Category Archives: Marathon

Running Free Blog is Back!

I’m back! šŸ™‚ Ā I wasn’t really gone-just insanely busy at work, as it goes as an accountant in the first quarter of a year.

Even though I didn’t have time to write and blog the past few months, I was still running. Ā To date, I have almost 150 miles logged in my barefoot running shoes. I run some days without them, if it’s too cold, or snowy.

Running this way has exceeded my expectations, as it’s been over 6 months, and I’ve had no injuries.

My reoccurring hip pain from before, still flares up from time to time, for a day or two, but nothing like where I could barely walk for days, or unable to run for weeks. I had a massage a few weeks ago and the therapist worked on that area and I could feel the tension melting. Ā It has stayed very lose since. The massage therapist recommended yoga or pilatesĀ to keep it loose and strengthen the muscles. Ā That is next up on my list to try to make time for.

The other constant reoccurring injury I could never avoid running the traditional way, no matter what stretches I did, shoes I bought, surfaces I ran on, were shin splints. Ā I probably had a new bout with them once every two months- sometimes minor, sometimes severe, where I’d be forced to stop running while they healed. Ā Sometimes I’d even get weird ones along my ankles- where it felt like a shin splint, but the pain was in the ankle. Ā Nothing worked to stop these, except to stop running.

Since I started running the barefoot method, I’ve not had one even hint of shin pain, splint, or ankle or any other type of pain. Ā I’ve run on all surfaces too. Ā Trail, cement, road, snow, grass, and I never have any pain no matter what surface I run on.

I can run longer distances too, where before, I’d feel it the next day. Ā Now it feels after these distances, I hadn’t even been running the day before. Ā Not to say I don’t have an occasional ache orĀ pain, but nothing that is in constant pain, debilitating, or causing me to stop running. Ā The biggest factor in preventing me from running these past few months has been my job- not injuries, which is something I thought I’d never say! Ā I would have never have believed it.

With the longer daylight now (I love it when daylight savings starts) more and warmer days here in Colorado,Ā and my job slowing down,Ā I’m excited I’ll have more time to run and blog.

Another benefit I’m seeing from running this way, is I’m running faster. Ā I useĀ my Garmin and look at it afterwards.Ā Many times during the run, I feel like I’m running slow and easy, but when I download the time and compare- I’m actually running faster.

I have seen my calf muscles define and be built up, over the months from this running method. I had a pair of “skinny jeans” with narrow leg openings, and before they slid right on. Now my muscles are too big for them, which is another benefit. Ā One, because I never had defined leg muscles, and two, for the real reason, running this way builds your calf muscles to take much of the impact on running, instead of your shins. The calves are much stronger muscles than your shins.Ā So it’s why I think, I’ve not had any shin pain at all.

Traditional running with traditional shoes, usually forces your foot to land on a mid or heel strike. You may not even realize you are running this way. As a result your shins have to take the brunt of impact, instead of your calves. Ā But when you land on your forefoot, the stress is taken by your calves and your foot, as it was designed to do. The shins were never desired to be able to withstand the constant pressure on them for running. Your forefoot is, with help from the calves.

I’ve learned a lot in the past 6 months and keep learning too. I love it. Ā It’s like I’m able to combine the love of running and improve my running, instead of holding back, and being worried about overdoing it and getting hurt, or being hurt, and having to stop while I heal and lose theĀ momentum.

I am still aiming for a marathon. I am confident I’ll be able to do it this year, but don’t want to say when yet. Ā But that is still my goal.

I’ve been thinking about running a 5K race too, just for fun. I’m within 3 minutes right now, of my fastest ever 5K time from several years ago. I’m not running anymore for fast speeds, but I love the 5K distance and have been thinking it would be fun to see how I’d run in a 5K with the barefoot method.

I have lots of blog posts I’ve been thinking about over the months, so there will definitely be new content coming more regularly about running, motivation, and achieving yourĀ goals.Ā I’ll be updating the Facebook page more too, so stay tuned!

 

Setback: Time to Quit, or Keep Going?

Hip painĀ 

ā€œTwenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things you didn’t do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover.ā€

~ Mark Twain

This week, Iā€™m writing ā€œlive,ā€ as Iā€™ve posted all the blog posts I was writing and saving, while I was designing Running Free Blog.

