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Tuesday, October 8, 2024
Blog Page 130

What We Permit We Promote

The cycle gets more sickeningly familiar by the day. In the past few weeks alone, a deluge of men in positions of power have been revealed as abusers who knew no consequences, in some cases for decades.

The most high profile of these stories have come from the world of celebrity, but the running community can’t pretend we have no role in the conversation or in changing this violent cycle.

For years now, we’ve had certain cycles of our own on repeat. On social media and message boards, womens’ athletic ability and talent can’t seem to be separated from their appearance. Every now and then, an article documents the violence that women face on the run. Stories of abusive coaches crop up too. A furor follows, but we know some variation of that article will appear again.

(You should read: Running While Female)

These dynamics are not isolated from the stories we’ve read in the past few months. They’re part of a cultural cancer that continuously reinforces the notion that women are inferior and can be controlled and intimidated.

When we’re silent, it grows. What we permit, we promote. The we I’m referring to in this case is the men in this community. We’ve long been past the point where we can claim shock or ignorance. We have no choice but to own this issue.

This is precisely why I didn’t interview any women for this piece. For one, women have told their story and at this point it’s merely a matter of whether or not we choose to accept the reality of the situation. Additionally, this is not meant to be a piece that proposes magic bullet, simple solutions to a complex issue. Each of us runs in a unique context and there is no one size fits all solution.

The objective I had in putting these words down is to encourage us to see ourselves as part of a solution that begins with dialogue, especially the listening part, and accountability. This is an invitation to acknowledge this issue in a real way and for any male runner — whether a coach, writer like myself, or run group leader — reading this to listen to the women they run with.

In a sport that celebrates community, we know that running shapes our values and the people we are in the world at large. Cross country and track teams of all levels, races, and local running groups are all spaces where we learn and are shaped as individuals. These same spaces have to be where change begins.

Jean Paul Bedard has for years used running as a vehicle for advocacy on behalf of victims of sexual abuse. “There’s an opportunity for mentorship in this sport,” Bedard says. “Running is not solitary, it’s a community that has leaders and role models.”

Bedard adds that running should take lessons from professional soccer, where community engagement and mentorship is written into the contracts of players. Running at its very top level has to model and encourage the behaviour we want to see in the world.

(You should read: Real Talk Reflections with Myself on Body Image)

 

Canadian running is lucky to have a wealth of exceptional role models among our elite athletes. For Bedard, the privilege of being a sponsored athlete (Bedard is sponsored by Brooks Running) entails a responsibility to engage with the public.

Running publications have a responsibility too to promote and celebrate the diversity of those who pursue our sport. If the elite athlete, and the associated body type, is all that we celebrate, we find ourselves complicit in a toxic culture. The images we put into the world have a power to dismantle or reinforce the notion that someone’s body, usually a woman’s, is tied to their worth.

(You should read: What Does a Runner Look Like?)

For editors and writers, we can’t be tone deaf and ignorant when it comes to how we talk about women. We can’t in one breath express outrage over abuse and mistreatment but in our words and actions not afford women an equal place among their male counterparts.

There’s an obligation as well for publications to serve as a forum for honest conversations about body image to also be a place where the images of women we convey to the world show them as full human beings. Our role is to allow women to tell their story or to honestly capture their perspective, not impose our own.

We’ve been comfortable enough condemning harassment and the violence women face on the run and within the running world from a distance, but dealing with it as it occurs directly in front of us is imperative. This is where awkward conversations have to begin.

Local running groups can make the space for these conversations. Uncomfortable as it may be, running groups have to make it explicit what will and will not be tolerated and understand directly from those who are vulnerable what they’ve faced, what needs to change, and follow through on that change.

Have the conversations outside of the run to understand what the women you run with are dealing with, how to identify it, and what you’re expected to do when that happens. Most importantly, we need our fellow runners to know that when they come forward that they will be greeted with trust and compassion.

