Old Man Still running

Rex Lee 10K

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Location:

Saratoga Springs,UT,

Member Since:

Jan 31, 2008

Gender:

Male

Goal Type:

Local Elite

Running Accomplishments:

2016 Finished 12 100-milers during the year.  86 career 100-mile finishes, 9th in the world.   First person to do 6 consecutive summits of Mount Timpanogos.  Won Crooked Road 24-hour race. Achieved the 5th, 6th, and 8th fastest 100-mile times in the world for runners age 57+ for the year.

2013  First person to bag the six highest Wasatch peaks in one day. First and only person to do a Kings Peak double (highest peak in Utah).  I've now accomplished it four times. 

2010 - Overall first place Across the Years 48-hour run (187 miles), Overall first place Pony Express Traill 100.

2009 - Utah State Grand Masters 5K champion (Road Runners Club of America).  National 100-mile Grand Masters Champion (Road Runners Club of America). USATF 100-mile National Champion for age 50-54.

2006 - Set record of five consecutive Timpanogos Summits ("A record for the criminally insane")  See: http://www.crockettclan.org/blog/?p=42

2007 - Summited 7 Utah 13-ers in one day.  See: http://www.crockettclan.org/blog/?p=14 

Only person to have finished nine different 100-mile races in Utah: Wasatch, Bear, Moab, Pony Express Trail, Buffalo Run, Salt Flats, Bryce, Monument Valley, Capitol Reef.

PRs - all accomplished when over 50 years old

5K - 19:51 - 2010 Run to Walk 5K

10K - 42:04 - 2010 Smile Center

1/2 Marathon: 1:29:13 - 2011 Utah Valley

Marathon - 3:23:43 - 2010 Ogden Marathon

50K - 4:38 - 2010 Across the Years split

50-mile - 8:07 - 2010 Across the Years split

100K - 10:49 - 2010 Across The Years split

12-hours 67.1 miles - 2010 Across The Years split

100-mile 19:40 - 2011 Across the Years split

24-hours 117.8 miles - 2011 Across the Years split

48-hours 187.033 miles - 2010 Across the Years

Long-Term Running Goals:

I would like to keep running ultras into my 60s. 

Personal:

Details at: http://www.crockettclan.org/ultras/ultracrockett.pdf Married with six kids and six grandchildren.  Started running at the age of 46 in 2004.  My first race since Junior High days was a 50K. I skipped the shorter road stuff and went straight to ultramarathons.  I started as a back-of-the packer, but have progressed to a top-10-percent ultra finisher.  Wish I would have started running at a much earlier age.  Have had several articles published in national running magazines.  Check out my running adventure blog at www.crockettclan.org/blog

Favorite Blogs:

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21.00
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Just a one mile walk to stretch out the sore quads from the 50-mile run.

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Stayed home sick, bad sinus headache.  Legs feel recovered.  It is amazing how fast they recover now from ultra distance runs.

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9.00

At 4 a.m. I went out into the 28 degree cold and ran out to the Lake Mountain ridge. The almost-full moon was wonderful and glowed over the valley and off of Mount Timpanogos far across Utah Lake to the east. I was surprised to find in the dark a new motercycle trail spur that I had never noticed. I suspected that there might be one in that area, but had never seriously explored. This single-track trail was great and nice and long. I noticed a set of runner footprints on it from the past week or so. So another runner knows about this hidden trail. Kind of surprising because it is 2-3 miles from any homes. This spur is more runnable than the one I have been using to the north, a little less steep, so I will have some fun trying to blast down it with speed.

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Again this week a close friend seriously confronted me and let me know that they thought I was ruining my life and the life of others by participating in, and encouraging ultrarunning.  Their belief is

1. That because they get injured as a low-mileage recreational runner, surely a high-mileage ultrarunner is seriously damaging their body far more. 
2. They believe that some exercise is of course good, but the level of exercise an ultrarunner participates in not normal and therefore unhealthy.
3. They believe that because they know someone who spends hours away from their families training that therefore all ultrarunners are neglecting their families and being selfish.

