True Inspiration
True Inspiration

When Harriet Anderson crossed the finish line at Kona — the Ford Ironman World Championship — in October 2009, there were a few reasons she stood out.

At 74 years of age, she was the oldest female competitor to complete the race. At 11:53 p.m. she finished, just seven minutes before the cutoff. And the reason she’d taken longer than usual?

The arm taped to her side was a clue. She’d broken her clavicle at mile 80 of the bike ride when another cyclist bumped into her. Did that deter Harriet? No. She picked herself up, finished the next 32 miles on the bike, and promptly walked the entire 26.2 miles of the marathon.

You can power through the 2.4-mile swim in ocean water. You can jump on your 27-speed carbon bicycle to ram through 112 miles of hot, dry pavement. Finally, you slip into a pair of shorts for a 26.2-mile marathon. Thousands begin the race and many fail to make the finish.  In 2013, at the age of 78, no one else could match her “Wonder Woman” power to cross the finish line—first in her age group.

Running an Ironman breaks most men down to physical misery and exhaustion. To do what she does at age 53 all the way to 78 defies our imagination. If you are a man or woman, look her story up on the Internet. She will motivate you, cause a sense of awe in you and bring out the best in your body, mind and spirit.

Endurance sports are not about finding your limits; they’re about finding out what lies beyond them. For Harriet Anderson, she lives with no limits.

 
 
Seen a lot of slim chicks posting their

workouts on here so I thought I'd join 

the fun
Warning : I will bully every one of you

into daily stretches, plyo drills, crazy 

intervals, lifting heavy weights and 

epic long runs
104 °F.....  As my Grandma says, 

"Marathon training ain't for p*ssies."



Crazy old lady is right.

New Featured eBibs

If ya runner is having a bad day, then surprise... so are you
RUNNING HACK: There are no f-ing hacks.  If running is difficult,  RUN MORE.
I don't mean to complain but I just  really feel like I should be a Nike sponsored runner by now.
Sore today, strong tomorrow.  Nope, still sore.
You know you're a runner when... You  can say things like "I'm just running  an easy 6 miler today" and you really mean it.
Every chance you get, shine.  They hate that.
What a beautiful day to go for a run  and tell everyone to f*ck off
HIM:   I'm getting hints of oak,  currant and cassis ME:  I'm getting  hammered
Me: I'm gonna start having more fun  on weekends, life is too short *Me on weekends -after a long run*
Instagram and Facebook are down?! Now how will people know I ran today???
Trying to embrace taper week is like feeding a kid candy then telling him  to sit still.... it ain't easy!!
Shoutout to everyone checking their  stats on Strava, Fitbit or Garmin on  the company dime right now
If you ever want time to slow down,  run on the treadmill.
You know you're a runner when...  you get mad that an injury keeps  you from running, not that  it damaged your body.
Long run and 95 degree weather,  what a mf tragedy.
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