Evan signed up 92nd, and finished the race about 680 out of 900 runners. But it would have been much easier to not have ran at all. |
How I Ran My First Marathon, By Evan Burgess, 31 1/2.
Evan Burgess qualified as a hypnotherapist in February 2015 and applies what he learned to himself. He used techniques before, during and after the marathon to improve the experience. These are not all shared here, but the story of the marathon completion should be tempered by the fact at 17 Evan was 18 stone and couldn't run 10 metres. What distances can you traverse in years to come by changing your mind?
There is no clever answer to this question, and the solution is simple, I ran my first marathon badly. I will explain why this wasn’t disappointing: I still achieved my goal.
I decided to do a marathon because I wanted to experience
life more fully, and enjoy my journey. I wanted to cross the finishing line and
discover what it was like.
The marathon is seen by many as a sign of fitness and
health, but the reality of it is, it is mostly about coping with monotony and
energy management. 26.3 miles is a long way to go on foot, but the greats can
get it down to near 2 hours. My time was 6 hours and 25 minutes, and my
preparation had been hindered by a broken toe four weeks before. However,
people who clearly weren’t as fit as me in some areas got better times. They
managed their energy better, and I must give credit to them.
In an accident whilst training Brazillian Jiu Jitsu I had
caught my little toe in a mat and seen it point the other way, hanging broken.
I couldn’t feel a thing but it looked wrong and I was just confused. What did
this mean for my marathon? Was it bad as it looked, or was it not such a
big deal? It was the first broken thing I had ever immediately noticed. I had
broken my big toe before but you couldn’t tell by looking at it, there was a
bruise and pain.
Right then I was incredibly annoyed at my little toe. I
thought maybe things would be better if it was just amputated. I had never paid
attention to it before, assuming it was just a passenger. As the days passed it
became clear just what the little toe does. With every swerving turn on my feet
to change direction there comes a point where the little toe becomes activated,
and then a sharp pain would take over. Lifting weights was hard because I
didn’t have the base, doing certain bodyweight movements like yoga was hard
depending on how my feet were aligned. Was it time to cancel?
I went to the hospital to make sure the toe didn’t need a
pin, and to find out exactly what had happened. There was some good news. It
was broken in the best possible way it could have been, along the line of the
bone, and not on a knuckle. The nurse looked casually at me, “You won’t be
doing any Brazillian Jiu Jitsu for a while. And I wouldn’t hold much hope for
the marathon.”
I looked into broken toes and discovered Gary Lineker had
much worse luck than me, with his broken toe ending his football career. Not
only that, but years later his wife drove over the same toe. I have learned
before that when something bad happens, it is always better to see how much
worse it could be. The nurse said toes take about four to six weeks to heal, so
I decided I would start the marathon. Whatever happened, I could always quit
after I began.
This left me in a quandary. I would be taking on a marathon
without any running in advance. What could I do for conditioning? In Brazillian
Jiu Jitsu, people tend to keep training even with injuries. It is designed into
the art that you can work around weaknesses and still overcome an opponent in
grappling skill. It was also very good conditioning, so I realised my best
cardio before the marathon was actually the thing that broke me. It was almost
the only exercise I could do where I didn’t have to use my little toe if I
didn’t want to.
The weeks passed, and every Sunday I managed to run about
800m for the three weeks before the marathon. This helped me gauge how much
better my toe was getting. It wasn’t great, but it wasn’t so bad anymore, so
long as I avoided lateral movement. I thought about it. A marathon is basically
going forward until you finish or quit. “I can do that!” I decided.
By the fourth week, I managed to run a few miles and was
content I would do my best in the marathon. I was thinking about times, what
might I achieve? Four hours, five hours? I thought four and a half to five and
a half hours should be my goal as that is what many said they got for their
first marathon. Then I started feeling pressure. It was time to rewind
mentally. My goal at signing up was to do the marathon, not to complete it in a
certain time. I reminded myself of this. Why would I put myself up for an
average time of people who didn’t have broken toes, who had been running 30-60
miles a week before the big day? I remembered something I had heard from Jim
Rohn, “How long do you wait for a baby to walk? Until. You just don’t stop
after a year!” I was not aiming for a good, average or great time. I wanted to
finish.
Then the day before I
did the marathon, I had a request on a website called Couchsurfing to host some
Spanish people. I obliged them and then stayed up chatting until midnight, had
four beers to relax myself before the marathon (not sure why, all I had to do
was quit if I didn’t like it) and then took my six hours sleep. I don’t drink
very often, but I’d listened to an interview with Bas Rutten, the MMA fighter,
about how he coped with jet lag when he went for fights in Japan. “I just went
to an all night bar and had some beers. It calmed me down and helped me sleep
for the local times.” The host seemed surprised, but Bas explained being
relaxed was better than having a perfect diet and feeling terrible. Bas hardly
ever lost, so I decided it was worth taking a leaf out of his book.
After all, I had decided to do a marathon to improve my
life and enjoy myself more, not less.
I got to the start of the marathon and I wasn’t feeling
great. As the run started, I took off very slowly. I counted to four for every step and relaxed
my breathing. I had a mantra, “Every step is like a massage.” It was a mantra inspired by Milton Erickson, a wonderful psychiatrist who used hypnosis to inspire people. His version was "You will go for a walk, and with every step you will feel better and better, but you won't know why." I didn’t know how my
energy would last, so I wasn’t going to push myself. I knew the most important
aspect was getting as far as possible, and then working on my weaknesses for
the next time.
