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Marathon Runner, Lydia O’Donnell - Educating Female Athletes, Body Image Issues & More!

June 26, 202401:46:41
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[Music]
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Lydia odono welcome to my podcast oh
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thank you so much for having me it's an
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honor to be here actually yeah I feel
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like well you and I have been friends
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for such a long time now and I know
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we've been talking about having this
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conversation for a long time and I am
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very fleeting when I come to New Zealand
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so stoked we could finally make this
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work yeah it's been years in the making
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by the way you said we've been friends
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for a long time um yeah I was thinking
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about this when I was doing the research
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for this interview do do you know do you
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remember how we
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met embarrassingly I do
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it was probably like
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200 N maybe I can't remember the year
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but I remember the event I'm just one
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want to match up stories to see if
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you've got the same yes so uh myself and
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my sister decided to enter a competition
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on the edge to win a mini and uh we knew
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that there would be a ton of people
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putting themselves forward to win the
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mini and I mean you win a mini which is
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worth I don't know like 40 or 50 Grand
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or something so it's like a decent price
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uh and so we decided to write in our
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submission that we would live in the
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mini which you had to live in the mini
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for like 3 or 4 days um that we would do
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it in our bikinis
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which I am somewhat embarrassed about
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this now my sister would be extremely
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embarrassed we've been talking about
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this I didn't remember I didn't remember
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you guys were in your bikini I remember
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the mini promo but I I didn't remember
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that aspect of it I think we tried to
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get like an upper hand on people and for
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some reason we thought being in our
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bikinis would do that but like now is
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this like very strong feminist I'm like
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we should not have done that that's all
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right but it's empowering though isn't
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it as a feminist like a yeah to embrace
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yourself yeah that's cool now but I
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remember um coming down and U meeting
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all the contestants cuz I think there
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was like four maybe four or five groups
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of two that were living in minis like
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little mini teams um and and we met and
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um you mentioned your run and I was like
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oh cool like what do you do you're like
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10 10,000 M or whatever and I was like
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oh what sort of time do you do cuz I
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think I at that time I was maybe like 45
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minutes 40ish minutes for 10K and you
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were like 33 minutes or something oh
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probably 35 maybe straight away I was
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like oh [ __ ] this chick's
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legit I remember like the the hardest
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part of the entire challenge was not
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being able to run I just sit in that
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mini for 3 or 4 days straight and like
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I'm you know nothing's really changed I
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can't sit
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still yeah so you've been um you've been
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like a crazy runner for a long time now
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um I I've so who do you do interviews
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and you say it's um like your identity
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is not tied up in it but it's kind of is
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in a way as it's mine I feel your
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identity I think can be whatever people
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think of it so I'm going to set my own
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identity but I feel like people probably
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have an idea of who I am based off what
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they see or hear of me and so I think
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definitely for other people they would
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see me as you know I'll L A that Runner
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um whereas myself I think I am I'd like
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to think I'm a lot more than just one
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who goes out and puts One Foot In Front
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of the other yeah I think it's an
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interesting one and I actually listened
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to the conversation you had with LV mtag
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and she's very similar around just
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keeping your identity you know away from
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Sport and being a person before you are
