying to regain
or exercise some level of control
and in a situation in which you feel out of control
and food plays a big part in that.
But really it's rooted in a sense of feeling different
than everyone else, of being insecure,
like you don't measure up
and you in and of yourself are not okay.
So how does that work?
And like, how do those other kind of,
like what is the OCD piece and the people pleasing
and the perfectionism aspect of
all of this? OCD, obsessive compulsive disorder, body dysmorphic disorder, I think it's classified
as an obsessive compulsive related disorder. So they're like two separate things, but they're
kind of in that soup of compulsive behaviors. And from my understanding, the big difference is
they share the same basically obsessions, compulsions linked with anxiety, but body dysmorphic disorder is directly linked just to your body where OCD
has like very kind of clear pathways of like harm OCD or, you know, germ OCD or just right OCD,
all these like religious OCD, they fall into these little categories and like body dysmorphia is almost like,
it's just the body OCD.
Right, I see, I got it.
So whether you're, you know,
checking the lock on your door 10 times
or you know, however that shows up,
it's a stress reducing, anxiety reducing kind of behavior.
So for like the by dysmorphic sufferer,
they may be checking themselves in the mirror,
which we all do,
but are you checking yourself in the mirror for hours a day?
Like, is it impeding your ability to go to work?
You know, are you looking at every reflective surface?
Did you know you can see your reflection in a spoon?
You know, and obviously a spoon is also,
you know, concave or convex.
So it's gonna like distort it even more,
but you will see yourself in a non-flattering way
and think that's real.
And so there's, I mean, I've found that
anything that was reflective became basically
an area that I could reduce the anxiety.
But the more you engage in those compulsions,
the stronger the link becomes.
And it just like self-perpetuates.
And it gets to the point where you don't trust yourself
if you don't do the compulsion,
because the obsession is so, I don't know,
it's so invasive and debilitating and unwelcomed
that you feel like you have to do the compulsion
to reassure yourself that it's okay.
Is that checking the lock over and over
or washing my hands, are my hands actually dirty? And so with body dysmorphia, it could be checking,
it could be, you know, fidgeting with your hair, you know, your glasses, making sure things are
just right because your fear of maybe that rejection or the fear of other people judging you.
And I don't know, I think like in my family, like we have a pretty extensive history of alcoholism.
And so to what you said,
like I think there are a lot of similarities
between all these things.
It's like, and the funny thing is-
It's the same thing that you just found
a different way of expressing.
I mean, it's kind of funny.
Like in, so I've had a really,
really difficult relationship with food
for a lot of reasons.
But like, I basically like did suffer
from bouts of extreme binging.
Again, I didn't fall into binge eating disorder criteria
because I also compulsively exercise
to like undo the binging.
So like I kept the balances, you know,
like, you know, weighted correctly.
But there was a point where I'd see my
friends at parties drink and they never ate. So I thought, why don't I just drink instead of eat?
Like maybe that can replace, you know, and ultimately I just ended up drinking and eating,
which is like double the calories. And it's like, okay, I'm going to add another 10 miles tomorrow
on my run. Like, so it was like, I'm very thankful that for whatever reason, despite our familial history,
like I didn't seem to have the gene
that latched onto the alcohol.
Like, cause I was raised with that awareness
that like, don't touch alcohol.
Like it's a really bad thing for our family.
Like you should not go close to it.
And so like the first time I took a drink of alcohol,
I think it was my sophomore year of college.
And I was terrified.
Like I asked my friends, like,
what's gonna happen when this touches my lips?
You know, like, and I was just like,
I was so scared.
And I think, but I don't know,
like, so there definitely is a component of just that,
that like overall anxiety, you know, around a lot of things.
But like with my compulsions,
I have a hard time remembering some things
about like my childhood or my life.
And that's probably pretty normal.
And I think what I've realized is over the last,
you know, 10 or 15 years,
when I was really just like suffocating in my own thoughts,
there wasn't room to entertain the past,
you know, of experiences that were positive or amazing.
Like, you know, because I've had a great life.
But I think I just got so focused on trying to get through the day or that moment.
All I could think about was numbers and food and my body and these different, you know, compulsory checks that I would perform.
But, you know, I guess I first started to kind of notice this when I was a kid. Um,
like I, I had kind of a, I guess I, I had like a, a challenging or troubling experience at like
a church camp growing up and like, I must've been eight or nine. Yeah. I must've been eight or nine.
And, and my mom, you know, she were, I raised very religious and like we were sent away to a boys camp, you know,
to learn how to, let's just say hunt fish, tie knots,
all that fun stuff.
And my mom was pretty nervous
because like I'm eight or nine.
She's like, oh, he's too young.
And all of her church lady friends were like,
no, no, this is great.
Like we'll send all the kids, you know,
all the boys are together.
And so, you know, they send me to upstate Minnesota.
That's where I grew up.
And, you know, I mean, it was, it was a great experience.
You know, we got to do all that stuff,
but it just so happened that like our counselor,
he was this recovering addict.
And I think he was six months sober
and he was a born again Christian.
He had found God and he wanted to basically
just share it with everybody.
You know, like he had to profess what he had learned and he wanted to basically just share it with everybody. You know, like he had
to profess what he had learned and he wanted to share it with everyone. And someone thought it
was good for him to be in charge of a nine-year-old, you know, boys at a church camp. And, and so,
and one thing with that experience was he was big on the book of revelations. And I don't know,
have you ever read revelations? I can't remember the last time that I did.
I know the story.
Yeah.
You know, I think I know enough about-
You know, it's about end of time.
Fire and brimstone and what's gonna happen.
It's like a Stephen King novel to an eight year old.
The end of times.
Yeah, and basically like really instilled in us
that like, unless you're a good person,
you lead a perfect life.
And unless you also like ask for, you know,
Jesus come into your heart,
you will go to hell and you'll burn forever.
And that was like, I definitely, you know,
had a hard time with that.
And I think I, so I ended up to this day,
like my mom will, you know, bring her to tears on this, but like I wrote
her a postcard from camp that said, and I didn't send it. I tucked it in my bag and she found it
a long time later, but it said something like, like, I don't want to die here. Please come get
me. Like I'm having this thoughts again. And I don. And I don't know what that last sentence was,
but like, you know,
I may have already been dealing
with some sort of intrusive thought,
but this basically like definitely
kind of kicked into high gear.
And following that experience,
like she tells that like the story
that I then was really afraid of everything.
Like everything was gonna kill me.
Like I wore clinging gloves, goggles,
and walked around with a Kleenex spray bottle,
just like disinfecting everything.
Cause I was afraid that if I got germs inside, I would die.
And then if I hadn't already asking for forgiveness
for that one thing I just did, I'd end up in hell.
Eternal damnation.
And so reflecting on all of this,
and I guess, yeah, it led to compulsively praying and asking for forgiveness, basically with everything.
Like, am I a good person?
Did I do that right?
Am I perfect?
Because I was learning that love was conditional and that it was dependent on basically something else granting me that.
And I'm not here to say those are, you know, like beliefs that shouldn't
be taught or, but in my personal experience, maybe it wasn't the right time or the right place or the
right person to like really instill these things. And that was my first experience with a psychologist.
My parents took me to a child psych. And again, I don't know why this is, because I'm sure they
never said anything, but like I was terrified of going.
Like something in my head told me, this is not normal.
Like you're broken.
And I, you know, had a huge tantrum,
begged them not to tell my siblings
that I had gone to a therapist.
Like something in me at that age knew that wasn't right.
You know, and I don't know where that came from,
but the psychologist from what my mom describes,
like said, you just have a really smart boy.
Like he's really in tune to his surroundings.
He's struggling with the home environment.
My parents were going through a separation.
Like I, you know, and I was, I had a hard time with that,
but he said, you know, it's gonna find its way through.
And as far as I know, like I didn't really have any lasting issues from, like, those compulsory things.
And I didn't actively try to get rid of it.
It just kind of disappeared.
But that was my first experience with kind of that stuff.
Wow, that's so interesting.
I mean, there's so much to unpack there.
I mean, basically you survived a trauma
and you found these coping mechanisms
that I don't know that you outgrew,
they just became latent and found their way
to different paths that kind of,
and they served you,
like they allowed you to survive and excel
as an athlete and all these other areas. I recently had this guy, Richard Schwartzen,
who's got this modality called internal family systems, which is super interesting. It's the
idea, the basic idea is we're not one personality. We're the composite of like, you know, all
different kinds of personalities that are, you know, all different kinds of personalities that
are, you know, acting up and vying for attention. And when something like OCD or a fear response
happens, that's one piece of your personality that was constructed specifically to protect you
in a certain set of circumstances. And it works, it does protect you. But then you grow up and you're not five years old
or eight or nine or 10, and it's not serving you anymore,
but it's still just as powerful because it thinks
that you're nine years old and you're still at camp, right?
And making peace with that and trying to quell it
and be like, it's cool, I'm good now, thank you.
I don't really need you anymore,
but I appreciate all the hard work that you've done for me.
Yeah, yeah.
It's like this process of like understanding
all of those different triggers
and aspects of your personality to reconstruct
a healthier one for yourself.
And as you were sharing that, I was thinking about that.
And also just the idea that, I mean, first of all,
credit to your parents.
They like realized that you needed some help
and sought out help, which is great.
But you being so young and pathologizing that
and that just exacerbating your sense of being broken
probably wasn't great.
Yeah.
And that's like, my parents are amazing.
You know, like I feel like I had the best parents ever,
you know, provided a loving household,
always reassured us that, you know,
we were welcomed, accepted.
Like, and so it's weird that like suddenly,
like some of these things I deal with,
it's like, oh, well, obviously it probably came from like,
just like your immediate inner circle.
Like you were, you know,
whatever something happened in that relationship.
There is a trauma.
Yeah.
But it's not about vilifying them or anything,
just because something might've happened
and maybe it wasn't managed or dealt with
in the best way possible. It doesn't mean that they're bad parents or not good people.
They were doing the best that they could under the circumstances, but it doesn't undercut the
fact that certainly something happened or a set of things happened that set you on a path to
kind of everything that happened and where you are now.
And I think probably this again is a generational thing.
Like each generation tries to provide a better household
and experience for their kids.
Cause like my parents had like what I would label
as like traumatic childhoods,
whereas like I had it bougie, it was chill.
But there are just things that happen.
And, and I think, I think with, with, I don't know, and maybe it's, it's a bit of a cultural thing, but it's like, you know, that, that Minnesota nice, you know, Lutheran Norwegian, you show up on Sunday with a hot dish and a smile and everything's always good. Like, you know, it's so like, I don't think I ever,
and no, I know I never really started to talk about things
that happened and then at different stages in life,
like you said, okay, maybe it kind of disappeared
and then resurfaced in experiences with bowling
or then it resurfaced in my competitive running,
you know, once I got to college and like,
that's where suddenly the eating disorder like surfaced up and like dealt with other things. So I think it, it was that the fact
that I never truly processed or, you know, kind of even like teased out what was happening. It was
just lurking under the surface for something else to trigger it off. It's also further complicated
by the fact that, I mean, you had mentioned earlier, like you were lucky that alcoholism runs in your family,
but you sidestep that.
But with alcoholism, you stop drinking
and then you're on a path to sobriety.
Like you set it down
and you don't have to contend with it anymore.
Whereas food, you have to eat every day.
So it haunts you forever.
Yeah, it's like looming over you all the time,
which I actually think makes it more difficult.
And then on top of that,
all of these traits that over time metastasize
to become problematic enough to address,
in the meantime, help construct a personality,
a lens on the world
that fuel exceptionalism, success and results.