Iā€™ve had a setback, the past few weeks in that I developed hip pain again.Ā  The furthest run Iā€™ve done was 7 plus miles.Ā  After that, my hip started hurting again and would hurt no matter what distance I was running.

I immediately cut down to 2 miles.Ā  But my hip was still sore.Ā  It was discouraging. It feels like Iā€™m just so close at times, and about to just break it out wide open, and then pain is just there again one day, forcing me to back down, once again.

However, Iā€™m not one to have a pity party for too long.Ā  I had been able to run with no pain whatsoever in my hip. I know I had the answer in all this- somewhere.Ā  I wasnā€™t sure why the pain was starting again, but I was going to find out.

So to find my answer, I tuned in to my running method. I went on a few short runs, and was trying to pay attention to what I was actually doing, while running, and if I could feel hip pain while running, or if it was only after I was done running.

It took me a few weeks and many short runs, to discover what I was doing.Ā  I was starting to notice something and piece a few things together.Ā  The first being, when I was running on pavement, I perceived the shock and force to be greater, so I would definitely always run striking on my forefoot, and even more than I have. I didnā€™t feel hip pain, but would feel it in my calves- as it should be- the calves absorbing the impact- not my hip or any other body part.

I realized though, when I was running on grass or on a trail, where I perceived the landing force not so great, I wasnā€™t landing on my forefoot- and in fact, I had gone back to a mid foot and even heal strike.

It clicked that I was doing this because it was easing the pain on my calves. My calves were hurting running the longer distances totally on a forefoot strike, so my body and brain, was doing what it needed to do, to ease the pressure off my calves, and that was putting it back to my feet, which in turn was making my hip hurt.

I concluded even though I was increasing my distances, it wasnā€™t all with the minimalist method.Ā  So the only thing I could do was start again- from the distance my calves werenā€™t hurting and start running EVERY step landing on my forefoot and start building up the mileage.

That was 2 miles.Ā  I ran a few times 2 miles.Ā  Then 2.25, then 2.50.Ā  The first time I ran a 5K, 3.2 miles- my calves were burning at the end of it, but I had no hip pain, and I knew I was on the right track.

A few days ago, I ran 4.25 miles, every single step, landing on my forefoot and had zero calf or hip pain.Ā  Iā€™m amazed how fast the calf muscles do get stronger.Ā  But my body had been ā€œcheatingā€ and not allowing them to properly accumulate to running this way.Ā  But the gig is up- Iā€™m consciously aware of this now, and I hope to be continually building my mileage back up, with it all being forefoot landing.

This has been very frustrating for me. Ā I think about it sometimes- quitting. Ā I certainly have had many successes running, and achieved more than I ever thought I would. Ā If I stopped running now, I certainly would have nothing to feel bad about. Ā But I would have regrets. Ā And I would always wonder….“what if?”

SoĀ I donā€™t let setbacks be a reason to quit or give up. It makes me realize how much I really do love running, because if I didnā€™t love it- really love it– I wouldnā€™t be trying to figure these things out.Ā  I would have just stopped running.Ā  Iā€™m not giving up on my dream of running a marathon, and more importantly, I donā€™t want to.

I donā€™t think you have to work so hard at something to the point it exhausts you, or you donā€™t even like it anymore to have success.Ā  But I do believe you will never get to where you want to go if you stop.Ā  Even for me, just running 2 miles at a time, while I was figuring out- that is the difference.Ā  I never stopped.

I think that is a point for anyone, no matter what you are trying to achieve.Ā  You canā€™t just stop.Ā  Even one step forward, and two back- eventually that one step forward will get you there, if you donā€™t stop. This applies to running or anything you are trying to accomplish.

If you want to run, but donā€™t feel you can, run half a block, or 1 minute on a tread mill. If you want a new job, send in one resume a day to your ā€œdream jobsā€ even if you donā€™t think you are qualified.Ā  If you want to eat healthier, start with one thing in your diet that helps you with that.Ā  When you have done that, start doing a little more than you did, and keep adding to that- even if you have setbacks.

The quote at the top of the post today from Mark Twain, Iā€™ve drawn on it a lot with running, because itā€™s true.Ā  You can get out and do what you dream of doing, and one day achieve it or come close- or you can talk yourself out of it before you even begin.Ā  I never wanted to be thinking back one day, wishing I had just gone for it, but didnā€™t.Ā  What is the worst that can happen? You try and donā€™t make it, or that you never tried at all? If you decide it would be that you never tried at all, than you have the power today, to get started!