We’ve learned that it can’t be taken for granted that unacceptable behaviours will be acknowledged and addressed. If we care about the women we run with, we have to make it clear that we’re ready to listen and act.

(You should read: Men Stop Me Running)

It’s not meant to be enjoyable to bring to light abuses or harm that may be taking place in our own community, or the ways in which we may be complicit, but it’s essential to living up to the values we claim to cherish. Furthermore, it’s essential to creating spaces where these values will be passed on to other men who run.

“When we run,” Bedard says, “We’re travelling through a community and have a voice in it. When we can be brave enough to acknowledge a problem and show that we won’t stand for something, we create the space for more allies to come forward.”

This understanding has to work its way through from the smallest of run clubs to the largest of university teams. No one’s right to participate can trump another’s right to safety, respect, and autonomy. Every failure within our own community to listen and take action says that we don’t care.

As runners, we won’t change anything until we are that change. If that change can be reality in our community, it can be a reality in the wider world.

“Recreational runners that have completed their first half marathon should expect a considerable improvement in the next race.” How to PB in 2018.

PALO ALTO, CA - Reebok Coach Chris Hinshaw

Just when the weather starts to get cold, runners begin thinking about spring—spring races, that is. Chris Hinshaw is a 10-time Ironman finisher, Reebok partner and creator of aerobic capacity programming, the perfect coach to get our heads around meeting our 2018 running goals. iRun’s GM Ben Kaplan sat down with Chris to talk race strategy and plans.

Ben Kaplan: In between seasons, when’s the best time to get new shoes? 

Chris Hinshaw: I recommend having two pairs of running shoes in rotation. One of the pairs is broken in and the other pair is much newer. I like using the old pair for long and easy runs and the new pair for faster paced interval workouts. In time you will need to retire the old pair of shoes because your foot will start feeling sloppy inside the shoe and your joints will feel achy afterwards because the midsoles have lost their cushioning.

BK: Would you get new shoes in December?

CH: Why not? Your stride will immediately feel lively and spring like when you bring in a brand new pair of running shoes. If you’re on the hunt for a new pair, my suggestion is the Reebok Floatride Run.[ed. note: Chris is a Reebok partner]. This running shoe is for sure our most technically advanced to-date, with an unprecedented level of comfort and performance for runners. The various components—from ultra-knit uppers to Floatride foam— allows for ultimate cushioning and responsiveness, and Reebok just released some great new colourway options, too.

BK: Say I’ve run a half marathon and want to get quicker this spring. What sort of speed work do you recommend and how often? 

CH: I would encourage an athlete that is training for a half marathon to incorporate several types of speed work. The first option is adding short surges at your half marathon goal pace into your long easy run in order to build specific endurance. For example, every 10 minutes during your long run surge for 3 minutes at your half marathon pace. Gradually increase the length and/or frequency of the surges. The second option is adding a pace acceleration or “pick-up” at the end of the long run workout. This pick-up will be an acceleration of speed to goal pace for the last 10-15 minutes of the long run. Gradually increase the length of the pick-up in future workouts.

BK: These are good ideas. What else can I do to ensure a spring PB? 

CH: I don’t know if anything can “ensure” a PB, but another good option is doing a small volume of speed work after the long run. This post long-run accessory workout would initially start with 6-8 reps of controlled sprints at 60-80 meters with an easy walk back to the original starting point. Gradually increase your speed and then increase your distance up to 100m.

BK: Anything special to consider if I’ve never done this before? 

CH: Your focus is maintaining control of your running form.

BK: Realistically, how much faster can you expect to get between races? What’s the single most important thing you can do?  

CH: Recreational runners that have completed their first half marathon should expect a considerable improvement in the next race. This first experience (and every experience thereafter), will build your confidence with completing the race distance. Most new runners focus on the volume. However, as their confidence builds they begin to also focus on improving their finish time or speed. Any athlete that want to improve their next race finishing time must practice this new goal pace. It’s important that you practice the new pace you want to run come race day. The way your body recruits muscle fibers, sequences muscle fibers, and fatigues muscle fibers is specific to the speed you practice.