So while you're in that buildup, you're winning races,
you're getting better as a runner, you're a professional,
you're doing all of these things,
quietly, these things are your superpowers.
So your relationship to them,
even if you know in your heart of hearts,
like this is not good, I shouldn't be doing this,
but like, look what's happening.
I'm on these podiums and this,
so I'm gonna keep doing this.
And this is like working for me,
makes it even more difficult
when you have to break up with them
because they are your best friends.
There are times that I have been at my sickest
and podiumed at UTMB.
And so it's really hard to decouple those two.
Right, and if you do break up with them,
then no more podiums.
Yeah, that's what your brain tells you.
When in reality, it was a coincidence
or it wasn't causation that because I held onto these certain things that happened,
that then I podiumed.
Arguably, you probably could have done better if you weren't dealing with all these other things.
But I do agree with you.
I think that something like obsessive compulsive disorders,
it is a bit of a superpower in the sense that like, it's really hard to manage
living in your own head when it's basically you're dealing with intrusive suffocating thoughts
and you learn a lot of resiliency, endurance, patience, which I mean, you need that in an
ultra, right? Like, so there are times where it's like, I almost feel thankful for,
I feel thankful for those,
like the skills that were developed.
I wish they had developed in a different way, you know?
And because I think the more I learn about even sports psych,
you can start to nurture those skillsets
through much healthier outlets.
You know, it doesn't have to be pathological.
But it doesn't create the same kind
of hormonal brain spike.
It's very unfamiliar and feels not right, right?
Like it's like, no, I need to feel,
I need to feel like I'm in pain or suffering
or in this sort of, I have to conjure up a certain kind
of state that I can manufacture through these behaviors
to do it in the more graceful way that requires a surrender
and a letting go and more of an allowing feels like,
you know, walking on Mars compared to a lifetime
of a certain way of doing things where you're getting
the result that you're seeking.
And you definitely like anyone that's run before,
the more you run,
the better you get, you know, and there's that direct correlation for a long time, you know,
okay, I'm going to put in more, I get more out. And obviously there are tipping points and, you
know, roadblocks that happen, but yeah, you start linking that and it becomes so strong that you
can't imagine performing without doing the things that got you there. And I think there is that,
like, yeah, just being stubborn is a really good asset until it isn't.
Right. Right. It's a short-term strategy. It will get you to a certain point, but if you want to have longevity or reach that, you know, kind of get off that plateau and get to the next level,
you know, what got you there isn't the thing that's going to get you to the next place. And
there's a discomfort with that. And then on top of it, being a runner
and with the food piece, it's a weight weenie sport.
Like, you know, the lightweight chassis
is gonna navigate those mountains
a little bit more gracefully, right?
So for any athlete who's in a sport like that,
whether it's wrestling, running, ultra running,
cycling, triathlon, where there's a power to weight thing,
or even more aesthetic sports like bodybuilding.
It's just, they're like,
they're just rife environments
for kind of cultivating these unhealthy relationships
with what we put in our mouth.
Totally, and I think that is a,
we're starting to see conversations change on that, which I love
because when I was growing up in high school and college, it was the era of either explicitly
saying you should look emaciated or it was implied, you know, from some of the classic
books and other things that like I would, you know, just, you know, ingest and, you
know, what people on the team would talk about and, you know, your peers, um, or rumors, a lot of that, you know,
or you'd see people, but it's, um, it, I think it's, you have to acknowledge that weight is a
variable in running. And as you said, like, okay, like you can just do the simple physics on this.
However, it's a low hanging fruit that we latch onto because we can manipulate
weight pretty quickly. So we think if I'm this powerful or stronger and like have that much
endurance, and if I just weigh less, I will perform X better. And that just isn't the truth
because there are a lot of other variables go into it. And I think it's easy for anyone to look at
in one of their running idols, cause I did this,
and you would forget that they may have been training
their body for 10, 20, 30 years to adapt
into that specific like body type.
It didn't just happen overnight.
And there are genetic, you know, anomalies out there
where someone is just like,
they don't have to manipulate their body
and they're going to have this particular frame.
You know, like I have very broad shoulders,
Lindsey and I joke that I have birthing hips.
Like I will never fit. For a runner.
For a runner. For a runner.
I mean, I'm looking at you, you're a pretty slight dude.
You know, and it's just, that's the dysmorphic piece too.
Oh, it definitely is.
Just you thinking like I'm too big to be a runner
and I'm looking at you and I'm like, you have a runner's physique. Yeah, and which is. Just you thinking like, I'm too big to be a runner and I'm looking at you and I'm like,
you have a runner's physique.
Yeah.
And which is the crazy thing is like at my worst,
when I was battling with anorexia in college,
I was almost 35 pounds less than I am right now,
which I don't-
Wow.
Like I can acknowledge my brain still says
you have 35 pounds, you could lose,
but I know that's not true.
Like I can just like start to acknowledge that and move on.
But like in college, like I don't have 35 pounds to lose.
Like, and it became a point where coach, my coach,
my teammates, they were worried and bringing it up.
And then you go into that defensive angry method of like,
I got everything fine.
Like, why are you accusing me?
And you know, it's just that immediate, you know,
kind of self-preservation.
When you were 35 pounds lighter,
in addition to just the training and the mileage,
like what was a day in food for you then?
Like, what did it look like?
I was restricting an incredible amount
while training very heavily for a distance runner.
while training very heavily for a distance runner. Cause I just had this very arbitrary and reduced thought
that I should always be consuming
less than 2000 calories a day,
even if I'm running 90 to a hundred miles a week.
And so over time you build up a huge deficit
where your body starts to cannibalize itself,
cause you need nutrients to cannibalize itself, you know, because you need nutrients to
fuel normal brain function, hormones, your bone density, all these things.
But you're like, great, cannibalize away because I'm trying to get smaller.
Yeah. I mean, and I hate to say this, but probably the highest high I've ever had
this but probably the highest high i've ever had is that euphoric feeling of like feeling like my bones or clothes hanging off of me or seeing the number on the scale like that
was like it's it's the needle in the arm it's better than standing on the top of utmb's podium
like and which is a weird really strange thing to say.
But I also know at the same moment, I was so unhappy, lonely, isolated, terrified.
So I would never want to go back to that.
But it was something that was powerful.
And what was your level of self-awareness around,
you know, the disease or disorder aspect
of what you were doing?
Cause I just know from my own experience,
it's like, you know, this isn't right or good.
You just kind of push that down and you're like,
it's fine, I got this, I'm under control. It'll be cool.
I definitely knew it.
I mean, I think when you engage in certain behaviors
where like you immediately have shame
around what you just did,
like, and you wouldn't be able to tell a friend
what you just engaged with.
I think you know that you're doing something
that's not right.
Like if you couldn't tell your grandmother
that you were just like eating out of the trash
or like whatever you just did,
like some sort of purging behavior,
like that's not okay.
Right.
And I think that's where like,
probably the components that I built as an adolescent
of like really being hyper-cognizant of my appearance
and of my, the way I carry myself, everything from my voice to my hair, to my, you know, to,
you know, my posture, all these things. Like I was just hyper-cognizant of being judged.
I think that led into, okay, now I'm an athlete and I see all these other athletes and,
and it's a very reduced view. You see athlete X perform and you think it's because they look a certain way.
And again, you don't know what the training was
that went into that.
You don't know their individual biological differences.
And what I noticed was I was very fortunate.
I was never the best
or even close to the best runner in high school, college,
even pros as a marathoner.
But I had opportunities because I had friends
with really fast people to like get
into these training groups like in Mammoth
and like run and do easy runs for Meb,
like and do long runs with him.
But like my brain's comparing me with Meb.
Like that's not a fair comparison.
Like that's just not like that should have never happened.
Right, I mean, just to kind of drop into Mammoth,
like if comparison is the thief of joy,
like you're in an environment where, you know,
that comparison that you're running in your mind
is gonna drive you insane.
Oh yeah, I was broke.
You're a monk.
Stole all my joy.
And was that, was Ryan Hall still, you know,
doing his marathon thing at that time?
Like, cause he obviously, he was like,
I mean, he got so lean or whatever to the point.
And then whether he over-trained
or whatever was going on at that point,
I mean, now he's a completely different human being.
But at that time,
it looks like he kind of took that all the way to the wall.
He definitely, I think he would say
he got everything he could out of himself.
He had transitioned out of Mammoth right when I got there.
Like Lindsey and I moved there in 2011 for an internship at the hospital for my therapy.
And at that point, Terrence, the coach, he was still in charge of the Mammoth Track Club.
Ryan and Sarah had just left, but like Sarah came back and I did some training with her.
But like it was Meb, Dina, Morgan Yusini,
and Anna Willard or Anna Pearson.
So it was kind of track heavily focused
with a few really stud marathoners like Dina and Meb.
Right.
Yeah.
I've had conversations on this podcast with Amelia Boone
about her analogous adventures in this world of like struggling
with relationship to food.
I had Mary Kane in here
and certainly there's no shortage
of running institutions,
especially when women and girls are involved
where the powers that be
are kind of issuing an edict
of not so healthy dynamics around food
that have led to a lot of problems.
And there's been a lot of spotlights shown on that world.
But what does that look like when you're a male athlete?
Do you have coaches that are saying
you need to drop weight or what is the, you know, kind of the power dynamic when you're underneath
somebody who's guiding your career and the kind of ripple effect on your relationship with food?
I was very fortunate that my coaches never had those conversations in terms of like,
we need to manipulate things. It doesn't seem to be a thing with guys.
No, and I mean, to my coach's credit in college,
like Gary, he pulled me aside and said,
I'm worried about you.
Like, are you eating enough?
And so he noticed something was happening.
You know, I think in the back, that was 2006,
you know, it was quite a while ago now.
I think at that time it was much more taboo.
You know, he had the, you know, he recognized it, but I don't know if he knew what to do with it,
you know, where I think now we have much better systems in place where it's like, okay, like,
let's get you in touch with our school nutritionist or the school psych, or let's talk to the, you
know, the GP. And I think those types of things have improved a lot
where, because as a coach,
you're kind of like the gatekeeper.
Like you're not the expert of everything,
but you are dealing with the athlete the most.
So you should be able to acknowledge
and then pass you off an athlete off to someone
that needs that expertise.
And as you said, like in the worst case scenarios,
like with a Mary Kane or NLP,
you had bad actors playing
roles they shouldn't have been playing under the guise of I'm guiding this career. And that's
tragic. Like that's really a horrible situation. And I think the more things are talked about,
we can start to undo some of that negative, you know, you know, those negative pathways.
And then also the stigmatize or the like de-stigmatizing that like, okay, like it is
not a male thing. Cause I'm sure there are plenty of men in all those sports you listed that have
had some sort of experience or at least thoughts on this stuff. And then worst case, and that goes
back to what you said at the very beginning, you know, and I was talking to another pro
marathoner about this, like, you know, and I was talking to another pro marathoner
about this, like, you know, there are people in sports
that like engage in disordered behavior for a season,
you know, because they're like, hey, my nutritionist
or someone in my medical team says,
I do need to cut weight for this boxing match.
Like, and so that stuff happens
and it could technically be done like with proper guidance,
but the addict or the person that actually suffering,
they can't turn it off when it's over.
Like, and so it will just continue.
It'll keep going despite the season being over.
And it doesn't end until, you know, something intervenes
or like, you know, you hit your proverbial rock bottom.
Yeah, and I think that lives on a spectrum.
It's not a light switch, right?
No.
Like right now, I've got a lower back condition.
It's really got me benched and I can't move the way that I would like.
And I haven't been able to run.
