Find the Lost Sheep

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Sasha Pachev:
Bloggers:

I am inviting everybody to go after the Lost Sheep to see if we can bring them back into the fold. When you to somebody's blog you will see the Lost Sheep section further down on your right. Those are the runners that have not posted in over a month. As of this writing we have a total of 443 blogs and 189 or 42% of them are in the Lost Sheep status.

Pick a couple and leave them a comment or send them a message. Most of those runners love to run and love the blog, they just have hit a rough patch in their life and training. Some are injured, some think they are too busy to blog, others feel their running is so bad it is not worth blogging. They could us a word of encouragement. Let's give them a hand.  Do not be shy about leaving too many comments or sending too many messages. Maybe one or two fellows might feel annoyed, if they do they can disable the public display of their blog in the worst case (or , better, just start blogging regularly), but most will feel an outpouring of love and support from our community if all of a sudden they see 10 or more personal messages from different people.

Also, do not forget the Lone Faithfuls. Those are the runners that have blogged within the last week but have gotten fewer comments than anybody else. Often those bloggers are a bit shy and we do not naturally notice them. Let's get them involved as well.

Scott Zincone:
Sasha - I loved the "kick in the pants" you sent Mike Kirk.  Do you know if he is still running?  I cannot imagine him stopping unless he was injured or something.  I was half hoping to check the Ogden results this weekend and see his name there.

Sasha Pachev:
I have not seen him in any races.

Andrea Birch:
Thanks for the reminder Sasha.  I know it puts a smile on my face when I get a comment on my blog!

Brad Taylor:
I am a testament to what Sasha is preaching.  I was blogging consistently from about August 2006 to January 2007.  I had a purpose for blogging--I was preparing for a marathon.  Then because my mileage decreased and I didn't have a singular purpose driving my running, I just kind of stopped blogging. 

Quite honestly, it can be a bit intimidating on the blog when your mileage from three of your running days combined look like a slow morning run for others.  There are all the individual accomplishments, PRs, training schedules, etc plus all the technical talk that also intimidates.  VO2 Max?, I thought.  Is that related to VO5 Shampoo?  Then as my running days went from 4 or 5 to only 2 or 3, I almost felt guilty (or unworthy) to post such rubbish on the blog.  So I stopped. 

In April or May of this year, Sasha dropped me a quick email that simply said, "How's the running?  We'd love to see you back on the blog."  It got me thinking about the blog and my running.  I came to realize that my blog isn't for everyone else, it's for me (Yeah, I know, not exactly a burning bush type revelation).  And if nothing else, it could serve almost a short journal of this part of my life for my two boys (like Big Plates vs. Little Plates in the Book of Mormon for those who follow). 

Anyway, I know I've been back for a whopping 3 weeks, but I definitely enjoy being back.  I've also found that blogging about the runs and reading other blogs has helped me stay motivated, pushes me, and keeps me honest about my running. 

Now if we can call on someone to lead us in a hymn and prayer, I'll get down from the podium and we can all skip a Church meeting or two on Sunday.  :)

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