Show HN: Ten years of running every day, visualized
958 points
20 days ago
| 100 comments
| nodaysoff.run
| HN
Today marks ten years, 3653 consecutive days, of running at least one mile every day under the USRSA rules [1]. To celebrate, I built an interactive dashboard that turns a decade of GPX files into charts you can explore.

Running has truly changed my life: I've made lifelong friends, explored beautiful places, and more importantly invested into my own health and fitness, which I'm starting to see the positive benefits as I get older.

The stack is pretty simple: a NextJS app, with a Postgres database to keep all my running data, and all the stats are pre-computed and cached in Redis, so I effectively only hit the database once a day when a new run is ingested. On the fronted, I toyed with the idea of using D3 or pre-existing data viz libraries, but ended up rolling my own using SVGs directly, it gave me more control on the visualizations.

I used the Strava bulk export to pre-populate the database, and I'm using their webhook API to do incremental updates. I have to tap into OpenWeatherMap and OpenCageDate to enrich the running data a little bit.

Happy to answer anything about the stack, data pipeline, or how I stayed motivated for 10 years!

[1] https://www.runeveryday.com Run Streak Association rules: ≥ 1 mile per day

lbrito
16 days ago
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>I've run through stress fractures, heart procedures, flus and other physical ailments. I've run in frigid sub zero weather and in sweltering heat.

Respectfully, that sounds awful. Being sick sucks enough, the last thing I'd want or benefit from doing is physical activity during a flu.

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friggeri
16 days ago
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Having experienced them, those runs were surprisingly not awful. In such cases I’ll jog a very slow mile, paying really close attention to what my body tells me (if I can walk, I can shuffle a mile or so). If anything, the act of getting out of the house and accomplishing something has more than once given me a morale and energy boost while sick.

The actually awful runs I’ve had are more of the "type 2 fun" kind (running in the desert, grueling trail runs), or the occasional hungover run before I quit drinking.

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WA
16 days ago
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Did you have the flu (influenza) or a cold? Because I had influenza once and couldn’t even walk from bed to the kitchen.

I’m asking, because in German, many people call a regular cold a flu here.

But the chance to catch real influenza is like once every 20 years or so.

What about COVID-19?

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ghc
16 days ago
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I'm a daily runner and I had influenza in February, for the first time in 30 years. I had a high fever for a full week and could not even sit up in bed.

People tend to think any bad cold is the flu, and underestimate just how bad actual influenza is. In retrospect, the narrative of "COVID is just like a bad flu" is pretty accurate, because the actual flu is a pretty traumatic experience, and the idea of getting a worse version is terrifying.

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kstrauser
16 days ago
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Hah! I had that exact reaction. So many medicines are labeled like “X Cold and Flu”, like “X Stubbed Toe and Decapitation”, and people start thinking about them as similar.

No, they’re. Not. One is miserable. The other invites pleas for a quick and merciful death.

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apelapan
15 days ago
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Influenza is not necessarily that bad, though it can be.

Most of the time influenza is not worse than a normal cold. You will have plenty of partial immunity via previous infections and vaccinations that takes the edge of most infections.

Same as COVID. Most of the infections are not even noticed by the ones infected. But sometimes it is/was extremely bad, if you had no previous exposure/vaccination, a large amount of bad luck and/or pre existing condition.

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mbreese
16 days ago
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Also a daily runner (6.5 years) - the worst time to run is when you have a head cold. The impact from the run just pounds throughout your skull. I have run when I had influenza and Covid. Only one mile at a time, up and down my driveway, but it wasn’t pleasant. But it was really only bad for a day or two, and for the sake of the running streak, you run (jog/walk) your mile and you’re done (and you collapse back to sleep). Then, once you’re starting to feel a little better, the feeling of running just one mile (when you’re used to running 3 or more) is the hard part.

I also ended up training for a marathon while I had a mild pneumonia. I had no clue until I saw my doctor for a routine checkup.

When you have a running streak like this, you find ways to make it work. You’re often running with some kind of a knock, be it a cold, or some knee pain.

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urban_winter
16 days ago
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I am a runner. I had proper flu this year for the first time. I have never been that ill ever before. I could not even get upstairs to bed one night when I was at my worst.
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padjo
16 days ago
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My mothers advice on how to tell if it’s cold or flu: if someone dropped a big pile of money outside your window and you could get out of bed to retrieve it then it’s probably just a cold, if not it’s flu.
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stank345
16 days ago
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If you think you have the flu, it's a cold. If you think you're dying, it's the flu.
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titusjohnson
16 days ago
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I had proper Flu this year, and almost exactly 4 weeks later caught COVID for the first time. Prior to these events I had a 5 year streak of being completely illness free, not a sniffle, not a head cold.

Both illnesses completely K.O.'d me. Literally 5 days straight of laying on the couch alternating between sleeping, sweating, or just groaning when I tried to move. So uncomfortable I couldn't even enjoy watching TV. I spent most of my awake time just kinda.... staring at the ceiling.

During the Flu on day 4 or 5 I was starting to feel a bit better, I was starting to care that my house was a bit of a wreck and the carpet in particular getting pretty gross (lots of dog treat crumbs). I did a half-assed job of vacuuming 2 bedrooms, the living room, and the den. Took maybe 15 minutes. That was the extent of my activity for the rest of the day, I was just wrecked. Had to sit down to catch my breath and get control of some violent shakes.

Next time I catch the flu I have to try going for a jog. It would probably put me into a coma long enough to sleep through the rest of the cold.

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anonymous344
15 days ago
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tip for the flu or cold: because they (viruses) get into your sinuses, and start to multiply there, not in the mouth or stomach, then would be good to put something in the sinuses to kill them. This needs to be done at the first sneeze! when there aren't yet billions of them. netipot, with cleaned water + salt is the way used for thousands of years. What is extra is to put pea size amount of cold pressed/virgin coconut oil in there (when water about 30c degrees, but not hotter) and flush with it. antiviral and antibacterial, gives nice coating also to sensitive skin inside sinuses. you'll skip the whole perioid of getting sick. works. trust me
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titusjohnson
14 days ago
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I might have to give that a try. It's been decades since I tried a netipot.
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kaffekaka
16 days ago
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My experience as well. The one time I had the proper flu there was absolutely no chance I would walk, let alone run, more than 10 meters inside the apartment. I was completely broken for five, six days and just a wreck the week after that. Awful memory.
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barry-cotter
16 days ago
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Different people react differently to flu and different strains are different. I remember when I was 30 I got the flu and I had enough energy to walk to the nearest convenience store to get lunch and enough energy to do an hour of driving practice a day and the rest of the time I lay in bed. I did not have the energy to read a book. I didn’t have the motivation to turn on the radio. It was awful. Glad I haven’t had the flu since.
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fifilura
16 days ago
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My flus were probably covids, I think it tends to bounce around in the population in the post covid days while loosing strength.

I have one really bad case if flu 20 years ago. Maybe I'll have to give up my streak then. It will be a bit sad, but maybe good for me that it opens up for some other way of exercise.

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tirant
16 days ago
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Different people react differently to flu and colds.

I usually don’t get any colds at all, but I catch the flu once a year and need to be in bed at least for a week. So I started vaccinating since a couple of years and have avoided it so far.

My wife on the other hand catches every cold possible but her flu is gone in a couple of days.

Said that, my doctor has always strongly advised against doing any sport during flu or immediately after due to risks of heart infection. That’s something I’m going to follow, I’m not a sports professional and I have no need to risk my hearts health.

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etruong42
13 days ago
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I've had Influenza A before in my mid-30s. To be honest, I couldn't even tell I had it. I had the sniffles, went to get a COVID check, and came back Influenza A-positive.

I did my usual, ran a few miles on the treadmill, did family walks all over, etc. I just felt lethargic - like I didn't sleep well at all, but I powered through it.

I know people who were absolutely bedridden with the flu. I can 100% believe some people can almost entirely brush it off too.

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BrandoElFollito
15 days ago
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> in German, many people call a regular cold a flu here.

Intersting, in France we have the "flu-ish state" (un état grippal) when you have a seriuos cold.

Flu (grippe) is a real sickness, determined by the doctor or extrapolated from the context (everything around your head it, now it's your turn).

They are very distinct, though.

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roarcher
16 days ago
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I ran a couple miles on a treadmill the last time I had COVID because I was going stir crazy from lying on the couch all week. It actually gave me a bit of a boost for the rest of the day, though I returned to feeling crappy the following day.
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thfuran
15 days ago
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Yes, that mistake is common in English as well.
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grantmuller
16 days ago
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In the ultra running community, it's common to do a 1 mile "test" when you're feeling awful. You start your run, and if it still feels awful after 1 mile you walk on back home and try again tomorrow. Do this until you can just keep going again.
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pmg101
16 days ago
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It was interesting today to discover the concept of "type 2 fun".

I often wondered why people did these self-evidently unfun things, purportedly "for fun".

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nathan_compton
16 days ago
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I think part of it is that I just don't think of pain as per se bad. A lot of people I know who struggle with exercise feel a little discomfort and act like its the end of the world. They get shin splits or something and they decide they can't run. I've had mild shin splits continuously for 15 years. It doesn't really bother me in the same way, I guess. When I get back from a run if I lightly bump my shins its excruciating.

I will say that now that I am getting older its getting a bit tougher - the pain is worse and lasts longer and real chronic pain kind of bums me out, but I just enjoy the challenge of trying to work around my body.

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ayewo
15 days ago
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> I will say that now that I am getting older its getting a bit tougher - the pain is worse and lasts longer and real chronic pain kind of bums me out, but I just enjoy the challenge of trying to work around my body.

Please see this as your body trying to tell you something before you end up with a bad injury that could prevent you from running for weeks.

For me, shin splits subsided after I got more comfortable running shoes and shortening the distance covered during runs (i.e. ~5km down to ~3km, 5-days a week).

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User23
16 days ago
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Some people get literally high when running. Some don’t. The get high types invariably posture as if they have more dedication or willpower. Funny stuff.
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freedomben
15 days ago
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It still takes a lot of discipline to make yourself get out there, especially on days when you don't feel well. The "high" only comes after the exercise is well underway. You can definitely condition yourself to look forward to the high as motivation, but it's not a given and it will never be as appealing as booze, weed, or any other drug.
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nathan_compton
16 days ago
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You're right, there is no such thing as willpower and we're all automatons moving through the universe like planets in orbit, helpless to affect our future or how we feel about ourselves or the world.
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freedomben
15 days ago
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I think you are ironically correct about that! We (including our neurons) operate at the deterministic level of physics. Measuring subconscious areas of the brain also demonstrates that "choices" we make aren't as made-by-our-consciousness as we think. Robert Sapolsky's books (especially "Behave" and "Determined" are phenomenal reads if this topic interests you.

Now that said I don't think living your life as though you have no free will is a good life strategy. The illusion of free will is incredibly important. Fortunately we humans are masters at living with cognitive dissonance and inconsistent beliefs

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nathan_compton
15 days ago
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I know all that stuff, I was just caricaturing the person's response because I felt it was a bit glib.

I definitely do not believe we have free will in the most traditional sense, but I am a sort of compatibilist: its clear we cannot make a different choice in identical circumstances for meaningful reasons, but identical circumstances never occur anyway. A person's psychology is a sort of accumulation of all their experiences into biases for future behavior and our "will" is really just a manifestation of those experiences. But to whatever extent we can curate those experiences to produce a long term psychology that we like, I think we should do it.

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freedomben
15 days ago
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Ah, got it! Yes, I totally agree.
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macNchz
16 days ago
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I think comfort/discomfort is a highly individualized thing where your range gets calibrated by your experience, and that modern western lifestyles have created a very narrow band of what’s comfortable for many people.

I’m a big Type II fun person and feel that there are all sorts of highly satisfying life experiences to be had if you’re able to tolerate some discomfort, but there has to be some deliberate practice of getting comfortable being uncomfortable to ease into it.

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kaffekaka
16 days ago
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They might be unpleasant but still fun. And they may be painful but in reward you get to see places you would otherwise not. Or you may get to discover your limits, which are of course further out than just pain and discomfort. So there is absolutely enjoyment in these "unfun" things.

Plus of course the chance to humble brag online afterwards!

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Cthulhu_
16 days ago
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Just because you feel like shit and your head is saying "this sucks ass", there's also the endorphins being released, the feeling of achieving something, of overcoming your own limitations and stuff.

I mean it's not for me but I can see how in hindsight (it's always in hindsight, never in the moment) it'll be considered fun. Or at the very least a story to share with friends or the internet, which is also fun.

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wobfan
16 days ago
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I heard so often that it's outright dangerous to run when you're sick. Does anyone with knowledge know whether this is true? The general vibes of this thread gives me the feelings that it's more like a inconvenience than straight up dangerous to your heart and everything, which is what I heard and believed up until now.
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mewpmewp2
16 days ago
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Depends how sick, I have frequently heard that with mild head cold, that has not gone to lungs it is good to run to activate immune system etc.
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HexPhantom
16 days ago
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I've had those days where a 10-minute shuffle felt more restorative than a full night's sleep
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silversmith
16 days ago
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Lymphatic system is actuated by your movement. Sure, it will work with just the little movements that your body does to keep in one piece, but for full performance so to speak you need to move around.
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Yossarrian22
16 days ago
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Did you not catch Covid? Even catching after getting the shots I still could barely move.
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balfirevic
16 days ago
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I barely felt covid, if not for temporary loss of smell I wouldn't think it was anything more than a moderate cold.
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Imme_Play_5550
16 days ago
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There is definitely such a thing as overtraining. I got my free testosterone down to 15 (reference range=35-155 pg/mL) and my total testosterone down to 96 (ref=250-1100 ng/dL). From histograms from various studies, I hit the 1-percentile of low testosterone as a 35yo male. That's... uh... not good.

This was due to a number of factors: excessive running (the equivalent of ~50-70mi/week), calorie restriction, and possibly carbohydrate restriction. Thankfully symptoms of low T (namely morning erections) resolved ~1month after ameliorating those 3 factors. (For anyone interested, look up "Relative Energy Deficiency in Sport".)

Mileage isn't my goal. Health is.

OP states "I've... invested into my own health", but I'm not convinced.

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ropable
16 days ago
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While I don't disagree that "team no days off" is probably not the ideal way to promote long-term health, I'd assert that most of the adult population in first-world countries are far more at risk from a lack of sufficient physical activity than from overtraining. Not dismissing your own experience (it sounds pretty bad) and I assume from context that you worked yourself into that hole, but we need to be encouraging people to be doing more physical activity rather than less.
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kqr
16 days ago
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> I'd assert that most of the adult population in first-world countries are far more at risk from a lack of sufficient physical activity than from overtraining.

You're using the wrong reference group here. Would you still assert that most people when narrowed down to those who are running every day are more at risk from a lack of sufficient physical activity than from overtraining? Because that's the group we are discussing – those either doing it or considering doing it.

Most of the adult population in first-world countries are not considering running every day.

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noboostforyou
16 days ago
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As a former runner (competitive trackin/xcountry) and a current recreational runner - I cannot imagine never taking a day off is actually safe for your knees and joints. At least for me, I simply cannot run every single day without developing some sort of tendinitis or other mild pain/ache.
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SketchySeaBeast
16 days ago
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Yeah. I'm training for my first official marathon right now and my rest days are sacred. I imagine if it's low volume running it's probably easier, but still, the pain adds up.
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ropable
15 days ago
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Yep, I don't disagree with your point here at all. I'm a former distance runner who gave himself knee tendonitis by overdoing it, so I definitely accept the risk of overtraining. I guess that I was trying to make the point that almost nobody is at risk of that.
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igouy
15 days ago
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I'd assert that overtraining is relative to what we've been doing. So people who've not been doing much can still be at risk of overtraining.
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psunavy03
15 days ago
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The problem is that the population which is not doing physical activity is the population uniquely at risk for overtraining. You can't put a couch potato out and have them run, run, run without them ending up with shin splints, stress fractures, and all the other issues that come from pushing too hard, too fast.