I've just been way more sedentary
than I have in a long time.
And so put on a little weight, little flabby,
looking in the mirror, that's not really how I wanna look.
And I can feel myself like, how does that impact how I,
first of all, then I don't feel as good in the world
and I don't feel like myself and my brain doesn't work.
And that alters my relationship with food in a way
and all of what, like some of that's fine
and perfectly healthy.
And some of it I can feel myself
being a little compulsive about.
Like I'm not, I wouldn't consider myself
to have an eating disorder,
but I noticed that, you know, compulsive kind of obsessive
tickle on the back of the brain, you know?
And it was weird.
We were talking, I was at this Strava event yesterday. It was all these super fit brain, you know? And it was weird, we were talking, I was at this Strava event yesterday
and it was all these super fit people, you know,
it was just like, and like, everyone's looking at me,
oh, you're the guy with the pod, you know,
it was like, and I'm like, yeah, but I'm kind of like,
yeah, and I go through all of that, like insecurity
and, you know, I wanna acquit myself and be the guy,
like, could people are projecting onto me
because they think they have a relationship with me
because they've listened to the podcast or whatever.
And all of that is spinning in my head.
And it's like, it's really hard to just get quiet
and realize like, no one gives a shit.
Like, you're cool.
Like everyone's happy you're here.
It's fine.
And I think-
You don't have to go on the group run in the morning
and like, you know, be in the lead pack and all of that.
Like, but that's what's looping.
And I've heard you say like,
you're not worried about racing against the best at UTMB
and how long you're gonna be out there
and the suffering and how hard it's gonna be.
You're freaked out about the fun run
two days ahead of time.
Yeah, which is, it's a really strange thing to,
like, it's almost like a both and.
I know I'm a competent and accomplished runner,
but at the same time,
I don't think I'm worthy of being called a runner
or showing up in the world with people
because I didn't feel thin enough or I didn't,
like it was terrifying.
So if someone says to you,
congrats or like, wow,
what you've done is amazing.
Like, do you kind of contract and feel
unworthy of receiving nice things being said about you? Yes. And maybe a good example is in 2017,
arguably probably the best race of my career. That's when you got third at UTMB. Yeah. Shared
the podium with Francois. Under 20 hours. Yep, with Francois and Killian.
Like the moment, like approaching the finish line,
like it was pure joy.
Like I'd just done something I'd dreamt of.
Like I had like silenced the haters and the voices in my head.
I just like was triumphant.
But the half-life of that happiness
didn't even make it to the podium the next day.
Like that next morning, I hopped on a bike
and I was like trying to spin out my legs.
I showed up and thankfully like we had podium jackets
that I could wear, but jackets are shells
that I would always cover my body in.
So I wore pants and jacket on a hot day,
staying on the podium, like super uncomfortable,
but like afraid of what people might think of me.
12 hours ago, I just run one of the best races
like ever at UTMB, but it didn't last.
Like, and it seemed like the more I got into my career,
especially the last couple of years,
like that happiness half-life got shorter
and shorter and shorter and shorter.
Like, or it needed more and more
to like trigger something as being worthy.
Yeah. The insanity of that, right?
Yeah. And I say it and it's like-
Yeah. I know. And even more for people who are trying to wrap their heads around,
like just to inhabit the mind, the insane mind of this, you've talked about one of the reasons why you like UTMB and where you would dismiss Western States.
Ah, it's not technical and blah, blah, blah.
But the real reason you liked UTMB
is that you start in the dark
and you got a good 12 hours of, you know,
hiding in darkness to sweat enough
to drop a little bit of weight
so that by the time people actually see you,
you feel like you look the way you would like to look.
Yeah.
And that is like, that encapsulates like everything
you need to know about the insanity of this disorder.
And cause I literally see myself as overweight.
Like even though the, you know,
we might have objective augmented feedback
that says otherwise, like I would see myself differently.
So like, but once I crossed that threshold
of exercising enough, something flips in my brain
and I start to feel that, okay,
the scales are balancing appropriately.
And it's just pretty unfortunate
that you have to go to those lengths to achieve that
and then it doesn't last.
Yeah, and then with the half-life shrinking
or your inability to like be present
and experience joy at your own accomplishments
is a situation in which you can make peace with that
because your job isn't to be joyful and happy.
Your job is to perform, right?
And if this set of behaviors gets you on a podium,
even if it doesn't produce joy,
that's a deal you're willing to make
because you need to excel because love is conditional
and you can't get that love
unless you do these things out in the world.
And whether you're able to experience that
or not for yourself is almost beside the point or irrelevant.
I think that's well encompassed.
Yeah. Yeah.
So where does it, I mean,
obviously there's a percolating awareness like that you're doing
things that you're not proud of or not willing to kind of share with other people. And I would
suspect it's building, there's a pressure cooker aspect to it, but where does it start to really
flare up in a way where you realize like, at some point, maybe soon I'm gonna need to address this
as you're kind of careening off the edge
or nearing your bottom.
I probably really started to notice some like cracks
like in the exterior shell that I like,
because I held everything together really well.
And I think there was almost like a pride aspect of that.
That's part of it too, the control.
Definitely.
And that's all the reassurance seeking behaviors
of like a compulsive disorder
is trying to establish and assert control.
Like, how do I know I didn't eat too much?
I'm gonna count.
Like, how do I know that wasn't too much?
I'm gonna weigh that.
You know, whatever.
And so I started to see it really,
I think part of it was Lindsay went back to school in about it must have been right around that like UTMB 2017 or so like
so we lived apart for about 18 months and she was away at school and I think you know I started to
realize how much I relied on her for you know some, some grounding and some stability. And, and for a long time in our
relationship, I, I really, I felt like I was the rock, you know, like, you know, I helped her get
through things and probably at the expense of my ability to share anything, you know, so when I
started to talk to her about things, it was a bit of a shock. Like, you know, she always knew there
were some things going on, but not the extent of what was happening. And I, cause I could internalize it that well. And, um, but I, I think starting to see how much it was impacting our relationship
was a bit of that, like big crack in the, you know, in the vase where it's like seeing that
my actions and, you know, the things that I'm, I thought I had under control are hurting other
people. I think that was a big turning point. And then when she left for school, it was also like, I think that was probably the first time in my life that
I maybe like, you know, kind of dabbled into the depressive state where again, I I'm a pretty happy
person. Like, even though I dealt with all this stuff, it felt like I still liked life, but like
when she was gone, I think I started to feel more isolated and lonely. And I think probably a
combination of seeing how much some things I was doing was impacting her and hurting, and then
like scaring myself that I was having a hard time seeing, you know, a future. Like if you wake up,
or I would wake up at 5 a.m., 6 a.m., and just be terrified of getting out of bed because the
thoughts would already have just
crashed on me. And I knew the moment I went downstairs, I was going to kind of like numb
those thoughts with food. And then by 6 a.m., I would have consumed all the calories I need for a
day. And then I know I have to somehow survive the next 14 hours in the world knowing I can't
eat because I've eaten too much. It was just like a life of
terror. And it's exhausting. It's exhausting. And as what you said earlier, I think is fascinating
where if you think about communities historically from beginning of time, we come together around
food. Food's an amazing thing. And you can't live without it. You have to have it.
That sustenance feeds us, fuels us, allows us to grow. But there were times where food felt like
it was this enemy and I couldn't be trusted around it. You know, you go into a grocery store and it's
like, I don't know, the, like the pharmacist just gave you the keys and he left and he's like, go have at it.
Yeah.
And like, and again, this also comes from a place of privilege where like, I have the
ability to purchase what I want.
So like, I'm not in a starved state.
I am not in a true deprived state.
Like for some reason, my brain's making me do these things, but that's kind of just what
I was living in.
do these things. But that's kind of just what I was living in. So I think it was day-to-day struggling to get through where you just want tomorrow to come. Like you can't wait for tomorrow.
And when you're living in that like state of, you just want the next day, you're not living.
You're not ever present. You're missing out on life. And I think there was a degree of that where it was like,
hey, you don't have it as put together
as you thought you did.
And this isn't a way to live.
And that's where, I mean, in that chorus film,
I'm really thankful Chorus chose to support that film.
I had approached some other sponsors
and they weren't as interested,
but Chorus thought it was a powerful thing to talk about. And so I'm very thankful to Chorus for that. Essentially it was like,
you're not okay anymore. You know, like something needs to give and it's not a fault to ask for
help. And I think I was still latched onto that. Like I can just tough through this. Like I can,
I can do anything like, you know, it's a. Right, because self-will is in your arsenal of superpowers
because you don't achieve excellence as a marathoner or an athlete in any field if you're
not somebody who has the capacity to deploy your self-will to procure a certain result.
Yeah. So why shouldn't that thing that is so, that I'm so good at, why can't, that should be
able to solve this problem.
I'll just redirect it here and we'll take care of it.
Yeah.
And you have to go through the journey of trying that
until you realize that, yeah,
it's just making the whole thing worse.
And meanwhile, I wanna talk a little bit more
about that journey from denial to acceptance and understanding
that your behavior,
because the thing is you covet this behavior
and you're like, it's not harming anyone else.
I'm just gonna do this, like fuck off, you know?
But then realizing it is impacting others negatively.
Like, what do you mean by that when your wife started, when you started to
realize that it was having a negative impact on her? The first time I really noticed it was
actually when I was in grad school. So, this would have been like 2009, 2010. Like, Lindsay is a saint. She's always been very financially insecure. She's worried about
finances. That's kind of like, it scares her. And I think that, so as I was going through grad
school, her goal was she wanted me to finish without student loans. So she did not want me
to take out a loan. And she worked two jobs to support us
throughout school. And we only had one car. So she was run commuting to work while training as
a marathoner. So I could take the car to the university. And I didn't understand this till
years later, but like I was dealing with some of that anxiety I had in other areas of my life and
school and all these things still through food. And we would get into fights over me spending money at school on food because
she had us on a very tight budget. And it was a budget that was, it was realistic. We could do it.
And the ultimate goal is we wanted to get out without loans. And so she was very adamant on
that. And she's working hard
in all these other areas. I was struggling and starting to suffocate dealing with these emotions.
I didn't really understand why. So I would end up buying these things to make it temporarily like,
you know, quell that anxiety. That would lead to arguments or fights and, you know,
something I didn't want to do. So that led to me starting to lie and hide those things,
which is not a good thing in a relationship.
Yeah, so the intimacy gets eroded and the trust.
I ultimately, I ended up taking out a student loan privately
that I didn't tell her about.
Yeah, you did.
So that I could fund these purchases.
Now we're getting to the good part. Yeah, this is the shit I tell her about. Yeah, you did. So that I could fund these purchases. Now we're getting to the good part.
Yeah, this is the shit I wanna hear about.
So I could go out and have a binge or whatever it was,
and she didn't know about it.
Because I hated making her angry.
That was the last thing I ever wanted to do.
But I also didn't know how to not do these things.
Like there was some link where I was experiencing
so much suffocation.
The only thing I knew how to get through that was-
The hungry ghost has to eat and you're gonna find a way.
Yep.
You're gonna have to be crafty.
And then I would have so much like guilt around
what I just did and or shame of lying to her.
And so that-
The only solution to that being either starving yourself
or eating, right?
Like, so it just, the vicious cycle perpetuates
and you dig the hole deeper and deeper
until you're alone in a dark room.
Yeah.
So she, needless to say, she wasn't real happy
when she found out about the private loan,
but then it was kind of like earlier,
it's like, oh, I go on and like thing,
like I somehow pieced it back together
and things are okay and never really addressed it.
