The Power of an Outward Focus

Published 9/28/2009 by Ryan Hall

Today as I was out running the last 20 miles on The ING NYC Marathon course I felt like I re-learned a very important lesson and fulfilled my purpose for coming to New York City this week.  I was having one of those days where I was tired and my run wasn’t going as well as I hoped.  All I could think about was how off my body felt, how tired I was from getting up at 5:30 am, how hard it was for me to navigate the city roads and traffic, how I wished I was back home in the forest. Really I was reaping frustration because I had let my heart become too self-focused.  As I ran along, God was telling me this is what it is like to be running with an inward focus, but it doesn’t have to be this way.  Though I heard Him, it didn’t make it from my head to my heart until after the run, as I lay on the massage table, still irritated by the morning, God impressed on my heart, get outside yourself.
 
It’s ironic that I am writing about lacking an outward focus less than two days after Sara and I launched our foundation, the Hall Steps Foundation.  Its goal is taking small steps towards the marathon goal of ending poverty.  The vision for the foundation came from one of my personal heroes, Mother Teresa, who said, “I can do no great things, just small things with great love.”  Out of this quote our slogan was born, “small steps, great love”.  Marathoners know best about taking lots of small steps towards accomplishing a seemingly impossible goal, whether it’s to break 2 hours or 8.  Through the Hall Steps Foundation our aim is to encourage runners to take their own “small steps” by focusing outside themselves on others both in their community and around the world living in poverty.
 
Yet, despite my excitement about starting this endeavor and belief in its mission, somehow I had lost focus.  This morning I woke up with the wrong perspective and forgotten my life and running is not all about me. I had forgotten that the truly special moments that I have experienced in running are all when I was outwardly-focused.  When I set my mind on God and praising Him through my running, thinking about my wife, family, and all those who I love, and remembering the people I am impacting a positive force in my running and is how God designed me to ideally function.  The more I reach out to positively impact others, the more my motivation and focus changes when running.  After visiting Zambia with World Vision in the fall of 2008, the faces of the kids we were to bring clean water to became burned in my mind’s eye.  I often go there when I am hurting on a run finding new strength that I couldn’t find in myself. 
 
The goal of today’s run was to preview the last 20 miles of The ING NYC Marathon course, but I accomplished so much more than that.  I learned an important lesson about what enables me to really fly: focusing outside myself by focusing on others I love.
 



Bookmark and Share Share

Strength In Numbers

Published 9/25/2009 by Deena Kastor

I just came home from the gym which means I am “clocked out” for the day.  Although I still need to make dinner, I can’t help but get my blog out on the computer.  With the marathon quickly approaching, I guess I was feeling a little sentimental as I went for my second run through the meadow Andrew and I got married in and through a grove of changing Aspen trees.  The leaves on the wind sounded like rushing water and their color was magnificent in yellows and oranges.  On the run I reflected on this morning’s tempo run.  It was my fastest 10 mile tempo in about four years which, given my leap of fitness every week, has me excited and confident for the Chicago marathon just two weeks away.  I was excited during this tempo because I dug down for something greater when I needed to.  This run was important and I gave myself a little pep talk half-way through the workout.  I needed to find some form of strength right then or I would not have the tools to persevere during the marathon.  Although I was beginning to fatigue, I knew there was something greater inside of me.  Andrew was shouting encouragement from the van.  My teammates Mike McKeeman and Josh Cox had shorter tempos runs because of their half-marathon races in Philadelphia last week.  That is where my answer came.  Although it was going to be my strongest tempo in some years, Mike and Josh jumped out of the team van and ran my last mile with me.  They pushed me.  Hard.  I have never been able to close a run with my fastest mile but my teammates brought the best out of me.  They were the strength I was searching for.  I have always been grateful for my teammates, but this morning moved me.  Literally and figuratively.  This morning will be imbedded in my mind when the going gets tough in Chicago.  At the 20-mile mark, I expect to pull out the image of Mike and Josh and let them help me the last 6.2 miles of the race.  There is strength in numbers and there is nothing like a team when you are trying to accomplish a difficult task. 



Bookmark and Share Share

Because I race only six times a year I am always excited for race week when it finally rolls around.  I was particularly pumped about racing the ING Philadelphia Distance run because I had heard so much about the event from my teammate Deena Kastor, who had set the American Record at the event a few years back.  She always talked about the city, course, and event as if it was the perfect environment for supernatural running.

Even though I have had mixed results in my races leading up to marathons I couldn’t help but dream about hitting one of those special days when I feel like I’m floating on heaven's clouds.  I was secretly hoping to run faster than I had ever run before.  So I ran my last interval workout on Tuesday of 8 by 1000 meters with high aspirations for Sunday's race.

Traveling from Mammoth is a bit of a journey when the daily winter flights are not in operation.  It requires a three-hour drive to Reno, staying over in a hotel, and then working out before catching an early flight to the east coast the next day.  It was fun to travel again, especially since I was traveling with my wife, my buddy Josh, and my massage therapist Leigh.  Traveling with friends makes the trip so much better.

The first thing I did in Philly was go for a half hour shake-out jog, which I highly recommend after a long day of travel.  Honestly, often times it is the last thing I feel like doing but it is a great way for my body to adjust to the time change and flush all the junk out of my legs rather than sleeping with it and feeling twice as bad in the morning.  After about 15 minutes of my legs flushing themselves out I began to feel really good.  Before hitting the sack I got a massage from Leigh and indulged in a Philly cheese steak.

Friday was a social day filled with expo appearances and meeting other runners.  Even though I am usually the one up with the mic giving advice to other runners I often feel that I learn more from them as they learn from me.  The day ended with a special dinner for the meet organizers, sponsors and athletes at a Museum.