What are you waiting for? Find your ā€œ2 mileā€ beginning point, and get going! Youā€™ll never regret you did. šŸ™‚

Iā€™d love to hear if you want to share, what goal you are trying to achieve. Leave a comment and let me know!

Because I Can

I run because I can. When I get tired, I remember those who can’t run, what they’d give to have this simple gift I take for granted, and I run harder for them. I know they would do the same for me~ Anonymous

ā€œBecause I Canā€¦ā€

Iā€™ve said those three words more times than I count, since I started running in 2009.

Almost every person I tell I run, asks me eventually, ā€œWhy did you start running?ā€ or some version of that. My answer is always the same,

ā€œBecause I can.ā€

The unspoken words Iā€™ve thought are, ā€œBecause there was once a time where I couldnā€™t.ā€

I couldnā€™t because I had cancer. I was diagnosed with thyroid cancer in April 2009. A few months later I found out it had spread to my lymph nodes in my neck, and I had to have a thyroidectomy (complete removal of the thyroid) and a neck dissection, where 60+ of my 80 neck lymph nodes were removed. It was a painstaking and somewhat risky surgery, but I was fortunate my surgeons did an excellent job. Many of the complications associated with this surgery, I was spared from.

However, there was a mistake made by doctors, while I was waiting for radioactive iodine for months- I was never given artificial thyroid hormone, which regulates, your metabolism, the way you feel, your energy, etc. It left me for months, in such a hypothyroidism state, I was sleeping 22 hours a day, couldnā€™t function, couldnā€™t take care of my kids, and it literally took me hours to complete simple tasks. I had no energy, and I was mentally confused. I felt like a 36-year old in a body that was 120-years old.

I had moved in with my dad and stepmom that summer, so they could help me with my very young boys, who were 5 and 3 at the time. I was going through a divorce. Their house was smaller and easier for me to watch the boys. During the day, my dad & stepmom were working- they’d help the boys in the morning, and go to work. Ā I’d sit on the patio and watch my boys play in the yard.

Iā€™d see it was 9:30AM and I knew I had to start getting lunch ready- NOW. It was good if I could get them lunch made by 12 or 1. It took me that long to make them two sandwiches, get some carrots out of a bag, and pour them milk. Then I was exhausted.

Doctors told me I may never get my energy levels back. They said at best, once I had radioactive iodine, I could start on Synthroid (synthetic thyroid hormone) and I would start to feel a gradual increase over several months, of improved energy, but it would be months and a very slow process, and I likely would never feel completely like my ā€œold self.ā€ Synthroid is very hard to get that perfect balance. Too much, and you are too hyper and sick because your bodyā€™s systems are operating too fast. Too slow, you are hypothyroid, where you are tired, lack energy, and suffer from mental confusion.

DuringĀ these months, where I was going through this and recovering, just walking up stairs without being exhausted was a goal. Running never even crossed my mind. I just wanted to get somewhat of a normal level of energy back, so I could be a mom again to my boys.

I was happy my prognosis was good, and there was a light at the end of the tunnel, I wasnā€™t going to feel like I was 120 years old forever.

I have often struggled with why I got cancer. I imagine most cancer patients do. No one else in my family had cancer, and we are all very healthy. Why me? Why did I get dealt this hand of cards?

Whenever something ā€œnegativeā€ happens, there is the other side of the coin- the positive. I had such an outpouring of love from family and friends- not everyone always sees that while they are alive. But I found a much less expected positive as my cancer treatment neared its end.

After I was cleared to take Synthroid, I was home by myself. My children had to stay away from me for 10 days, since I was radioactive. I was quarantined and had to stay away from large crowds for a few more days.

I took my first Synthroid, and it wasnā€™t months, weeks, days, or even hours, until I started to feel better. I felt better within MINUTES. I was a little freaked out. This wasnā€™t ā€œsupposedā€ to happen. I was supposed to feel the way I had been feeling for months.

