Walt Hampton, J.D.

Creating the Work & Life You LOVE

Life Is Not A Marathon
October 20, 2011

It’s an Ultra!

It’s amazing how fast significant events can disappear into the rear-view mirror of our lives. It was nearly a month ago already that we ran the Vermont 50. Yet despite the passage of time, I keep realizing how many lessons I learned in the hills around Ascutney.

I used to think that life was like a marathon. I don’t think so anymore. Now I think it’s more like an ultra. Here’s why:

1. The need to take better care of ourselves.

There is no question that marathon training is difficult.  And 26.2 miles is a long way to run.  But it’s possible to run a marathon, get a bit dehydrated, allow yourself to get nutritionally depleted, and still walk away relatively unscathed.

Not so with an ultra.  Over 50 or 100 miles, it is critical to attend meticulously to the needs of your body.  You can’t afford to get dehydrated.  It’s essential to continually monitor your electrolytes. You need constant fuel to go the distance. 

How easy it is to ignore our bodies in our lives. When I’m out speaking to groups on the message of Journeys, when I urge folks to be active participants in their lives, the familiar refrain I hear is: I’m too old, too overweight, too out of shape.

It is axiomatic that without our health we have nothing. And yet how cavalier we are with the care of the  vessels that enable us to make manifest the very essence of who we are in the world.

Small tweaks in diet and exercise can transform how we feel about ourselves; and can transform our lives. At our ideal weights, we can sometimes feel like we can fly.

The death of Steve Jobs is a stark reminder that all of the fame and fortune and success and notoriaty on the planet cannot save us from consequences of ill health.

We need to care for our bodies well if we’re going to go the distance.

2. It’s about endurance not speed.

I remember being preoccupied in my marathon training about time.  Would I finish sub-4? Would I have a “qualifying” time? Would I beat Ann?  How fast could I be?

In an ultra, there is a lot more plodding. And for me, running 50 miles was not about the amount of time it took me; it was about being able to go the distance. Sure there was a time limit. But it mattered much less to me how fast I ran it than being able to cross the finish line.

We are constantly challenged by the need for speed in our lives with the constant barrage of emails and voicemails and status updates. Yet what really matters is our ability to persist.

Those of you who read me frequently know that I am a big fan of Darren Hardy’s metaphor of the hand pump, one of those old metal things you see at a campground. He says that when we engage in a big life project – at work, in school or in our creative lives – we need to make slow, steady, constant efforts toward our goal. As we continue “to pump the handle,” at first we see just a slow trickle of results for all our work. (If we stop, we need to start again.) But if we continue to pump steadily, eventually a huge torrent flows.

Jack Canfield says that even the mightiest tree in the forest can be felled with just five whacks of the axe each day, so long as we don’t give up.

Small consistent steps over time lead to magnificent results.

Persistence is the key.

3. We get to stop and re-group.

When I first started my distance training, I freaked out when Ann suggested that we stop and hydrate and have a snack. Stop?  How can we stop? We’ve gotta run a race! We can’t stop! We’ll fall behind! Our muscles will seize up. All will be lost!

Well, in running ultra distances, there’s a lot of stopping.

We need to be a lot better about this in our lives. And I am guilty as charged! They say that we teach what we most need to know and this is a lesson that I need to constantly remind myself to follow.

We seem to think that busy means that we are productive. And this is not necessarily so. In fact, last week I wrote: busy is bad.

Busy will burn us out. And yet the world drives us forward. Our egos drive us forward.

How essential it is to stop. To reflect. To rest. To recreate. To think about where we’ve been; to consider where we’re going. To connect again with those we love; to connect with our essential selves; to connect with the ground; and with the Ground of All Being.

If we’re going to go the distance, we gotta to stop and regroup. Often.

4. We can suffer for a long time and still be ok.

Before I met Ann, I hadn’t run more than 8 or 10 miles. When I went out beyond 10 for the first time, I thought I was going to die.

As I extended the distances out, though, I discovered that the entire range of physical and mental feelings ebbs and flows; that there is a constant state of flux. I found that I could run 15 miles like the wind, 10 miles as if my legs were bound by piano wire; and another 5 as if I were a flowing river. All on the same run!  And I discovered too that even if I were miserable for 20 miles, it could all change in an instant – and it would be ok.