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an athlete I think is really important
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there's just so many dangers that come
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into play if you get too tied up in
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competitive Sport and you don't
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necessarily have a control of the
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outcome and so if you you know think you
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are a particular person and that you
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have to be achieving particular things
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to be that person if those things don't
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come true then you do lose your identity
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and you lose who you are and your self
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worth and I've been there and it's
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pretty hard to work through that and so
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yeah I think for me now it's just like I
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love running and everything I do is very
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much based on the sport of running but I
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also am
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someone away from the sport as well
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yeah I feel um quite similar similar to
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you uh obviously a lot slower Pace umow
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but I um I I love running and I love
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what it's given to me from a physical
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perspective and a mental perspective but
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the past um year 18 months I've had knee
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issues and I've had periods where I've
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been unable to run all together and I've
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had to sort of re-evaluate um things and
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it's um initially it's a terrifying
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Prospect thinking I may never better run
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again and this is a part of who I am and
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I'm a big ad for you what it's done for
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me but you do have to accept that it's
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it's a good thing and it's something
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that can be taken away definitely and
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honestly those challenging times and
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some of the hardest times that I've had
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with the sport have been some of the
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best for my relationship with the sport
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they've really like taught me who I am
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away from running and what running means
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to me and changed my perspective towards
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yeah towards running as well so I've
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definitely gone through periods of my
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life where I haven't been able to run or
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I've been chasing a mess of go and
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haven't got there and then had to go
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through kind of like this turmoil of
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like who am I away from it away from all
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these results and running and you we all
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like need to kind of go to those depths
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to figure out who we are cuz life
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shouldn't be about like results you know
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um there's so much more to life so I try
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to inspire other people to find
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themselves away from running too but
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running can help you get there but it
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shouldn't be your kind of Soul Thing m
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yeah uh your Instagram's amazing um and
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uh we're recording this a couple of days
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after the um Ro room marathon where you
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finished um Second Place yeah was second
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place it was actually national champs
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and that was like a massive reason well
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one of the reasons why I did it um was
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to compete in a national race which I
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hadn't done in probably like four or
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five years a long time so uh yeah it was
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cool to get out there and run and be
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here in Alo racing against other people
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so I love your caption you said um it's
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it's um it's not a personal best time
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but you had a personal best time which
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um I loved I thought that's really cool
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and um there'll be a lot of people that
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that listening to this that don't run or
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don't really understand running times
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but um just for a little perspective you
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broke three hours which is something
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I've done once
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I cool thanks J um I I I TR I even wrote
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it wrote a book about this my quest to
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break 3 hours so this was you having a
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shitty day out and you still managed to
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break 3 hours but I I love that post I
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love that post and I love the phrasing
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of it I thought that was really cool oh
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I appreciate it I feel like I try to be
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super aware of
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my um ability in running and try not to
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you know downplay the result like I I
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did run sub three I don't actually know
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the final time um and I got second place
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and that's amazing and I am incredibly
