The Cold, Dark Run
The Cold, Dark Run

Running in the sun with your friends by your side, a slight breeze at your back, surrounded by beauty, and feeling unstoppable are moments we welcome—sweet and pleasurable. Surely, we’ve all experienced such breathtaking occasions. But there are other periods in a runner’s training as well.

This time of year in the Intermountain West it’s more common for a runner to be out there alone in the cold and dark. Shorter daylight hours, long work days, and below freezing temperatures limit options to run in more hospitable conditions.

If a runner wants to achieve their goals, they must go out alone into the cold and dark, make friends with their solitude, and embrace the quiet sound of their own labored breathing.

Like the winter season in a runner’s training regimen, we all go through times of isolation, with limited options. As runners, we too must push through the dark and cold if we are to realize the beauty and fullness of being that only comes through consistent and steady effort.

Ultimately, the key may be in embracing struggle as it comes and welcoming the embryo of strength such exertions create. After all, it is out there on our cold, dark runs that we discover ourselves and make running in the sun even more brilliant.

 
 
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

Sometimes I get distracted by my own legs like... nice...
How my marathon training started.                        And ended.
Me: "idk why i'm not losing weight."  Also me:
Sorry for the person I become when I'm unable to run.... I don't know her
If you love her, buy her running shoes.
I just blocked someone for posting  "Running sucks". I am not f*cking  around today
Running involves buying a LOT more lube than I ever imagined possible.
I'm 40 but I feel like I'm 20 ... Until I hang out with some 20 years olds for mile repeats. Then I'm like no, never mind, I'm 40.
My doctor: "no running for 5 weeks" Me & Lil Nas X:  "can't nobody tell me nothiiiiiing"
No one: Literally no one:  Me:  yeah i'm down for five
Me:  *crossing the finish line* Mile 26.2:  Congratulations. If you can make it here, you can make it anywhere.
At mile 20 I thought I was dead.  At mile 22 I wished I was dead.  At mile 24 I knew I was dead.  At mile 26.2 I realized I had  become too tough to kill.
Anyone else feel personally attacked  by the non-runners when they ask  "Did you win it" after a marathon?
You either want to be a distance runner or you want skinny jeans. You really  can't have both.
i like my morning run more than  i like most people
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