Saturday was pretty low key.  I try and schedule as little as possible the day before the race, just a massage, run, nap, and lots of preparing my spirit to run.  My wife had to leave for her race in Providence at about noon but luckily I had my teammates Mike and Josh Cox to keep me company and keep my mind off the race.  One of my old coaches gave me a great piece of advice that I still implement to this day.  He told me to think about the race a lot in my months and weeks of training leading up to the race but then the last couple of days not to think about it at all until I start warming up.  A lot of waisted energy can be lost in those final days worrying, contemplating, and thinking about the race so I find it is better to do all the thinking well in advance and then show up and live it out on the race weekend.  Easier said than done I admit, but something for us to strive after.

When I woke up on Sunday morning I went straight to my knees.  There is no better place to be on race morning than praying.  I don’t pray for victory but I do pray for a supernatural experience of God as I run.  I pray to experience heaven on earth.  I have had a few times when I feel like I have experienced it and that was enough for me to keep asking God to experience it over and over again.  Its addicting.  After saying my morning prayers I had my bagel with almond butter and Cytomax gel and walked over to the window to check the weather, which was perfect.

It really was the perfect day to run.  I will never forget being on the starting line and looking back at the thousands of runners about to embark on the 13.1 mile journey with me.  It is a very special time of unity that I think everyone should experience at some point in there life.  When the gun fired and we got under way I went out at a pace that I knew I could manage for the distance.  I was hoping to look down and see a fast split at the mile mark, in hopes of making for a special day, but seeing a 4:40 for the first mile I knew that it was unlikely.  I went to the front and pushed a little harder hoping that maybe I just needed to run a little harder to get better warmed up, but again I saw the split of 4:40.  At that point I knew that a personal best would have to wait for another day.  Sometimes things don’t click perfectly and you have to set new goals within the race.  So rather than bagging the race as a complete loss I came up with a new goal of forgetting about the time and practice trying to win the race.

By mile 8 there was four of us remaining.  I decided to test out how everyone was feeling, myself included, by throwing in a little surge.  I was trying to find a way to wake myself up from the monotonous rhythm we had established.  The pace felt comfortable, almost like marathon pace, but whenever I tried to pick up the intensity just a little bit, the effort would go up exponentially.  This is often the case when I am racing while in the middle of marathon training.  Since I wasn’t feeling that I could maintain a faster pace I tucked back in the pack and waited.

With a couple of miles left to go I committed that I would make a hard move with a mile remaining and run as hard as I could for the last mile.  Committing to a plan can be a good thing because it makes you surge whether you feel like it or not.  It often times feels like it is impossible to go any faster but if you can find some trigger to change gears you often feel better when you pick it up.  This is one of the advantages of running a course that has some down hills that  naturally trigger a change in gears.

I put my head down and ran my heart out that last mile.  I had no idea how the other guys where feeling and honestly I wasn’t thinking about that.  I wasn’t thinking about trying to win or anything like that, I was just thinking about running as hard as I could.  What resulted was a 4:27 last mile and walking a way with a victory.  It was very special to win in front of the crowd in Philly.  They were very enthusiastic and loud the last 100 meters.  It felt great to get across the line.  Mission accomplished!


Categories: Athletes | Ryan Hall

Bookmark and Share Share

Looking to show the running community that he is ready for a magical run at the upcoming ING New York City Marathon, Ryan Hall's performance today at the ING Philadelphia Distance Run (1/2 Marathon) indicates that his training is on the right track.  Hall pulled away from the lead pack of 4 athletes after dropping a 4:27 mile between miles 12 and 13 running unchallenged to the finish line.  He crossed the finish line with an official time of 1:01:52.  His time was slower than his 1/2 Marathon AR set in Houston (2007) but was a result of slow race tactics by the lead pack until Hall ran away with a little over a mile to go in the race.

You can view the replay of the race at http://elite.competitor.com/webcast/pdr/index.html


Categories: Athletes | Ryan Hall

Bookmark and Share Share

 Another great week of workouts under my belt and another week closer to the Bank of America Chicago Marathon.  With the announcement of more elite runners joining the starting line, I get more excited for the race.  I love the thrill of competition so much that I tried to break away from Andrew, who was  riding the bike, during a 12 mile tempo run this week…what was I thinking?  In my pursuit, I ran my fastest 12 mile tempo run, so I guess it worked out even though I couldn’t shake him going up the last hill.  As I think of the marathon coming up and the 45,000 people I’ll be sharing the starting line with, I can’t help but think that the October 11 race day may be a little extra special for all of us.  Why? Because the 2016 Olympic bid will be announced 9 days prior.  On October 2, the International Olympic Committee will announce which city will host the 2016 Games.  If Chicago wins the bid, there will be extra electricity in the air.  Besides fully supporting Chicago’s bid, I think the timing of the announcement will elevate this year’s Bank of America Chicago Marathon.  Chicago and its people are great hosts to the world I learned when reading Devil in the White City.  The city pulled together for a great World’s Fair, and being a sport fanatical town seems a perfect host for the 2016 Games.  I have always loved running and racing in Chicago because of the sport-friendly fans that line the lake front.  Whenever I run there, I always receive encouragement from runners and cyclists getting in their morning workouts.  Now, we wait to hear if this great city will be hosting the world in the Olympic Games.  There will be quite a celebration on Marathon weekend if that is the case.  I’ll toast to that!



Bookmark and Share Share

Ryan Hall's Playlist

Published 9/17/2009 by Ryan Hall

Ryan Hall's September 2009 Playlist that helps motivate and inspire his training prior to The ING New York City Marathon.



Bookmark and Share Share

Deena Kastor's iMix

Published 9/17/2009 by Deena Kastor

Deena Kastor's September 2009 Playlist that helps motivate and inspire her training prior to the Chicago Marathon.



Bookmark and Share Share