Such concerns from non-runners and recreational runners are common and hard to explain away.  Some don’t want to hear explanations.

Let me deal with each concern:

Because they get injured as a low-mileage recreational runner, surely a high-mileage ultrarunner is seriously damaging their body far more. 

It is my firm belief that ultrarunners are far less-susceptible to injury than recreational runners.  When I was a recreational runner, I was always getting injured and it would make me quit running.  I then became a couch potato, gained weight and had poor health.  I see recreational runners always battling injuries.   I constantly advise runners how to recover from injuries.  On this blog I see high-milage road runners battle injuries. 

There is one huge difference in the running I do.  I avoid roads like the plague.  The only time I run roads is during a road race (5k, 10k, etc.) or during the winter when the trails are muddy.   This makes a huge difference on the wear and tear of an ultrarunners body.   I do believe that high-mileage on roads can be damaging to the body over time because of the jarring caused.   Soft trails are a world of difference.

I also believe that once ultrarunners have established a high mileage base (and sometimes they do go through injury to reach this) that their body has gone through some amazing adjustments that now prevent injuries that a recreational runner may more commonly see.   I’m always asked, “Aren’t you ruining your knees?’   No!  My knees now are stronger, the ligaments and sinews tighter, such that they can endure great distances without problem.  I don’t get ITB or runner’s knee problem anymore that a low-mileage recreational runner has to deal with often.  People just can’t understand the wonder of the human body, that it can do amazing things to adjust once it has become used to stress.  It puts up new barriers to protect itself from that stress.

Recreational runners don’t know about the fast recovery ultrarunners experience once they have a high-mileage base.   After my first 100-mile race, I could hardly walk for a week, and couldn’t run for a month.  I also experienced some soft-tissue damage in my knee.   But I didn’t have that high-mileage base to protect me.   Now I do.   I can run a 4-hour marathon and feel no pain the next day.  I can run a 50-mile race, and be out running pain-free in three days.    I can run a 100-miler and be out running pain-free in one week.   The human body is amazing.  It fascinates me how it adjusts.  Recreational runners just don’t understand this.   If they feel a month of pain after a marathon, surely ultrarunners must feel several months of pain after a 100-miler.  Well, that logic is a fallacy.

OK, surely I have developed some chronic injuries from the 13,000 miles that I have run, from the 22 100-milers, and 43 ultras in the past five years.   Yes, I have some chronic injuries to deal with.   I’ll document them.

1. I have a soreness in my right inner quad/groin muscle that flairs up.  I believe it was injured during the 2007 Plain 100.  I didn’t notice it until the next week.  It was very sore for a couple months.  I must have torn something.  But it calmed down.  Now it flares up every now and then but rarely bothers me during a race.  I notice it mostly at night as I sleep and the body does normal stretching.  I will wake up feeling some pain there from stretching it.  Very minor.
2. I have some numbness in my feet -- the ball of my feet extending to a couple toes.   It is minor and I don’t really notice it much or I’m just used to it.  After long races it will be more pronounced, but then it mostly goes away.  I don’t see this as much of a problem.
3. I have a neuroma in the ball of my right foot.  This is a bunching of nerves that can cause severe pain extending out to your toes.  Anyone can get this even non-runners.  I just deal with it.  Using a thinner insole helps.  During a race it can flare up for about ten miles and really hurt, but then it calms down, I think once the surrounding tissue swells a little to protect it.
4. I tore the meniscus in my right knee when I was an over-weight backpacker.  So, I have less cartilage protection in that knee.  I can feel pain there at times, but I have learned to manage it and the knee has became stronger and now protects itself.
5. About twice a year I bruise my bladder, usually due to running dehydtrated.  The result is soreness in the adomen and hematurina (blood).  This can be alarming but a running doctor understands what is going on.  I let it heal and am more careful about hydration.
6. I’ve developed sesimoiditis in my left foot.  There are two little bones in the ball of the foot behind the big toe.  These have became irriated over time and get inflamed.  They are not fractured, but the surrounding tissue has grown more in an attempt to protect them.   To deal with this, I just make a custom insole to give me more room in the shoe for that area of the foot.  This usually solves the problem, but it can flare up on 100-milers.
7. I have some cool scars on my arms and legs from face-plants on the trail.  Big deal, at age 50 I’m not entering beauty contests anymore.  To prevent this, I like running with hand-held running bottles.  When I fall, the bottles take the brunt of the damage.