BK: Cool, and thanks for your time. Before we say goodbye, any last words of advice for a speedy, injury-free 2018? 

CH: It’s basically pretty simple: the more your practice running at a faster speed, the more efficient you will be at running this speed. You can do it! Here’s to a great running year.

Join the Community Where Everybody Runs

When it comes to running and training, it happens anytime of the day for me. Day or night, it takes place. With saying this, even when I was over 350lbs, I ran outside in the light. Over the years and more recently I’ve heard plus size runners say how they never ran during the day. How they only trained at night away from eyes.
What you need to know about this wonderful running family it’s a community, where we don’t play “sandbox” games. We are genuine, honest, kind, caring folks. We WANT you to succeed. We will be your cheerleader.
I’ve never cared about running during the day, if people look, so be it. Are they looking as they drive by? Sitting on their butts from the comforts of their house? I am running. I was making my plus size body healthier and I still am making myself a better version of the current version. I run for me. Not for what others think. I don’t allow random strangers thoughts to enter my mind. I’m stronger than any thoughts they might have. I don’t feel that people are judging me or looking at me any different when I run. I’m doing something that is making me a better person. I’m not the fastest runner, nor will I ever be an elite. I’d rather be slow and still moving forward.
The running community is a strong base, I had the experience of random strangers yelling out encouragement as they want me to succeed. They are not judging. These are honest people being humble and kind. I return the same thing during runs. If I’m passing someone who has the look of wanting to give up. I’ll slow to get them back focused. Run with your heart when your mind is done. It’s simple but I’ve returned what I’ve been given to others. Encouragement is free to give.
I want someone to see that they are beautiful and know they are strong enough to toss their fears aside and run in the day light.
If you have a few extra pounds, that doesn’t define you. You are putting yourself under a label. The wrong label. You need to say “yes I’m a runner”. So as a runner you can run anytime of the day. You can run beside anyone at the gym. You’re training. Training for life. Don’t let useless people take up residence in your mind. Let the fear go. No matter of anything we all can run in the day light. Be proud of yourself.”
I don’t care if you only take one line or word from this. People have to realize running does not discriminate and the running community is amazing. We all started somewhere.

The Las Vegas Chronicles, III: The Las Vegas Fever

Vegas is Vegas. Before and after the tragedy of October 1.

I am sitting in the restaurant Lago, watching the firework fountains of Bellagio, noticing the joy and anticipation on the faces of runners for the event to come. In the city, both runners and non-runners celebrate life. Two young women at the next table were unaware of what was going on, race wise, but came to hear the Backstreet Boys. And eat a fantastic lunch. Tina and Nina, both of LA, were meeting friends and family with what seemed to be thousands of people wandering around and enjoying the Las Vegas fever.

From the diverse crowd of the restaurant to the sporadic sighting of the Rock ‘n’ Roll marathon shirts, to kids drinking daiquiri slurppies. The excitement is palpable. Vegas is like nowhere else in the world. All throughout the city, friends and family gather to talk, think and plan for the big race. Runners, in Las Vegas, must determine their race strategy, with so much temptation at every corner, abstaining can be tough.

While sitting at the pool at the Cosmopolitan Hotel, we met three young runners, Zena and Brie from Philadelphia, and Karina from Washington DC. Reading Runner’s World magazine and hoping to perform well in their race, they said they had no fear of another attack happening. “We’re not afraid,” said Zena. “We love to run and travel for races and that’s something we’ll never stop doing—despite the crazy times we live in.”

Those comments reflect the opinions were heard from a wide assortment of the 45,000 people that are about to race. At the race expo, people wore the bright VEGAS STRONG shirts that the Rock ‘n’ Roll Marathon is selling for $20, all proceeds going to victims of the shooting. What struck me from the time I landed is how the same vibrant excitement of Las Vegas has not been diminished one bit. Not for runners. Not for eaters. And not for any of the people here, having the time of their lives.

