I went from average to world-class – this is how I did it, and how you can do it.
[Hint: Age is your friend]
THREAD 👇👇👇
This is me in 1988 – 27yrs old. Slim, light build.
Not long before this photo my girlfriend persuaded me to join a running club. I always liked running but never took it seriously, but I had taken part in a few ‘fun runs’.
So I start training at an athletics track with a coach but also designing my own sessions and weekly/monthly programme.
My first 800m race a few weeks after I joined was 2:14, ok, but nothing to write home about.
Around about the same time I took part in an undulating 8mile New Year’s Day race (West Bay to Beaminster, in Dorset. UK) after a bet on New Year’s eve. I was 4th in 46:50 – again, ok – but nothing special. My VO2 max ~63ml/kg/min (Bleep test)
Not long after (my late 20’s) I ran 4:21 for one mile, in The Westminster Mile open road race in London.
I quickly got down to 2 minutes flat for 800m – a semi-decent *club level* performance. With more (very hard) training, I took a few seconds off this.
At some stage in my early 30’s I took a year out to test myself over sprints – 7.2 (60m); 11.3 (100m); 22.5 (200m). Pretty nippy, but no sprinter. Then I went back to longer distance.
When I turned 40 (1981) I decided to stop all the longer distance running and concentrate only on sprinting. I bought some blocks and learnt how to start properly.
There’s a saying in running that “as you get older you go up in distance” i.e. you lose your speed but endurance remains. I thought this was self-fulfilling. I looked at the older distance runners and didn’t like what I saw. Skinny, no muscle.
I wanted to be strong and muscular
My first year in ‘Masters’ (over 40yrs) competition I came 4th in the national Championships at 400m (53.1) and 3rd in the UK over-40 rankings at 200m (23.3). I had gone from a normal club runner to top national level for my AGE
I continued training hard for 10 years (getting medals at national level), at 50yrs running 12.1secs for 100m – that put me ~25 in the World for my age group.
I had gone from club level to national level to world-ranked level as I aged.
In my 50’s I backed off training hard; however at 60 I am ‘training’ to run 5:30 for the mile & 12.xx secs for 100m. Neither are *top* of the world, but world ranked.
A 5min mile & a 12sec 100m probably puts me in only a handful of 60yrs olds globally who can do both.
AGING FAVOURS YOU
My advice (from my lived experience)
If you have ‘average’ sporting genetics you can get relatively better (much better) as you age – even world-class.
1/ Whilst others give up training, go to seed, put on weight, or are too injured to train - keep yourself fit & lean. Have self-respect
2/ Retain muscle mass and keep strong
3/ Have a *physically active lifestyle*. Do not leave all your physical activity to 'exercise windows'
4/ Soft Target Training
If you want to achieve anything in sport you need an ego, but you have to tame it, make it your pupil not your master. As you age you have to become intelligent and not get injured. It doesn't matter how fit you are if you get injured
SQUID GAME
Be consistent. Apply training intelligently. Keep healthy. You CANNOT train like you are indestructible.
Two ways you will rise over time:
1 Your 'opponents' exit the gene pool a la Squid Game
2 Their degradation is faster than yours; they sink - you rise.
Your 'opponents' are actually your friends. They give you the drive and desire to achieve. They push you and you push them.
You see what they can do; it gives you the self-believe that your goals can be achieved.
As far as running is concerned that means (mostly) training on soft ground; not killing yourself in any session – i.e survival, and leaving something in the tank.
Focus:
1 aerobic (mitochondrial) health
1 anaerobic (glycolytic) health
3 strength and muscle
4 metabolic health
5 a positive psychological attitude
6 a consistent & commonsense approach to training (dose-response, overtraining & injury avoidance) – you take longer to recover from injury!
7 eat well
8 avoid the 'diseases of modernity'
- Attractor Landscape
- Fasting
- Intervals-Gym-Circuits
- Harm is Supply
- Health & Risk
- How to Run Faster
- Insomnia
- Micro, Mini & Mega-Challenges
- Resolving IBD
Gravity is an increasing challenge for people as they age; they fall, they break bones, they have difficulty walking up stairs or slopes, they can’t get up from a chair without using their arms.
Working against gravity is how we retain our strength. Using ‘hyper-gravity’ (my term for resistance training), in any direction or plane, means that normal gravity is easier to overcome.
Strong, robust and enduring strength is the fountain of youth. Look at the elderly people… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
This physical decline of strength and fitness starts in your 30’s if you are not actively doing something about it. Again, elderly people don’t suddenly become fragile, it’s just a point on the unresisted trajectory of aging.
What do sauna, ice baths, sprinting, training to failure & acidosis have in common?
They are EXTREMES. Generating extremes and tolerating extremes are a superpower. It doesn't matter the nature of the extreme, they are what keeps you young, robust and dynamic.
As you age, your ability to tolerate/generate extremes is the first thing that degrades
First the 'extremes' go - sprinting, jumping, acidosis tolerance, strength; then the normal becomes harder, walking, getting out of a chair, walking up steps....
Aging is Diminishing Variation.
Older people lose the ability to generate and tolerate extremes - they lose the *desire* as well because it hurts. This is the most important quality to retain in age - it's what I do (gentle exercise isn't enough).
- It’s better to be naively right than expertly wrong
- Much of modern medicine is a solution in search of a problem
- The more powerful the ‘superfood’ the more potential for harm
- The more energy you eat, the less energetic you are
- The human body is designed for scarcity
- Starvation reveals your primal nature
- Supply dictates harm/benefit
- Plants make sense when viewed as drugs
- Eat plants, not all of them, not too many
- The extent of your omnivory is dictated by what you tolerate
- Deranged intestinal permeability causes systemic problems
- In a modern environment the body is harmed by its own protective mechanisms
- Your body is sub-set of the environment
- Your body’s processes match those of the environment
- Nature is senolytic
In the wild environment they are intermittently called upon to help us survive. However, when they are *chronically* engaged by an abundance of calories (& w/out the need to exercise) they start to harm us; obesity, visceral fat, chronic inflammation, Insulin resistance.
During the first lockdown I spent huge amounts of time in the Sun; in the park, on the heath, at the track, in the woods and at the coast. I exercised outside (did interval training on the empty roads) and I knocked about London with my top off.