Saying we need to do more physical activity is not carte blanche to run yourself into the ground. No decent running coach would recommend running every day anyway. 3-4 times a week, and then let your body rest and recover. Training does not make you healthy or stronger. Recovering from the training makes you healthy and stronger.

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HexPhantom
16 days ago
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I think the nuance gets lost in a lot of the "no days off" messaging
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neutronicus
16 days ago
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I mean you're right, but if you're fat running is pretty rough on the knees.

Source: was fat, ran a lot, lost weight, got runner's knee, am fat again.

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ropable
15 days ago
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100% relate (I was never overweight but gave myself knee tendonitis through overdoing distance running). It's my own (unscientific) opinion that cycling or rowing are superior options for untrained people to get more conditioning work in, albeit they do have a higher barrier to entry due to the equipment.
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NicoJuicy
16 days ago
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Was fat, walked a lot, lost weight, started running, still -25 kg.

But I'm not that skinny since "long time". Running 2-3x a week.

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JKCalhoun
16 days ago
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Maybe you already looked into barefoot running. I found it took the impact off my knees.
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neutronicus
16 days ago
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Oh yeah, haha

I've never done the like barefoot-barefoot thing but switched to minimalist zero-drop shoes.

It was in fact a game-changer for me, all of a sudden in my 30s I could run 10k without IT band pain (even when fairly athletic playing American football in my youth). But when I pushed more into the 10-mile range I got runner's knee - diagnosed w/o MRI or anything as patellar tendinitis although I'm sort of worried it was actually my meniscus.

I kept wanting to get back to it and kept re-aggravating. So I have now mostly given it up for like a year. Bad for my health of course. But as I move forward forced days off (ideally cross-training w/ swimming, kayaking, hitting a heavy bag, etc) just have to be part of the plan.

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JKCalhoun
16 days ago
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Yeah, zero-drop shoes is what I mean by "barefoot" running. Landing on the balls of your feet, not your heel.

Maybe 10 miles is too much regardless though.

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johnrob
16 days ago
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Have you tried non-running (indoor) cardio as a regular replacement? Jumping jacks, squats, jump squats, mountain climbers, even jogging in place. I do cardio everyday but running is only every 4th day. Of course, if you have access to equipment there’s always stationary bike and other machines like an elliptical.
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nasmorn
16 days ago
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But the daily mile is not what will push you into overtraining. It’s just 7 miles a week. Training hard in calorie restriction is IMO a horrible idea though. You would need to make sure to burn as little carbs as possible and not do any workouts. Basically dedicating a block to losing weight instead of improving your running. Might still get faster, weight is a factor in running
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fivestones
16 days ago
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But exercise along with calorie restriction will keep you from losing muscle mass and so your weight loss will be more from fat. I agree though, no need to train hard during calorie restriction.
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criddell
16 days ago
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Totally off-topic, but when did people start abbreviating testosterone to T? I noticed it a few years ago when TV commercials started airing promoting various snake oils to fix low T. But now I see it everywhere. Is it another idea that escaped body building forums?
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Aurornis
16 days ago
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It started on forums, bled into social media, and now it’s used by advertisers trying to capture the people who recognize it from forums and social media.

Interestingly, the businesses targeting this segment have pivoted into offering actual testosterone prescriptions, pill-mill style. They’ve discovered that if they can find a willing doctor then there are no consequences for writing mass prescriptions for testosterone as long as they can create a minimal paper trail documenting some symptoms. So people see an ad on social media or hear one on the radio, make an appointment, and the doctor quickly diagnoses them with “low T” based on vague symptoms like “not performing as well as I’d like in the gym”, and they get a prescription.

The business model is to charge a monthly fee such as $200/month. Once people start taking testosterone their body shuts off its natural production, meaning they feel devastated if they ever stop taking it. So the customer is hooked. Some people can discontinue and eventually recover, but most people who take it for years will have testicular atrophy such that they may never be able to live without testosterone injections again for the rest of their lives. This inconvenient fact is rarely communicated up front, of course.

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anton-c
16 days ago
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I think it's a shame avoidance and marketing effort. It's not flattering for a man to admit he thinks he has low testosterone. Easier to talk about.

There is some fake shit no doubt, but you can have real problems that lower it. Kills dudes motivation, libido, etc and that kinda spirals towards depression sometimes. But it's not meant for long term use or meant to be given out as willingly as it is.

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HexPhantom
16 days ago
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I've also seen how easily well-meaning habits (running, dieting, etc.) can tip into something detrimental, especially when the metrics become the goal. There's a fine line between dedication and depletion.
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vl
16 days ago
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But how would you loose weight without calorie restriction?

Maybe this amount of running was excessive, but how did you even run such distances with T so low? (Ie how did you recover?)

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BadOakOx
16 days ago
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I'm no expert on this, but I also read about this as I also tried calorie restriction.

You still have to keep your macros (and micros) in balance while on calorie deficit, which is even harder. Your body needs various things, you just need to optimize your food. Also, I think the main contributor for OPs issues was the fat deficit, which is very easy to fall into while you think you eat healthy a lean food. Fat is important for your hormone production.

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26843151/

https://shilpidietclinic.com/low-fat-diet-and-hormonal-imbal...

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mtlmtlmtlmtl
16 days ago
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In my experience(currently about 15kg into a 40kg weight-loss program), eating enough fat can also be very helpful for losing weight. It seems counter-intuitive, but it works for me. Fat contributes a great deal to satiety. My diet setup has been to have breakfast and dinner only, no lunch on most days. This way I can make both meals quite calorific, filling and plenty tasty. Crucial for maintaining adherence to the setup, which is by far the hardest part of weight loss.

When you have to go 7 to 8 hours without eating before dinner you want plenty of slow-burning calories. Long chain fats, protein, slow carbs, with plenty of fiber.

My typical breakfast ends up being one slice of bread with liver pate and cheese, another with peanut butter and either nutella(if I'm doing morning cardio or some other exercise mid-day. Lots of sugar in nutella, which gets used up immediately by the exercise anyway) or various kinds of jam with no added sugar(usually pear and apple, since they're not so tart and are pretty sweet without added sugar), and a protein pudding cup(20g protein). The bread needs to be whole-grain, of course. Ideally 100% whole grain.

This ends up being about 700 calories, which is a pretty substantial breakfast. And most importantly, it includes a lot of protein(from liver, peanut butter, cheese, the bread and the pudding), a good mix of saturated fats with plenty of SCFA and MCT from the cheese and liver, mono- and polyunsaturated fat from the peanut butter, and tons of soluble and insoluble fiber from the bread and peanut butter.

This tends to keep me full until dinner time, at which point I can typically eat up to 1300 kcal depending on how active I've been.

On extremely active days, I might either add another slice of bread to breakfast, or have a protein snack and some fruit after exercise, as well as electrolyte drink with sugar in it during(important both for energy and fluid uptake).

Anyway, I'm rarely hungry except for just before eating, which is the idea. I think this would be much harder on a low-fat diet.

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busymom0
16 days ago
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If someone is running everyday like this, do they actually even need to lose weight? Aren't they already very fit?

Also, testosterone also gets impacted by fatigue. Running is more fatiguing than lets say stationary biking or elliptical. So maybe try other forms of cardio to burn calories too instead of only running?

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thewebguyd
16 days ago
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> If someone is running everyday like this, do they actually even need to lose weight? Aren't they already very fit?

Not necessarily. There's a reason the saying is "You can't outrun a bad diet."

Before I got my diet dialed in I was cycling every day, upwards of 10 miles a day with a couple 20 mile rides per week, and was still gaining weight because I ate like crap, and more importantly, still ate more than I was burning with all the exercise.

The average American consumes 3,864 calories per day. A moderately active male might have a maintenance of ~2,647 calories, give or take a couple hundred. Just eating 500 calories per day over what you burn will lead to about a 1lb increase in weight per week. A zone 2 run might burn somewhere between 500-600 calories per hour, so its easy to see how quickly over eating can add up and at a point it becomes basically impossible to "run it off."

There's other factors that play into it such as lean mass vs. fat, etc. but in general, you can be very active and still be overweight.

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busymom0
15 days ago
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I understand what you are saying but OP is not an average American. They have been running every single day for 10 years, so chances of them already being very conscious about their diet are very high I think.
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mathieuh
16 days ago
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You can eat like shit and do a lot of exercise and be overweight.

I’m 90 kg at 180 cm. I ride my bike 450 km per week. A few weeks ago I did a 340 km, 3000 m elevation ride at 25.6 km/h and yesterday I did a 220 km ride at 27 km/h. Last week I burned 13,468 calories from cycling (this should be fairly accurate as I have a power meter).

I would say I’m quite fit, I can obviously ride my bike further and faster than the vast majority of people but I am definitely overweight and look fat.

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serial_dev
16 days ago
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While I didn't run this much, I used to run 50 km / 30 miles a week. My "cardio" was good, but I didn't lose weight because all the running made me 1. extremely hungry 2. too tired to cook a proper meal, 3. have a convenient excuse to eat bad...

"How could I not eat a second donut, I just ran 15k!"

I was not "feeling fit", though, I believe I had low T, and I stayed relatively fat, which is not great for your organs, liver values, heart, etc.

So even if you are able to run 50K a week, you may still be somewhat unhealthy due to poor diet and other factors, and some of them can be improved by losing weight...

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Cthulhu_
16 days ago
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For #2, meal prep is a valid strategy; double up on ingredients when you do cook, put the leftovers in the freezer for later.

I was too lazy to cook a proper meal for a good while, but I would make something in weekends. Since all portion sizes in shops are catered for 2-3 people minimum, I'd always have 1-2 portions left over. I had convenient 500ml freezer/microwave containers which was also ideal for portion control. Lost 8 kilos in 8 months without actively dieting during that period.

Mind you it was also a stressful period, with a new job and stuff.

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amenghra
16 days ago
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I’m no expert, but you should be roughly as tired burning 200 kcal running vs walking vs biking. The difference will be how quickly you’ll burn those calories.
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ses1984
16 days ago
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It's not really the type of exercise but the intensity that determines fatigue. If you walk for an hour you will burn 200 kcal and ready to walk one more hour. If you try to burn 200 kcal sprinting, most people would become exhausted before getting close.
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nasmorn
16 days ago
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When people say calorie deficit they usually mean low calories. Not 3000 kcal intake and 3300 burned which would be a healthy approach for a runner
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Aurornis
16 days ago
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A small calorie deficit alone won’t lead to major problems.

The phrase “calorie restriction” is often used in the context of life extension to refer to periods of very low caloric intake, near fasting. This would cause problems with hormone levels.

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pomtato
16 days ago
[-]
wait what? you get morning erections when on low testosterone?
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DanOpcode
16 days ago
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When googling, it seems to be the opposite. That morning erection is a sign of a healthy testosterone level.
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Aurornis
16 days ago
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He meant the opposite: They were absent.

It should be noted that this isn’t a truly reliable indicator like the internet suggests some times. For many people, they still get them but it occurs while they’re sleeping rather than at time of wake up.

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jksflkjl3jk3
16 days ago
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Yeah I've always wondered about that. I haven't gotten them regularly since I was 16 - 17. But in my late 30's, I still have an annoyingly high libido, no issues in the bedroom, and testosterone in the upper range of normal.
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Aurornis
16 days ago
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Internet bro science about testosterone has evolved into something resembling a horoscope: If you read a list of symptoms of “low T” on the Internet nearly everyone will think they have a problem.

There’s a parallel problem where the testosterone replacement therapy industry has diverged from its original stated purpose of replacing missing testosterone. The trend now is to prescribe excessive doses, beyond what the person ever naturally had. It’s basically a doctor-prescribed steroids when overdosed, but that’s also what a lot of people think they want.

Even crazier, some of the TRT clinics are now prescribing anabolic steroid compounds that were only FDA approved for severe muscle wasting disorders and cancer patients. The subreddits even had scripts you could follow to trigger certain clinics to prescribe the steroids for a time.

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IAmGraydon
16 days ago
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Yeah that’s not true at all. Not sure where he got his info but it’s incorrect.
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Xenoamorphous
16 days ago
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He probably meant absence of morning erections.
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mobiledev2014
16 days ago
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The site is cool but as a runner this is not admirable and not something others should emulate. Interesting how few comments call that out but perhaps not surprising if your audience admires The Hustle
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noah_buddy
16 days ago
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Respectfully, if this guy has been doing it for ten years, it’s obviously not so bad as you make it out to be. It’s not a grind set mentality, it’s just one guys choice to exercise in a certain manner.

I am a runner. I train at what is probably the 80th percentile for longer distances, so I am by no means an expert. But I do understand that if you are running 7 miles a week, most of the time, your body isn’t going to be that beat up, especially if you are taking it slow.

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RamblingCTO
16 days ago
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It's not about the running but the "running through sickness and fractures". It's just plain stupid to risk your health like that. Great that it worked, but this is nothing anyone should blindly emulate. Have fun with the heart infection because you needed to run for virtual internet points.
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noah_buddy
16 days ago
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Scientific information on the topic is quite sparse. There are ascientific recommendations about vigorous activity that probably have some merit, but unless you are terribly, terribly ill, a very light workout is not known to increase adverse health outcomes.
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RHSman2
16 days ago
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Read it out loud ‘7 miles a week’

Most people sit at a desk for 40 hrs a week. That is way more damaging to your health.

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simianparrot
16 days ago
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Yeah once I read that I realised it wasn’t extreme at all.

I take ~2 mile brisk walks every day (the kind where my pulse will average to 130), interspersed with casual multi-mile hikes up the mountain trail nearby. That’s just my baseline cardio and movement to feel good and keep myself healthy.

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d1sxeyes
16 days ago
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What I’ve learned is a lot of people would call a “brisk walk” which takes your heart rate to average 130 “a run”. A runner’s definition of running can be quite different to a layperson’s.
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balfirevic
16 days ago
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I always thought (and still do!) it's about whether there are moments when both of your feet are off the ground, not about the pace.
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LandR
16 days ago
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Isn't that running?

If my heart rate is 130, that's a run for me, all be ot slow. 33-35min ish 5k.

A brisk walk would be 95ish

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simianparrot
10 days ago
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Lots of change in elevation, with steep hills, stairs etc. For comparison my resting heart rate is ~57 on average, and for more intense workouts I can go up to ~160 for periods of time, so I think my range is healthy. But I can get a lot out of a brisk walk in this terrain ;) I've found it's a lot better for my knees than running or jogging, which I've practically replaced in favor of mountain hiking and said brisk walks, as well as indoor cycling when the weather is bad.
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afterburner
16 days ago
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Ten years might not be long enough for long term damage to make itself known. In fact, most of the time, it's nowhere near long enough.

However, the cardio should help. With overall health that is, not whatever blown knee or hip or whatever he'll have to deal with later.

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gempir
16 days ago
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It worked out for this specific person under these specific circumstances with a methodology he might have not even fully shared.

You should not conclude from that, that it is healthy for every person to do so.