But just like I canā€™t explain fully why I got cancer, I canā€™t explain why within minutes, I felt the best I had in years! It was like my body was soaking up the hormone it had been depleted and starved of for months (maybe even years if my diseased thyroid wasnā€™t producing correct levels) and said, ā€œWhoo-hoo- we are back in business- turn on the engines- we are going to rock!ā€

I went out for several walks in the next days. Something I hadnā€™t been able to do for months. I cleaned the house- I had to clean and disinfect everything very carefully so there were no traces of the radioactive iodine in the house when the boys came home. My energy wasnā€™t decreasing every day, it was improving- in fact I had felt better than I had in years- within a few days.

I knew this was a gift. I didnā€™t know if it was going last, but after the past few months, I was determined to make the most of it- for however long I felt this good.

One thing that came in my mind was I had always wanted to run a 5K race. I donā€™t know why. I wasnā€™t ever a runner- I actually HATED running. It was like that old joke, ā€œthe only time I am running is if something is chasing me.ā€

But cancer changes you- it gives you a fresh perspective if you are lucky to get a second chance. I had never been motivated or inspired to try running. But I thought ā€œWhy the hell not- what have I got to lose- I certainly wonā€™t feel worse than I have for months.ā€ There was a reason though, and even if I didnā€™t fully understand the ā€œwhyā€ behind it, I wasnā€™t going to ignore the feeling that I had to try.

It was late August. The Susan B. Komen Race for the Cure was coming up in early October. I had about a month. I knew nothing about running or where to even begin.

I asked one of my friends, who had been in a mommyā€™s group with me, Sonja Wieck, who has now conquered several Iron man’s, who was just starting out herself in triathlons, ā€œHow do I run a 5K?ā€

She told me, ā€œOne step at a time. Just do the distance. Even if you have to barely run, or walk slow, just keep moving and do the distance. And then do it again- it will get easier and easier-and have fun.ā€

It sounded like good advice to me and I had a month. So that night, I dug out what ever old sneakers I had in my closet and put on a pair of old shorts and a T-shirt. I had used the odometer on my car to map out 1.6 miles, earlier, because I hadnā€™t even heard of a Garmin, or a watch that would track distance by GPS. I grabbed a pair of ear buds to stick in my phoneĀ for music.

It was dusk. I started out down the country road, in the country town I lived in at the time- Mead, Colorado. And I did what Sonja suggested. I started with one step, and then another and another. And I absolutely fell in love.

For the first time, I saw wheat fields, with the wind whipping across the top of the wheat. I could smell the sweet hay that had been cut and was lying in the fields. I saw the gorgeous Colorado sunset dipping behind the majestic mountains- Longā€™s Peak, a 14-teener included.

Even though I hadnā€™t been on Synthroid for more than a week, or hadnā€™t been able to physically exert myself for months, I never felt better. I wasnā€™t tired. I wasnā€™t huffing and puffing. I was actually bummed when I saw the turnaround point. I figured this is where I would get tired.

But with the air growing cooler and cooler by the moment, the sun casting out its orange, pink, and red rays, fields of wheat moving with the wind, my feet finding their rhythm and pattern with the road, I felt energized- not tired. And for the first time in my life, I knew I had found something that could set me completely free- for however long I could run. I was free. No divorce stuff, no medical stuff, no sickness, no feeling like I was a failure at life. Every step I ran was telling my soul, not only was I not a failure, I was strong, healthy, and amazing.

I got back to my house and looked at the time. And so it started. I was thinking if I could run the 3.10 miles in an hour, Iā€™d be happy. I didnā€™t stop once, and I didnā€™t have to walk any of it. I didnā€™t officially time myself but it had been about 38 minutes since I left for my first ever, 5K run.

I was elated. I knew I could do the race! I signed up that night. I felt like I could have run it the next morning. But I had a month to go. Would my health hold up? I couldnā€™t answer that question, but I knew I was going to do everything I could to make sure I could run that race- even just once.

By the time the race came a month later, I was feeling even stronger, healthier, and better. There was no doubt I would be running and running as fast as Iā€™d ever been able to run to date. I had just been following Sonjaā€™s advice. I had just been concentrating on running 3.10 miles. I had no thoughts about speed, or training, or endurance. I had run a little, just slightly longer distances a few times, but I had no doubts, I was running every step of this race and finishing.

Race day, I was ecstatic. My dad came with me and Sonja was there, running for a friend who had cancer and Sonja was the first woman to finish! On my previous blog, I blogged about the whole race with pictures.

