The sun is up, the air is fresh, the stone is old

December 22, 2024

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Location:

Logan,UT,USA

Member Since:

Dec 15, 2009

Gender:

Male

Goal Type:

Other

Running Accomplishments:

PRs after age 40:

 

5k     15:15  Running of the Leopards.

8k      22:21  Alta Death Dash

10k   33:02    Des News

Half Marathon      1:10  Timp Half

Marathon        2:32    Ogden

First solo R2R2R Bass Trails Grand Canyon 

First R2R2R Grand Canyon Toroweap Overlook

 

Short-Term Running Goals:

Not be fat all year

Long-Term Running Goals:

Smell the dirt, feel the mountain, taste the wind.

Personal:

 

"Our legs are tight, our feet are flying, and we are gliding over the roll of the land. The sun is up, the air is fresh, the stone is old, and we are free and at peace. The clock has stopped because another time has taken over." C. Bowden

Favorite Blogs:

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Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 0.00 Year: 0.00
Easy MilesMarathon Pace MilesThreshold MilesVO2 Max MilesTotal Distance
5.403.005.000.0013.40

Time to get back to work running.  Continuous interval run today and excited to survive it.  2 mile warmup, 3 miles at 5:45 pace, 6X 800 at 2:30 pace, 6X200 at 1:10 pace, 4X100 balls to the wall, 3.4 cool down.  Warm up, cool down and 1/4 mile in between intervals done at 7:30 pace. 

Amazingly enough once again dealing with the same "competition" issue that I heard last spring.  My youngest daughter's soccer team is making the shift to non-scoring.  My oldest daughter's annual Mile Race the fourth and fifth grade do every year is this year changing to participation only.  It's confusing to the kids and I've racked my brain the last three days trying to answer my 9 year old's questions about it.  I wrote this to the Principal:

The Mantra "Winning is Everything" is false, but so is the ever increasing belief that competition is harmful; that participation is the heart of sports.  Participation is great, but it’s hardly what sports and especially life are about.  The problem is misconception of success, of greatness.  Success is not the same as achievement.  Success lies in the process to achievement.  If achievement is winning a race or doing the impossible, success is believing in yourself, training for the impossible, and running that race with everything you have, every time.  Achievement is a goal, an endpoint that one strives for.  Success is what you could have right now, this instant, each one of us, no matter what our condition, weight, pace, goal or path towards that endpoint.  It’s the understanding that you are ever changing, endless striving, completely uncomfortable, more stupid than every person you meet, and have only just started being what you want to be.  It’s fun.  Replace achievement with participation and you lose success.

 

Kind of a mix of what we runners think about and talk to each other about. 

Night Sleep Time: 0.00Nap Time: 0.00Total Sleep Time: 0.00Weight: 0.00Calories: 0.00
Comments
From Jake K on Thu, May 10, 2012 at 19:45:45 from 67.182.215.126

Really well said Steve. I agree with you 110% that participation is great, but there is nothing wrong with striving for greatness and success. I could write 10,000 words on this topic, but I think your letter is very articulate and drives the point home in a fair, balanced way.

Great workout today too!

From jtshad on Fri, May 11, 2012 at 07:46:53 from 204.134.132.225

Great workout! I do wish we lived closer so we could do workouts together, I need someone to drive me to train harder at intervals.

Very good editorial about the balance of participation and willingness to drive for success. I have the opposite issue with my son right now, he kind of wants to participate in running events, but is only putting in the bare minimum. I want him to see the results of hard work, but don't want to drive him away from the sport.

From Steve on Fri, May 11, 2012 at 09:23:50 from 66.87.67.241

Thanks guys. Jeff, my daughter also asked me why on earth I run if I never win. It's so hard for the kids to understand why you would want to work so hard at something that someone always beats you at. I think if you grow up never exercising the desire at all to try and be the best at something, you end up being an adult who really doesn't care either. It could be I'm a little fixated on this right now. I'm basically half a parent since I'm divorced, with an Ex who has no interest in having kids excell at anything. It's tough to sell.

From Steve on Fri, May 11, 2012 at 09:27:34 from 66.87.67.241

I don't need them to excell, so much as to care. It's like Rob's bumper sticker, "No Half Assing".

From Jake K on Fri, May 11, 2012 at 09:33:54 from 155.100.226.54

That's a great point - not everyone, no matter how hard they work, it going to end up in the top 1%... but TRYING to do your BEST carries over into everything else you do in your life. It helps you become the best person you can be, teaches you how to rise up and face challenges, maximize your own potential, etc. Sports and competition are great ways (maybe the best ways?) to teach these life lessons.

From Steve on Sat, May 12, 2012 at 21:21:36 from 66.87.65.49

I think its a big part of what keeps me running, just hanging out with more people who are driven

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