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igouy
16 days ago
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> with the occasional 0:01 run to be sure I get one in that day

> i call the one-milers "streak savers"

If that game helps, fine.

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noah_buddy
16 days ago
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I believe that he means 00:01 as in one minute after midnight and not 1 second runs. The minimum distance is a mile for his streak I believe
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igouy
15 days ago
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Do you think it matters what they mean? It's a game with arbitrary rules. If the game helps then fine.
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andyst
16 days ago
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I (still!) have an uncle who had a similar mindset, broke his leg half way through a race and only realised when he stopped at the end, that he couldnt walk any further

finally when they had to (successfully) defib him during a race, that shook him into assessing his health not running for the sake of running

There's a mindset with distance runners that I have seen over and over, just sometimes way too much of a generally good thing

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ujkiolp
15 days ago
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as a runner, i love the site.
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pimeys
16 days ago
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My cousin played ice hockey when he was a teenager, and started playing again too soon after having a flu. That lead to a heart infection, and almost killed him. He never played ice hockey after that.

So yeah, please be careful when doing sports while sick.

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fransje26
16 days ago
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Rule 0 of training as an athlete was: you do not train when sick

Rule 1 of training as an athlete was: you do not train for N extra days after N days of fever

You do not want a heart infection.

Keeping track of you morning resting heart rate will tell you exactly what is going on.

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RamblingCTO
16 days ago
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I came here to say this, running while being sick is incredibly stupid, more so for men.
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dlahoda
16 days ago
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i had similar experience as author. so run few times a week for 7 years.

i was run in pine forest(it produces air with antibiotics), sub zero, down to -20c(in light clothes and sneakers).

for simple throat and nose conditions it was immediately healing, body temperature under 38c.

there rule was - never stop. nor walk. only run(until get to shower). or will get ill. tested few times.

in hockey people does not seem to run all time

also, i was run on frozen randomized ice pieces, dirt and snow like things. i had to adapt my posture for that, basically it does not streess same joints same way, not like thread mill or flat city roads. it was good. rule was never walk. when i started to walk, slipped to ground fast.

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mendigou
16 days ago
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How is it worse for men?
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RamblingCTO
16 days ago
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I was under the impression that the risk is higher for men than for women.

According to https://www.myocarditisfoundation.org/about-myocarditis/:

> Men however are twice as likely as women to develop it, but women do develop myocarditis.

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Zambyte
16 days ago
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Why more so for men?
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anton-c
16 days ago
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I don't have a specific thing to back it up but from my exercise science degree(in another life) men are at a greater risk for pretty much all heart/cardiovascular problems.
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fifilura
16 days ago
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It is only a mile and you can run really, really slow.

I am also a run-streaker (3 years by now). I am not proud of running when i have the flu. But I run really slow and only the required amount.

Effort comparable to going to the store to buy food and aspirin.

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Imme_Play_5550
16 days ago
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Just gonna say, as a fellow excessive exerciser... exercise doesn't make you stronger. It's the recovery afterwards and the resulting growth/adaptation that makes you better.

Don't let rest feel like weakness. It’s where the real progress happens.

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jmye
16 days ago
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Rest doesn’t preclude running. Most high end runners run every day. It’s very easy to run at recovery pace and feel better than if you’d done nothing at all.

I find the tendency of very amateur runners having very strong opinions about running, odd. There are literally decades of research, and while the particulars change over time, the macros tend not to.

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igouy
16 days ago
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Here's Nils van der Poel's (World champion, World record) 5k 10k speed-skating training-program.

He explains why he took Saturday and Sunday off ;-)

https://www.howtoskate.se/

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igouy
15 days ago
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For example:

"As I rested for two days my body would get a reset. On Monday-sessions I would always be well rested and ready for another hard five days. And if I weren’t well rested, if my pulse was not responding as usual or if my legs felt heavier than they usually did on a Monday-session, I would take notice early. I would know that something was abnormal before it became a real issue and I would throw in some extra rest days and avoid a negative trend."

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jmye
14 days ago
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Do you want me to link Conner Mantz’s Strava? Like, what is the point of dropping a single, random example here?

“Rest doesn’t preclude running” is a very simple, clear thought (followed by “recovery pace”, another very simple concept, well known in running). If you don’t want to respond to it because you don’t know anything about running, that’s fine, but maybe, you know, don’t jump into a conversation you’re not capable of participating in?

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igouy
13 days ago
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Would Strava provide the athlete's own reasons for why they chose each aspect of their training program?

"Usually I did not train at all during rest days. I rested both my mind and my body. However, if my friends wanted to go alpine skiing or go for a hike, I would join them. But I didn’t perform any intended active recovery. I tried to live a normal life."

“Rest with zero recovery running” is a very simple, clear thought.

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igouy
14 days ago
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Who are you talking to?
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fifilura
16 days ago
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You have to appreciate how short a mile run is.

And either way, yeah runstreak is probably not optimal for improving your stamina. I am sure there are more rigorous programs for that.

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grumpy-de-sre
16 days ago
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I've been running five miles roughly every other day for fifteen years. If I've got a flu or not feeling great I'll take a few days off, no loss. Not sure how one would objectively determine "stamina", but my resting HR is in the bottom 3% for my age.

Obsessively run streaking one mile every day sounds completely bizarre to me and a complete PITA.

Almost as bizarre as those poor bastards that I see doing laps around tiny parks / basketball courts (the monotony would drive me crazy).

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JKCalhoun
16 days ago
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A treadmill looks even worse to my eye though. At least they're getting outside?
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grumpy-de-sre
16 days ago
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If a treadmill was my only option. I straight up wouldn't run.

If you hate running and you've only tried it on a treadmill, highly recommend giving it another try somewhere nice outside.

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solumunus
16 days ago
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I must be one of the few that prefers treadmill running. The fact that it requires zero attention turns it into meditation for me.
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anton-c
16 days ago
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> Not sure how one would objectively determine "stamina", but my resting HR is in the bottom 3% for my age.

It's not testable at home but if you're curious, google VO2 max.

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verisimi
16 days ago
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But the stats! The streak fail! That's what running is about, right?

Imo, this is OCD (obsessive compulsive disorder) expressed as running stats, rather than thimble collections or hand washing. It's about gaining/regaining a sense of control of one's life.

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JKCalhoun
16 days ago
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I'm allowing that maintaining the streak is perhaps the prime motivation when you are finding it hard to drag one's sorry ass out of bed every day. So maybe it's a good thing if it keeps you running.

I stopped running maybe 7 or 8 years ago. This thread has me wanting to go back to a mile a day or so — I'm past 60 years old now and more concerned about my health than I used to be.

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igouy
16 days ago
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A sequence of 5k race times (and ages) from yesterday:

    21:34 — 65 
    22:49 — 64 
    23:04 — 61
    23:41 — 64
    24:45 — 75
    24:57 — 63
    25:06 — 67
    25:41 — 66
    25:52 — 66
    26:37 — 63
    27:01 — 73
    27:31 — 70
    27:52 — 74
    28:49 — 76
    29:29 — 61
    30:34 — 78
    30:55 — 86
    31:03 — 72
    31:14 — 68

    & another 14 older than 60
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fifilura
16 days ago
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It will be good for you. Start with a mile/day for three weeks. From there the past days will push you forward.
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grumpy-de-sre
16 days ago
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I suffered from an eating disorder a very long time ago that shared a lot of the same mechanisms (thankfully my starvation survival instinct was stronger).

A healthy relationship with exercise does not look like this and I hate seeing this stuff promoted.

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fifilura
16 days ago
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I am surprised by the emotions in this thread!

Where do they come from?

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mns
16 days ago
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The running community is intense. As a former "runs way too much" runner, you get very into it and it kind of takes over your life, it becomes your whole identity. Until you get injured from it and it wakes you up.
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fifilura
16 days ago
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Thank you for your comment about identity. Was it something I wanted or did it sneak up on me?

The 1000+ days behind me means something. And many days it is what pushes me through.

It would be nice if I could find a ramp down scheme, but then with something else to ramp up, otherwise it would probably be better to just keep going.

Just stopping on a random Wednesday, it would just feel very weird.

(I am not the person in the article, just another guy with a streak)

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aaronbrethorst
16 days ago
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You have to appreciate how critical recovery time is to improving your strength/stamina/whatever.
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_Algernon_
16 days ago
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We are talking about a level of effort that is less than people's commute or a simple walking of the dog. People exert themselves more than a slow 1-mile jog by vacuuming their house or carrying groceries home from the store.

It doesn't magically turn dangerous just because the activity is labeled "running".

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stephenbez
16 days ago
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I looked it up and running slowly at a 12 minute per mile pace is about 8 METs, and vacuuming might be around 4 METs so that doesn’t seem to be true.

Also running tends to be more repetitive and pounding on the joints which requires more recovery time than simply vacuuming. I’ve never heard someone get injured vacuuming but I know dozens of people injured from running.

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_Algernon_
15 days ago
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You forget that METs have time in the denominator, so half the MET for twice the time is equivalent.

A mile of slow running is ~11 minutes.

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balfirevic
16 days ago
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> People exert themselves more than a slow 1-mile jog by vacuuming their house or carrying groceries home from the store.

As someone who vacuums and carries groceries but doesn't run, I find that pretty hard to believe. Maybe if you are a very fit runner? But then those other activities would hopefully also be easier.

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fifilura
16 days ago
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Do you tend to avoid household chores or letting the dog out on your resting days?
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igouy
12 days ago
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I'll take your question seriously.

Presumably their (aaronbrethorst) "resting days" are resting from running, not resting from "household chores" and "letting the dog out".

Should we ask whether you have an unblemished daily streak of "household chores" and "letting the dog out".

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_Algernon_
16 days ago
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If you are sufficiently trained, a 1 mile day is a rest day though.
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pferde
16 days ago
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Not when you have flu. Or a stress fracture on your leg.
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_Algernon_
16 days ago
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When you have run for a while, you get a pretty good feel of what kind of pain / discomfort you can push through, and what kind of pain / discomfort is actually harmful.

I suspect that the original poster has a better sense of these factors, for their own body, than you do and is much more suited to make these decisions.

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pferde
16 days ago
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As someone who has been running a lot for past 30 years, I respectfully disagree. This is objectively a bad idea, no matter what the "factors" or "sense of" these factors is, or what the runner's subjective situation is.
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fivestones
15 days ago
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No experience with a stress fracture of my leg and running. But I know when I had the flu and did a slow easy 1 mile run I felt much better after than before. Same thing happened with Covid.
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hatsnp
16 days ago
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This isn't really that simple. Studies keep coming out showing that even people undergoing chemo and other heavy therapies benefit from some exercise(ex brisk walks), showing upwards of 20-30% better results. For his fitness a very light run could be as taxing as a brisk walk for a common person and still bring some benefits in fighting his illness.
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pinkmuffinere
16 days ago
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I don’t feel strongly on either side, but I do want to point out that “I am not proud of running when I have the flu” immediately suggests a course of action that could make you more proud. It seems that not-running when sick would make you happier? Is it really worth doing just for the completionism?
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Elixir6419
16 days ago
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i am not sure about the OP or the motivation and I am not a Streak runner/mover myself, but I do see the appeal of it, that will keep someone moving and exercise more or less consistently. Overall maybe the bad it is doing on bad days, is compensated with the good it is doing on good/average days. It is a long term motivator. For me now that i was cycling about 2-300km per week last year, going to nearly 0 this year so far because life and stuff, makes it pretty hard mentally to get back into the saddle, because of reduced performance, fatigue and just the general feeling of what it felt like to be in a faster group ride that I would get dropped from and i need to work my way back up there in performance and endurance. Having a streak going might have helped with this.
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kaffekaka
16 days ago
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The way I see it is this: maintaining a run streak can be hard, but what is even harder is taking rest days when needed and every time get back on it. The (amateur) runners that impress me the most are those that keep running for years, decades, not through some neverending streak but through determination. The skill to abort a long run streak without quitting running is admirable.
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fifilura
16 days ago
[-]
Ok, happy for you that you have the intrinsic motivation.

You seem to be equally intrinsically motivated to tell me what to do and not do based on your experience.

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kaffekaka
16 days ago
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I am not describing my own motivation, nor am I telling you what to do. I am only describing what to seems to be the most difficult thing to do. It matches well the expressed view that "if I break the streak I might stop running for good".

Sorry if you feel pressured to do anything.

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fifilura
15 days ago
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Apology accepted, and mine was an over reaction too, sorry. Just that opinions are very high in this thread in general.

I drink coffee too, if someone wants to take a stab at that.

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kaffekaka
15 days ago
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The intersection of exercise and identity is indeed a sensitive topic for many, myself included. We are all just humans doing our best.
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fifilura
16 days ago
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Then I would loose my streak and the magic would disappear.

I am not a pro athlete. I think there are many days where athletes go beyond what they should to win some gold medal in some competition.

This is for me only and I am fine with it.

Can you tell me what you think you'd do?

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pinkmuffinere
16 days ago
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Ya, that's fair, arbitrary motivators are arbitrary, but they still give motivation. I strongly dislike running, so if it was me I think I would give up once I get sick, or likely would not start the streak to begin with. I'm not saying that's the right solution, just trying to address your question.
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igouy
12 days ago
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Perhaps I misunderstand and misread and then dislike what I feel about that first sentence.

I take it to express fear of losing the streak and fear that the magic would disappear.

It's the feeling of fear as motivation that I dislike.

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fifilura
12 days ago
[-]
Probably not for you then.

I think what's important for me is that for me this does not feel at all unhealthy. It is more a way to maintain a good habit, like brushing my teeth.

And I don't feel like I need to be saved by anyone.

Some days I run farther but most days I run 2 miles. As much as a lunch break allows.

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igouy
11 days ago
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> And I don't feel like I need to be saved by anyone.

You seem to have read what isn't there.

I was attempting to check if I had read what wasn't there.

And perhaps I did, if it's "more a way to maintain a good habit".

When less-than 3 times-per-week my run-habit will feel unfamiliar. When transitioning from distance runs to intervals my run-habit will feel unfamiliar. After a 10-day vacation break my run-habit will feel unfamiliar. And soon it feels familiar again.

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JKCalhoun
16 days ago
[-]
If you "know better" are you a "run-streaker" because of some innate need to not break a streak? Is the streak the thing that keeps you motivated?

I can see how you might worry that if you take off one day when you are sick that somehow you'll start taking more and more "sick days" out of perhaps laziness. But I also feel like someone with such a level of dedication would not be in much danger of doing that.

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kaffekaka
16 days ago
[-]
I have also done a couple longish run streaks, but would have rested if ill.

Why do you run with the flu of you feel bad about it? What is the point of fulfilling the "rules" of run streaking?

For me the by far biggest positive effect of run streaking was that I knew every morning when I woke up that I would something i enjoy that day. The training is too low intensity and volume to really matter and doing it for the rules would have felt pointless.

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jimbokun
16 days ago
[-]
I was more surprised the doctors even let him run after a heart procedure.
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_Algernon_
16 days ago
[-]
It may come as a surprise to you, but doctors don't have any means of "letting" people do anything. They can, at most, advise.
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afterburner
16 days ago
[-]
Did he ask them?
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mrbonner
16 days ago
[-]
Yeah I was in the camp of " tough it out" when I was younger. Now, I understand how and when to listen to my body and lrt it rest is as important as working out with it. When my body is under stress from illness there is no need to put more stress on it.
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ourmandave
16 days ago
[-]
Worked with a guy who led the local running club and he'd run in nearly all weather. But even he admitted defeat after bundling up in heavy winter gear and doing a few blocks in -50F wind chill conditions.
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WalterBright
16 days ago
[-]
I had an operation a while back, and had to give up running for 6 weeks (running increases blood pressure which can cause internal bleeding). I was climbing the walls waiting so I could step out and resume running.