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proud of that um but when I compare
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myself to myself and what I know is
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achievable and what I have achieved
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before it's tough like it is it's it is
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tough to kind of be in that position be
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like I want to be running faster and I
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know that I can and I didn't reach my
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potential on that day but trying to find
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the middle ground of just accepting that
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being proud of where I am and like
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looking ahead and continuing to push I
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think is really important for me so
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yeah it's uh it's a hard one because I
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am super proud of it and anyone running
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a marathon anyone running at all is like
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super impressive it's it's such an
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amazing feat um so not downplaying that
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but also kind of like pushing to the
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next book yeah there's a little bit of
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disappointment there there is yeah there
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is naturally I think um cuz how how many
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marathons have you done now what what do
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you reckon 20 30 n no no no way like
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maybe 10 yeah or 11 yeah okay we we're
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talking yeah we're talking like formal
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official events but it's worth pointing
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out you do some Long training runs yeah
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I probably would have done a lot of
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marathons and training as well uh so in
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a training block towards Marathon I
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wouldn't really get up to 42k maybe
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maybe once but most of the time I'll get
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up to like 38 39 at the most um but
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there have been a few 40 plusk long runs
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and yeah there's a few others like I did
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an ultra last year so you can maybe take
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that as as a marathon but yeah I have
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raced 10 or 11 but I'm like pretty
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particular about the races that I do and
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so that those 10 or so have been spread
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out over the last nearly 10 years um
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which means I'm really only running a
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marathon maybe once a year but there's
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actually been gaps there where I haven't
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run a marathon for a few years and then
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I'd like load two or three marathons up
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into one one year so uh yeah I feel like
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I fluctuate a lot when it comes to the
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marathon but I love all running like 5Ks
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get me on the track like I love that
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love 10K half marathon's probably my
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more favorite distance um but the
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marathon is just such a challenge and
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it's freaking hard like it's so tough um
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which I do love the
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pancave yeah you must do even with the
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training that some that you do like you
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do love the pain cave like just your
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speed workouts and stuff like it's um
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it's exhausting do you do you ever run
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run n as without a watch uh uh I thought
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you meant something
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else that's what I ask all
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feminist do I run without a watch no I I
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love my watch I run with it all the time
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I run with my phone pretty much all the
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time un least I'm doing like a track
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workout but I
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um I'm not someone who gets super
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consumed by the data and I laugh with my
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best friend Esther who is someone who
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has extreme she either loves the data
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and will dive into it and like and
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analyze every workout or not wear a
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watch and not not even like collect the
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data whereas I will wear a watch I'll
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look at my runs I'll look at my Paces
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while I'm running I'll look at my total
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distance but I'll never go back and look
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at that run ever again uh which is funny
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I just don't get too consumed by it I
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just love training I love running I love
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how it makes me feel and uh I just also
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trust the process and know that if I'm
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doing the work then I'm going to get to
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where I want to go so no I'm prettyy
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much wearing a watch all the time yeah
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same I'm a I'm a straa [ __ ]
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boy that's funny I I uh have some quarms
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with straa but uh I can understand why
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people love it but I also don't think
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it's been built for woman oh real yeah