As with many people, I have a tendency of moving the
goalposts and most of the run was spent trying to contain my speed. Every time
I started to push myself too hard, I reminded myself, “Finish wanting to do this again!” and then I concentrated on my
breathing. Slow and all the way down to the belly, hold, breathe out slowly. It
felt great, and that was what I wanted.
At mile 12 I felt quite good, then I took a gel that was
given out at a way point. It was a big mistake, the sugar in it almost
immediately turned my calves to stone. Sugar, as I was aware of, is not good
for the tendons and muscles in endurance sports. It made me think of something,
why did I take it? It was because everyone else did, and I felt it was the done
thing. But then, the done thing is often
the worse thing to be done. Maybe in your life, you can think of times when
you have done what’s acceptable, and got absolutely nothing from it.
I carried on at a snail’s pace until mile 17, where I came
up to a large hill. There was a photographer on the hill, “Do you want to
sprint so you look good in the picture?” This was the stupidest thing I had
ever heard. I could have complied and done what was suggested, but I listened
to my body. Why instantly gratify, when at that point it would have meant I would
not finish the marathon? I refused. I didn’t come to the marathon to take a
picture, I came to finish it.
The hill was a massive incline, and went on for about 500m.
Still, I felt disappointed. People who seemed more unfit than me were leaving
me in their wake. I let my ego take the wheel. I had to change my mind.
Remembering my beginning, 17 miles in, I realised my feelings of disappointment
were silly. I rationalised things, a marathon is a bit like a game. Until you
know the rules, you expend energy in silly ways and don’t regulate yourself. It
is like me being annoyed I was losing at chess to a more experienced player.
I took myself back to a time of similar adversity. At 17 years old, I was 18 stone and I
couldn’t run. I went to a field and ran 10m, walked, and ran again. It was so
hard. I have the frame of someone who should be about 12-13 stone, so it was
like running with 5-6 stone on my back. If someone told me I would run 17 miles
after I tried running my first 10m, I would not have felt very confident. Back
then, I felt as bad with my first 10m as I did after 17 miles. But I knew
something back then that I had forgotten. I had to break things down and get as
humble as I had been when I was 18 stone. And it was that humbleness that led to
me losing seven stone in about eight months. I had done something really hard
before, and again it was really hard. I had to give up the desire for
comfort. Make no mistake, if I felt I was going to be injured or feint, I would
have stopped. But I mean a comfort level in the neighbourhood of easy I had
grown to expect.
I ran, then I walked, I ran then I walked. It reminded me of
where I had come from. If I didn’t stop before I was empty, I wouldn’t start
again. You have to know your pace, and yet appreciate others perspective at the
same time. But your action must be yours. No one can get inside you like a
puppet and do things for you, so telling someone the right thing one hundred
times doesn’t mean they can actually do it. But one day, you might end up doing
the thing people have been telling you for years, and it clicks. “That’s what
they meant!” But until you can do it, it is like someone trying to explain to
you a colour you have never seen before. It has no mental traction or
resonance.
At mile 18, I stopped and stretched my legs. Someone came to
ask if I was alright. “I will be after I stretch.” And that is the point
sometimes. I didn’t 100% have to stretch, but if I didn’t then, I would not
complete the marathon. There are some times when you have to stop what you’re
doing and adjust your equipment before carrying on work.
I read an article that explained dancers who watched other
dancers do moves they knew, experienced a reaction in their brain. It was as if
they were doing these moves. However, when they watched a dancer in a different
style, they didn’t have the same brain reaction. It isn’t that someone can’t do
something. It is that a body movement is like a word in a foreign language you
don’t know.
The reason I say this is because when you are given advice
in a hard time, it could well be right. But until you understand it, you can’t
understand it. Surely this means truly understanding is impossible? Reality is
a bit stranger and yet more simple than that. Before you learned to walk, you
saw people walk, you tried it, and fell over, yet you did one day walk. Because
you knew it was possible, when you finally did it yourself, you recognised it.
But what happens when adults try to crawl like a baby? They sometimes have as
much trouble doing what a baby finds easy. We have a lot to learn from
each other, pros and amateurs.
When I got to mile 25, I started running fast. I knew I was
nearly there. As I crossed the finishing line I felt fresh. I wanted to do it
again. The last 500m were easy, and I made it look easy.
The moral of this story is that making something seem easy
often takes a lot of private discomfort. There was a lot of work before the
finish line that made me feel terrible. As long as I worked on a
realistic goal, and stopped trying to switch my targets, I would get what was
possible and be satisfied.
Are you switching your targets and putting pressure on
yourself at the wrong points? Are you sometimes forgetting why you
started? Take the time to realign
yourself with what you originally wanted, and look back at where you came from.
Evan Burgess is a
qualified hypnotherapist, and can help with issues including weight loss and
achieving targets in all areas of life. With a degree in music recording and
qualifications in English teaching, Evan has lived abroad and enjoyed learning
languages and exploring alternative ways of living. This means he can see
things from many points of view, and realises that differences make us richer.
Having written a travel writing book about being a street musician, Evan has
performed on street and stage in nine countries. So if you have any problems
with fear or confidence, you can be sure to get some tried and tested advice.
One thing you can be sure of is that no advice will be given on subjects that
Evan doesn’t understand first hand. Constantly testing himself despite being a
slow learner, Evan is comfortable being uncomfortable. Not a gifted student at
school, Evan had an epiphany when learning Swedish and getting the best mark in
his class on a test after six months of study. He had learned what worked for
him, and can help you learn yourself. To book an appointment contact: Evan@cirencester-scene.co.uk
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