One of the symptoms of the flu is aching joints. Running on aching joints may be damaging them, so I don't.

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ujkiolp
16 days ago
[-]
then don’t? not for everyone and that’s why it’s an achievement
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mmmlinux
14 days ago
[-]
Addiction.
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zipping1549
16 days ago
[-]
It's honestly downright dangerous. I don't think anyone's going to _enjoy_ running after that.
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PaulDavisThe1st
16 days ago
[-]
The author sounds as though they still do.
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musikele
16 days ago
[-]
It'd be perfect if we can have a toggle to switch to metric system, like kilometers, meters, celsius for temperature, etc. I find it very hard to follow the numbers expressed in miles
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navane
16 days ago
[-]
I know it's a dumb trick but it works for me: I use the Fibonacci sequence. 3 miles? 5 km. 8miles? 13km. 33 miles? 55km.
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gus_massa
16 days ago
[-]
My dumber version: Just multiply by 1.5. It's fine unless you are using a treasure map.
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chakintosh
16 days ago
[-]
Same here. Usually it's x1.6 but 1.5 is easier to calculate and you add a teeny bit after.
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alt227
16 days ago
[-]
Mine is divide by 3, multiply by 5. Simple and quite accurate.
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catoc
16 days ago
[-]
Ha! That’s nice.

I never realized 1.609 miles/km is close to the golden ratio (1.618)

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donpott
16 days ago
[-]
It is quite clever. My own rule of thumb is "add half of the amount in miles, then 10% of the (original) amount in miles". What's interesting is that it happens to be just as precise as the method shown above (ie. 1.6 v 1.609 v 1.618 )
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mnaimd
16 days ago
[-]
Hey, this is very smart. The golden ratio... Wow!
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DanielVZ
16 days ago
[-]
Fahrenheit is easy if you just forget trying to translate it to Celsius and just equate it to roughly:

- 0 = freezing

- 50 = mild

- 100 = Very hot (not burning just very hot)

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stephen_g
16 days ago
[-]
Yeah but Fahrenheit still feels super alien and unintuitive if you haven’t used it much. I have like three or four approximate values that I think I know what they feel like, but most of the time I really have to stop and think.
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anton-c
16 days ago
[-]
For casual human use I would say Fahrenheit is one of the more easily defended imperial units since it has more resolution.

In reality hearing its 80 outside where I live could mean beautiful day or sweltering mugginess so it's never been a great indicator for me regardless of unit.

Or when people adjust a thermostat by like 2 degrees. If you changed it and didn't tell me idk if I would even perceive it. Temperature is weird.

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Chico75
16 days ago
[-]
The resolution part doesn't really hold for me, celsius can have decimals to have as much precision as you need but for weather purpose, half degree precision is usually more than enough.
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igouy
15 days ago
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"… the US National Weather Service (NWS) uses the Celsius scale internally and when communicating with other scientific agencies, but converts temperatures to Fahrenheit when releasing data to the general public."

Kind-of funny; kind-of sad.

https://worldpopulationreview.com/country-rankings/countries...

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jbaber
15 days ago
[-]
What's sad about scientists reporting in units practical for their audience?

Should the label on a cookie say 836,800 J?

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mbs159
14 days ago
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Of course not, you'd have to label as 837 kJ
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eCa
16 days ago
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We Celsius users use decimals if we need higher resolution.
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anton-c
16 days ago
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That's fair. When I put "I would say" followed by "in reality" it means I don't fully support it.

The previous comment said they don't find F that useful since they aren't familiar. I am, and I dont find it that useful for predicting how it actually feels outside. Celsius doesn't change much for me in that situation.

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igouy
16 days ago
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0_____0
16 days ago
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If you go for a run at 0C with a T-shirt you'll probably be OK. Gloves and ear coverings would be nice.

If you go for a run at 0F in a T-shirt, you won't be running for very long. That's like -18C.

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Breza
9 days ago
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That's a great way to look at it. Fahrenheit is arguably aligned with how people perceive temperature. Zero is so cold that you probably should stay inside. One hundred is so hot that you should probably stay inside.
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brudgers
16 days ago
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0 = freezing

“Frigid” would perhaps be less confusing “Freezing.”

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toss1
16 days ago
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...except 0°C is literally originally defined as the freezing point of water? "Freezing" seems more on-point to me...
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filleduchaos
16 days ago
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The temperatures given in that comment are very obviously in Fahrenheit...?
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toss1
16 days ago
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oh, OOPS, I didn't look at the GP

In that case, I stand corrected, and 0°F should definitely be "Frigid" nto "Freezing"

(thx for the alert)

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tbassetto
16 days ago
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I can somehow convert distances in my head, by pace is harder! If someone has a trick to quickly convert between minutes/mile and minutes/km please chime in.
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mosquitobiten
16 days ago
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I always use minutes as percentages of hours to convert miles to km, 30min is 0.5 hours so following that 30miles=50km.
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fivestones
16 days ago
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Yeah! Please do
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david927
16 days ago
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A year ago, I started running a mile five days a week, and have slowly moved up distance and pace. I'm doing weight and resistance training as well and cut out most sugar and carbs, going high protein.

The result has been transformational. Resting heart rate is at 60, blood pressure down, my clothes don't fit me anymore, and best of all, I feel better and can concentrate more.

I wish I knew this in my teens. It's like a cheat code.

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noman-land
16 days ago
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The cheat code isn't knowing it'll make you feel better. The cheat code is convincing yourself to suffer through it.
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loeg
16 days ago
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If it's suffering, you're pushing too hard. I think that's the challenging thing for beginners to understand. At worst you should be bored, most days. You don't really need to push into uncomfortable territory until you've got some regular volume and want to improve race performance.
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mtalantikite
16 days ago
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Maybe I'm doing it wrong, but for me there certainly was (is) a mental hurdle to get over. When I first seriously started exercising I think it probably took 6 or so months of 3-4x per week before I began looking forward to it. Even after years of training, I still will battle with myself a bit before heading to my muay thai gym or heading out for a run.
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loeg
15 days ago
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Yeah, true. Putting your shoes on and getting out the door is half the battle. I wouldn't call that suffering, though.
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Breza
9 days ago
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There are different approaches to learning how to run. I picked the suffering approach, where I'd push myself to log miles even though I was gasping at the end. Now that I'm an experienced runner prepping for a 50 miler, I agree about training yourself to boredom.
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Neywiny
16 days ago
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Every day it gets a bit easier. But that's the key. You have to do it every day.

- weird monkey from Bojack Horseman, paraphrased through my memory

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vrosas
16 days ago
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I loved that scene too, but something I wish I knew before I started my running/fitness journey is that, every day it does NOT get easier.

You are going to have bad days.

I remember running 3 miles and feeling great, and then trying the same run a few days later and feeling like crap - gassed myself half a mile in and either couldn't finish or finished at half the pace. I would get frustrated, wonder if I was even making progress, etc. In reality your progress is going to look like a stock price. Some up days, some down days, some very up and some VERY down days (or weeks or months) but over time the line WILL go up and to the right. I once apologized to my fitness instructor that I half-assed his workout that day. He just shrugged and said, "Eh, not every day's Christmas." I think about that a lot now. But yes, going out for a shitty run still counts as a run, and you have to frame your mind around how big of a success that was. You make the most progress on the days you have to fight the hardest and the days you break some speed or distance PR, the gains are minimal at best and destructive at worst.

Happy running everybody.

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scubbo
16 days ago
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It's a classic "annoyingly-misleading wise-sounding statement", because there's an interpretation - which I think is the intended one - which _is_ correct; "every day [that you do it] it gets easier [than it would have been, ceteris paribus, if you hadn't done it that day]". So, on that down day where you get what feels like a bad result, you still got a better result ("it was easier") than if you _hadn't_ have trained the day before. Your environmental factors were pulling you down, but your accumulated training counteracted that. Your bad days are better than they would otherwise have been.

But that's not as snappy for a cartoon monkey to say.

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thewebguyd
16 days ago
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> every day it does NOT get easier.

This was important for me to realize too when I started my journey, both strength training and cycling.

For cycling in particular I like to use the anecdote "It never gets easier, you just get faster."

It's hard, and will always be hard, but seeing and feeling the results, beating my PRs, etc. keep me going, and also celebrating the small wins. Some days, just committing to going to the gym and picking up the weights is a big accomplishment and you should absolutely celebrate it.

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shpongled
16 days ago
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"It doesn't get any easier, you just get faster"

- Greg LeMond

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igouy
16 days ago
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No it often gets harder because stuff-happens.

No we often need days-off to rebuild.

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mathteddybear
16 days ago
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The cheat code is to substitute it with something like rollerblading. But you'll need to practice it ~3x longer each time, and aint' nobody on HN got time for that.
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noman-land
15 days ago
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Rollerblading is super fun though so this is a good suggestion.
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bityard
16 days ago
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Alright, so I'm open to ideas here. My problem is getting bored while running.

When I'm in a good routine, I run on my treadmill indoors. (I can't currently run outdoors for reasons I don't want to get into at the moment.) However, after a few weeks, especially if work/family life is getting stressful, I tend to stop running just because I want to work on something more mentally stimulating and tangibly productive with my extremely limited free time.

I have tried:

- Movies/TV Shows: I'm hit-or-miss when it comes to enjoying these. The ones I don't care for are boring to watch. The ones I like, I tend to get engrossed in them and pay more attention to the screen than my workout and end up phoning it in. Plus I'm not sure there are enough of these that I can watch one or half one one every single day. (Bonus: I don't watch anything with ads.)

- Music: I don't like most pop music, and the music that I DO like, I try not to listen to every day because I'll get sick of it that way and then I won't have any music to listen to when I want to listen to music. I can deal with high-energy EDM but 99% of it is not great, especially when binge-listening. Also I get tired of staring at a blank wall and so have tried finding live EDM performances to watch on YouTube. This is a lot of work and so far has worked okay but not perfect.

- Podcasts: There are a LOT of podcasts that I want to catch up on, but half the time I want to stop and take notes because the advice or information being given sounds really useful or seems worth following up on. Maybe there are comedy podcasts out there that I wouldn't hate?

- Audiobooks: I love reading but I have a hard time getting into audiobooks. Same issue with podcasts, I often want to stop and research topics and that would take me away from the treadmill.

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johnfn
16 days ago
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My solution to getting bored is to run harder. Zone 4 heart rate is really the sweet spot for me. It's intense enough that I don't get bored - it's like all the energy that would typically make my mind look for stimulation gets sucked up and directed towards running instead. But, critically, it isn't that hard to sustain - I can do 30-40 minutes of Zone 4 and, while it isn't exactly a walk in the park, it's infinitely psychologically easier than full-out sprints.

Be careful to avoid injury, however. I wouldn't recommend this until you've already got a solid running base of miles to build upon.

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mtalantikite
16 days ago
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Same. Just looking at my last 8k run from the other day I was in Zone 5 for 22 minutes and Zone 4 for 16. I run very infrequently, but I find it very difficult to just do steady state Zone 2 runs, it feels like going for a walk. I prefer to pick up the tempo and just really focus on my breathing/stride.
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reducesuffering
16 days ago
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Your zones aren't calibrated correctly. Zone 5 is only sustainable for a few minutes. It's not just 220 - age for max HR and applying the %'s.
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mtalantikite
15 days ago
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Yeah, I'm not totally sure how to fix that tbh and always have assumed it's just off. Open to suggestions though!

I use WorkOutDoors (with a Polar H10), and I've attempted the whole "do hill sprints" thing to calculate it, but I'm generally not far off from 220-age. When I put my resting heart rate into WorkOutDoors the zones get thrown even further off, so I don't even bother with that data point. I've kinda just shrugged it off and assume what is reading as Zone 5 is more like a high Zone 4.

I've considered doing a lactate threshold test, but honestly I just go running once a week to supplement my muay thai training, so it's not totally worth it to me.

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rige
15 days ago
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There's a good journal article that compares different perspectives and measurements for zones, that might help (if you're interested in the science!): https://journals.humankinetics.com/view/journals/ijspp/aop/a...

Threshold test might help you dial it in, and it doesn't have to be in a lab (though that would be most accurate) -- you could do a workout effort to estimate your max sustainable heart rate for an hour, then calculate zones based on that threshold HR (i.e. my Garmin calculates based on % LTHR, where zone2 ends up being 83-89% of LTHR).

It's also not an exact science - it's a spectrum and shifts day to day depending on lots of conditions!

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bityard
16 days ago
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Yeah, injury is one of my issues. I have not been a consistent runner all my life and ramping up too quickly has lead me to a torn tendon (twice) which takes MONTHS to heal.
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Breza
9 days ago
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I've found success in spending time walking when I'm not running. I have a treadmill desk, but I also take part in long conference calls while walking around my neighborhood. Training your body to spend hours moving on a regular basis can help get you ready for increased running mileage.
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johnfn
16 days ago
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Very much the same. The best luck I ever had was when I forced myself to do zone 2 for a month or two before really getting into it.
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jonas21
16 days ago
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> half the time I want to stop and take notes because the advice or information being given sounds really useful or seems worth following up on.

Like running, keeping notes in your head is something that gets easier if you do it a lot. It's also a really useful skill to have when talking to people in person.

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toolslive
16 days ago
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I

   - load chess problems (look at a diagram before getting out the door) and try to solve it while running. Sometimes, I solve it the first 5min, sometimes I get frustrated because it turns out to be too difficult.

   - practice polyrhythms. you have a dominant cadence while running, now impose  others on top of it.
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thewebguyd
16 days ago
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Have you tried other forms of cardio?

Running never did it for me, I just couldn't stick to it, was always miserable and bored, etc. My main focus is strength training, but for my cardio cycling is what brings me joy. I would dread going for a run, but I excitedly look forward to my next bike ride.

Cycling, swimming, hiking, rowing, even dance will all get you the same benefits so if you're bored doing one, try something else - the important thing is to get moving, the specifics of the activity doesn't matter.

If you really want to get into running, and you have some green spaces or trails near you, give trail running a try. It's the one form of running I sort of enjoy - I get so bored on a treadmill or just in my neighborhood, but I love being out in the woods.

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jermberj
16 days ago
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It certainly sounds like you've tried a lot. One approach could be to (and I'm not being facetious) cultivate a mindfulness-in-boredom practice. Seriously. I'm not saying you will initially get onto the treadmill thinking "Boy, I can't wait to be bored." However, over time you might start to crave that time in your head. Alternatively (if that sounds absolutely unappealing), you might try another type of exercise. Running definitely isn't the be all, end all. I wish you luck!
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loeg
16 days ago
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Treadmills are boring, yeah. Not sure why you can't run outside but that's probably worth more interrogation than a single parenthetical comment.
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losvedir
15 days ago
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Consider picking up another language! I've found YA audiobooks (right now, Harry Potter) in my secondary language to be wonderful. It's interesting and engaging enough that I enjoy listening, and I don't feel like I need to "do" anything like take notes or whatever, because I know just the exposure is beneficial in and of itself.
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mellosouls
16 days ago
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- Audiobooks: I love reading but I have a hard time getting into audiobooks. Same issue with podcasts, I often want to stop and research topics and that would take me away from the treadmill.