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why what do you mean um I think a lot of
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Fitness platforms have been very much
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been built by for men by men uh and
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particularly straver has been built on
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competition in comparison and I think a
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lot of men
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not to say women don't like it but a lot
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of men thrive in that environment of
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competition and comparison whereas
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women women not so much uh women are
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there to support each other and they
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want to feel supported but when it comes
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to a
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platform like straa uh we're constantly
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being compared to each other and so
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being put in a position where you're
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layering on top of that the ability to
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compare yourself after others I think it
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can be quite dangerous so I know for a
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fact when I was on straa for a very
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brief time I had so many women looking
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at my workouts looking at my runs my
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mileage and comparing themselves to what
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I was doing and then they thought if
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they could wanted to get to where I was
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they needed to do what I was doing
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without the context of like I'd been
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running my entire life and I've like
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gradually Built My mileage up and I've
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done all the right things to be able to
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condition my body to get here so if
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you're someone who's running running for
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2 years and you see what I'm doing don't
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go and do what I do because you will
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probably get injured or at the very
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least you'll get burnt out and so for me
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I'm just like yeah I'm here to support
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woman and I want to empower them and
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Inspire them to do what is right for
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them to get to where they want to go but
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like just don't compare yourself to me
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so I feel like with driver it's kind of
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just a tool to to do that to compare one
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another and I'm just not really here for
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it yeah I I think with running in with
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life like comparison it's just um it's
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not a good thing the only thing you yeah
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I've even got family members cuz on my
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mom's side of the family it's there's
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she's one of 14 and there's a lot of
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runners in the family and they're all
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very competitive and I've got like one
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of my uncles Uncle John he's like in a
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70s now he did a marathon in like the
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1970s or the 1980s this is like pre-at
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pre- internet and apparently he did like
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a 241 and he he'll say to me 241 that's
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the that's the time to beat that's the
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family record and I'll laugh it off but
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I don't give a [ __ ] yeah I I what would
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it what would it mean to me if I broke
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that time I'm still 30 30 minutes behind
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the world's best yeah there still my
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best time ever was 2 hours 57 in Tokyo I
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I don't think I even made the top
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thousand yeah it's crazy isn't it so you
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it's dumb compare compare yourself to
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anyone else is dumb yeah exactly hang on
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o stop it sorry Kanye is being extra
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annoying yeah it's just it's just a it's
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dangerous game and you've um yeah you've
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you've got sort of muscle memory from
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years and years of doing this like you
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can you can handle what are you do on a
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big week at the moment I'm probably
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running like 120 to 130 which sounds
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like KS that is that sounds like a lot
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of KS and it is a lot of training but to
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where I used to be before I had this
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full-time job that takes a lot of my
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time I was running up to like 160 to
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170k so I have stripped my training back
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quite a lot but I'm just trying to be as
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realistic as possible and just do what
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is achievable and enough for me to
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continue to make progress but not burn
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myself to the ground yeah 170k is it's
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like 100 miles in a week that's massive
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that's huge by anyone's measure it's a
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lot of running um and another thing I've
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noticed about your Instagram you hardly
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ever me mention your your finishing