The Las Vegas Chronicles: Soul food at Mandalay Bay

Johnny Church is from Michigan and both of his arms are covered in tattoos. The executive chef of Aureole was hand-picked by Charlie Palmer to run the gourmet restaurant, located in Mandalay Bay. On October 1, during the shooting, Church’s restaurant was closed, but he opened the very next day and worked in tangent with other Vegas chefs to feed first responders and people in need.

“We’re hospitality people, that’s what we do,” says Church, who talked to us about his restaurant beneath a 3,000 bottle wine cellar, in which waiters use a harness to retrieve chardonnays.

Tell us about your restaurant and approach to food.

It’s a classic Charlie Palmer restaurant, it originated in New York City and opened here in Mandalay Bay 15 years ago. We’re currently 11 months into a revamp.

Lots of people in town this weekend are here for the race. I think runners would be pleased to know how locally you can eat in Las Vegas.

We focus on the freshest food, as local as possible. Here in Vegas there are local farms, and we source many things from Blue Lizard Farms, which is 150 miles north of us and plus, right in our backyard is Southern California, and that’s where we pull a lot of products. It’s very important to us to serve the freshest, most local food.

What brought you to Las Vegas? 

I was in San Diego and worked there, but I came out to Vegas 25 years ago and something about it just appeals to me. I’ve gotten off the Strip, I opened MTO Cafe, and I’ve worked for Gordon Ramsey, but Charlie is really the one who gave me my shot. He’s family.

Can you talk a little bit about what happened here and about that night?

Well, we’re closed on Sunday so I wasn’t at the restaurant at that time, but we opened the very next day.

Was the restaurant crowded? 

It wasn’t crowded but there were definitely people. I think it’s important that life has to go on and we lost a few bookings, a party of 150 for that night and another 200 the next, but you’d be amazed at how quickly we got back up and running. I was proud of our team.

What did you folks do to pinch in?

I had bunch of local writers with me and we went out and were getting the first responders food. It wasn’t much, but we were there—anything we could do locally, we all did. We just did intuitively, there wasn’t any message going out. We just helped facilitate food to people and set up food trucks and what was really cool was that it wasn’t just me, just us, it was all the chefs in town.

Las Vegas can seem transient, people coming and going, but talk about the sense of community here, that sense of pride.

Pride is a great word for it. It sucks that something like that has to happen for everyone to come together but it happened in a moment, in an instant, as an instinct. Look, I always thought Michigan was my home, but Vegas is truly my home. This is my kind of town and I’m proud to call Las Vegas home.

The Las Vegas Chronicles: #VegasStrong

This is my twelfth trip to Las Vegas, my third with my father and my second time running the Rock ’n’ Roll Las Vegas marathon. The city has always been more than a vacation, but an accomplishment: in Vegas, it seems, a tourist is encouraged to live like a king, to toast their success, to raise a glass to making it here, a monument to toasting the good life. 

The city has been battered, yet another example of the historic, horrific American plague of gun violence decimating our neighbours to the south. Lives lost in October will be commemorated on the course of Sunday’s race. They’re on my mind, as are the heroes who first responded and everyone whose loves and lives were lost to that brutal act. When will it end? No one knows, but life, for the rest of us, has to go on.

We have to keep showing up on the starting line.

Las Vegas is a dream, an idea, a man-made construct of soaring ambition, excess and fun. So, my twelfth trip to town is a reclamation project of a city that, over the past two decades, has hosted me as a nervous college kid with a fake ID; a bumbling husband with a pregnant wife; a loving son celebrating his father’s 70th birthday and a runner, breaking 1:30 in a half marathon back when I was still new to the sport and didn’t know enough to take off my earphones and listen, on the Las Vegas Strip, to the cheers of the crowd. 