That is it.  I really can’t think of anything else.  No stress fractures, no ITB problems, no chondromalacia (runner’s knee), no planter fasciitis, no serious muscle problems, no back problems.

When I have health checkups, the doctors and nurses are impressed.  My cholestoral level is great because of the super high level of HDL caused by good fitness.  Nurses who draw my blood always comment on the wonderful deep red color due to high oxygen content.  When I had a EKG the technician commented on my strong heart and said, “you must be a runner.”

So, how am I damaging my body?  I get occasional colds and sinus infections (due to a deviated septum) but never the flu.   I’m old, 50.  Where is this damage?

Some exercise is of course good, but the level of exercise an ultrarunner participates in not normal and therefore unhealthy.

Recreational runners for some reason believe there is a wall at 26.2 miles and that anything over that is not normal.  What is so magic about 26.2 miles?   OK, yes recreational runners constantly complain about “hitting the wall” before that distance.  They therefore think it is a barrier, and anyone going past that is not normal and doing something amazing or unhealthy.   All this is silly.  The recreational runner just doesn’t know how to fuel properly and get the balance in their body to prevent bonking past their “wall.”  Their body hasn’t yet adjusted to the stress of high mileage.  Just because they haven’t experience the lack of pain and stress at long distances, doesn’t mean it isn’t possible, even for them.


I probably exercise on average about 10-12 hours per week.  Is that excessive?   Because I now have a high-mileage base and my body has adapted in amazing ways, I can be dormant for days and then just jump right back into the saddle with no problem for even higher performance.  Recreational runners or non-runners just can’t understand that.  I’m not exercising huge amounts each week.  Yes if I wanted to be an elite ultrarunner, winning races, I would need to do much more.  But, I’m 50 years old.  Its not going to happen.  I’m happy with strong performance in races and a fitness level so I can do them often.

With the amount of exercise I do, I know far more about my body.   I understand the signals it sends me when there is something wrong.   I believe strongly that if I develop a serious illness, that I will detect it far faster than when I was a couch potato.  I know my body now.  I didn’t before.   I believe my life will be extended for years more because of ultrarunning if I’m lucky enough to avoid accident and disease.  As a couch potato, or even as an occasional recreational runner, I didn’t have this knowledge or fitness to protect my body.

Because they know someone who spends hours away from their families training that therefore all ultrarunners are neglecting their families.

I am an obsessive-compulsive person.   I know that.   I try to use that as a strength, not a weakness.  I’ll take hold of something and go crazy with it.  I’ve authored/published three books in 18 months.   Obsessive.  I’ve gone crazy doing family history research, far more than any “normal person.”  I’ve studied LDS scriptures and history far more than any “normal person.”   I helped establish a successful Internet startup that went from nothing to amazing in just a year.  I know I go overboard, and put in safeguards.