 

After my first ever 5K race, October 2009. Five weeks after having completed thyroid cancer treatments

After my first ever 5K race, October 2009. Five weeks after having completed thyroid cancer treatments

I had a goal of finishing under 40 minutes. The race wasnā€™t officially timed and I forgot to stop my watch when I finished. But even at that, the time I ran that was around 34-36 minutes. That meant I had dropped about 2-4 minutes off my time in a month! I was so happy. That race- I ran with a smile on my face the entire time- for everything I had been through- barely a month ago, I couldnā€™t get out of bed and I just had ran a 5K in about 35 minutes. I was completely free and a huge part of me healed that day- from running that race. I wasnā€™t ā€œsickā€ anymore. I wasnā€™t a ā€œcancer patientā€ anymore. I was a runner!

So the runner in me was ignitedā€¦.the question for me was never ā€œifā€ I was going to run again, but when and what. I decided that day; I was going to run a marathon. No matter what- I was going to do 26.2 miles and run it fun. It would be the ultimate full circle for me. From cancer patient to marathon runner! It was my dream and my goal.

In 2010 (less than year out of my cancer recovery) just for ā€œfunā€ I entered a FAST 3K (1.7) mile race sprint in Boulder, home of the best runners, and I entered the elite division- where the professional runners run. There were men in other age groups that were Olympic qualifiers running in this race. Why, did I enter the elite division, when I wasnā€™t technically an elite runner? Because I Can.

It was so hot and humid that steaming evening in July on race night. I ran and gave it my all. No one had been able to come with me to cheer me on. It was all me. I had to stop and walk a few paces during the race too, because it was so humid, I couldnā€™t catch my breath and breathe. I thought no one places in an elite division walking. Iā€™m out of my league. But then I saw other women walking too, I figured ā€œWho knows? Thatā€™s why we run the race.ā€

I could feel a woman on my heels and felt like she could be the difference between me placing and not, so I dug deep- to a place I didnā€™t even know I had. I pushed myself that night even more than I ever did with anything, not involving birthing a child. šŸ˜‰

The crowd was cheering me on, and they gave me that final push I needed to keep the other woman from passing me. 1.7 miles had never felt so long before, but underneath it all, it was still fun. I was running free and running for no one, except for me. And as I crossed the finish line, I knew I had given it my absolute best. I was physically exhausted. Dripping in sweat- gasping for thick, humid air for my lungs. But my mind was energized- maybe I was dead last, but it had been the absolutely best physical performance I had ever done. I just ran with some of Boulderā€™s and the United States, elite runners!

It was about 30 minutes before results came out, and I had to stare at the paper a few times to make sure it was real. I was the second woman in my age group. In an elite division- in a tough race. My first elite race-ever. Running less than a year off cancer- I came in second for my age group. There is no way, when I couldnā€™t even walk up 5 stairs in my dadā€™s house less than a year earlier, I would have ever had dared to dream this, and yet I had just achieved it! Because I knew- and knew me, and I knew that place running takes me to- if I can dream it, I can do it- the mind will find a way, if I can allow it. That July day I did- I found a way to run an elite race with pure joy and the results showed me that. I wasnā€™t running to place- I hoped I would place- but I was running for me- for the joy and fun of it. Because I Can.

With my bib number after my first competitive elite division race. I thought “321” was good karma the moment I saw it, & it was. I placed 2nd in my age group! This was in 2010, one year after I had thyroid and lymph node cancer.

Iā€™ve never stopped running over the years, but I have stopped dreaming. I have stopped running free with it all. I became much more goal and results processed. Iā€™ve lost some of my joy for it over the years. In the six years since that first run, among the hay fields in Mead, CO, Iā€™ve achieved more in running than I ever thought possible. Even at times when I thought running was the last thing I could do. Through hard injuries, and emotional times- Iā€™ve done some of my best running. That spirit has never died, but it has been kept down.

Why, Iā€™m notĀ for certain. Ā Maybe on some levels I didnā€™t feel like I really deserved to be great and excel at something. Running has always been more mental for me. Thereā€™s a great running quote, ā€œYou only need to beat the voice in your head.ā€ For a few years, the voice has beaten me- but not completely, as Iā€™ve never given up running. Iā€™ve run every distance too, in official races. From 3Kā€™s to 1/2 marathons. Some distances Iā€™ve lost count of how many times Iā€™ve raced.