Again, I think it was a pride thing
and it was an embarrassment thing,
acknowledging that I was struggling
and I didn't wanna ask for help
because I thought I could deal with it myself.
I guess the next real big one was one of my compulsions
with all the food related stuff was the counting.
So I have this obsessive thought that invades my head,
causes an incredible amount of anxiety. So I then count to reassure myself that what I was afraid of
isn't happening. And for years, that compulsion was more of a physical, I had to like add it up
on my phone's calculator. So I had actually like, like just physically do that. And that actually
started back in like 2004, Back when I was on a
cross country trip with my coach. And I don't know if you remember these days, but like you had to
pay per text message back then. And like my coach was like, man, you're just blowing up. I was like,
no, like, yeah, you know, kind of popular. But I was so mad at people when they texted me because
like I didn't have the money to pay for each text. So like I was actually just adding up
on my phone's calculator.
I wasn't texting people,
but like I played it off
as I was just on my phone all the time.
I was just texting.
But there were times over,
I mean, it's happened numerous,
but where, you know, I've almost wrecked my car
because I'm adding up on the calculator
because I can't not know where I am in the count.
And the worse are if Lindsay's sleeping
in the passenger seat.
Like, you know, we're coming down Highway 50
on the windy road through the mountains of Tahoe.
You know, she wakes up.
You crash because you're like doing this weird OCD thing
on your calculator on your phone.
I don't want to be doing it.
That you can't put down while you're driving.
I could not not know.
No, I understand.
That's the powerlessness part of it, right?
Yeah.
And it makes you feel horrible.
And the unmanageability.
Like, so you think you're just doing this thing
and nobody should bother you about it.
And it takes a while before you realize that the chaos
that you're creating all around you.
Yeah.
And then it doesn't matter whether it's drugs or alcohol
or gambling or relationships or whatever, shopping.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, like you say, replace X.
And there are similar themes probably through a lot of this stuff.
And then I found actually through therapy,
starting to open up and talk about things also was hard because that made me realize how the things I would say about myself
were hurting other people.
Because obviously if I'm saying these things about me, I'm judging others indirectly through those types of comments.
You know, like you said, like, I am a athletic built dude. Like, if I think I have weight to
lose, what does that say about you? Like, so like, there's that like reflective piece that was really
also hard because I always thought it was just,
you know, I'm dealing with myself and what I'm struggling with,
but it's actually hurting other people.
The judgment that you have towards everybody else as well.
Which it's a fascinating thing.
And nobody's judging,
but nobody's judging you that way.
Certainly not the way you're judging yourself.
And I didn't find myself judging other people
the way I judged myself.
Of course not.
And I think that's where, that's the secret.
Like no one actually cares. We all think everyone's looking where, that's the secret. Like no one actually cares.
We all think everyone's looking at us.
No one is, like no one's actually paying attention to you.
Just reflect for a moment
on your own level of self obsession.
Yeah.
And just realize like, even if they took your 10
and you tune it down to five,
people are just still walking around
thinking about themselves.
So like relax, dude.
Yeah, and I think that's where,
that's an it less important,
like turning point in anyone
when you're struggling with something
is that acknowledging that,
and I poke fun at Lindsay all the time on this
and she'll just kind of rouse me and say,
you're not special.
And it's like, it's true, I'm not special.
Like we all have something going on.
Like we internalize it.
But that's the other addict thing,
the sense of terminal uniqueness.
You have no idea how different I am
and how complicated and special my problems are.
And you'll never understand.
And I can't ever talk about it with anybody
because they wouldn't understand.
And it's not until, you know,
you're in that recovery process and you realize like,
you know, the person you're working with
or the community that you're sharing with, like it's all, they're all like, yeah, of course, duh,
like it's exactly, you know, the facts of the, you know, your story are going to be different
from the other person, but the thoughts and the emotions and the feelings are exactly the same.
And this is something I hope does change is just resources for eating disorders or OCD
improve and are more readily available. Cause in some of those periods that I was describing when as just resources for eating disorders or OCD improve
and are more readily available.
Because in some of those periods that I was describing
when Lindsay was away at school,
I considered attending AA
because I couldn't find a support group.
Like I couldn't find anyone to talk to.
And, but in a small community like Mammoth,
I was terrified that I would know every single person
in that meeting.
And some of them would be my patients.
And it actually, the meeting was held in our clinic in the conference room.
And like, so it was like too incestual that I didn't.
And then there was that sense of like, well, I don't deal with alcohol.
Like I can't show up there.
That's not respectful to other people.
And, but there, you know, I was seeking someone to like,
hopefully like, you know, give me tools to work with,
you know, and then eventually it led to actually
getting therapy one-on-one, but in this country,
that's very cost prohibitive for a lot of people.
Like, I think that's challenging.
Yeah, yeah, I mean, if I was secretary of that AA meeting,
I would have let you in.
Thank you.
I would have given you permission to. Yeah.
But yeah, so it is a weird thing
and that's why it's anonymous, right?
There's the stigma and the fear and the self-judgment
and the fear of others judging you.
And how does that reflect?
I mean, when it's in your clinic where you work,
like it's close to home, it's scary.
So was it just a dawning realization?
Like, okay, I got, I have to deal
with this. How am I going to deal with it? Or did, was there like a bottom where something bad
happened and you're like, okay, like Lindsay's like pack your bags, dude, or, or get help or,
you know, how did it kind of go down? Thankfully that never happened, But I think it was more that realization that I don't see a future living this way in my head.
You know, just getting through moments in a day or an entire day was so exhausting.
It was hard to imagine actually being a partner to her.
Like, definitely we would never have kids.
Like, we would never have a dog.
Like, I couldn't handle any of that stuff.
And I think that started to scare me
that I just didn't, I didn't wanna be around basically.
Like, so there wasn't like a particular moment
or an action, but I saw where it was heading.
And around those same, you know, in 2017,
when she was away, we had a close friend.
He had lost his life to suicide.
And then I'd lost a few friends to the mountains. one other than some grandparents that I started to really kind of like sit with how, yeah, like
how fragile this existence is. And I think that really started to scare me that I didn't trust
myself in terms of like knowing I can't live this way. And so that was the impetus to finally,
you know, seek out and start treatment. And, and Lindsay was very encouraging of that.
It, I did cancel multiple, my first visits because a combination of that still shame,
like being embarrassed that I would have to talk to someone about it. And then also in the small
community, my therapist was downstairs from my clinic and in the waiting room where my patients.
You're going to see the guy in the bathroom. So like I'd go in and like the mental health services
were with orthopedics.
So I would be in the waiting room and patient X,
what are you doing here, Tim?
I'm like, oh, you know, I'm just, I'm checking up on you.
You know, I'd spend some story.
And so there was a lot of that just like embarrassment
and shame where it probably took me almost two years
before I actually told people in the waiting room,
oh, I'm here for myself.
Like I no longer had that story.
It's so interesting that the help that you found
was literally downstairs from where you worked
the whole time.
Yeah.
And you could have, I mean,
you could have gone to inpatient somewhere.
You could have gone to a treatment center
or something like that,
but you found it
in your own building all along. And that's been your recovery modality ever since?
It's been the main one. I mean, there are times where I wanted or still want to go to like an
inpatient facility, but I think there's part of my brain is like, no, no, you don't need that. Or
like, oh, that's too expensive. And like worried about all these other, you know, collateral things. But what I realized is like,
so it's been over three years now. I think the first, and so actually this is, I think,
important. Like I was very resistant to trying medication. Like it was another one of those,
like, well, that's not me. Like I had some internal stigma around it, even though I never passed that onto my patients. Like when I learned they were
taking meds, like, cause it's therapeutic, you know, there are reasons why you might take a med.
But three months ago I started fluoxetine, which is an SSRI. And I was resistant for probably two
years.
And the nice thing is my therapist never pushed it,
just said, hey, these are tools that are available,
but let's try these things.
And, you know, just if we might need to.
And when it was maybe kind of suggested,
I was very hands-off on it.
But I think that for me personally,
really stalled a lot of my progress
because in the last three months since starting this,
I've actually been able to start to think a little clearer
because this cloud of, we'll call it cloud of counting
was so dense.
I would go through a therapy session every week
and I'd leave feeling like I'd just gone out of church camp.
I'm filled with the spirit. I'm gonna go preach to everyone. And I'd leave feeling like I'd just gone out of church camp. I'm filled with the
spirit. I'm going to go preach to everyone. And then five minutes later, I had forgotten it and
reality struck me in the face. And I just was in this kind of cycle of back into it. And I
eventually kind of connected with, okay, maybe that component of the compulsive behavior or like, you know, the behaviors is preventing for
me from actually getting into these other things. So I would say I am, I'm very grateful for where
I'm at now, but I know there's still a lot to be done because I immediately just fall back into,
you know, the old patterns. Like I raced, I was at a, actually, yeah, I was in Spain 10 days ago for a race.
And like, I almost derailed my entire like buildup
because of a trigger that shouldn't trigger me anymore.
You know, like, and so it highlighted that,
hey, you're still in this vulnerable state
where you have, your quiver is getting more robust.
And like, I'm very proud of that,
but I need to refine that and continue to work on it. And it seems it has to be like a daily
practice. Yeah. I mean, you're three years in, you know, on some level that's early recovery,
right? And you speak about it very eloquently and you have a grasp on the condition and how it's impacted you and the way forward,
but the brain and it's rewiring takes a little bit longer
and those triggers don't go away.
The recovery is about noticing them as they arise
and having that extra moment to not act on them
and to take a contrary action.
And to the extent that the SSRI can function
as a pattern interrupt or be another tool in that quiver,
there's nothing wrong with that.
But it's probably good that you didn't do it right away.
Like you're, cause then you can sort of just divest,
well, I'm taking this drug, I've dealt with it or whatever,
but to shoulder the responsibility for your own recovery
and realize that you're three years in
and it's still, this is still,
it's like, you're not over it.
Like this is something you live with
and you develop these tools
and those tools become rote and routine,
but they need to be practiced.
And, you know,
cause in that dark, lonely room,
that disorder is doing its pushups, so to speak, and just waiting for
a vulnerable moment to leap. Yeah. And I think that that parallel with sport is really impactful
where I didn't get here overnight and I cannot run it as quickly. Just like we didn't get to these
levels of achievement overnight. It took year after year, after season, after season of building and it became a habit. And so, you know, I think recovery is a habit. You have to continually
practice it. And like you said, flex that muscle and get it stronger and be kind with yourself when
you mess up. And that's something I am not good about. And I don't think a lot of people are,
is that self-compassion. Like the things we say to ourselves are horrible and you would never say that out loud.
Like I don't even tell my therapist
the things I say to myself, you know?
But it's like, how do we, like, you can't live that way.
You have to be compassionate towards yourself.
That's a tough one.
Like what are the tools that you practice
to get over that piece?
Cause I struggle with that.
Just acknowledging that something is
and try not to place judgment on it, good or bad.
Like, okay, I overate today, that happened.
Like that doesn't inherently mean it was bad,
like, but I have to accept it.
I don't have to like what happened,
but I can acknowledge that I'm human,
that that did occur.
And what am I gonna do next?
You know, and not get hung up on, you know, that good.
Because-
Revelations.
Yeah, exactly.
Careful there.
Because, you know, no amount of guilt
will ever change the past.
And no amount of anxiety can shape the future. You really
need to kind of bring it back into that present moment. And that's where I'm kind of starting to
realize like I'm relearning all these things. Like I still don't trust myself with food. Like I'm
relearning my relationship with it. But in that, I'm also relearning like what it is to have fun.