In every day of our lives, we go through the range of emotions. Some affirmation from a co-worker will lift us up; the all-too-busy boss becomes a sure sign that we will lose our job; the ungrateful teenager enrages us; a smile from a passer-by makes our heart sing; our exhausted spouse hurls us into a lonely despair. Over and over again.

And we will be ok.

A relationship unwinds. A loved one dies.  We have no idea whether the house will ever sell. Or whether our kid will get into school. Or whether there will ever be work again.

And we will be ok.

It is so easy to lose faith in ourselves; in our abilities; in our resiliance.

We shouldn’t. We can prevail. We will.

5. It’s a banquet, a really nice banquet.

On a short run, you start and you finish. In marathons, there are places to fill your water bottles every now and then. And perhaps pick up a package of Gu.

When I first started thinking about ultras, I was told that they were like running buffets or banquets. And they are!

Every 5 or 6 miles or so in an ultra, there are long tables of goodies: sandwiches and bananas and cookies and crackers and fruits and nuts and candies and gummies and all sorts of other fun stuff.

Life is like that: it’s a banquet.  And we forget. We forget how good it is. We forget to stop along the way and peruse the table and fill our pockets and satisfy our hunger and our thirst. We hurtle forward, missing the majesty that lays before our eyes.

We miss the sunrises and the sunsets and the northern lights and the shooting stars. We miss our lover. We miss the child who wants to connect; the parent who wants to be remembered; the co-worker who needs a hug. We miss the garden and the fall colors and the fine wine and the bountiful harvest. And one day becomes the next.

And before you know it, the ultra is done.

Linger at the banquet. It’s ours to enjoy.

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3 Comments

  1. Audrey

    So… I have mixed emotions reading this. Because,Walt, I think that running an Ultra is something that only a very elite few can ever do. And, praise God, you got to do it. And you did it so well. And I followed every training run, every FB post with great excitement… and thought about you and Ann on that weekend…and was amazed and proud at your results. But I don’t think that we’re all up for that game.

    I have limitations. Of time, mostly, due to work. And of health. My body is not in optimal shape because I am out of balance in my mind-body-spirit-work-family-fun-commitments-avocation-vocation ratio…. and the physical-self suffers from this imbalance.

    That said, I am training for my 5th marathon. This is hard for me. I have slowed down considerably. (Imagine carrying a 30 lb. weight and expecting to run as fast as you usually do.) And, yet, I am persistent. And I know the glory of finishing a long run and feeling a tiny bit sore the next day and loving it. I love the satisfaction of being up early and accomplishing more before 8 am each day than I used to in a whole day. I love watching the sunrise each morning and marveling at Creation. I love our small, sleepy town and I feel such complete happiness as I make my way through its darkened streets, looking for lights in houses that mark the awakening of the Community and the beginning of another day of possibility.

    But I don’t think I’ll ever run an Ultra… and for some reason , that makes me sad. A good friend of mine completed an IronMan last year. And I was envious of her, too.

    In all of your best personal life coaching way, I can imagine you saying: ” If you really wanted it, you could do it.”
    But I don’t think that’s true.

    Sort of sanguine this rainy morning…

    Reply
    • Walt

      Yes. Sanguine. I see that. It’s the time of year with the fading light and incessant rain I think – at least it is for me.

      In the rearview mirror, the ultra seems unimaginable -even to me. And I agree that ultras are not the standard. But I have been caught up in the metaphor of distance running. It seems that in everything we do there is demand for immediate response and an expectation of instantaneous results. It is so easy to burn out when life is viewed as a sprint. It is that steady long view – the ability to stay steady and present and even in the face of all the uphills and down – that allows us to go the distance.

      The training book we used was called Relentless Forward Progress. One day at a time. One moment at a time. Even if we’re not running.

      And btw, you’re doing it – you walk the walk (and the run). Not many do one marathon, let alone five!

      Reply
  2. Barrel Bob

    …and some of us are mere walkers…but running or walking we learn better how to hear the voice within us.

    “And when you turn to the right or when you turn to the left, your ears shall hear a word behind you, saying, ‘This is the way; walk in it.'” Isaiah 30:21

    Reply

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