But the one goal Iā€™ve set for myself- the marathon- Iā€™ve never tried it. Never even went for it. Itā€™s eluded me. Iā€™ve felt it too hard, too demanding, too much time involved to train for it. Iā€™ve had some running injuries over the years too ranging from shin splints, to pulled and strained muscles that wonā€™t heal for a long time. Iā€™ve been afraid, what if I get hurt again? Iā€™ve always used those as reasons to justify the ā€œvoice in my headā€ is right.

My boys who are now 11 and 9, love the ā€œNight At The Museumā€ movies. In the ā€œNight at the Smithsonian,ā€Ā a line Amy Adams says as Amelia Earhart has gotten me thinking for months. She says, ā€œDo you know why I became a pilot? ā€¦ For the fun of it. Why else would anyone do anything?ā€

Iā€™ve been thinking about that for months, as Iā€™ve thought about me and running. I knew Iā€™d have to find the ā€œfunā€ in running again, if I was ever going to be able to even try running a marathon.

Iā€™ve recently read the amazing book, Born to Run. If you havenā€™t read it, do. Itā€™s not just a running book, but a book on the absolutely beautiful human spirit that you connect with when you run- and that is yourself and the others around you.

It motivated me again. It gave me the spark to put the fire back in my dream of running a marathon. It also helped me see how I could run smarter and run free again while training, so I can have fun, and not get injured.

So now itā€™s not about my run times. Itā€™s not about the pacing. Itā€™s not about placing in an elite division. Itā€™s not about the fancy gear or top of the line shoes. Itā€™s not about running my fastest. Itā€™s about running with my joy, and in the spirit of why I loved running in the first place. It is about running for the fun of it and running free- that place, where there isnā€™t anything IĀ canā€™t achieve. Where if IĀ can dream it, I willĀ do it.

Iā€™ve been a ā€œMommy Bloggerā€ at A Mama’s Blog, since 2007. I had success with it and I truly enjoyed it. I stopped blogging about my kids a few years ago, as I felt it invaded their privacy. But Iā€™ve always been a writer. Iā€™m not a professional athlete or coach with all the answers, or resources. I want to do this for myself- to find that part of me again, and show myself I can. And in the process inspire anyone else who wants to find their ā€œRunning Freeā€ spirit too- no matter if that is jogging one mile a week, achieving something they keep putting off, or an ultra marathon.

So I decided itā€™s time to start running and writing again, and to share my journey from being solely goal and results focused to running free. This isnā€™t going to be a blog about knocking 3 seconds off my 10K time, or increasing my mileage 10% every week. This is about the spirit of running- that raw, pure, joy and happiness in those rare moments Iā€™ve had running, where it all comes together, and Iā€™m ā€œrunning free.ā€

Iā€™m going to write about those moments, and how to find that- by running free, and showing you donā€™t have to spend tons of money to become a runner. Iā€™ve often thought over the years, ā€œWhy does it cost so much to run?ā€

So ā€œRunning Free Blogā€ is about that running spirit but also about finding that without having to buy the latest gear, or entering races and spending a lot of money to achieve your goals.

Itā€™s a change for me. I know it wonā€™t always be easy, but it will be fun. Iā€™m going minimalist. Iā€™m going to transition to minimalist running. So Iā€™m really starting from square one, and ditching my running style Iā€™ve developed for the past 6 years. Iā€™m starting over.

Iā€™m not going to track my times, and pacing anymore. Iā€™m an accountant in ā€œreal lifeā€ so tracking my running times, stats and statistics- I love it. Iā€™m giving that up. Because when I run with times in mind, I get injured. Iā€™m going to run without music at times too. Iā€™m going to connect with the journey again. My feet, step by step, making contact with the ground. Iā€™m going to let my feet do the thinking when Iā€™m running. Iā€™m going to let my body- not my Garmin- set the pace.

Iā€™m going to notice the sunsets again. The wheat fields, the scent of the sweet hay on a late summerā€™s evening. The sunset dipping behind the glorious Rocky Mountains. The rest will take care of itself. I believe this, and Iā€™m going to start living and running it.

Why?

The answer hasnā€™t changed for me- itā€™s the same reason I started running, when I wasnā€™t even sure, six years ago, if my first run would be my last.

ā€œBecause I Can.ā€