I am here once again with my father, sitting beside me serenely with a smile, and tonight we’ll see Cirque Du Soleil about Michael Jackson and eat too much at Aureole, located, quite intentionally, at Mandalay Bay. I’m back at the Cosmopolitan, where Julie and I stayed while she was pregnant with Esme, who is now six years old and waiting to wear my shiny new medal when I bring it back home. Stay tuned for reports from Sin City, a city now overtaken by runners—9,000 from Manitoba, here to see the Jets play the Knights—all of us, for our own personal reasons, proclaiming #VegasStrong. 

iRun Radio – November 12th, 2017

iRun Radio

This week Mark speaks with one well-traveled runner whose road to Boston dates back to the 1980s Then Lesley Sexton, the fastest Canadian female at the 2017 Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront Marathon, shares her experience as a distance runner, the fictional characters who inspire her and her thoughts on equality in sport.

Running from LA to Vegas with the Calgary Marathon

The team behind the Calgary Marathon has a race they’re competing in to get ready for their own race weekend and it sounds like an amazing adventure: run from LA to Vegas.

“560 kilometres and the record is something like just over 36 hours and when I heard that, it sounded awesome. I figured we had to take a shot,” says Ari Sarantis, a 47-year-old lawyer and member of the Calgary Marathon board who first brought The Speed Project ultra relay race to Run Calgary’s attention.

Soon, Sarantis had enlisted two men and is working on securing the final woman to join the core team of speedy, sorta nutty Albertans, who plan to run as hard as they can and compete in The Speed Project to win. And there’s another dimension: the Run Calgary race squad is opening up two slots on the team to Albertans as a competition, and we’re announcing it here: one man and one woman can win an all-expense paid trip to run from LA to Vegas as part of their team.

“Send us your race times, tell us how competitive you are and make sure you play nice with strangers, because it’s going to be more than 36-hours cooped up in an RV,” says Sarantis, with a laugh.

If you’re interested in applying, and are from Alberta, you can send in your submission here.

Prior competitors suggests the best strategy is to run the first half in 10K splits and then change; switch to 5K splits when the going gets tough, like running-an-ultra-in-Death Valley tough.

Good luck to everyone who enters. There’s also a pool party in Vegas the day after the race, so participants must be over 21.

What does a runner look like?

“I certainly don’t fit into what some may see as “ideal” runner shape. Often, when I tell people I am a runner, I get looked up and down, usually met with skepticism that I am a runner. What they don’t know is that I’ve finished 1 full marathon, 5 half marathons, numerous 5 and 10 k races and I strength train 2-3 times a week.”

These are some of the runners that we’ve met so far. Do you see yourself reflected here? What’s a runner look like? Look in the mirror: if you’re reading this, odds are a runner looks just like you.

“I started running to lose weight and set the example for my kids about being active. I was 80lbs heavier but I ran just as proudly then as I do now. Today I run to be active, stay healthy and maintain my mental health too!”

“I’ve been running for quite a few years now as a plus size runner. I still get the comment; wow, you run??? It’s very annoying to be honest. I always say you can be a runner at any weight or size.”

“I started running again in April 2015, I could hardly complete a 3 km run. But I stuck to it  and last October 22nd I completed my first Marathon in Toronto. I am so proud of my accomplishment. I do not have the body of what people expect a Marathoner to look like but here I am. This year I have run 1613 km so far. In 2017, I participated in 9 races. It’s been a great year for me. I am 54 years old and I feel better then when I was in my 30.”

iRun Radio – November 5th, 2017

iRun Radio

 

This week on the iRun podcast Mark Sutcliffe speaks with runner and writer Noel Paine, iRun’s Running Dad who talks about how he has used running in confronting mental illness. Last month at the Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront Marathon Mark found out what one women meant after she said that she runs for those who can’t. And runner and amputee, Tom McIntyre shares his emotional experience of completing the Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront Marathon.