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Sudhanshu Sehgal's avatar

100% of the shots not taken are missed, so better take a shot at what you want to.

These are not out of the world numbers but I believe in this a lot. You got believe first that you can do this and then mind will somewhat follow.

I ran a 100 KM Stadium Run(250 laps) on 24th January in a time of 9:15 whereas the goal was 7:30. I blew up in the second half pretty badly and didn't consume much calories after 55 KM mark and around the 90 KM mark I was peeing dark brown blood and after the race I was having blood in my spits as well. Then I ran a 50 KM race on 8th February where I had goal of running it under 3:45 but ran 4:17 as I chose to run a 2.5 hour run on 7th February. Both of these times internal monologue choked me up big time as I was falling way off my expectations. But after this both the upcoming races I was able to maintain my sanity for long enough.

On 1st March I randomly ran my first ever marathon on fully flat surface and this was my first attempt at 42.2 since I started running. No specific marathon training, no specific speed workouts, no long runs on PMP. Ran a 2:48 on basically sheer aerobic base that I have built and ran 1:22 & 1:26 for 1st & 2nd half.

Then on 7th March(a couple of days ago) I attempted again a 100 KM Stadium Run(250 laps) at the same venue. Ran 8:12 for the 100 KM, improved by 63 minutes in a span of 6 weeks. Even though I had ran a marathon 6 days prior to this effort. My Coros Pace Pro clocked 70 Km in 5:01 but then I had to deal with the fatigue. Gut issues after 39 KM mark and still learning. I know I can run this distance under 7:30. Swinging for the fences approach and nobody lets to tell me that this can't be done. I believe now in taking shots because 100% of the shots not taken are missed, so better take it when the body is healthy. Sometimes we think next time and the next time never comes- might be family obligations/responsibilties, health issue, injury or can be any other thing. If time & health allows, go for the MF thing.

This is my story from 14th to 20th March what I did.

I can walk off from the sport of running now as I have achieved my long term goal of running 175 mile week in training. In the last 7 days- I have run 294 KM(182.7 miles) and that only on singles. I am proud of myself. I know you can understand the enormity of doing this on singles and this much of volume and that it was not slow and included fast paces.The point is this wasn't even planned as I had 2 races in a span of 6 days. Marathon debut on 1st March for which I ran 2:48 and 100 KM for which I ran 8:12 on 7th March. Now I am thinking did I really almost ran 300 KM in a week span and don't feel much fatigue. I can run Sub-3 for marathon tomorrow. I don’t sell myself short in running now and have to apply this in other facets of life as well.

I had a goal of wanting to get a qualifier for team India for 2026 100 KM World Championships. But I couldn't get it. The best part is I am self coached meaning I am my own guinea pig and run the experiments in the lab. Experiments can be done when A goal is not on the line. So I tried and learnt that psychologically is big limiter for what we can achieve in our lives. I have been running for 5.5 years and this 7 day training experiment/block has unlocked a different level for what I can do. Even though I don’t believe in limits and believe anything can be achieved but a lot of the times one can’t visualize or turn that into confidence when the work hasn’t been put or there is no proof/evidence of work.

If one doesn't try & test, unknown territory remains unknown and the hidden potential would remain a hidden treasure.

If I wouldn’t have tried this, I would have the same belief regarding training and the amount of confidence I have for my own self.

Kate Oram's avatar

This is an unbelievable read. Thank you for taking the time to share it.

What stands out most isn’t just the volume or the times (which are incredible), it’s the way you’ve leaned into the discomfort, the setbacks, and the unknown and kept going anyway.

That’s exactly what “take the hits” is about.

Not everything went to plan. In fact, quite a lot didn’t. But instead of stepping back, you used it. You tested, you learnt, you adjusted and that’s where the real progress came from.

The psychological side you mentioned is huge. Most people never get close to their potential because they never put themselves in positions where it’s challenged.

You did.

And now you’ve got proof to work with.

Really appreciate you sharing this—there’s a lot in here that people can take from, whether they run or not.