You know, like it's like,
it's almost being like a kid again in terms of like all these new experiences of like, oh, like
having a meal where you're not thinking about every micronutrient or macronutrient that's in
your food and counting and being worried about all these things off in the future, what you just ate,
like, and actually listening to someone talk is a pretty cool thing. You know, like being truly immersed in a conversation and present. Like, I mean, I, I think you, you facilitate like this really
nice space because I don't know how long we've been going, but I haven't counted once. Like,
that's not like I was counting this morning. I was worried about coming in and seeing you because
like, I haven't been running much. It's been a week off from my race, you know? So all these
things I, and I think that's part of the compassion thing is like thoughts are automatic. and seeing you because like, I haven't been running much. It's been a week off from my race, you know? So all these things,
and I think that's part of the compassion thing is like thoughts are automatic.
You can't control them.
That's huge progress if you can sit and have a meal
and not be doing the thing that you've done for decades,
obsessively and compulsively
and get to the other end of the meal
and realize you didn't do it.
That's like massive progress.
So I'm interested in the experience
of going into a grocery store or entering a restaurant.
Like what was going on in your mind previously
in terms of the foods that would find their way
into like what you're thinking about
when you're pushing the cart down the aisles then
versus like what it's like now and how,
cause you gotta eat, right?
And you're still trying to perform as an athlete.
Like all of those are triggers
that you can't avoid in your life.
No.
You have to confront them and find new strategies.
So that's really tricky.
The short answer is I fell into the cost convenience
and comfort choices.
Like what could give me the fix the quickest?
And that's normally something high sugar, high fat
that I can just devour, it takes no prep.
So it's processed foods.
And again, like this is one of those,
like I curated this notion that like I'm the donut guy.
Like I love donuts and I do, but like.
Like how Scott Fable is the burrito guy.
The burrito guy, like donuts and dirt were my thing,
you know, like, and that is something that I still like,
you know, but a donut is great.
A dozen donuts is excessive, like probably for anyone.
And so I think with the food stuff,
I didn't know how to control. like probably for anyone. And so I think with the food stuff,
I didn't know how to control.
And there were times where like the,
like the, like binges have a very clear diagnostic kind of criterion,
but like the, you know, the uncontrolled,
you know, kind of consumption would occur a lot.
And it kind of just felt powerless.
So one of the, you know, strategies was just elimination,
try and like keep things out of sight or out of our house.
And the unfortunate thing, like you said,
like as an athlete, you have to train,
so you have to fuel.
And this is where I'm thankful that, you know,
my bout with anorexia was in college.
And over the last decade plus,
it's been more of this, like I said, the OSFED,
the other specified feeding eating disorder, where it's kind of like a mashup of a lot of
different components, because if I was still actually restricting to the point of weight loss,
I would be perpetually injured. And as a distance runner, you have no career if you're continually
injured. And that's where, you know, other people that have suffered or they suffered long enough in
that critical time period
of their adolescence or early 20s,
their bone density could permanently be damaged.
Like I feel grateful that I didn't have that occur
because I've never thought of myself as talented,
but actually my biggest superpower is my durability.
So like, I've hated myself for never being thin enough
or skinny enough.
But the durability is rooted in having a little more
meat on your bones.
And I'm doing this 20 years later without injury
because of that durability.
And so that was never a deficit,
but I think acknowledging our inadequacies
aren't things that make us less worthy of acceptance or love,
but you should celebrate that.
But I ended up using running as really a mask to hide behind
where if I lost my control around food or a meal or events,
I knew I had this secret weapon.
I could just go out and run four or five, six hours
without eating or drinking.
And like, and I also would chalk it up to,
I'm working on fat adaptation.
Like, you know, I-
I heard Killian talking about how he would go like all day.
And like, so this is what we're supposed to be doing.
Yeah, so, but then when you do that every day
or every big training block, that's not how it's done.
Like you have to be selective
and you have to be thoughtful and really precise
and recognize that the recovery is important
where if I went out and ran for five hours
without food or water,
I wouldn't come home and then eat everything.
I was in that euphoric state
and I would not recover the way I should have.
And I don't think any of this stuff,
like I'm not of the belief that had I figured this out,
I would have been a better performer.
I just think I would have been happier
throughout my entire career.
Like, and I do, well, I do think
there would have been more consistent performances.
Like I could have avoided a lot of the huge pitfalls,
failures or blowups I had,
because a lot of those were mental or physical
because I wasn't treating
my body well, you know, I wasn't nourishing it. And that is hard because I'm in it to perform,
you know, and it has real life consequences of like, you can lose your job if you don't perform.
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, yeah, exactly. So there are amazing pressures on top of all of this
outside of just how you're interacting
with your peers at work and your partner at home.
We're like an hour and a half into this.
We haven't even talked about running.
It's like, we should probably point out
that like Tim's pretty good at running.
Or I can run my mouth.
You have this, you're kind of like average in high school,
you go to college, you start having some success.
You take your shot at marathoning.
I think you're like a 218 PR marathoner,
two time Olympic trials qualifier,
but recognizing you're not gonna kind of get to that next,
you know, super elite level, you find the trail world,
you have success.
I think your first ultra,
you won the 50K US championships.
That's true.
So like right out of the gate,
distinguished Nike contract.
And then UTMB in 2017 was, was that, that was your top race, right?
When you got third?
Yeah, I got third in 2016 as well.
Right, but that was 22 hours.
And then the following year under 20.
So the world is looking very bright.
Everybody's looking at you, the next big thing.
And you went a lot of races after that, tons of races,
looking at you, the next big thing.
And you win a lot of races after that, tons of races,
but you couldn't quite recapture some of those,
you know, high highs or whatever.
You've had, you know,
some disappointing results over the years.
And I'm sure a lot of that is wed to everything that we've been talking about today.
So I'm interested not so much in going back
and rehashing old stuff,
but how you're thinking about your training
and your racing now.
I heard you say at some point
that a big part of your motivation
came from a place of anger.
And certainly in recovery,
that's gotta be replaced with something better
and more sustainable.
So what does that look like for you now?
Like it's gotta be a totally different relationship
with the thing that you do professionally.
It is.
And to what we spoke about earlier,
like thinking that maybe these things I battled
were actually a superpower,
there's been that fear of letting it go.
And then when you pair it with subpar performances,
you start to connect those dots and think,
oh yeah, it's because you're not doing these things anymore.
Sure.
It would be so easy to go back and do that, yeah.
And like, I have to fight that thought,
but I always remind myself of how lonely
and isolating and unhappy I was in those moments.
Even when outwardly I was having success,
like I was pretty empty
and there was never gonna be enough.
So like if I had one U-team being one of those years,
I honestly think it would have been worse
because I would have doubled down on everything
because I was pre-starting therapy.
I think my life would have really struggled as a result.
If everything I basically am afraid of
then was amplified to an 11 because
of that success or notoriety, I would have completely crumbled. But I think some of what
I'm really working on is making sure I acknowledge that, okay, I am very proud of the steps I'm
taking in terms of recovery and separating that from my performances.
So just because, you know, the last couple of years, I've had some pretty tough breaks on the biggest stage at Western States and at UTMB.
And it would be easy to say, okay, you're past your prime, you know, you're washed up or you just don't have it anymore.
Or linking it, okay, it's because I'm not doing these things, but I I'm confident that I just have had
a string of bad luck, you know, and that's the sport ultra running is hard. Like, unless you're
Courtney or Jim, like, like, and I always wanted to be that, but I have to acknowledge I'm human.
Like I'm of this earth. And the reality is I'm going to lose 99% of the events I line up for,
but I'm like, I still hold onto that one big dream that I'll eventually get it. And that's
what keeps me showing up and starting to see that like my individual success doesn't have to be the
top of the podium. Like there's so many ways for me to achieve
like my best result,
even letting go of what other people do, which is hard.
Yeah, one of the things that I got out of the Kouros doc,
which also chronicled you running Western States
was the fact that even though
you had a disappointing result,
you were kind of fast out of the gate.
Things didn't go quite as you planned,
that there was a joy and a sense of connection
and like community that was really buoyant for you
and very different from reaching the heights
of being on the podium at UTMB and going under 20 hours.
Like even though the result wasn't what you wanted,
the lived experience of that
was somehow more meaningful and important.
For sure.
And that was, I think the community part was huge
because in the past,
I've always prided myself on this lone wolf mentality,
which is laughable because no one does anything alone.
You know, we always have help
from the moment we're born to any achievement,
but there's something in that, you know,
is this like, you know, self-made athlete
or ex or entrepreneur or whatever it is.
And like that I can do it alone
and asking for help is a weakness
or asking for help shows that I, you know,
like vulnerability is something I shouldn't, you know, lean into.
And so I think with that first experience with States and even last year, yeah, last year, I, you know, welcoming my inner crew and actually letting them in to help me was so much more powerful and meaningful because I do feel like we created something more beautiful as a result for having been broken and then coming out the other side than if I had just knocked it out of the park, you know? And what was fascinating
is the amount of people that reached out afterwards and like shared their stories or wanted to connect
because I hadn't given up on myself and I finished was far more reaching than if I had won the race,
you know? And I think that think that was a, like another
important reminder that people aren't going to remember the races you won or the records you set
or, you know, the, the IPOs you hit and like all these things. It's more like, Hey, how did you
make them feel? How did you connect on that personal level? What were you able to do together
as a community? And that's, that's something I'm really trying to lean into, which is hard because I'm
still afraid of people's opinions. I can't shake that fully. I still find myself doing body checks
and all these things, but I'm getting better at confronting it and letting that anxiety kind of
course through me and realize that my fears aren't matching reality. And then it starts to almost
feel like, okay, that demon's starting to like, you know, become more of a whisper.
Yeah, that's really beautifully put.
I mean, the antidote to the isolation
and the habitat in which the disease can really,
you know, kind of linger is community, right?
Like being with people, being transparent
and open and vulnerable and trusting, letting people in.
Like so much of it is just like allowing yourself
to open the door to those people
who already wanna help you,
who've been waiting for you the whole time
and are finally grateful and thankful
that you're giving them that opportunity.
And it's hard when you're stuck in that desperate cycle,
but you've walked through that.
And what I love is that now,
like recognizing that and realizing
that that is not only important,
but maybe that's the whole thing,
you end up starting this trail series,
which is really just like an entrepreneurial,
external manifestation of your recognition
of how important it is to cultivate community and share the things
that you love. And now like you're doing that. So it's one thing to just say, I'm going to start a
race series or start a race, but here it's like, it's so wed to your recovery in a really beautiful
and authentic way. Thanks. Yeah. Yeah, it was terrifying also.
Have you ever seen that documentary Fire Festival?
Yes.
I was a hundred percent convinced
they were gonna like do a docu-series on Trail Fest.
How bad?
And it was gonna be like people out in the woods.
It's kind of like,
just because you're a trail runner doesn't mean
that you can be a race director and create a race. It's sort of like, you know, just because you're a trail runner doesn't mean that you can be a race director
and create a race.
It's sort of like an actor in a movie
thinking they can write, direct, and produce,
or, you know, like you compete at UTMB.
That's like a guy who shows up to do two days
on, you know, the Avengers movie
where there's a million moving pieces
and thinking, well, I can do this, right?
Like, and then going and making your can do this, right? And then
going and making your little indie movie, right? But you're on the second, you have the second one
coming up? Yeah, it'll be our second one this September. And yeah, I mean, it was an amazing
experience and I definitely credit all the people involved that helped make it happen. All my local
partners in Mammoth and it was beautiful.
But I think what I've really recognized is
as much as a kid,
I dreamt of being that superstar sports athlete,
naming the stars, you know,
kind of like, you know, being a professional.