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times or anything like that yeah I don't
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know I why is that is that conscious it
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is I'm really proud of my times and I'm
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proud of what I've been able to achieve
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in my running career and I will continue
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to be proud proud of it but I also don't
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think again it's it's super helpful for
00:15:03
me to just like be pushing those times
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in front of people and I want to feel
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like I can be relatable to women
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particularly like I really want women to
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feel like I'm one of them and I am one
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of them and I am on my own running
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journey and I want wom to feel like
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we're on that together and so yeah
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constantly talking about my own times
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and my own splits I feel like that can
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be intimidating to a lot of people and
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so I just don't think it's like that
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interesting either I just feel like
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we're all on our own Journeys and
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whether you're running a seven minute k
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or a 32 minute K like who really cares
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you know I I love that I love that so
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much yeah because your times your times
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are lightning quick um but then if say
00:15:49
Bridget Cy sees your times she's going
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to think you're slow you know exactly
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there's always going to be someone
00:15:55
faster and someone slower it just
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there's a lot of people faster than me
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um okay said let's go all the way back
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so you're from um toonga Mount monoi
00:16:03
from toonga yeah grew up in toonga so
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and you run as a kid as a kid you like
00:16:07
soccer dancing and running dancing was
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like kind of my first love I started
00:16:11
dancing when I was like three years old
00:16:14
loved ballet I think ballet in
00:16:17
particular taught me a lot about
00:16:19
discipline and hard work and I just
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thrived in that really competitive
00:16:23
dancing environment and so I did that
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from a pretty young age and and then I
00:16:27
found running when I was about seven so
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I started doing Athletics um back home
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Ina from the ages of seven and loved it
00:16:35
also I was just a hyper competitive kid
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I think I just wanted to like give
00:16:40
everything my all and see where it could
00:16:42
take me and so once I got to high school
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I actually met a woman called Rosemary
00:16:47
Wright who was a PE teacher at high
00:16:49
school but also a commonwealth games 800
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meter Champion she ran for Scotland I
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think um and she was just an amazing
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coach she like took me under her Wing at
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the ages of about 12 maybe even slightly
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earlier and just like taught me so much
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about running and like the importance of
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enjoying the sport especially as a young
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girl like not putting too much pressure
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on me I remember her always saying to me
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no one remembers a young athlete like
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wait till you're a little bit older and
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just like go out there and have fun with
00:17:21
it and so at that time in the early
00:17:25
2000s most high schools didn't have
00:17:28
running groups and so we were one of the
00:17:30
only groups in New Zealand that had like
00:17:32
a high school running team and so it was
00:17:35
so cool because we just hung out with
00:17:37
our friends we'd go after school go to
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the supermarket buy this huge bag of
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lollies like consume all these lollies
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go to training and have the worst
00:17:46
stomach but it was just so fun because
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you with your mates and you didn't
00:17:49
really think about the running at all
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and then we'd go to Nationals and none
00:17:53
of us would ever win national titles but
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we would win the national medals because
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cuz we had just had such a solid team so
00:18:00
it always felt like we were like making
00:18:03
some really like massive gains and and
00:18:06
we were getting that satisfaction of
00:18:07
like winning but winning as a team and
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so yeah she just instilled so many
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values that I still hold with myself
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today and what we do it Fe me is very
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much about what she taught me around
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like sustainability in the sport and
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enjoying the process and having fun with
00:18:21
it and like the the race is just the
00:18:23
cherry on top you know and so I was very
00:18:26
lucky to have her and and through my
00:18:28
high school I ended up pulling away from
00:18:30
dancing cuz I just couldn't do both um
00:18:33
but I did play football I was
00:18:35
terrible I literally played because I
00:18:38
because I could run um but yeah she
00:18:40
taught me just so much and I'm just so
00:18:42
grateful to have had her as a coach
00:18:44
because I was just so um and still am
00:18:47
like dedicated to success that I think I
00:18:50
would have done some pretty silly things
00:18:52
if I didn't have her guidance at that
00:18:53
time so I'm pretty pretty lucky to have
00:18:55
had that experience how do you mean
00:18:57
silly things I think I probably would
00:18:59
have trained way harder than what I was
00:19:02
training at the time I would have tried
00:19:03
to win national titles at high school
00:19:05
which awesome to do but as she said no
00:19:09
one remembers the young athletes like
00:19:11
patience is so key to being a successful
00:19:13
senior athlete and so yeah I just so she
00:19:16
H me held me back so much and then it
00:19:18
wasn't until like my late teenage years