Sounds like you are only listening to non-fiction? You don't need to research topics to enjoy (say) a genre thriller, so listen to fiction.

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Breza
9 days ago
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I set up my laptop on my treadmill. Over the years, I've built increasingly fancy setups, but I started with a basic stand from Amazon.

Playing a computer game for hours on end feels productive when you burn 1,000 calories doing it.

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armonster
16 days ago
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Could try informative podcasts that just give you information, instead of wisdom or life practices - such as a history of philosophy, or some other topic. Or just history in general!

For audiobooks, something I've been wanting to try is to see if I can listen to an audiobook of a textbook for a topic that I'm interested in. But I'm not sure if it would work well, since often textbooks have diagrams and such.

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shpongled
16 days ago
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One possibility is trying a different form of cardio. I personally don't enjoy running at all... but I love cycling. Running for 30 minutes is super boring, but I can go do a 4-hour ride no problem. If you can't go outside at all, then this won't really help you though.
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pjerem
16 days ago
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Same here : I discovered the fun of rollerblading in skate parks at 34.

Never did any sport in my whole life, officially obese, but now I’m taking a collective course in a skatepark every week and I’m having so much fun that I’m forcing myself to do more sessions even when I don’t feel like it. And even if I’m still pretty "bad" at it, it’s just amazingly liberating.

I guess you just have to find your thing ?

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ayewo
16 days ago
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> If you can't go outside at all, then this won't really help you though.

If going outside is not an option, stationary bicycles are a thing though there wont be any nice outdoor scenery to go with your cycling.

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josmar
16 days ago
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My best cardio is doubtless stair machine while doing Anki with headphones and a small Bluetooth game pad in hand
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Sxubas
16 days ago
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Try biking. I can't run due to a hip issue and it has been very fun for me.
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bityard
16 days ago
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I love biking! And I do bike a lot. In fact, I often bike and run on the same day. But where I live, biking is only feasible about 5 months out of the year unless I invest in a bunch of cold weather gear. (And impossible at least 2 months out of the year due to snow/ice/slush/etc.)
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thorncorona
16 days ago
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get an indoor trainer if that’s the case
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chrisxlucas
15 days ago
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this is so real. anytime im running, it seems the only thing i can think about is the fact that im running and i ask myself why im running. ive found segmneting my time on the treadmill (like in barry's classes) + long live EDM youtube shows has been the best combo. The EDM shows are nice (as opposed to just music) since the artists tend to mix up their sounds a bit so the risk of getting sick of their music goes down a bit. extra points for b2b sets so they're more unique
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runjake
16 days ago
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Unpopular opinion: Maybe being bored isn't a bad thing. It allows for an escape from constant stimulus and eventually, your mind will learn to wander, introspect, and come up with new ideas.

This is how we ran before smartphones, anyway.

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freedomben
15 days ago
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> This is how we ran before smartphones, anyway.

Interesting, I started running with my Walkman -> eventually Discman (switched back and forth with some headphones that did FM radio when I got tired of CD skips) -> Early mp3 player (could only fit about 5 songs at a time lol) -> classic iPod. I got injured and stopped running around the time I got my first smart phone, so I never experienced running with a phone.

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bityard
15 days ago
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You could be right. I'm not actually a heavy smartphone user, there are a few things I check but I mostly just read email, HN, and a handful of low-traffic subreddits. I'm not sure _more_ introspection is what I need, I literally have to read bland fiction just to shut off my brain in order to sleep at night.
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runjake
15 days ago
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> I literally have to read bland fiction just to shut off my brain in order to sleep at night.

I'm the same, but running literally allows me to do this while I'm running, instead of while I'm trying to go sleep. Most of my most significant problems were solved during mind-wandering runs.

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glxxyz
16 days ago
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Find a neighbour with an active dog and offer to take them for regular runs.
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wiether
16 days ago
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If you're on a treadmill, then you should try Zwift
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hombre_fatal
16 days ago
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What about a particularly exciting book in audiobook form?

To get back into running I listened to some page turners, but I’d only listen to them when running. Sometimes I’d do an extra lap just to hear more. And I’d look forward to the next run.

Once the habit takes, I don’t need as much stimulation.

Another idea is political commentary slop or news. Don’t consume any during the day like you normally do (Reddit, twitter, news sites).

Instead consume it only through Youtube on your run. It’s usually stimulating enough to compel the run.

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anthomtb
16 days ago
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> I tend to stop running just because I want to work on something more mentally stimulating and tangibly productive

Maybe accept that running, or perhaps exercise in general, is not your thing? You clearly have more pressing interests and there are other ways to maintain good health. My grandfather lived well into his eighties with nigh a scrap of fat on him and, near as I can tell, did no formal exercise after his army days ended. My mother is on the same track despite health issue severely limiting her mobility.

I say this as a guy who rides an indoor cycling trainer 3-4 times a week during the winter and turns in to a raging jerk if he doesn't get his workouts done. If you're not a "gym guy", "runner guy", "biking guy" or whatever, why waste your extremely limited free time trying to become one?

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thfuran
15 days ago
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>exercise in general, is not your thing? You clearly have more pressing interests and there are other ways to maintain good health.

This is profoundly bad advice. Being completely sedentary is absolutely awful when it comes to health. A single anecdote of a person who didn’t exercise but didn’t die young is meaningless. I’m not going to recommend people take up smoking because my grandpa smoked for 60 years and is still alive at 95.

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anthomtb
15 days ago
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Being completely sedentary was not my suggestion. My intention was to re-frame the asker's question from "how can I make this exercise tolerable" to "how can I maintain good health without engaging in this miserable activity".

I too once preached the exercise gospel to any that would listen. But I have mellowed out with age (while still riding my stationary bike).

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kirtakat
16 days ago
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Man - I knew this in my teens - I just didn't DO it.
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taeric
16 days ago
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It is amusingly frustrating to finally learn this. Trying to convince my kids of it, and they don't believe me. At all.

Spouse is also dubious. Remarks that spending 20 minutes on a treadmill or out walking is actually somewhat hard to do. Not wrong, but it only gets easier if you do it. And then it starts to get a lot easier.

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misha599
16 days ago
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Try convincing them with incline walking - feels less daunting than running and has helped me get going! And now as it's gotten easier I'm starting to feel a natural running bug to up my intensity.
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taeric
16 days ago
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Alas, I'm trying to convince them to put down whatever other distraction they have. That is a predictably difficult thing to surmount.
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bovermyer
16 days ago
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I started "running" a mile a week ago. I use quotes because I walk the first couple blocks to warm up and walk the last several blocks to cool down, and the entire route is just over a mile. On day 1, I jogged for a couple blocks at a time, walking for rest in between. I definitely walked more than I jogged.

This morning, I jogged more than I walked, and almost jogged the entire distance between warm up and cool down.

I haven't decided yet if I will then move to doing a second lap or if I will instead work on speed.

Either way, the daily habit has been surprisingly enjoyable, even if I'm very out of shape. The progress is addicting.

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nlarew
16 days ago
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If you have the time I recommend working on distance first. Running farther is great for fat loss & cardio training and speed only really matters if you're trying to be competitive in races or have to squeeze your run into a confined time slot.

I also find that adding distance makes it easier to improve time. If I can only run 1 mile, it's pretty hard to run that same mile but faster. BUT if I can run 3 miles, it's a bit easier to run 1/3 of my normal distance but focusing on pushing the pace.

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igouy
16 days ago
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We can try 10 yards faster and then repeat.

As-long-as we gradually increase our effort.

Somedays walk, somedays jog, somedays shorter, somedays longer — it's all good.

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BizarroLand
16 days ago
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Don't push yourself too hard, especially if you are out of shape.

I did the same thing but kept pushing harder because my muscles could keep up and I wanted to build up cardio endurance, but I didn't take into account my bones.

Shin splints are no joke and will sideline you for months without warning. It takes several months for your leg bones to build up the compressive strength to deal with continuous high impact running.

Even if your endurance can take it, take your time. Slow and steady wins the race.

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bovermyer
15 days ago
[-]
As a result of your comment, I went looking into advice for beginning runners. This led me to understand heart rate zones and other related concepts.

I've now dialed my efforts way back, since apparently I was pushing way too hard and didn't even realize it. Thank you!

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igouy
15 days ago
[-]
(I did read your other comment.)

Continue doing the walk / jog that you found "surprisingly enjoyable".

Continue doing jog instead of walk when that feels OK to you, and walk or stop whenever you feel like it.

Continue for a month.

Long enough to learn what your body feels like with that regular exercise. Learn to distinguish routine tiredness from something doesn't feel right. Let how your body feels be your guide.

Also, progress will be smoother if you also try to level-up with exercises designed to prepare for running.

The best approach I've come across is "Running Rewired" by Jay Dicharry. I was lucky enough to stumble across it in the local library.

https://www.google.com/books/edition/Running_Rewired/epZUDwA...

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bovermyer
15 days ago
[-]
Thanks for the tips, and yeah, I'll check out that book!
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singlow
16 days ago
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I was here about a year ago. Getting close to doing 5k 4 times a week, but the last 2k are more walk than run. I'm definitely more interested in getting endurance over speed, but both improve pretty steadily at this point. I guess once I'm doing 5k without walking I'll try to just increase pace. Pretty amazing how much better my quality of life is since exercising seriously for the first time in my late 40s.
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2c0m
16 days ago
[-]
I was you like 3-4 months ago. Part walking, part running. It was a tough start and I was extremely sore during many runs!

Keep it up though. All of a sudden it all sort of comes together. I just ran 9 miles straight last week! I was shocked and so excited.

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ch4s3
16 days ago
[-]
The cool thing about running and lifting weights is that you see a lot of progress early on. The path to a sub 30 minute 5k is all about getting out the door and consistently running a little more. Pretty much everyone who starts weight lifting has a moment a few months in where they go to lift a random household object and are shocked by how light it feels.
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DwnVoteHoneyPot
15 days ago
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Just to clarify, you only run 1 mile per day? You're seeing fitness gains from 1 mile? I'm not judging, that's 1 mile more than I do now. I'm just wondering if that's a useful technique vs. running longer a few times a week. I'm guessing it useful to get you in the habit. Also, lower risk of injury. I guess i can just try it myself, it's only 1 mile.
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itslennysfault
15 days ago
[-]
I'm not a doctor or any kind of expert, but I think consistency is pretty much always the best. A lot of people get stuck in a weird mindset of "it's only a mile why bother" ... but even just going for a walk every day is infinitely better than doing nothing.

From my own experience, after 2020 threw me into a bit of a depression I gained a bunch of weight for the first time in my life. I decided I was going to "workout every day" but gave myself a ton of grace about what the definition of "workout" meant. If it was bed time and I hadn't done anything yet I'd just do a couple sets of pushups to "check the box" and go to sleep. I tried to do as much as I could every day, but still gave myself a pat on the back as long as I did ANYTHING that I could call a "workout" ... I lost the weight shockingly quickly and felt a lot better even though most days I was only working out for 10-20 minutes.

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elijaht
15 days ago
[-]
> I started running a mile five days a week, and have slowly moved up distance and pace

Presumably more than a mile a day now

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yihong0618
16 days ago
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Hi I record my running for almost 15 years

you can check https://yihong.run/

and also a repo: https://github.com/yihong0618/running_page

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tomashubelbauer
16 days ago
[-]
The map on your page is incredibly cool to me! Is 2023 a bug or did you really run a single loop for the whole year? What I imagine running while on house arrest would be like :D (Just kidding, of course :))
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nico_h
16 days ago
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Zoom way out, the usual area is a bit “south”.
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bob1029
16 days ago
[-]
Very impressive work.

I've been on an unbroken rowing streak (Concept2) since December last year. Half hour per day mandatory, no rest days. Typical distance rowed is 6.5-8km. There are days where I "take it easy" but I still force a minimum distance of 6.5km regardless of how long it takes. My rationale for using the C2 is the lower impact and the fact that it resides inside a climate controlled building. These factors help reduce the possibility of excuse making.

I found that taking even one day off is all it takes to throw my discipline into a death spiral. Making it a required thing no matter what changes the psychology and game theory. It has become entirely a background concern after day 90 or so. There are days where I have to row and then do hours of yard work. The first two weeks of Texas summer almost got to me. But, this too has become a background concern. I can wake up, row 30 minutes, landscape for 2 hours, and then write code or post on HN until the sun goes down. No naps, stimulants or motivational speeches required.

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zdc1
16 days ago
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A lot of the comments are raising how unsafe it is to be exercising through 10 years of life without a day off, but as someone who also tends to let a day off turn into a year off, I can appreciate the wisdom of slowing rather than stopping / having a slow day rather than an off day.
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gh0stcat
16 days ago
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I really enjoy the philosophy of the 80/20 rule for running (Book from Matt Fitzgerald), which says that 80% of your training should be at level 2, where your heart rate is much lower. It's made it a lot easier to actually go run every day, as it doesn't leave me feeling exhausted and it changes the psychology from feeling like I need to run faster to actually needing to slow myself down, which is really transformative for me in particular. YMMV, pun intended.
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RamblingCTO
16 days ago
[-]
I don't think 1mi per day is dangerous by a longshot but pushing through injury and sickness is wildly dangerous. heart infection is a thing, especially for men
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fivestones
15 days ago
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Do you have e some evidence for this? I’m looking but having trouble finding any. May you are talking about myocarditis risk during/after influenza infection? Even for that I can’t find anything specifically showing that exercise increases the risk. I haven’t looked exhaustively though, and I’d love to see the evidence if you can point me to it.
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nlarew
16 days ago
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What do you do if you're out of town for a vacation, work trip, family event, etc? I could see making a daily habit work for running since your feet work anywhere but if you physically don't have access to a rowing machine do you find some alternative?
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bob1029
16 days ago
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I haven't encountered this scenario yet, but I would just substitute with running, stationary bike, etc. The whole point of rowing is to minimize impact and encourage consistency day-to-day. If we need to deviate on rare occasions to stay on track, it's not a big deal.

Not overthinking the exercise is a big part of not falling off the wagon. If you wrap yourself around that post it can really discourage you. Perfect is the enemy of really, really good things.

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rixed
16 days ago
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I don't know what impress me the most: that you run every single day for 10 years, or that you manage to have a data point for each of those. Not a single day did you forget your phone/watch/wtv? Not a single data loss? Not a single account hijaking/locked out/revoken token? Do you have your personnal SRE team?
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mminer237
16 days ago
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It's all stored on Strava. You just push a button when you start running and when you stop. If it's habit, you notice pretty fast if you don't have your phone, especially if you listen to music or something when you run.
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rixed
16 days ago
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I don't run as much, and never more than 1h, yet it happened several times to me that my phone battery died on me while running. (I'm obviously not carrying a powerbank with me, and my phone is many years old). It would also expect that Strava or the network would fail from time to time (no need to go as far as antarctica for that - I've been living in germany for less than a year and I have lost track already of how many times the 5G/4G network has been out of order for hours). I guess strava has a good networkless mode. Or maybe my experience with tech has been particularly bad and I'm an outlier?
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SketchySeaBeast
15 days ago
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I don't know about Strava, but I have a Garmin running watch. It's got a battery that lasts for over a week and stores all activities until it can be uploaded via phone. The only failure point there might be user error, but given we're talking about a 1 mile run, I barely count that as penance if I have to redo it.
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Breza
9 days ago
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The battery life of Garmin watches is astonishing. When I get a low battery alert, I still have several days to plug it in. If my phone dies, my watch stores my run until I get home, at which point it logs into my Wi-Fi network and uploads it automatically.