I think it's a common dream for a lot of kids.
You are a professional, you know that, right?
Okay.
It wouldn't matter how,
like if you had beaten Francois and Killian,
there'd still be somebody else.
Like you would never feel like you actually
achieve that height that you had set for yourself.
It's true.
Touche.
But go ahead, sorry.
No.
And I think what I've recognized though is
the impact I really wanna have on the sport or a community
is giving other people those
opportunities. And I learned from so many people that came before me, like reading their blogs,
talking to them. And I know that the next generation of trail runners are going to supersede
anything Killian, Francois, myself, Courtney, Rory, any of those people have done. And I hope
that we just facilitate and give them opportunities
and help foster them to achieve those things
with a little bit less of the sidestepping
that we may have occurred
because they're gonna encounter some
kind of fork in the road
and they're gonna struggle.
But hopefully they can learn from these experiences
and recognize, hey, you don't need to change your body
to meet sport. Through training, your body will adapt to what you're doing if you're nurturing it and
taking care of it and providing love to it. And I think the ultimate act of self-compassion would
be to fuel your body properly and to actually recover. But I think those are the types of
things that led me into Trailfest where I see it as an opportunity to have a platform to welcome people to the majestic place of Mammoth, which is absolutely stunning.
Like, it's a beautiful place in California. And allow them the opportunity to then go have this
kind of self-discovery in a majestic place with a very supportive community. Like, I mean, last
year was amazing. We had a woman from the Midwest.
She showed up, had never been on a mountain in her life.
She said that she had just heard me talking on a podcast
and thought it was a good idea.
So she signed up and she finished her first ultra.
Like we had a guy from Florida.
He was training on a treadmill with an oxygen mask.
And when he crossed the line, he wept in my arms. Like he was just
like, couldn't believe what he had just done. And I think that's this type of stuff that really fills
me up where I want to share those experiences with people. And what I told all of our runners
last year was, this is going to be hard. You will suffer. Like no one, I mean, that's life, right?
There's no way of avoiding suffering, but what better place than in a supportive community like this,
where if you do stumble, if you do fall,
if you fail to make the cutoff,
we're gonna pick you back up.
You're gonna be okay.
You're gonna have an amazing weekend learning,
watching, being inspired by other people.
And then hopefully that excites you
to go do another race somewhere.
Right, like removing the veneer of intimidation
from the thing that's already intimidating
and like creating a welcome environment for all comers.
I've had periods where I've definitely thought
my life would be healthier without running,
which is a strange thing to say
because inherently running is not bad.
Like running is an amazing gift to have,
but my relationship with it was so, so kind of like skewed and twisted that it was leading to
unhealthy behaviors and experiences. But running has also changed my life in so many positive ways.
And that's what I want to share with other people. And I mean, I, I am all about
the community, but I also love competition. Like I'm still that, you know, athlete and, um, like,
and I, I'm not a, like, I recognize that we need, you know, and that is my job, you know, like I
didn't perform for a couple of years and I basically was at risk of losing my job, you know,
and that's a hard thing to swallow, but I think there's that both and. You can have,
celebrate the top level competition and strive for big audacious goals and foster community individual wins and recognize that we all can have something to better ourselves as a result,
even if you didn't top the podium. Well, not only are those two ands not mutually exclusive,
they feed each other. Because I think the more that you serve
this community of people through the series
that you've created, the more fulfilled you'll become.
And it will just make you feel more whole
and a better version of yourself
to approach the competitive side
with the races that you're competing in.
I mean, what is that like?
Like, does that, you're still competitive,
you're in the game,
like how are you thinking about like the big races
that are coming up?
Like what's on the calendar
and what is your relationship to, you know,
the buildup and, you know,
how you're imagining your participation in them
versus what it was like a couple of years ago.
It's definitely shifted where, as you said,
for a while, anger drove me.
And there've been times where I think,
can I even perform if I'm not angry?
Or if I don't have that like, you know, built up,
you know, doubt that I'm trying to prove everyone wrong.
And I think there are, and this might be, you know,
that big question, what is your why? You know, like in life and sport, I think there are, and this might be, you know, that big question, what is your why?
You know, like in life and sport, I think why shift, they change.
And mine has definitely been shifting and changing.
And I think I don't, I've recognized I don't need that anger or that doubt or that insecurity to drive my good performances.
I need to lean more into that community, that love, that self-acceptance.
And that's gonna allow me to self-actualize.
And I do understand that that's a bit,
you know, maybe, you know,
it's kind of a privilege and indulgent
to be able to like be at that place.
But I'm really thankful, like, especially right now,
like I switched sponsors this year.
And that was hard.
I, to be honest, I thought I was going to grow old with Hoka.
Like I thought it was going to be, you know, I was going to retire and we had a longstanding
relationship and, but several years of underperforming, like it caught up to me,
you know, and that's the reality of sport. And that's, and I have a great relationship with
everyone there. I just saw him a couple of weeks ago at a race and saw my manager and marketing
director and it like like and i understood that
and going back to earlier you know i had some friends that top of their game meb loses his
sponsorship you know like then he goes on to win the olympic trials medal at the olympics win new
york and or no he won boston like and so i you know it was hard though, recognizing like, Hey, I'm no longer valued,
but that was business. And my goals, my dreams, and what I believe I'm capable of are still there.
And that's where I'm really thankful, you know, with craft coming in. When I started talking to
them, they had, it really reminded me of like my early days talking with, you know, the small,
you know, the co-founders of Hoka and they're excited about the sport.
They're kind of creating this misfit group of athletes and inspiring people that want to change
the game, you know, from the footwear to the stories we tell to the ways we engage with the
community. I mean, the way they stood by Tommy was unbelievable. Like it just like, it reminded me
that, Hey, these are the people I wanna surround myself with.
And they most importantly believed in me.
They said, hey, we don't think you're done.
We just think you've had a tough string.
And that's really what I've leaned into
is my inner community with the brand and with our team
and myself and my therapist
and everyone that's in my circle of recognizing
I still have these big goals.
I know what it takes to achieve them.
And I'm working towards that.
And I don't have to have this self-sensitive
sense of humility anymore.
Like for a while, I thought it was bad to say
I wanted to win UTMB.
So like I'd skirt it and say,
I'm just out here to have fun.
I'm gonna enjoy the vistas. And the reality is you wouldn't do this type of
training, put in the hours, see like year after year or, you know, destroy your body through the
Alps if something wasn't driving you. And it's okay to want to win, but I'm separating that,
like I don't need to win anymore to complete myself as a person, but I want to win and I'm training with intention to win
and I believe I can win and that I will win,
but I don't need that to validate myself anymore.
And I think I've never been able to authentically say that.
I may have said it, but I didn't believe it.
Like I still thought my acceptance and love
was contingent on
achievement or something external where, and as you said, there's never enough.
That's massive growth. I mean, in this evolution of your why and how you define your why and what
motivates you as you pivot away from these old behaviors and patterns that don't serve you into this, you know,
different, more, you know, nourishing way
that involves the trail series and the community
and like understanding that you don't have to earn love
and all of that.
Like you don't get the dopamine hits
that like anger is gonna give you or these other spikes
that, you know, you've come to rely on over the years
and have like mistakenly associated with performance.
But what you're doing is building
a really solid foundation for a healthier approach
to being a competitive athlete.
And you are taking out an insurance policy
on your longevity,
but it takes a while to build that foundation, right? So you're
still, you haven't emerged from the foundation stage yet to actually show people what you're
capable of, which I think makes it a very exciting time for you. And that's where it would have been
really easy to default, where dropped out of UTMB the last two years again. Like last year I had COVID, finally caught me after two and a half years.
I'm gonna mindfully relapse into my food,
you know, idiocy,
just so I can extract this one performance
and make sure that I'm holding onto these sponsors.
And then I'll go back to the recovery stuff.
And then it'll be fine.
Yeah.
And I'm really proud that I didn't do that.
And I think it's just that like affirming
and a reminder that just because you do everything right,
doesn't mean you're actually going to get the outcome you wanted.
Like life isn't fair.
Like you're not going to get what you deserve, but you keep showing up.
You keep trying, you keep giving the effort.
And at some point, I am a believer that things will work out in a positive way,
but you have to go through a lot of shit to get there.
And that's where I love that saying,
I think it came from Vanilla Sky,
the sweet is never as sweet without the sour.
And it's like, we all have sour in our life.
And instead of trying to numb that sour,
let it fuel you into something else.
Cause once you get the sweet, it's gonna be really good.
It's still a pretty new sport, right?
And there's been a lot of growing pains
and it's sort of emerging out of this phase of dirt baggery
into like real money.
And we saw Ironman take over UTMB
and like these are big changes
and I'm sure not everyone's happy about them,
but they're a reflection of growing interest in the sport,
more people participating in them,
money coming in, sponsored, like all of this stuff, right?
And meanwhile, athletes getting more and more sophisticated
and savvy about how to race and train.
So prior or in maybe the flight or the generation
that proceeded yours,
there were a lot of people who would come,
they would arrive on the scene
and they would just destroy everybody and be unbelievable.
And then would be completely unable
to ever replicate those performances
and are never to be heard from again.
Only a couple outliers had any type of longevity
in the sport.
Now we see, you know, there's Killian and I mean, Courtney,
people like that.
I'm interested in, you know, why you think they're so good
or so much better than everyone else.
But, you know, what are you learning about what's required
to have that kind of longevity or to maintain an elite level of performance
over the course of a respectable amount of time
as opposed to a flash in the pan.
And also as a kind of side note to that,
we saw what happened with Anton Krupika, right?
Like he was like, he was the dude gone forever back,
like had an incredible performance last year. Like, that's very cool. Like, I think that, you know, just because maybe
to your point, like you've had a downturn, you know, there's still sweet to be mined on the
other side of sour. Yeah. In any endurance endeavor or sport, I feel that the patient will ultimately be rewarded.
Like, consistency is key.
That is the underappreciated skill set in endurance.
Like, it's about stacking hours season after season, year after year, and keep showing up.
You know, I talked to a close friend one time and I said,
you know, or he kind of asked a similar thing,
like, you know, what sets people apart?
And I, like, my response was,
it's hard to beat someone
when they don't know when to stop showing up.
Like, is that like Rocky Balboa?
Like, you just-
It's true in anything.
Like, you just, you gotta grind.
Right.
And I think that's something I really hope to do
in our sport is set the next generation up to have more consistency and have the ability to not only self-actualize, but avoid burnout.
And so if we can do that collectively as a community, I think we will have won.
So that if your kids want to get into ultra running, they know that the healthy way to do that is to nurture their body.
Or if they want to get into marathon or sport or anything, don't try to manipulate your body to mirror some idealistic version you've seen of X.
Because you don't know what's actually behind that.
Like, I mean, if someone was modeling me, they were modeling after a very sick, unhealthy person,
like, and I wouldn't want that to happen. You know, so I hope that we change those conversations. And then I think through that discourse and discussion, we can get more people to basically
adhere to, you know, the values and norms that are going to allow for healthy relationship with a sport.
And that's going to just trickle down into all aspects
and make the community stronger.
I think that's probably going to be the most important thing.
And you mentioned the big players coming in
and kind of maybe changing the face of the sport.
And that's happening.
Change is hard.
Growth does not come easy. It, I remember back in school, um, you undergrad, we, we had to read this book, um, uh, omnivores dilemma. Sure. And yeah, you, you would
know, right. You know, a little bit about nutrition. Um, it's, uh, and like, I believe he talks about like,
you know, our choices,
like we vote with our dollars,
vote with our choices.
And I feel like the same is true
for our community and sport.