00:19:20
that I actually started to train a lot
00:19:22
harder and then by the age of 19 I won
00:19:24
my first national title and that was
00:19:25
like a moment for me to understand that
00:19:29
I have huge potential in the sport if I
00:19:31
do all the right things and I think
00:19:33
that's where I really just like got
00:19:35
hooked into being a a competitive Runner
00:19:39
and um haven't really looked back so
00:19:42
were you was there some natural Talent
00:19:44
there I think look I think my natural
00:19:48
Talent was probably more so in my mind
00:19:50
than in my body what does that mean I
00:19:53
think I have a pretty competitive mind
00:19:56
and I think I'm pretty like dedicated to
00:20:00
get the job done whereas I think uh I
00:20:03
don't know I'm I talk about this quite
00:20:06
often around like the balance of natural
00:20:09
ability and not having that and learning
00:20:12
the tools that you need to have to
00:20:13
become successful in whatever you do and
00:20:16
I think it's way better to not have a
00:20:18
natural ability and to actually work to
00:20:21
get to where you want to go because you
00:20:22
learn the things that matter like
00:20:24
dedication and how to work hard and to
00:20:26
make sacrifices like you learn all of
00:20:28
that through process whereas when you're
00:20:30
naturally talented you just see the
00:20:32
success for what it is but you don't
00:20:34
actually have to do the work to get
00:20:35
there and as an a senior athlete in
00:20:40
whatever sport uh hard work is going to
00:20:43
take you way further than natural
00:20:44
ability so I'm kind of stoked that I
00:20:46
didn't have I definitely had some I
00:20:49
don't think I had like if you look at
00:20:51
some of the athletes there are some
00:20:52
pretty yeah I'm I'm a sucker for a good
00:20:54
quote in this one I really like it um
00:20:56
hard work beats Talent when Talent
00:20:58
doesn't work hard exactly and it's one
00:21:01
thing I've found doing this this podcast
00:21:02
and um I've had so many like high
00:21:04
Achievers and high performers on hard
00:21:06
work is the only cheat code there is
00:21:08
yeah um you look at the absolute best
00:21:10
like the guys in the NBA like Kobe
00:21:12
Bryant and Michael Jordan um they had
00:21:14
natural talent but it was matched with a
00:21:16
work ethic like no other actually I know
00:21:18
you're good friends with um Jimma mcco
00:21:20
she's one of your besties and yeah
00:21:22
Richie is another example of that is he
00:21:24
is a guy that works his [ __ ] ass off
00:21:26
definitely and look where he's got to so
00:21:28
like it is it is it's all about hard
00:21:30
work there is no check codes you just
00:21:31
kind of have to put your head down and
00:21:33
stay focused and and be patient that's
00:21:35
the biggest thing with running is like
00:21:38
patience it takes so long to Peak as a
00:21:41
runner um so you can't just like go out
00:21:44
and train really hard for six months and
00:21:46
think you think you're going to be
00:21:47
incredible it takes years and years they
00:21:50
say eight years to reach your Peak as a
00:21:51
runner oh no I've been going way longer
00:21:54
than eight years yes iach definely are
00:21:58
you what are you 30 33 33 so are you do
00:22:02
you think you're at the Apex now you're
00:22:03
still getting better or you feel like
00:22:05
you're sort of at that Plateau point now
00:22:07
I think for me I through 27 to 20 uh
00:22:12
2017 to 2020 2ish my soul Focus became
00:22:17
running and I saw the progress I made
00:22:22
when I purely just focused on training
00:22:26
and racing and
00:22:29
it was awesome to see all the PBS that I
00:22:31
broke I think within 18 months I broke
00:22:33
every PB from my 5K to the marathon and
00:22:35
there was many other things that led to
00:22:37
that point but
00:22:39
uh I don't think I was satisfied I don't
00:22:43
think i' got to a place where I was like
00:22:45
completely satisfied in myself not
00:22:48
myself as an athlete I think I was
00:22:50
definitely proud of what I'd done but I
00:22:52
just felt like there was something
00:22:55
missing you know like I just don't think
00:22:56
that running competitive running as a
00:22:59
professional athlete completely fills my
00:23:02
cup and
00:23:03
so since then and and building for me
00:23:07
which I'm sure we'll talk about has um
00:23:10
taken a lot of my focus away from
00:23:11
training and hence why my training has
00:23:13
dropped down my KS have dropped down but
00:23:15
it's just not my priority anymore and I
00:23:17
think I know if I stripped everything
00:23:20
back and just ran I don't think I've
00:23:23
reached my complete potential I think I
00:23:24
could run a lot faster but is that what
00:23:27
I want to do probably really not right
00:23:29
now I feel like I'm having a way bigger
00:23:31
impact in the work that I do right now
00:23:32
than being a a sole athlete um and so
00:23:36
yeah who knows maybe I run faster than I
00:23:39
run in the future that would be epic to
00:23:42
run just as fast and to be doing and
00:23:45
leading this company that we're building
00:23:47
and to to have both would be amazing but
00:23:49
I just don't know if it's possible yes
00:23:51
one thing I love and um I suppose some
00:23:54
of this is sort of ego based but you see
00:23:57
you see some athletes and when they when
00:23:58
when they're no longer winning or
00:24:00
they're no longer running the best times
00:24:01
that's that they they throw it away um
00:24:03
and then you see someone like um
00:24:05
slightly different sport but um Cameron
00:24:06
Brown who's I think 52 53 now he's no
00:24:10
longer winning anymore but he still
00:24:11
loves it yeah still trains like a Savage
00:24:14
he's he's just getting out there and
00:24:15
doing it I think that's really awesome I
00:24:17
feel like you'll be the same you just
00:24:19
like like running for the for the for
00:24:21
the for the movement aspect and the act
00:24:22
of getting out there and doing it yeah
00:24:24
there's so many things that running has
00:24:25
given me which is like yeah I guess
00:24:28
connection to others is a big thing like
00:24:30
the friendships that I've been able to
00:24:32
build through this water of running like
00:24:33
it's changed my life and and it's given
00:24:36
me my career and it's given me my
00:24:37
confidence and so much like it is so
00:24:40
much more about that than getting to
00:24:42
finish lines and winning gold medals for
00:24:43
me and everybody's different there are
00:24:45
athletes out there who just want to
00:24:47
chase gold medals and that's awesome for
00:24:49
them but it isn't really why I do it I
00:24:52
think the results are a on top and it
00:24:55
would be nice to win races again but I
00:24:58
also so I'm just like will always be
00:25:01
grateful to the sport and like just
00:25:03
stoked that I can be doing it I don't
00:25:05
know I think I've always said growing up
00:25:06
like if I wake up one day and completely
00:25:08
hate running I'll just stop you know but
00:25:11
you do see some athletes who hate their
00:25:13
sport but they just do it because they
00:25:15
want to be the best and I just can't
00:25:16
imagine living like that yeah yeah yeah
00:25:19
yeah it's funny that isn't it um okay so
00:25:22
so yeah so you're at school you're
00:25:24
running you're good but not great
00:25:27
necessarily um you must be okay though
00:25:29
because then you get a scholarship you
00:25:30
leave school and you get a US
00:25:32
scholarship in Texas I do yes and that's
00:25:34
a that's a terrible experience so you're
00:25:36
1 17 171 18 you go to Texas what happens
00:25:40
there yeah so when I over to America um
00:25:43
I was like super excited to go over to
00:25:46
the US on a scholarship because I just
00:25:47
was yeah a real upand Go kid and I just
00:25:50
wanted to like try different experiences
00:25:52
and so I got the scholarship to a place
00:25:55
in Texas and
00:25:58
I just was super unaware super naive of
00:26:01
like what I was going into I think my
00:26:03
parents probably were too and I kind of
00:26:06
just like got on a Plane by myself went
00:26:09
to the other side of the world and it
00:26:12
was just a massive shock I'd gone from
00:26:14