As far as running, I try to be careful with my time.   My wife sleeps about nine hours on average per night.   I sleep about 6.5 hours on average per night.   Therefore, there is on average about 2.5 hours per day when I’m awake and the rest of the family is asleep.    I try to do almost all of my training during those hours.   Where is the harm to the family?    Yes, for races I’m away, but I try to get my family to go with me at times and when I add up the days, I’m home far, far, less than others who have demanding jobs that take them away from home or church callings that require them to be away so much.   In a few months, with another son graduating from highschool, I will only have one child at home (compared to the six that were home previously).  The family time-demands are now much different when the family was younger.  Yes, my wife will grumble at times because of my running.  She isn’t a runner.  But I negotiate, try to listen, and try to be a good husband and father.  We have a very happy family life.  So why all the criticism?

Some argue that ultrarunning is a very selfish use of time.   I don’t buy this at all.   A musician will spend hours each week practicing.  How is their talent less selfish?   I make sure my ultrarunning experience is not selfish by writing about my experiences and sharing them with others.   This is very fulfilling.  I know my writings have affects hundreds of people who have been inspired to improve their lives with better fitness or set greater heights in their goals.   One close friend, a non-runner, was so inspired by my tales of endurance and reaching for goals that he became determined to do “marathon” sessions of LDS temple work and name extraction.   It greatly blessed his life.

Conclusion

I’m comfortable with being an ultrarunner.  I know the general population thinks it is crazy because their conclusions are from their own experience and prospective.  They don’t understand the facts.   I’m at the point where I just avoid trying to debate it with close friends or relatives.  Ok, I have that off my chest, now I can go do something better with me time, like go running.

Comments(2)
Race: Rex Lee 10K (6.2 Miles) 00:43:17, Place overall: 65, Place in age division: 2
Total Distance
7.00

I ran in the Rex Lee 10K race in Provo that helps benefit cancer research.  My 12-year-old son ran in the 5K.  There were 521 runners in the 10K and 1,470 in the 5K.  At the start line, I found my speedy brother-in-law Ed Johnson and we warmed up together.  The course is pretty fast.  It has some hills near the beginning and ends with a steady gentle climb, but I set my goal to set a PR and break 43 minutes.   I was a little skeptical about this goal because I had raced 50 miles hard only 7 days ago.  But I felt confident.

The George Q. cannon roared, and away we went.  During the first 1/4 mile I ran with Ed.  I joked around and bumped him a couple times telling him he was going slow and pushed ahead a little, but couldn't keep that pace long.   Ed went up ahead and I tried to keep pace with the other runners around me.   I forgot to start my watch, but I think the mile markers were grossly misplaced because when I did start it at mile 1, my mile 2 was very slow and my mile 3 was blazing fast.  It didn't make sense.

On the downhill I tried my best to keep my foot speed up.  At about the three-mile mark I noticed a guy pass me who looked like he was in my age group.   I tried to keep up but at that point I started to struggle a little.  The legs felt heavy, a result of the race last week.  Some runners started to slow down and because of parked cars along Center Street it became frustrating trying to pass slower runners who insisted to run side-by-side.  Finally I chastized two, telling them to not run two-abrest if they are going slower.  They shouted back, "What?"  Oh well.

After mile five the course merges with the 5K runners.  These runners are going significantly slower (30-minute 5K pace), so I had to swing wide to the left in order to continue to have room to pass them.   I was delighted to catch up with my son Connor.  He was doing great!   He tried to keep up for a little while but then faded.   I poured it on the best I could and entered onto the track.   I had to swing wide in order to pass dozens of 5K runners.  Then with 100 yards to go, some young runners decided to sprint like crazy and swing in front of me.  I didn't have much left in the tank and just pushed hard to the finish.   The clock said, 43:13, but the official time ended up being 43:17, in 65th place.   I was pleased.  It was a PR for me by almost a full minute.   I earned a second-place medal for my age group and that one guy was the only guy older than me to finish ahead of me.

Connor came in a couple minutes later with a 29:34 5K finish.   Pretty good for a kid whose only training was a one-mile run a couple days ago.   My speedy brother-in-law Ed finished 26th in the 10K, 40:08, 2nd in his age group.

Comments(2)
Total Distance
21.00
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