I had a bunch of Fitbits over the course of a decade and wish I'd made the change earlier.

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epolanski
16 days ago
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I keep track of my calories every day, every meal, every snack from a very long time. It's very rare to not have the phone or another device close when I'm eating or after the meal, even if offline I'll send a WhatsApp message to myself and it will be sent when im back online.

In the very rare occasions I don't have a phone I vividly remember what I've eaten and will record it later.

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k__
16 days ago
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Neurotypicals, am I right? :')
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rixed
16 days ago
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You are always the neurotypical of someone, I guess :)
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jdefr89
16 days ago
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Same.. I am surprised someone would remember the exact dates to when they started running consistently... Seems odd..
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randlet
16 days ago
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A lot of runners (me included) are data nerds and record every runs date/time, distance, pace, weather, shoes worn, how we're feeling, temperature, elevation gain etc.
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SketchySeaBeast
15 days ago
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Watch the start of most race events and the first thing that people will do as they start is turn on their watches.
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footy
16 days ago
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why? Give me 10 minutes and I could tell you the exact dates of each training program I've done since I was in University 18 years ago.
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jdefr89
16 days ago
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Really? I can hardly remember what the hell I was doing one day ago... I am probably just burned out though so that doesn't mean much.
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footy
16 days ago
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I don't remember either, but I've always kept training logs. The 10 minutes are to check those!
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dirkc
16 days ago
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I'd like to congratulate you on all those 1 mile days - I opened the link expecting to go "yeah, this person is just extremely lucky that they're one of those people that can just run all the time with no issues".

But a 1 mile run mean you've put your shoes on, went outdoor, were active and it feels extremely doable for anyone. I'm wondering if I walk at least 1 mile each day, if not, I definitely should!

Thanks for the share!

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Breza
9 days ago
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I had a similar reaction. OP has only run a few marathons, and most of his runs aren't exactly setting a record-breaking pace. That's a refreshing change from social media influencers who make it seem like anyone can run a near-4 or tackle Cocodona. I'm training for my first ultra, and so much of the experience is mental. OP is an inspiration in developing mental toughness and dedication.
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Tepix
16 days ago
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He does run inside 13% of the time.
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zparky
19 days ago
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just wanted to say the site looks awesome! I love the minimal black+white/grayscale and the fonts are just lovely. vis looks great too, I enjoyed poking around nearly all of the unique runs to look at the map and paces.
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natnatenathan
16 days ago
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I came to say this as well. I really like the design and all the fun statistics.
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som
16 days ago
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Agreed. Was wondering where the inspiration came for each chart choice?
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friggeri
15 days ago
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I wanted something minimalist but high contrast, and enough variety so charts would not be repetitive. I have a thing for data visualization, so I pulled inspiration from the pile of books I have on my bookshelf.
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Breza
9 days ago
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What are some of your favorite data viz books? I'm a fellow chart nerd and I'm always looking for new suggestions.
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zug_zug
16 days ago
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I'd be curious to see long-term improvements, like resting heartrate over time, or heartrate @ 10 min mile over time.
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nasmorn
18 days ago
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Impressive. I did streak running for 6 months nice and it was some of the most productive running in my life. Interestingly I have much higher yearly averages than you do but still consider daily streak running quite hard. Not being a morning runner myself might contribute since I get into a lot of close calls that way. My streak literally ended when my daughter went into the hospital and I couldn’t well just fuck off for a run any longer.
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elcaro
16 days ago
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Under the "Countries Visited" section it says "been lucky to run on all seven continents, including antarctica!", but it doesn't look like they've been to Australia.
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pinkmuffinere
16 days ago
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Oh lol you’re right! Perhaps they ran in Australia before they started this ten-year streak? In that case it could still be true, but not show in the data

Edit: also, they pulled the data from strava. It’s possible they forgot to record their Australian run(s) in strava for some reason

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xarope
16 days ago
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wonder if I know this person, as I've also run on all seven continents, as well as the north pole (which is not a continent).

there aren't that many of us (that have run on antarctica, vs king george island).

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friggeri
16 days ago
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I haven’t been to Australia, but I’ve run in Hawaii, which is part of Oceania (broader than just Australia).
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pedalpete
15 days ago
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Come to Australia! It's a great place to run!

Or NZ at the least. Hawaii isn't on the content. You've got only one continent to go before you can check that box.

I have 100% confidence you'll do it!

I ran every day for a year, and kinda wished I had kept going (though I only managed 3 continents in that year).

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bigDinosaur
16 days ago
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Notably not on the tectonic plate Australia is on (which is mostly although not entirely just Australia in terms of land), though, if someone is going by that definition.
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4gotunameagain
16 days ago
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Eh, that doesn't really count. Sounds like a good excuse for a trip ;)
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soperj
16 days ago
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there's also 8 continents now apparently.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zealandia

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jmpavlec
16 days ago
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Something funky with your personal beats. It says your best 5k was in 35:35 but your best 10k was in 43:26. Not possible for those both to be true . I guess the 5k data is screwy since that is quite a slow 5k time.

Edit: seems maybe tht 5k is mislabeled, should be 5 miles... But that feels like a less standardized time.

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wging
16 days ago
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Just a labeling issue. If you click on the 5k you get a detail popup on the right that says 5 miles, which is much more in line with several of the other times.

5 miles is not that uncommon a race distance in the US; 8k is very close, but you can still find both. (There are much fewer 3-mile or 6-mile races, those are mostly all 5ks and 10ks.) Though it's unclear if it was an organized race.

edit: it probably wasn't an organized race, there's a separate "races" tab.

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friggeri
16 days ago
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Definitely a bug, will fix tomorrow, thanks for catching!
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LeafItAlone
16 days ago
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The label seems to be off. It’s 5 miles, not 5 kilometers. Based on the data below it and map.
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grilledchickenw
16 days ago
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OP, what is that grid of geo-located countries called? It's beautiful, and I want to play with such a map. Is there a name for this?
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friggeri
16 days ago
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Those are called "tile grid maps", I got the template for the world one here: https://policyviz.com/2017/10/12/the-world-tile-grid-map/
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HexPhantom
16 days ago
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Streak culture is motivating, but I always wonder where the line is between discipline and obsession. Still, there's something powerful about building a routine that becomes part of your identity
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HeartStrings
16 days ago
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Stop treating obsession like a bad thing. That’s the only way how you get at front page of hackernews.
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jdefr89
16 days ago
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As someone with severe OCD my entire life... Trust me its a bad thing.
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puppymaster
16 days ago
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I am gonna blame your OCD for the malfunctioned sarcasm detector.
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fivestones
15 days ago
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But obsession and OCD aren’t equivalent.
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SketchySeaBeast
15 days ago
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I've always found obsession to turn into resentment. For myself I need to give myself permission to take a day off and find a schedule that works for me.
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Breza
9 days ago
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Different approaches work for different folks. When I was new to running, I had a good streak going for a long time. Now that I'm training for ultras, I focus on quality training, which can mean spending a Saturday playing with my daughter and not thinking about running. My focus has shifted to weekly mileage and Garmin-dictated training load.
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ColinEberhardt
16 days ago
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That is very cool, thanks for sharing, and congratulations on an epic streak.

I'm also into running visualisation, and created the running report card:

https://run-report.com/

It visualises your year in running, with some fun narrative generated by GPT. Here's my report card:

https://run-report.com/8725202.html

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steivan
16 days ago
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Nice work. My first thought was whether I could get similar graphs for my own data — this run-report.com does exactly that. Clean design, and the GPT-generated summary is a nice touch. Thanks for sharing.
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paulcole
16 days ago
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I love streaks like this.

My current bests are: 686 days for completing the New York Times Crossword and 582 days of 20+ minutes of Apple Fitness+ classes.

Plus 15,344 days without driving a car (I never learned) and without having alcohol or soda (just never had the interest). And 5,123 days since I've taken Ecstasy (tried it once).

Around 6,000 days since I last intentionally ate meat, but I couldn't tell you the exact date.

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flexagoon
16 days ago
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> Around 6,000 days since I last intentionally ate meat

What does "intentionally" mean? Are you sometimes accidentally tricked into eating meat?

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paulcole
16 days ago
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I was pre-empting the ultra-clever HN commenter who might question whether I’d accidentally eaten meat as a byproduct of food production.
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andrewrn
16 days ago
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I got hopelessly addicted to running in college, then got a knee cartilage injury and haven't consistently ran in 3 years. Absolutely soul-disfiguring for those who love to do long slow runs like yourself. Cool data and visualizations!

Unreal that you rolled your own svg's for this instead of using d3.js. That absolutely blows my mind, great work!

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reactordev
16 days ago
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Having lived in Denver for a decade, I can say it’s definitely a run city. So many run groups. A guy I used to work with did ultra marathons of 100mi+. Insane. Good for you! I saw the flat irons green mountain run and immediately said “Hey, I know that place!!!”

I’m not going to run it but I’ve hiked up in there a bunch of times.

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wvh
16 days ago
[-]
I admire your dedication. I also like the spartan look of your site.

I'm a trail runner and I've been running over 18 years or so, not every day, but two or three times a week. Sickness or health, injury, birthdays, holidays, rain, snow, -30C. My last big run was around Christmas. After that I had about three months medical off-time. Now it's very hard to get back on track. I just had to cancel some summer running events. It's not just motivation, but general stiffness and musculoskeletal pains like shin splints and knee and ankle soreness. My guess is that at my (middle) age, you either do it or lose it.

I advise anybody to find something they like and stick with it. Vary it according to how your body feels, but always do something. Keep the body (and the brain) working.

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jdkoeck
16 days ago
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Have you tried getting back into cardio with a softer method like biking? Maybe that combined with some strength exercices could toughen up your body enough that you can start running again! Anyway, best wishes.
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nathan_compton
16 days ago
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Trail running has started to absolutely wreck my back. Part of the problem is that I can't wear shoes that have plastic in them because of an allergy. Advice?
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nico_h
16 days ago
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There’s a movement called “barefoot shoes” / “barefoot running”. Very different gait from usual running and all the cushioning is in the muscles/ tendons. You can find some brands that have coton + rubber shoes (rubber is from a plant whereas plastic is from petroleum, don’t know if that works for you). And hemp or wool insoles. Probably not very durable but softer and more flexible than leather.
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raffael_de
16 days ago
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I'd be interested in some knee cartilage statistics.
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igouy
15 days ago
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Stuff happens.

"Roger Federer says he was injured giving daughter bath"

https://www.espn.com/tennis/story/_/id/15059810/roger-federe...

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boguscoder
16 days ago
[-]
Just from stats alone I assume op is from Colorado but ~4 years in a decade were split between NY and CA, that’s impressive level of traveling even ignoring all the rest of the even more impressive international trips. What do you do for living, man on the run:)?
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DevX101
16 days ago
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Do you have longitudinal resting heart rate data? Would love to see how it changed over the years.
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friggeri
16 days ago
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I haven’t aggregated the trend over time, but my resting HR has definitely decreased, I’m roughly around 40bpm at the moment, down from ~60bpm 10 years ago.
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LeonM
16 days ago
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> I’m roughly around 40bpm at the moment, down from ~60bpm 10 years ago

To put that into perspective for other readers: I've been running for about 10 years also, but typically 2x a week (10k mid-week, 15~20k weekend), I have no real data on my heart rate from when I started, but at rest I'm now typically at 60bpm.

I measure almost daily due to medication and having a minor heart defect, and I have noticed that if I skip a week of running, it'll slowly go up, averaging at ~62bpm, but when I train for a (half) marathon I typically increase my distance a bit and try to train every other day (~3x/week) then my heart rate a rest goes down a bit to be consistently below 60bpm (58bpm avg).

40bpm is very low, for non-athletes this would be considered dangerously low, but I guess daily running at OPs distance would classify OP as an athlete. Also keep in mind that heart rate differs per person, some people just naturally have a low heartbeat.

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LourensT
16 days ago
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He might be referring to his sleeping heart rate. Mine's around 40bpm too, and although I'm in shape, I am definitely not an athlete. There is a correlation with height (taller -> slower bpm). If you are young and fit, I don't think you have much to worry about a slow resting heart rate, in the absence of other symptoms.
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vunderba
16 days ago
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Was just coming to say that there's definitely a genetic component. Even in my more sedentary periods of life, my resting HR never really peaked above ~55 BPM. Playing tennis and going for regular runs with my husky puts my resting HR at 38-40bpm. My father who also runs and plays sports has a similar heart rate.

Just so we're clear on definitions, resting HR is your heart-rate AT REST (meaning sitting or lying down quietly), it's not necessarily your HR while you are sleeping which may be potentially lower.

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NoPicklez
16 days ago
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This is brilliant!

I'd like to see your average HR per pace marker to see how your running zones have changed at the same pace over time.

The average HR for a 10k you did at 5,50 per km did 6 years ago compared to now at the same pace.

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ck2
16 days ago
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I've run for 40 years but not every day because of age/illness (covid will pretty much end your life)

I don't think you should be running through illness and stress fractures but I can't really criticize as I get the obsession

My personal joke is that I like to get my "10,000 steps a day" in all in the first hour

but this is actually the most amazing part to me:

     COUNTRIES VISITED
     been lucky to run on all seven continents, including antarctica!
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rasen58
16 days ago
[-]
Can you post a picture of what your body looks like? Curious if a person who runs every day has a very thin body or if you are more well built still
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blackbear_
16 days ago
[-]
Congrats! How are your knees doing if I may ask and how did you take care of them?

I've only been running for a couple of years and already feeling troubles brewing in.

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ultrarunner
16 days ago
[-]
The idea that running leads to knee damage is a pervasive myth.
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pedro_caetano
16 days ago
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The focus is usually on the increased impact during running, but arguably when averaged over the time it is actually somewhat equivalent to walking, the 'air time' of each joint means you are effectively under no load with some form of decompression.

It is effectively a higher load with a lower duty cycle. versus walking with a lower load at about 50% duty cycle.

Joint 'damage' is a misnomer. Joint surfaces are under load/impact and friction while running, that is just biomechanics.

Other mechanical parts like bearings have a load capacity and lifetime. It is not a stretch to model the same for articular surfaces on your hips, knees, ankles.

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rendaw
15 days ago
[-]
I was curious so I looked

https://health.clevelandclinic.org/is-running-bad-for-your-k...

> Running does not cause arthritis, and when you rest, your body — and your knees — recover from the effects of running

> The type of surface you run on does matter because it changes the impact on your body

Okay, so if running does not cause arthritis, how can the type of surface matter wrt to causing arthritis?

Then they suggest a new myth, that running prevents arthritis.

https://www.health.harvard.edu/blog/does-running-cause-arthr...

> Runners can get arthritis, but is running the cause?

This section ends with "While the answers are still not entirely clear, we're moving closer."

Then they have a large section on why it's hard to determine.

https://www.nm.org/healthbeat/healthy-tips/fitness/is-runnin...

> Knee and joint pain may be common complaints among runners

> More common sources of pain or injury in runners’ knees are iliotibial band syndrome (ITBS) and patellofemoral pain syndrome (PFPS), says Dr. Mayer.

So it doesn't sound like a myth, unless you restrict your definition of knee health to "osteoarthritis".

Each of these cited a number of studies. I know there's a lot of "these are professional researchers, of course they controlled for bias" and the studies said "we controlled for bias" but it wasn't clear how they controlled for bias or how it was effective.