this incredible coach that I was telling
00:26:16
you about Rosemary right who was just
00:26:18
like so supportive was there for me
00:26:21
wanted me to just like have fun and
00:26:23
there was no pressure to this intense
00:26:26
environment the NCAA system is just like
00:26:29
hyper intense it's all about competition
00:26:31
and who's winning your coaches uh
00:26:34
essentially there and getting paid if
00:26:36
the team is winning so there's pressure
00:26:38
on them and so I got put into that
00:26:41
environment and my entire education at
00:26:45
University was based on my running
00:26:47
training and so you'll find this funny
00:26:49
but one of the classes that I got put
00:26:51
into was called Walking for
00:26:54
Fitness so because it worked in my
00:26:57
schedule
00:26:58
I would go to class and would walk
00:27:00
around an inside track for an
00:27:02
hour but that was just like did you pass
00:27:05
you passed that class look I don't think
00:27:07
I've gave it enough time because I left
00:27:09
pretty quick but um I would like to
00:27:11
think I'd pass that one but yeah it was
00:27:13
just like my education to me was
00:27:14
important and I wasn't getting it there
00:27:17
and then the environment was not great
00:27:18
for me and I was home cced the the
00:27:22
culture in Texas is so different to what
00:27:26
we experien in New Zealand and that was
00:27:28
the
00:27:29
biggest probably the biggest thing that
00:27:31
turned me away from being there was just
00:27:34
like we're so lucky an out o like we
00:27:37
have such an amazing country and it's um
00:27:40
the people are beautiful and everyone is
00:27:42
like kind to each other and over there
00:27:44
it just wasn't like that at all and as a
00:27:47
17year old it was just really eye
00:27:51
opening and so yeah I can't imagine the
00:27:53
level of homesickness um some sure some
00:27:56
people would thrive in that environment
00:27:57
though right I think some people would I
00:28:00
think if I um I don't know I I want I
00:28:03
want to say if I hadn't had such an
00:28:05
amazing High School experience maybe I
00:28:07
would have gone more prepared into that
00:28:08
environment but because I didn't have
00:28:10
that and then I came back and I was like
00:28:12
I came back from to New Zealand after
00:28:14
about six weeks and I was like I don't
00:28:16
want to run like that was horrific I
00:28:18
don't if that's what running and
00:28:20
competitive running is like I don't want
00:28:22
to do that so I actually ended up giving
00:28:24
up running for about a year after that
00:28:26
so you just lost the love temporarily
00:28:28
I think I lost the motivation to be an
00:28:31
athlete because I had experienced what
00:28:35
the toxic side of being an athlete looks
00:28:37
like and um my coach what do what do you
00:28:41
mean toxic like how my coach over there
00:28:44
was just incredibly intense and I
00:28:47
remember one training session after we
00:28:49
had raced on the Saturday and we're
00:28:50
going out for a long run on a Sunday and
00:28:53
she she cried when we got back from
00:28:55
training because we hadn't run fast
00:28:57
enough on the long
00:29:00
run which is as a coach that is
00:29:03
passionate though you can't you can't
00:29:05
argue with imp passent I could never as
00:29:08
a coach never
00:29:09
imagine okay maybe if you're upset about
00:29:12
the training go and have your moment but
00:29:14
I remember it being quite like obvious
00:29:16
that she'd been upset about it so there
00:29:18
was that and there were other things I
00:29:20
knew a boy in the team had a stress
00:29:21
fracture or multiple stress fractures
00:29:23
and he was being made to run to make up
00:29:25
numbers and just things that didn't sit
00:29:28
well with me at all so you you I mean
00:29:30
under the 2024 lens that's that's pretty
00:29:32
bad even under at the time you thought
00:29:35
okay this is not no no even at the time
00:29:38
I was 17 and like I was also aware of um
00:29:42
what was going on amongst the woman in
00:29:43
the team which yeah I guess I'm kind of
00:29:46
proud that I could pick this out at that
00:29:48
time because it's everything we talk
00:29:50
about it Fe now but every woman by me
00:29:53
pretty much were suffering disordered
00:29:55
eating behaviors and it was very obvious
00:29:57
and they were this is not the fault of
00:30:00
their own unfortunately it's super
00:30:02
common amongst our sport but um they
00:30:05
were all suffering and no one was
00:30:06
stepping up or doing anything about it
00:30:08
and I as a 17-year-old I had never
00:30:11
experienced any of it I was just like
00:30:13
this is not healthy and not what running
00:30:15
should be about what what do you mean
00:30:16
like they were watching their calorie
00:30:17
intake or they we had there was a woman
00:30:21
on our te who was anorexic and um we
00:30:23
would go to the dining hall sounds so
00:30:25
American but we'd go to these dining
00:30:26
Halls at lunchtime and the girls would
00:30:28
all get salads and the boys would all be
00:30:29
eating pizzas and I'm like I want the
00:30:32
pizza right yeah uh and I think that was
00:30:36
like probably one of my kind of first
00:30:38
experiences um around seeing the
00:30:41
pressure that female athletes get put
00:30:43
under um
00:30:45
as competitive athletes but also we know
00:30:48
now it's not just competitive athletes
00:30:50
that are suffering which is sad but yeah
00:30:52
yeah it's um it was yeah eye opening to
00:30:54
say the least and I escaped there as
00:30:56
soon as I could yeah six weeks six weeks
00:30:59
got I can't imagine how homesick you're
00:31:00
very young as well at that point weren
00:31:02
you I was I was young um I think I was a
00:31:06
youngest of three and I think I was I
00:31:08
want to say quite independent and like
00:31:10
doing my own thing but it was um now I
00:31:13
look back as a 17 I was like damn what
00:31:14
was I thinking so
00:31:16
young um so then you come back and you
00:31:19
quit running for a while is this where
00:31:20
you have your party girlly
00:31:22
era how how much fun was that what was L
00:31:25
odonnell the party girl like um were you
00:31:28
naturally talented or hard work at it I
00:31:30
I was
00:31:32
neither no it's funny because you could
00:31:36
call it like a party girl ER era I
00:31:38
definitely I quit running I wasn't doing
00:31:41
a heck of a lot I lived down the mount I
00:31:43
was um yeah drinking quite a lot I was
00:31:46
doing drugs I was not in a good mental
00:31:49
space at all it's probably one of the
00:31:51
worst mental spaces I've been in my life
00:31:54
and I actually haven't talked about this
00:31:55
very much before but yeah I wasn't in a
00:31:58
healthy place I was not moving my body
00:32:01
and I just had no idea who I was and I
00:32:04
think a lot of teenagers go through that
00:32:06
process of trying to figure out who they
00:32:08
are what they want to do with their
00:32:10
lives there's so much pressure as a late
00:32:12
team to figure out what you're going to
00:32:14
do for the rest of your life and that's
00:32:17
I think incredibly difficult to do and
00:32:20
so I just didn't know and I lost myself
00:32:23
for a while I was on a pretty toxic
00:32:25
relationship and things weren't really
00:32:28
working for me at the time and so yeah
00:32:31
after about 12 months it was running
00:32:32
that like pulled me back on track came
00:32:35
back to it yeah you said do you think
00:32:38
your your mental health issues were sort
00:32:39
of um like bought on or compounded
00:32:43
compounded by the alcohol and and drug
00:32:45
use or or do you think um you started
00:32:47
taking the alcohol and drugs to you know
00:32:49
trying to escape feeling [ __ ] I don't
00:32:51
know I think I was just like a teen
00:32:54
exploring what life was about and um
00:32:58
yeah I'm super like super grateful that
00:33:02
I had experienced a really like healthy
00:33:05
life where I felt confident in my body
00:33:07
through growing up as a as an athlete
00:33:09
because that was what I missed and
00:33:11
that's what I craved and and I firsthand
00:33:16
witnessed and have witnessed throughout
00:33:18
my life addiction pretty severely and um
00:33:22
yeah it's like have you heard friends
00:33:24