You know, people are always going to show up
and support, purchase,
and align themselves with people and brands
and companies they share similar values.
And we have collectively a lot of power to do that.
And I think our group of trail runners can do that.
So like, if we don't like things are going a certain way,
you know, we just can make those choices on our own.
But I think that I am excited to see where it goes
because as we get more opportunities for athletes,
I think we're gonna see, you know,
even more transcendent performances. Like we're gonna get more Courtney for athletes, I think we're gonna see, you know, even more transcendent performances.
Like we're gonna get more Courtney's and Jim's out there
in the next generation as we make trail running cool.
It's inevitable.
In the same way, you know,
if you look over the history of Ironman or triathlon,
the people that would win were people
who were really good at one of the three.
And if you happen to be good at two of the three,
you were like, you know, beyond, you know,
so you would be, you know, a marathon runner
or a collegiate track and field athlete could do well.
Now you have to be unbelievable at all three.
And that's not a guarantee of anything.
And now in the world of ultra running,
we're seeing you, Walmsley,
like people that are Olympic trials qualifiers in marathon going into trail running, we're seeing you, Walmsley, like people that are Olympic trials qualifiers in marathon
going into trail running,
like you're only gonna see more and more elite performers,
especially when the money comes in.
Like, you know, it's like,
if you're an elite track and field athlete or marathon,
or why are you gonna fuck around in the trail world
when there's no money and you could just get hurt
or whatever, there's too much risk involved.
But you know, that's changing.
And I think it's only gonna attract
a higher caliber of athlete who's approaching it,
not from, well, I eat granola bars and do whatever
to like being very precise
and intentional about what they're doing.
I think there's a lot of room for growth here.
Oh, for sure.
I mean, that's where I feel lucky that I came up when I did
because if I had been this athlete,
and this goes back to even high school,
like I wasn't recruited out of high school
to go to college.
I walked on.
I wasn't an All-American in college.
I left without that athlete
that every collegiate athlete wants,
but I kept going.
And like, I just didn't give up on myself.
But I think with the sport,
like, and I was fortunate
because like when I was in high school,
we aren't where we are 20 years later
in such good guidance for high school kids.
Like the level of training they're getting
is next level.
And we're gonna see that in trail running.
If I'd come up into trail running 10 years from now,
I couldn't have gotten away
with all the shit I did with starving myself
and not treating my body well.
And I hope that people recognize
that the only way to really self-actualize
or get the best out of yourself
is to do these things properly.
No shortcuts.
There aren't any hacks out there
that are gonna get you there.
Like a hack is the quickest way
to get you on the injury list.
Like you're gonna end up with stress fractures,
whole host of things.
And there are times where I wonder like,
was all of that abuse I did to my body
over the last 15 years,
like is it finally catching up on me?
It's like, maybe.
And if that's the case, like I had a good run
and like I'm not gonna like let that deter me
from what I wanna do next.
Like, but I'm confident that that isn't the case.
Like I think that that is my superpower is the durability.
And I just have been fortunate to have messed up so many times
and still had second chances.
So that's kind of-
Yeah, no, I get it.
Yeah, I get it.
I think like you're describing like,
oh, if I starve myself or do this,
this thing that I know is not in my long-term best interest,
but probably will help me short-term performance-wise.
And when you're like young and you're a gunner
and that race is everything,
you'll take that bargain every time.
And I'm sure tons of athletes do that.
It's like, who cares?
Like I'll deal with my bone density,
you know, 10 years from now.
I don't care about that.
What I care about is what's gonna happen in six weeks.
So it's really hard to overcome that, you know, 10 years from now, I don't care about that. What I care about is what's gonna happen in six weeks.
So it's really hard to overcome that,
especially with, you know, younger people
who have a hard time thinking long-term about anything.
Like these are decisions that, you know,
start to make sense when you're in the twilight
of your career and you're trying to, you know,
keep going, right?
We're in that rocking chair moment
where we can just reflect on everything.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. But that's where in the social media age, we are rewarded with instant
gratification. So undoing, or not undoing, but acknowledging that's one path, not the only path,
and learning to pleasure delay, I think is really important to instill with anybody in any endeavor.
Because that's where the greatest, you know,
benefits gonna come.
Sure.
Is if you can display some emotional control
to then at some point reap the rewards.
And I think a good way to kind of,
I wanna close this with a little bit of guidance and help
for either people who are in the midst of suffering from some version of what you've gone
through and the alarm bells are going off in their minds because they're relating to what you have to
share, or people who have people in their life that they are confused around how to best help
them and for the teachers and the coaches and the parents to understand how to look out for this and what the warning signs are.
So if you're a basketball coach or a track and field coach,
or you're a seventh grade teacher,
or you're a parent whose kids are now adolescents
and you're noticing,
hey, this thing around food doesn't look quite so right.
Like, what have you learned about what to look out for?
And once you have a sense
that maybe something might be awry, like, what have you learned about what to look out for? And once you have a sense that maybe something
might be awry, like, how do you navigate that?
How do you address that with that person?
How, you know, what is the way,
and this is obviously not,
there's no easy way to answer this, but you know,
I'm sure there's a lot of people out there who are like,
I know this person needs help.
I don't know how to help them.
What should I do?
That's another two hour podcast.
We could go,
you spent hours on this?
I think Lindsay was out
That was like eight questions.
So yeah.
I'm good.
I got my coffee still.
I think it's important
to let people know
that you love them.
Like that's at the heart of it.
Like you are there,
you love them,
you know,
for who they are.
You aren't gonna be the one responsible to fix someone.
And that's what I think a lot of us try to do
is we want to be the fixer.
And in reality, with anyone that might be suffering
from something like they need to be,
they need to autonomously make that decision
to seek help or get treatment.
But you need to show that you support them,
not enable them, you support them. Not enable
them, but support them. And I think then it's about collaboratively reaching out to people that
are the professionals. So if you're a coach and you see this kind of behavior starting in someone
that you're worried about, I think bringing in a professional to help would be good. Getting the school psychologist or the nutritionist. But I think
it's important to really not approach people as you're doing something wrong. You need to come to
them from a place of love and let them know that, hey, we're worried about this and let's talk about
what's going on. Because I think conversation is the root of everything. I wish I had been strong
enough to have conversations with people when I was growing up
or in college or with Lindsay early on.
Like, a myriad of reasons I didn't,
but I think not talking allowed me
to basically build unchecked narratives in my head
that just ruminated, got deeper, the roots got deeper.
And eventually, like, it just, you know,
started to strangle everything.
But talking and conversation also aren't light switches.
You didn't grow up in a household
where you learned how to do that
or where that was modeled or practiced.
So if there isn't a habit or a practice
or an environment where trust
and kind of open dialogue is already kind of in place,
that takes a lot of time to build and establish.
You can't just, you know, come to somebody who's never,
who has no, who's not used to that and say,
it's time to talk and expect that person
to be open with you.
Yeah, no, not at all.
And I think that's where you just have to approach
like all of these conversations or people
kind of with the grace of recognizing,
meet them where they are.
Don't expect a quick fix.
You know, it's not a light switch.
We're dealing with dimmer switches.
You know, it's going to be a slow up and down.
And that's the thing with recovery is we expect it to be linear,
and it's anything but, right?
Like I'm sure you have felt that.
And it's very circuitous.
And it's, you know, what we think it looks like is, you know, and it's very circuitous. And it's, you know, what we think it looks like is,
you know, this A to B, you know, vertical line
or, you know, like, you know, going up on the graph,
but it's just convoluted, it's messed up.
And being kind to yourself or others
when they aren't making the progress we would expect
because each person's timeframe is going to be different.
But I think, you know, that's probably important.
But yeah, having the conversations is not going to be easy. And that's the hardest thing.
Like I've seen people suffering and I can't reach out to talk to them because I'm afraid I don't have the right words. And I think that's what prevents a lot of us from doing a lot of things
is the fear of not having the right thing to say. And sometimes just being there or saying something
is what someone needs to hear. You know, it, I think, I don't know,
I really try to tell myself, like, you know, stop measuring and start living. You know, it's,
life's too short to count all your Cheerios. You know, it's like, you really need to get out of,
out of that model and realize that, you know, the beauty that is in life is if you're actually in
the game. You know, like, you can't just be a spectator in your own life
and window shop while everyone else is feasting on
the goods of what being alive is.
And I think anyone that might be suffering
or has questions,
just know that the ultimate act of courage
would be just to talk to someone.
And it's never gonna be as bad as you think it is.
Like we said, no one's watching us.
No one, well, people might be watching us on YouTube right now,
but no one cares the way we care.
I think that's very well said.
Yeah, I mean, obviously, certainly,
if you're listening or watching to this
and you're having a sense that maybe you need to talk to somebody
about your own behavior,
it would be absolutely key to reach out
to somebody you trust,
somebody who you feel will receive you with grace
and not judgment.
I mean, the judgment piece I think is huge,
but you're not gonna be able to solve the problem
in your head, despite what you think.
And it's not going to go away
because you're pushing it down.
The only solution is going to come by raising your hand,
inviting people in and not only asking for help,
but receiving that help when people offer to help you.
And that is much harder than trying to grit your teeth
and figure it out yourself.
Because, well, if I figure it out myself,
then I don't have to tell anybody about it, right?
That's the thing.
And I think if you're somebody who's bearing witness
to somebody suffering, whether you're a parent or a friend
or a colleague or a teacher or a coach,
it can be very confusing because if you don't have
any personal familiarity with this,
it defies logic.
Why can't they just fix this?
Or why don't they stop doing that thing?
Can't they see?
And I can see what they need to do and they can't.
And so with that,
like when you're kind of thinking of it in that context,
when you approach that person,
you're gonna be coming at them like pretty aggressively
or with a lot of judgment or confusion.
And that's gonna put that person on their heels
and defensive.
So you gotta find a way to broach it in a compassionate way
by draining it of any judgment
and just coming at it with love and curiosity.
And to your point, like not being codependent,
I'm not here to like enable you,
I'm not gonna keep your secret.
And maybe I can't even be your friend right now,
but like when you're ready, I love you.
And when you're ready for help,
like I want me to be your first call.
And it's hard, man.
It is.
When people who care about the people who are suffering,
they're suffering themselves
and they can't help that person
unless they're taking care of themselves.
So, whether it's Al-Anon or finding their own community
with people who have navigated that same thing,
I think becomes really key.
That's spot on.
And I love what you said.
It's that like nonjudgmental awareness of the situation.
Like you don't have to place judgment
on what they're doing.
You could say, I don't even need you to stop.
I'm not telling you to stop.
I'm just saying like, I know what's up here.
Exactly.
Cause that's gonna disarm people.
Like all of us are conditioned where if you come in,
I'm gonna immediately like, you know,
be resistant and, you know, lie my way out of something,
you know, cause there is that shame component
that you're wrapped up in.
And that will lead you to do things you don't want to do.
But I think that coming in with that nonjudgmental
kind of awareness of the situation
and then also educating yourself.
I think a lot of that,
the misconception of what OCD or eating disorders are,
like with OCD, it's like, oh, I'm compulsive. Like, you know,
like I like to arrange my pen certain ways. And like, so it kind of gets maybe reduced into like
something that's more like a personality trait versus like an actual disorder. And I think just
educating ourselves on, no, this is something that's actually leading people to suffer.
Like it's intrusive, it's unwelcomed and it's debilitating.
And progressive.
And progressive, like, and what we said earlier,
if you think about anorexia nervosa,
which is one of the major eating disorders,
is the, has the highest rate of mortality
out of any mental health, like illness, that's scary.