For example, the one about marathon runners didn't analyze long term affects of marathon running, just whether the people who ran marathons at the time had arthritis (no: if you had arthritis you would probably quit running marathons). Another general meta study seemed similar (recreational runners have lower arthritis, but would you be a recreational runner if you had arthritis?) in addition to noting higher arthritis in long term (15 year) runners vs general population.

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Helmut10001
16 days ago
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I agree, and I've heard the same. In my experience, knee problems always disappeared with moderate running. Of course, you have to allow yourself time to recover after running. But as far as I know, the science is that joint lubrication in your knees needs activity to function properly.
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shepherdjerred
16 days ago
[-]
How so?
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noah_buddy
16 days ago
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Old people often have bad knees. Runners often become old people. People make an association that’s not born out in statistics. Most of the body is “use it or lose it” and running improves blood flow and development of muscles and structures of/around the knee.
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friggeri
16 days ago
[-]
I’ve been lucky to never have any real knee issues. The only period I ended up with a little knee pain was because of a poor running shoe choice, and it resolved when I got properly fitted and changed shoes. Hope you figure out the source of your troubles!
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alternatex
16 days ago
[-]
Do strength training, as in compound leg exercises once or twice a week. Squats, forward lunges, (and many more you can find online for knee strength). The healthiest approach to running is not just running, especially if you're over 30 :)
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jamil7
16 days ago
[-]
It might be worth going to a sports physio that specialises in runners. I did this a year ago and fixed my overstriding and increased my cadence and no longer have random soreness or troubles in hips or knees etc.
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can16358p
16 days ago
[-]
Impressive.

A nice addition would be adding a switch for converting to non-American units though

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llmthrow103
16 days ago
[-]
Looks fantastic! I run somewhat regularly and enjoy it, but would never make it my primary form of exercise due to the high impact stress on the body and relatively high injury rate compared to other solo forms of exercise. What made you decide to make it your primary form of exercise, and to do it every day?
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hopelite
16 days ago
[-]
Congratulations. I just have one question; how do you run one day in each, Porto Rico, Hawaii, Austria, Sweden, let alone China?

In other words; what led to being in each of those places for only one day? I don’t understand how you, e.g., found yourself in Puerto Rico for only one day.

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friggeri
16 days ago
[-]
Unfortunately my treadmill runs don’t have GPS data associated with them. Austria, PR and Hawaii were places where I ran mostly in the gym.

This being said, Sweden is a fun one: I was in Copenhagen for a few weeks and I thought it’d be fun to take the train to Malmo, do my long run, and then take the train back. All that to say, I’ve spent 3h30 in Sweden, 3h05 of which I was running.

Shanghai was an overnight layover.

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yamatokaneko
19 days ago
[-]
This is so cool! At what point did you start thinking about this project? Like, were you quietly working on it a year ago after every run, just waiting for this moment?

And hey, great run in Japan! (Tokyo here!) I love the map visualization too.

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friggeri
19 days ago
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I thought about it last week, was pretty quick to hack together!

I loved loved running in Japan, such a wonderful country

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blarg1
16 days ago
[-]
I started walking everyday 1-4km, and then switched to jogging 1-2.5 km everyday. It built up the muscles in my back so I no longer slouch, also fixed constipation issues I was having.
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suralind
16 days ago
[-]
What a dope website. I used to run every day for a ~year and every since I'm on a decline. Would really love to get into that habit again.
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Antitoxic6185
16 days ago
[-]
you seem to be leaking your access token for mapbox.com api?

'pk.eyJ1IjoiZnJpZ2dlcmkiLCJhIjoiY21jbHdmZmZmMGV3dTJpcHR5cWcwOHhzdyJ9.Z-XMMh_nFDjm8FUyB2tZ_w'

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hotdogsalesman
16 days ago
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pk usually means publishable key - should be fine
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throwaway2037
16 days ago
[-]
First, congrats on your self discipline.

Second: About running just one mile in a single day: Does have any physical benefit? (Yes, I know you run more than one mile on many days.) It would take more time to change in to/out of your clothes and shoes than run a mile. Plus it only burns 100 cals. Can you imagine someone writing here that they only swim 9 mins per day... Or bike 9 mins per day?

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fivestones
15 days ago
[-]
Yes. It does have physical benefit.

Here’s a study called “Minimum amount of physical activity for reduced mortality and extended life expectancy: a prospective cohort study” https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21846575/

From the abstract: “Compared with individuals in the inactive group, those in the low-volume activity group, who exercised for an average of 92 min per week (95% CI 71-112) or 15 min a day (SD 1·8), had a 14% reduced risk of all-cause mortality (0·86, 0·81-0·91), and had a 3 year longer life expectancy.”

Of course 1 mile a day is less than 15 minutes for most people, but that 92 min per week is just 13 minutes 9 seconds per day. I’m guessing with the long runs he’s over this when measured weekly.

There are other corroborating studies too.

Here’s from “Association between Bout Duration of Physical Activity and Health: Systematic Review” (https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6527142/)

“Additional evidence was identified from cross-sectional and prospective studies to support that bouts of physical activity <10 minutes in duration are associated with a variety of health outcomes…The current evidence, from cross-sectional and prospective cohort studies, supports that physical activity of any bout duration is associated with improved health outcomes, which includes all-cause mortality.”

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calcifer
16 days ago
[-]
> Does have any physical benefit?

Compared to what? Sitting on the couch, snacking on chips? Of course.

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xenocratus
16 days ago
[-]
Compared to letting your body fully rest during that day (perhaps in between longer runs).
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joduplessis
16 days ago
[-]
I'm not running so much anymore (foot injury) - but for the last 15 years I've spent an hour+ on the road or in the gym 5 - 6 (sometimes 7) days a week. Also through sickness, injury, etc. It's changed the way I view being alive and healthy - I actually consider it "chronic medication" :) Kudos to the OP though - that's some mad dedication.
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brnaftr361
15 days ago
[-]
I love this, kinda vindicated my behaviors. I won't run in thunderstorms and I have trouble justifying getting out once the temperature tips above 80. Looking at such a disciplined runner I see similar traits. Unfortunately these are both frequent occurances where I live.

Of course that may also just be due to locale.

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no-reply
16 days ago
[-]
Fascinating. I wonder if this is all run time or a mix of running+walking? I started running recently three days a week and this is my schedule-walk 5 mins , run 22 minutes, walk 5 minutes, another 22 min run, and then a final 5 min walk.

I cover about ~4 miles or so depending on my pace. I increase my running duration every other week by a few minutes.

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shahzaibmushtaq
16 days ago
[-]
You collected and logged all 3653 days of data through a device or manually by typing/saving it where initially (excel sheet) after each new run?

The details are astonishing.

Can you tell how you managed all of this so gracefully? Were you working on this idea from day 1? When did you buy this domain?

You even saved and displayed a few dozen live map coordinates as well from 2016 onwards.

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import
16 days ago
[-]
Most of the well known GPS watches supports GPX exports.
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dmazin
16 days ago
[-]
Strava and GPS watches and Apple Watch make this really easy, even back in 2015.
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shahzaibmushtaq
15 days ago
[-]
Thank you! I wanted to know from the author.
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serial_dev
16 days ago
[-]
I really appreciate the website, it's amazing!

How do the runs end up on the dashboard? Is that Apple Watch / Strava data that you automatically or manually export? How many different systems did you have to integrate? I assume you don't necessarily used the same app or watch to track your running ten years ago that you use today?

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piyiotisk
15 days ago
[-]
I am interested in your experience with nextjs vs vanillajs, html etc. the site seems simple enough that it could be done using just html etc. I have this dilemma, using vanillajs vs react. If you can share your thought process it would be awesome. Thanks and congrats on the 10 years of running!
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Zaylan
16 days ago
[-]
Running every day for ten years is impressive enough on its own. What really stands out to me is how you turned the whole thing into a structured, data-driven project. The way you blended life and tech feels genuinely inspiring. It's not just about running, it's about how you choose to spend your time.
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anonnon
16 days ago
[-]
> heart procedures

Do you have AFib, by any chance? Congratulations on your streak, regardless.

EDIT: in another comment, you mentioned:

> I needed a cardiac ablation a couple of years ago

So I guess that's a yes? Was that when you were averaging 5.3 miles daily that one year? For those unaware, there's a well-established link between excessive endurance exercise and AFib.

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friggeri
16 days ago
[-]
Not AFib thankfully, I had a few sporadic SVTs while running (it’s however unclear whether exercise was the original cause, or if it was congenital and started manifesting while running).

Thankfully the ablation took care of them and I haven’t had an episode in a few years.

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anonnon
15 days ago
[-]
Thanks for your reply, and good luck with your streak and your SVT staying in remission.
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aanet
15 days ago
[-]
Well done! Very inspiring. And a lovely app too. Excellent visualizations. Though the low-contrast is a bit hard to read/see.

Do you also use Apple Watch (or other smartwatch) while running? If so, in your experience, do the run stats match up with Strava?? How different are they?

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bix6
16 days ago
[-]
Congrats! Why don’t you ever take a day off eg for recuperation or during some of the more serious issues you mention?
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friggeri
16 days ago
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Jogging a slow mile is pretty much "a day off" these days
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jimlawruk
16 days ago
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Great job. The website is well done, too. I had a streak of about 400+ days several years ago which I ended the day after a marathon. Today I take off when I am sick or the day after a long race. The morning coffee doesn't taste right unless I run beforehand. :)
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igouy
16 days ago
[-]
I find the coffee tastes better when I clean my teeth after the run :-)
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agcat
20 days ago
[-]
Love it! How did you stay motivated?
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friggeri
20 days ago
[-]
At first it was all about the challenge of doing one more day.

After about two years the streak became part of my identity, which might sound a little unhealthy. It’s easier to just head out and jog a mile or two than to let the number go back to zero.

This being said, it’s made for interesting conversations with medical professionals – I needed a cardiac ablation a couple of years ago and my electrocardiologist came to an “agreement” (as in she didn’t forcefully dissuade me from doing it) that I could jog a slow slow slow mile late in the evening the day after the procedure, as long as I kept my heart rate down and I made sure I was being mindful of my puncture sites.

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sim7c00
20 days ago
[-]
just want to second this. and realy, antarctica?? how?? i mean, apart from the logistics etc , ... is it runnable? i can hardly picture it in such harshness!
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joshvm
16 days ago
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Speaking for the US stations, in the summer you can run outdoors. I don't want to say many people do, but there are always some.

Here's me from a few years ago, to give an idea of the clothing required https://icecube.wisc.edu/news/life-at-the-pole/2021/01/week-...

Even at the South Pole, we have a 5k "Race Around the World" at Christmas, and a marathon shortly after New Year. In 2022, someone did an ultra. It's compacted snow/ice. Not easy terrain, but doable in your average pair of running shoes (with wooly socks). For the race events we normally ask someone to drive round the route a few times to compact it a bit more. On the coast at McMurdo there are routes that are more like traditional trail running - dirt/gravel, hills. I assume other stations are similar.

The more intrepid folks gave up when it got to around -50C and then it's treadmills until sunrise and it warms up again.

There's also a more pay-to-play marathon: https://www.icemarathon.com/ ($22k)

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tempestn
16 days ago
[-]
Those might've been some of the treadmill runs. Also looks like they were all one-milers.
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moomoo11
16 days ago
[-]
Very cool. I can’t run (bad knees) but I’ve been making a habit of walking at least 30 min a day, and goal of 90 minutes.

I’m happy to have hit that goal this past week, and your post inspired me to make every week a successful one in that regard. Thanks!

Cheers, best with everything!

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patrickhogan1
16 days ago
[-]
This really inspired me. I think I will do one on basketball.

Great work on data collection for 10 years. Quantified self tracking into a universal format is still really hard.

What tracking sensors do you use that input into Strava? (e.g. Garmin, Apple Watch, built in iphone, etc)?

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friggeri
16 days ago
[-]
It’s changed over time: I first used MapMyRun with my iPhone, then switched to Strava on the iPhone, then got a garmin, and nowadays an Apple Watch. I’m super grateful for Strava to exist, if only as a repo of all my workouts.
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HexPhantom
16 days ago
[-]
Would be super cool to see a "no days off" streak in a skill-based sport like that
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alalonde
15 days ago
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Reminds me of those "birthday challenges" I see a lot of here in the mountain west: e.g. climb 25 pitches on your 25th birthday, run 28 miles on your 28th, etc. Gets a lot harder (or more contrived) as you get older!
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MOARDONGZPLZ
16 days ago
[-]
I’ve always wanted to do this, but I fly to Singapore from the USA about annually. That means that I essentially skip a day (take off on day 1, land on day 3) so can’t qualify for the streak. Also why I couldn’t do the 366 day streak in one year.
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paulcole
16 days ago
[-]
Will Shortz (NYT crossword editor) had a table tennis streak that was going to be affected in a similar way.

> You cannot fly from New York to Bangalore without missing a day in the calendar. So I flew to Dubai and stopped there for two and a half days, played table tennis at clubs there, and then flew on to Bangalore. I’ve been to China and Japan multiple times, and, because of the time change, the flight leaves New York at, say, 11 a.m. and gets to China or Japan late afternoon the next day. So I play early in the morning, like seven or eight, go directly to the airport, fly to Beijing, get off the plane, and go directly to a club to keep my streak alive.

https://www.newyorker.com/culture/the-new-yorker-interview/w...

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pinkmuffinere
16 days ago
[-]
I don’t think this is true! Days of your life are (imo) not defined by the date line, but by the 24-hour periods you experience. If you accept my rules, then as long as you always have flights shorter than 24 hours, you can still run on sequential days.

Edit: you could also potentially run on the plane. I admit that would be pretty weird though

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PaulDavisThe1st
16 days ago
[-]
I ran on the Queen Mary II, every day, across the Atlantic :)

Much easier than a plane, though.

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zylepe
16 days ago
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A friend of mine is on a 25 year running every day streak. He flew to Australia and landed 2 days after taking off and said that day “never existed for him” ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
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bot403
16 days ago
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I like your friend's rule. If a guy literally runs every day, through stress fractures, flu, winter snow, thunderstorms, etc, I'm going to cut him a break on an international flight and continue to celebrate his streak with him.
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ropable
16 days ago
[-]
I'm inspired. I need to start trying for this sort of consistency with resistance training. While I'd never advocate for "no days off", a lifetime of progress is built on a lifetime of participation.
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igtztorrero
16 days ago
[-]
Bike to run. Bike helps strengthen your knees, and it's very easy to target Zone 2, which achieves the highest calorie burn rate. This is how I got back into running after a meniscus injury, without surgery.
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reducesuffering
16 days ago
[-]
Zone 2 doesn't have the highest burn rate. It's just easier to maintain it longer. 1 hour Zone 2 burns more than 30 in Zone 3, but 30 in Zone 3 burns more than 30 in Zone 2.
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igtztorrero
15 days ago
[-]
You're right, I should have said: cardio zone 2 is where you achieve the highest rate of FAT calorie burning, since zones 3 and 4 primarily burn glycogen. For chubby people like me, who work 8 hours a day sitting down, the best way to stay in shape is to burn fat.
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reducesuffering
14 days ago
[-]
True about the fat / glycogen, although that's short term. I'm not confident, but from what I've read on it, our body is quite good at converting and allocating calories. So that if you spend 1 hour zone 2 burning mostly fat but 600 cals, vs. 1 hour zone 3 burning glycogen but 800 cals, when you eat 600 cals you'll still backfill the fat/glycogen, but zone 3 would still have been better for weight loss because of the increased calorie expenditure. So that zone 2 is better for fat loss very short term, but not necessarily long term unless you're also putting in more miles than you would higher zones. But regardless of the nitty-gritty you're doing the right thing focusing on zone 2 because it almost assuredly helps you run more and overall burn more. Most people do way too little because the higher zones feel awful to them.
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Trixter
14 days ago
[-]
I have posterior tibial tendonitis, and will never run (or walk without pain for more than 10 minutes) again. I am happy for you, in a bittersweet way.
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ahalimah
20 days ago
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Do you have the source/pipeline available? I love the design and would want to do something similar for my own runs.

Congrats on the decade! Did you ever focus on specific metrics or was it always just about the run?

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friggeri
19 days ago
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Unfortunately I ended up winging the data processing, so it was mostly a pile of adhoc scripts. The incremental update pulling from the Strava API is a little cleaner, but would require significant work to open source.

The only thing I ever really cared about was keeping the streak going, everything else has come second. I dropped out of a trail running trip after a fall because I felt that even though I could continue, putting too much mileage on my knee would jeopardize the streak.

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seany
16 days ago
[-]
You need a angular histogram (like WORKOUT ACTIVITY BY TIME) but for miles per direction ran. Doesn't really need to be more granular than 3 cardnals long to be pretty interesting.
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GZGavinZhao
16 days ago
[-]
I don't have the tenacity to run strictly _everyday_, so as a middle ground I don't run when it rains at anytime during daylight.

Of course the effectiveness of this rule depends on where you live :P

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kazinator
16 days ago
[-]
In particular, the access to indoor treadmills.
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rubansk
16 days ago
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decade streak is legit impressive. just hit 30 days of 5k myself. some might scoff at the number of 1mile days but dragging yourself out when you're busy or exhausted is rough.
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anon191928
16 days ago
[-]
"Running over 30 miles a week for probably my first five, six years on Tour pretty much destroyed my body and my knees,” Tiger Woods said.

So in 4 years it might be really bad? Be careful.

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nluken
16 days ago
[-]
Just running 30 miles a week is not enough to cause damage in most people. Tiger was also doing hours of professional-level golf training every day at the same time.
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matwood
16 days ago
[-]
7 miles/week vs. 30. And this doesn't count all the other physical stresses Tiger put on his body, like the insane torque he was able to generate swinging a club.

Even if the poster walked a mile day, that's only 20 minutes and barely hits the recommended exercise time.

I feel like anytime these threads pop up about someone staying physically healthy a bunch of people come out the woodwork to make it sound like they are hurting themselves. I'm not really sure why.

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seizethecheese
16 days ago
[-]
The pace chart looks very close to a normal distribution, cool!
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wjholden
16 days ago
[-]
I feel very inspired by this, thanks for sharing! Didn't know this Run Streak Association existed but now I want to join. Congratulations on your immense achievement.
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michaelhoney
16 days ago
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I love this! BTW you are selling yourself short on your 5K personal best. The time listed (35:35) is your best 5 mile, whereas your best 5K is a respectable 21:20
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Zeetah
16 days ago
[-]
I'm all on again, of again runner.

I was in the on phase, and we decided to get a puppy. She lives to sniff, run, and explore. So, looking forward to a long streak!

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unixfox
16 days ago
[-]
How do you manage to always find the free time for run even though the conditions doesn't allow it? Like for example if you take a flight of 16 hours.
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randlet
16 days ago
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I'm not a run streaker, but am an avid runner and if you "only" need to run a mile you really only need to find 15min in a day to keep your streak alive.
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fivestones
15 days ago
[-]
Once I did 5k running with my son in mostly empty terminals of an airport while on a layover. We were training for a race and didn’t want to miss the day.

The 16-17 hour flights from the US to Asia are really hard to manage when you are trying to run every day. Depending on when you take off, you may be in the air an entire calendar day, based on starting the flight in the time zone were you leave in the US and ending it in the time zone where you land in Asia. (Like Singapore airlines flight 23. Takes off 10:15 pm from New York on a Wednesday and lands 19 h 15m later on Friday morning 5:30 am in Singapore.) Either you decide that your first run in Singapore is going to be on New York time, or you say running in place on the plane is going to count, or you don’t take that kind of flight.

Flying the other way is easy to keep your streak with though. Take off from Singapore at 11:35 pm and land in New York at 6 the next morning (18 1/2 hours later)

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distances
16 days ago
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I don't want to speak for the OP, but most people don't take a 16 hour flight ever in their life.
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matwood
16 days ago
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Yeah, 16 hours is crazy long. I would add that I found the best thing to do on both sides of a lengthy flight (say 6-8 hours) is exercise.
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iancmceachern
16 days ago
[-]
Running has been good for me and my folks too.

It doesn't have to start big, you can start by running down your block once a day and go from there.

Start small, think big.

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sciencesama
16 days ago
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do you have code it on github ?
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albatrosstrophy
16 days ago
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As someone who' just counting steps, I'm genuinely curious what's your average steps per day? And how many steps over 10 years?
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nelox
16 days ago
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Honest question. Why is it imperative you run everyday? What would it mean for you to not run for day or everyday?
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DanOpcode
16 days ago
[-]
Is it possible to toggle from miles to km?
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johncole
16 days ago
[-]
This is incredible, really nice work. How do you deal with physical injury and giving yourself time to heal?
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rocauc
16 days ago
[-]
both the endeavor and the site are super cool - congrats on 10 years. interaction on the graphics would be a nice touch to select into a specific run. went looking for the code on your GH! https://github.com/friggeri
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_jholland
16 days ago
[-]
Obligatory Tom7 recommendation: [How I ran the length of every street in Pittsburgh: PAC TOM](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1c8i5SABqwU).

In this "expert mode running" video the protagonist, Tom Murphy VII, of computer science comedy YouTube fame, runs 3661 miles across 269 runs in this mammoth 16 year project to run every street in Pittsburgh, thus "completing" it Pac Man style.

If you are not familiar with Tom7 and his whimsy, I cannot recommend enough that you check his videos out.

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reader9274
16 days ago
[-]
What shoes do you use? How often do you replace them? How are your knees holding up after ten years?
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loeg
16 days ago
[-]
Some neat visualizations. I have a fondness for every-day running (I used to participate).
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HAL9OOO
15 days ago
[-]
Cool site man! Do you have the project on github to self host/play around too?
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junon
16 days ago
[-]
These graphs are gorgeous, visually and otherwise. Really well done display of information.
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high_priest
18 days ago
[-]
SVGs? So, some of the staistics graphs do not update, or have you made them dynamic by hand?
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chrisxlucas
18 days ago
[-]
beautifullllllll—both the streak and the stack. Love how lightweight the architecture is for something so personal and long-term. Curious if you noticed any patterns in the data that surprised you once you visualized it?
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mvkillu
19 days ago
[-]
Love it!

I will hit one year mark in a couple of weeks. Currently maintaining stats in a Google spreadsheet :)

https://vijaykillu.com/

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friggeri
16 days ago
[-]
Congrats, that’s an amazing milestone!
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BatmansMom
16 days ago
[-]
10 days in antarctica? Why were you there? Were these all treadmill days?
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urda
16 days ago
[-]
(oh no this was on the wrong comment and alas past the delete window ha).
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efilife
16 days ago
[-]
I don't understand how this is related, can you explain?
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urda
16 days ago
[-]
Hah oh my this was on the wrong HN article I had open. Thank you so much for kindly pointing that out.
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countfeng
16 days ago
[-]
I admire your persistence and it's something I should learn from.
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YuvalFishbine
17 days ago
[-]
That's awesome! any tips for people who are just starting out?
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GZGavinZhao
16 days ago
[-]
Not OP but I've been consistently running for ~4 years (consistent := >=200K every month). The #1 advice I'd give is start short, start slow, e.g. start with 1 mile and as long as you're not walking you can consider yourself running. It's about finishing, not about speed.

Also unlike many people I know, I don't listen to anything while running. Running is a time for me to think about stuff that I'm too busy to think about during the day (e.g. contemplating life issues or is 1*0=0 because of 1 or 0)

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kccqzy
16 days ago
[-]
I would say that starting slow is more important than starting short. And the important part of starting slow is having a full acceptance of slow running as valid running.

I used to think anything slower than 10:00/mile is jogging and doesn't qualify as running. This harmed motivation since when I was just starting I couldn't actually get faster than that every single run.

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faeyanpiraat
16 days ago
[-]
I always hated running, but months of nagging by one of my colleagues (who does marathons) I started doing it, but keeping it short and slow for now.

My first jog was like 500 meters, and I was exhausted, but I've did like 20 more sessions since then, and I see a steady increase of distance I can go before I reach my first point of exhaustion.

Now I can go 1000 meters, and recover faster, and I even feel slightly generally better during my everyday life.

Since I'm not pushing myself too hard, it is actually kind of enjoyable and even though I do not have a regular routine, never before I had the spontaneous urge to jump up from my chair at the end of the workday and go running with a smile on my face.

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__turbobrew__
16 days ago
[-]
When you exercise try to stay in heartrate zone 2/3. This may mean walking up a hill as many people cannot start running and keep their heart rate down. Many who try to run get discouraged as they go too hard and blow up their heartrate which makes for a unpleasant experience.

Over time the speed and duration you can run will get better but your heart rate will stay the same.

I would recommend trail running as it is much more dynamic and you are less likely to get overuse injuries like people who run on concrete for many miles get stress fractures. Bonus points you get out in nature.

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igouy
16 days ago
[-]
Our heart rate will not stay the same when we run.

Our expectations change. We learn to expect a faster heart rate.

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__turbobrew__
14 days ago
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Im not sure what you are trying to get at? I 100% can run faster and longer than I did a few years ago, but my heart rate stayed in the same zone when running?
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igouy
14 days ago
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> Many who try to run get discouraged as they go too hard and blow up their heartrate which makes for a unpleasant experience.

"People who are just starting out" may experience "blow up their heart rate" as unpleasant; and then they learn to expect a faster heart rate when they run.

These days my running heart rate peaks at 3.5x my at-rest heart rate.

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fifilura
16 days ago
[-]
When I started out (3y into my streak now), the magic happened in some more or less distinct stages.

On week four "I am really doing this". And on week 12 "impossible to stop now".

Aim for those and you will be unstoppable.

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elric
16 days ago
[-]
Don't buy into the "couch to 5k" hype. Instead, try "none to run" and don't be afraid to take it even slower than the programme suggests.
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friggeri
16 days ago
[-]
Like others said: take it slow, invest in the long term, and most importantly learn to listen to your body. Best of luck in your journey!
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hackeraccount
16 days ago
[-]
If you run regularly there'll be nice days. The temperature will be 55F with no breeze and cloudy enough so the sun isn't annoyingly bright. You'll feel great the whole time and the only regret will be that it wasn't a longer run.

Those aren't the days that matter.

The days that matter are rainy. They'll be bastard hot and humid. Cold and windy. You'll be annoyed because you don't have time. Something will hurt and there'll be a thought in the back of your head that maybe if you skip today (and the next run too?) then you'll feel better.

Those crap days are the days that count. Those days are money in the bank. Enough of them and you get great days. Every day like that is a day where you can think that running for you is like a smoke to a pack a day man. It's not something you do it's something you are.

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lippihom
16 days ago
[-]
Love how you laid (layed?) everything out. Super clean site.
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MarcelOlsz
16 days ago
[-]
Reminds me of this one guys site from way back on HN that had tons of biometric data hooked up into a futuristic live panel. Wish I could remember the URL.
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pocketarc
16 days ago
[-]
Is it https://howisfelix.today, by any chance? I remember that being here.
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MarcelOlsz
15 days ago
[-]
Very cool but not even close on the UI side. The guy I'm thinking of had a full 3d blue human model and a really slick UI.
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maxglute
16 days ago
[-]
This is beautiful. I wish you lifted 10 years ago!
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downrightmike
16 days ago
[-]
How many shoes do you go through in a year?
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dcreater
16 days ago
[-]
Everything about this is absolutely wow
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edverma2
16 days ago
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This is so cool. Congrats on ten years!
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avkpatel
16 days ago
[-]
Developer version of Forest Grump.
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Bulbasaur2015
15 days ago
[-]
you are an inspiration. what does your running gear & shoe collection look like
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zkmon
16 days ago
[-]
I envy all runners. I tried running many times, on consecutive days as well. After running for a minute or so, I start getting a burning sensation in the chest and I gasp for breath. I must stop and sit. After resting for a few minutes, I can repeat the same. However I can do fast walking for an hour. I suspect this is some condition that I have, rather than lack of practice. So I don't push it. Anyone thinks this is normal? Also I'm not sure if running for longer time is so much needed if I do walking.
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randlet
16 days ago
[-]
Talk to your Dr obviously, but you may just be running too fast. There's lots of Couch to 5k programs that start off with 30s run intervals with walking in between.

With running you need to play the long game and slowly build up your pace, total mileage, and number of weekly training days. It's hard to be patient, but it seems to be the secret to minimizing training injuries.

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Manuel_D
16 days ago
[-]
Take a much more gradual increase in intensity. Start walking for 5 minutes, then speed walking for 5 minutes, then light jogging, etc.

Alternatively, try cadio exercise on a machine. Personally I like the elliptical machine way more than running. Mostly since I can watch Netflix and other videos while I do it. But it also lets you regulate and monitor intensity more effectively than running.

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_Algernon_
16 days ago
[-]
It took me at least a couple of months of regular running before I could run consistently on flat terrain without taking walking breaks (and almost a year to consistently manage long up-hill sections).

Consider taking it much slower and do intervals between walking and jogging (I'd do it by feel instead of timing exactly). Over time increase the proportion you jog.

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krzat
16 days ago
[-]
It's normal. Run slow and have breaks every minute. It will improve pretty fast (every run will be slightly but noticeably better than the previous one).
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ideashower
16 days ago
[-]
Damn. I want to try this, now.
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jimbokun
16 days ago
[-]
Well you can go out and set a one day streak right now!
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queeey
16 days ago
[-]
Such pretty visualizations!
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cyberge99
16 days ago
[-]
Did you ever have a day where you just jumped on the treadmill and ran a few steps and said, “eh, technically that counts” and ended the run early?
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citizenkeen
16 days ago
[-]
See the note about the one mile runs.
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turing_complete
16 days ago
[-]
Do you never get sick?
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winterrx
16 days ago
[-]
Insane dedication.
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alexozer
16 days ago
[-]
Tried starting a "run every day for a year" initiative last year. Wish it was for me, after 42 days I realized that I actually actively despise running and spend most of my time not running dreading the next one. Easiest habit I've ever dropped :(
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HeartStrings
16 days ago
[-]
Is this healthy?
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sjmulder
16 days ago
[-]
Running through illness and injury isn’t, otherwise why not. But I don’t think that’s the point. It’s challenge to yourself.
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Anduia
16 days ago
[-]
> every. single. day.

No logs for May 1st, 2021, what happened that day?

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friggeri
16 days ago
[-]
That was a bug :)
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faeyanpiraat
16 days ago
[-]
You monster!
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fungibletaco
16 days ago
[-]
amazing
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timzaman
16 days ago
[-]
Very cool, but running 1 mile really can't be considered a run of course. So don't reallt see this as ran-every-day-for-10y. Nice vis tho!
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the_gastropod
16 days ago
[-]
This is such funny gatekeeping. I don't know what % of the U.S. population could even run 1 mile at all without stopping, but I'm certain it's well under 50%, much less do at least that every day for 10 years. This is an impressive feat. For real, shame on you for crapping on this person's very respectable achievement.
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