Like, so it's not just a, oh yeah, we all overeat,
or we all have like problems with food.
It's like, yes, that's true. But let's educate ourselves that some people really are suffering.
And I think that's the important piece where like, then we can come to them with compassion.
It's not just, oh yeah, like, I don't like how my legs look in the mirror or, you know, how my,
my shirt fit today. Like, cause all of those are true. And, and I think it's just recognizing that,
okay, like this is a serious thing and not
to reduce, like, you know, belittle it or, you know, kind of reduce it in your mind. I think
that's a huge step because then the person that's suffering will feel a little more welcomed that,
okay, like you actually understand, you know, it's not like, oh yeah, like I count my calories.
It's like, well, did you count 300 times today? Like, did you-
I'll win that game.
You want to go to war over like this?
Like, yeah.
So it's kind of like, you know,
but it's all a spectrum.
And I loved what you said earlier.
It's like, it's about us managing our feelings
and our triggers.
Cause we're not going to live in a world.
And I don't want a world where everyone's tiptoeing around
and like, they can't say certain things.
You know, I wish I'll be respectful,
but I need to manage myself in the world. That's an open environment that people are going to say,
do and act in different ways. And I can't expect them to always like coddle me.
Right. Is it okay if I eat in front of you?
Exactly. Like, so it's about like finding that balance point, but like just being
respective of where people are. Yeah, and understand that it's a disorder, it's a disease,
it's not the person.
Like decoupling the identity or that person you know
from the behavior, I think is really important.
And realizing that it's a coping strategy
born out of a feeling of being less than
or out of control or being incapable
of giving yourself the level of self-love
that we all deserve, right?
And that recovery is that journey
towards self-acceptance and self-love
as the antidote to that darkness.
And it can feel like I'm broken.
I'm the thing that's wrong,
not acknowledging that, oh, I do have this illness.
And it's kind of like the computer is glitching.
We don't just throw the computer away.
Like you upload the software better.
You know, you just like give it a patch.
And it's like, we just gotta like, you know,
kind of work on the, you know,
how we're dealing with things.
Like, but I think that prevents people
from asking for help or mentioning
because it feels like they're broken.
If you knew just how bad I am and how broken I am
and how beyond repair the situation is,
like that's the mentality.
And it's, I mean, I'll be honest,
letting go of the reassurance seeking behavior
is very scary.
Like I've had times where I don't know
where I am in the world.
It's so unsettling because I'm trying to actively fight
whatever behavior was going to reassure me
that it was okay.
And that's a terrifying thing.
So it's like, you're caught in this massive storm
out in the ocean and you were, had this shitty little life raft
and like arm floaties and you were terrified,
but you felt some sort of comfort
with your little raft and your arm floaties
compared to when you have the calm open sea
and you're all alone and there's nothing else there.
Yeah.
What am I supposed to do with all this like serenity?
I'd rather have the noise in my head
and like grip on white knuckling these little things
than that, but eventually you recognize that the calmness
and the serenity is a state you can live in and trust.
But as you said, it's gonna take time.
And also it's gonna take resources
and it's not easy like to get those resources.
Like when I left my job as a full-time therapist,
I lost my health insurance.
So the best thing for me to deal with some of these anxiety
inducing things was leaving that full-time employment.
And by doing so I lost access to my healthcare.
Right, you couldn't pay for recovery resources
that you needed.
Which, that was a, that was a
shame. That's fucked up. Like, yeah, that sucked. Like, and I mean, again, I'm, I'm at a place where,
I mean, I, I had two other careers going to pro athlete and a race director, like, you know,
building something. So I was really like burning myself out with three things, just filling the
void, but it shouldn't be that way. I wish we had access to resources that, you know,
because people are struggling.
And it's always going to be that way,
but there is, like you said, everything is impermanent.
And there was something I came across in my recovery
is the term wabi-sabi.
And it's this Japanese philosophy taken from nature
that everything is impermanent,
imperfect, and incomplete. And I think it's a beautiful way to kind of look at ourselves,
our situations, the world. Things are imperfect. They are impermanent. It will pass.
And we know that in ultras, you could be in the lowest low you've ever had. And somehow you went 70 more miles after that because you didn't give in yet,
you know, it'll pass. But then it's also incomplete. Like our recoveries aren't complete,
you know, our careers, our relationships. And I think just like me leaning into that and accepting
that, oh, like someone that wanted control on everything, someone that like was tied up in like perfectionism
and thinking that that was the way to, you know,
salvation or, you know, being loved or accepted
and recognize that everything is impermanent,
imperfect and incomplete.
Like it helped me kind of like start to like settle in
to the muck and just be like, oh, okay.
Like I can live with that.
Like, you know, cause I'm chasing this,
this figment of something that doesn't exist. and just be like, oh, okay, like I can live with that. Like, you know, cause I'm chasing this,
this figment of something that doesn't exist.
It's theoretical perfection.
You've convinced yourself it's real, but it doesn't exist.
Yeah, it is an impossibility anyway.
Yeah, so.
And there's a relief in that.
Yeah.
But also discomfort.
And that's what we like to numb ourselves, Rich. But I have really learned and
I continue to remind myself that like learning to let go is far more powerful than holding on.
And that's not easy, but I'm trying to let go of more and more things and trust.
And that's a very counterintuitive edict in and of itself,
but to tell a hard driving, very competitive athlete
or business person, or just ambitious person in general,
that the better way is in the surrender and the letting go.
You might as well be speaking, you know, Mongolian.
Like it just doesn't, it's like, what are you talking about?
Like the whole reason I'm here and what fuels me
is my ability to like double down on that self-will
and hold on even more tightly and push, push, push, push.
So the subtlety or the, you know,
the kind of being in that state
where you're untethering yourself from results
and floating in that calm body of water is like,
yeah, it's like being on Mars.
That is not, it takes a long time
to really understand what that means
and to grok the fact that it's not about,
it's not about like giving up.
It's just tapping into a more powerful
and more sustainable fuel source
that not only will lead you exactly towards
the same things that you're ambitious about,
although your goals may change,
you know, you can be ready for that.
But also, yeah, you'll be able to do it with joy
and with others and all of these things
that you have decided are
indulgences or distractions. Totally. And that's, I think that was key. What you said is the,
you don't have to like it. Like, you know, it's that like acknowledging this, the radical
acceptance idea of, hey, this is what's occurring. You don't have to like it, but what are you going
to do about it? You know, what's that next step?
And I think that's where people get stuck sometimes, but-
Well, that's why, you know, the universe is wired to,
you know, create these bottoms.
So you can have these reckonings and these realizations,
which are gifts, right?
Like, so you crashed into the wall
and now you're on the other side and you're like,
oh my God, and now we're talking about it.
But the fact that somebody listening to this
might be struck and short of hitting their own bottom
is gonna say, I'm gonna do that.
Like that's unlikely, it's probably not gonna happen.
You know, you have to, it's an experiential thing.
You might have to suffer a certain kind of pain
that's different than the pain you suffer
when you're running an ultra marathon,
a psychic pain, a spiritual, emotional pain.
And those tend to be levers and motivators
to do things a different way.
For sure, without a doubt.
Like, and I think you're spot on,
like the, like, you know,
you have to go through that resistance.
And I don't know,
thinking about running a hundred miles through the Alps
doesn't seem as scary or daunting
as like living with your own thoughts
when you're like really in that.
Right, which is the source of all of man's suffering,
of course, his inability to sit alone for five minutes
with his own thoughts.
We're gonna fill that void with something.
Yeah, I'm gonna go, like the suffering in the mountains
is really just an elaborate distraction
from having to sit alone with yourself for a couple of minutes.
And how often do people now take their phone or their podcast or whatever while, you know,
a lot of people will be on their run or their bike listening to this.
Like, and something I've actually done that I think is really great for where I'm at is
I've unplugged when I go run.
No more stimulus.
I was almost using that.
Like, I forgot what running felt like.
Because I was like, there was always something I was trying using that. Like I forgot what running felt like. Cause I was like,
there was always something I was trying to get out of it outside of, and like, I was just overstimulating and I went for a run and I literally was just listening to my breath,
my footfalls, the birds. And it was, it like reminded me of me as a kid running. I was like,
oh, like that's what I love about running. Like moving through space quickly,
you know, kind of feeling effortless and floating.
And you described the flow state just a little bit ago.
Like, you know, letting everything go,
letting go of the control, not thinking,
getting rid of that analysis by paralysis.
That's where you're gonna produce your best work,
whatever it is.
If you're an artist or an athlete or, you know,
if you're in medicine or I athlete or if you're in medicine,
or I feel like you do have to let go of that control,
stop thinking and trust the process.
Well, to be continued, man.
I can't wait to see what you're gonna manifest and do.
I'm excited about the trail series.
I'm excited about the performances on the horizon.
But more than anything,
just this message that you're carrying
has a very kind of important vibration to it.
You're an amazing vehicle to speak about this thing.
And my goal for this podcast really honestly
is to just make more people aware
of what you went through
so others don't have to.
And for that message to ripple out and transcend beyond
like the trail community to a larger population of people.
Because I do think, as I said at the outset,
it's important when men speak up about this,
because I do think that there are just so many men out there
who are suffering in silence with this
because there isn't a culture of permissiveness
around talking about it.
So I applaud you for the courage
and the vulnerability that you've demonstrated
in kind of shouldering the responsibility,
like in a public service announcement way
to talk about this stuff.
So it was really cool.
And I appreciate your openness, man.
Thank you.
And thanks for sharing those stories
because it makes a difference.
Someone out there will hear one of your podcasts
and it'll save them.
So, yeah.
We'll see, man.
All I do is I put it out there
and then it's up to them, right?
Yeah.
I'm surrendering.
I am surrendering this podcast to the world, Tim.
Wait, can we do the peace?
We're gonna do it, we're not there yet.
I was gonna, this was like my big opportunity.
Oh, did I jump the gun?
Yeah, like his is like, I'm gonna softball,
I'm throwing you, I'm tossing you the softball
for the plug.
Like, where do you want, you're on Instagram.
You got the, like, what are the URLs?
Where do you want people to go?
I'm sure people are gonna wanna learn more
about the Mammoth Trail series in September.
So where can they find out more about that?
MammothTrailFest.com would be it.
It's pretty cool.
We have over a thousand people signed up for this year
and there aren't too many spots left.
So if anyone's interested in joining,
they should get on it.
And someday
I'll learn how to, you know, do thoughtful merch. But right now we don't really have much.
You brought me some swag, but yeah, you got to up your game. We don't do that either. We probably
should do that. It's like, do people really want coffee mugs? I guess they do as I take a sip out
of my branded coffee mug that I can't sell because this is the only one we have.
But I would just encourage
people if they were interested, like, and they aren't going to run, like, just come join the
party. Like, we're looking for, like, what we're terming the Sierra Soiree. Like, it's just going
to be this big gathering of our community at the end of September before the snow hits the Sierra.
And if you can't make it, go out to one of your local trail events, like volunteer,
join in, just see how powerful it is watching people overcome
their doubts, their fears,
these incredible endurance feats
and just go be part of it.
I think it's gonna make all this a little bit better.
So I would really just encourage people to get out there
and join the trail community.
It's the best place in the world.
So, yeah.
Cool, man.
Right on.
Well, thanks again for sharing.
I'm gonna let you, now, here it is. You do it. You take it. So cool, man. Yeah, right on. Well, thanks again for sharing. I'm going to let you now.
Now, here it is.
You do it.
Can you take it?
Peace plants.
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
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See you back here soon.
Peace. Plants back here soon.
Peace.
Plants.
Namaste. Thank you.