family uh my sister yeah really is she
00:33:27
right now or is she still she is uh no
00:33:31
no so me and her grew up like really
00:33:34
close we were um best friends she's only
00:33:37
about 12 13 months older than me so like
00:33:40
super close in age and pretty similar
00:33:42
like personalities as young kids and
00:33:45
grew up playing sport together and
00:33:47
dancing and running and everything and
00:33:49
um yeah about the age of 12 13 like I
00:33:52
was starting to like figure out myself
00:33:54
as an athlete and started kind of taking
00:33:56
that path with with my coach at high
00:33:58
school and she just took the complete
00:34:01
opposite path and yeah she just like
00:34:04
have hasn't been able to get off that
00:34:07
path unfortunately and it's like pretty
00:34:10
um hard to think about because of the
00:34:14
opportunities that we were both given
00:34:16
and I said yes to these opportunities
00:34:19
and she said yes to these and it's just
00:34:23
completely you know chalk and cheese
00:34:25
like taking us down different yeah
00:34:27
Journeys and yeah it's um it's been
00:34:31
pretty tough for my family to go through
00:34:33
it and I think that's what's affected me
00:34:35
the most is just seeing like what my
00:34:36
parents have gone through to be able to
00:34:38
support her through it and and uh yeah I
00:34:42
I guess for me it's just sport that
00:34:45
saved my life and that's why I think I'm
00:34:46
so passionate about getting young women
00:34:49
but all women also into Sport and into
00:34:52
running because it it literally saved me
00:34:55
and it's given me this incredible life
00:34:57
and I look at my sister who I don't have
00:35:00
a heck of a lot to do with now but I I
00:35:03
look at her and I'm like if if only she
00:35:04
was like yeah she would she took those
00:35:08
opportunities that I took or said yes to
00:35:10
the things that I said yes to would have
00:35:11
changed who she is so I suppose
00:35:15
um I mean it's never too late to turn
00:35:17
things around so she's obviously like a
00:35:19
year older than you so she's 35 or
00:35:21
whatever so and the big scheme of an
00:35:23
entire life it's still still young so
00:35:24
she could turn it
00:35:26
around yeah
00:35:28
I mean ideally that would be incredible
00:35:31
but I also know how unlikely it can
00:35:35
be when people are addicted to opiates
00:35:38
it's it's pretty severe and it's pretty
00:35:40
hard to get off that once you're on it
00:35:42
so um one day she might find running you
00:35:46
never know but uh for now it's just kind
00:35:48
of like yeah accepting what has been I
00:35:51
mean there's a lot of people that do
00:35:52
like there's a I know there's an
00:35:53
organization called speed freaks um I've
00:35:56
seen them yeah which um you know you get
00:35:58
people that were addicted to one thing
00:35:59
and they replace it with another
00:36:00
addiction to distance running you know
00:36:02
there's a lot there are like a lot of
00:36:04
reformed um yeah people that had drug
00:36:05
issues that gravitate towards the pain
00:36:08
of running I suppose it's um you chasing
00:36:10
that cheap dopamine versus you know yeah
00:36:12
chasing the um the hard earn dipine
00:36:14
which you get from running yeah it's
00:36:16
funny I think I saw a quote one time and
00:36:18
it said something like um when you take
00:36:20
drugs you feel great in the moment and
00:36:22
then [ __ ] afterwards but when you run
00:36:23
you feel [ __ ] in the moment but great
00:36:25
afterwards and I think I know which one
00:36:27
one yeah 100% it's funny that it's like
00:36:31
ice baths are you are you still in the
00:36:33
ice bath Buzz or look uh not so much I'm
00:36:36
a BG WM in the car but I tried to every
00:36:39
now and then I tried to do a ice bath
00:36:40
but I wouldn't say it's the thing that I
00:36:42
do yeah that's so hard but they feel
00:36:44
it's amazing though yeah it's like and
00:36:47
and you feel just electric for hours
00:36:49
afterwards it's so good it is it's a bit
00:36:50
of a hit yeah I I should do it more
00:36:52
often that okay so you you you um have
00:36:56
your party G or your deil for a little
00:36:57
bit and then you come back to running
00:37:00
um New York Marathon was that your first
00:37:02
one in 2018 no it wasn't actually my
00:37:06
first marathon was in 2015 and that was
00:37:08
mbour Marathon so between the ages of
00:37:10
like 20 to 25 I was running a lot of 5K
00:37:14
10K and half marathons and then by the
00:37:16
age of 25 I I can't really remember what
00:37:19
it was um why I decided to do the
00:37:22
marathon I think my coach was kind of
00:37:24
like I was running somewhat f in the
00:37:28
shorter distances but I think he could
00:37:29
maybe see this potential that I could
00:37:31
have in the longer distances and so yeah
00:37:33
I signed up to Marin marathon with just
00:37:35
like so much naivity I had no idea what
00:37:38
I was doing and there's so much Beauty
00:37:41
in that particularly in the marathon
00:37:43
like the Beauty and the ignorance yeah
00:37:46
like just not knowing what to expect how
00:37:48
much it's going to hurt I just remember
00:37:50
last week going into I I was terrified
00:37:54
like I was genuinely so scared of the
00:37:55
pain that was going to come because I
00:37:57
knew exactly how much it hurt whereas
00:38:00
that first marathon I was just like cool
00:38:02
I just get to go and run around
00:38:03
Melbourne like that'll be fun and it's
00:38:06
the best Marathon I've ever had it felt
00:38:08
so amazing I'd never really got to that
00:38:12
point of heading walls or feeling like
00:38:14
incredible pain and yeah I ended up
00:38:18
getting second which was just I think a
00:38:20
shock to everybody and ran a PB that I
00:38:23
didn't break for another about five or
00:38:25
six years after so yeah it was an
00:38:28
amazing race and I think um it
00:38:31
definitely that was my first like moment
00:38:33
of falling in love with the marathon and
00:38:35
then from there I've just kind of
00:38:37
continued to chase that high which I
00:38:39
just have not had again like the same as
00:38:42
your sister but way more noble yeah um
00:38:45
yeah it's funny CU I suppose you do your
00:38:47
first one you've got nothing to compare
00:38:48
it to so yeah you say you didn't beat
00:38:50
that time for another few years or
00:38:51
whatever I suppose you do that first one
00:38:53
then you're like oh that's that's I can
00:38:55
do that again I can do that better um
00:38:57
and it's um you need so much to go right
00:39:01
so much to go right and I think I don't
00:39:03
know exactly but I think every marathon
00:39:06
after that well the next six marathons I
00:39:09
ran between 239 and 240 like six times
00:39:12
or something which I think was similar
00:39:14
to you did you run like around the same
00:39:16
time just over and over and over oh yeah
00:39:18
yeah you're way slower so like 3 310 to
00:39:21
3 set of 15 yeah yeah but you just kind
00:39:23
of repeat the same such a close time for
00:39:27
marathon after marathon and you're like
00:39:29
I like I know I can take time off this
00:39:32
and I mean my PB now is only 238 so it's
00:39:34
only like a minute faster than what I
00:39:36
ran back in 2015 but it is um it's
00:39:41
making progress so yeah by the way for
00:39:44
any um sort of non-runners or people
00:39:48
that don't sort of have a perspective of
00:39:49
time that are listening to this or
00:39:50
watching this so to do if you do a 2hour
00:39:52
48 marathon it's lightning [ __ ] quick
00:39:55
it basically means you're running 4E km
00:39:58
pace for 42 km so 238 what's that like 3
00:40:02
minutes 45 per km I think so so next
00:40:06
time you're on a treadmill in the gym or
00:40:07
somewhere you try doing 1 kilm at 345
00:40:11
that is quick yeah that is quick yeah
00:40:15
here's me downplaying it again yeah and
00:40:18
it's it's running quick for a long time
00:40:20
as well yeah it is it is but uh I can
00:40:23
see why you're nervous at the start cuz
00:40:24
it's going to yeah it's going to hurt
00:40:26
but it's going to be for most people you
00:40:28
know like it's all relative to like
00:40:30
where you're at in your journey but um
00:40:32
it's uh it's a pretty incredible feeling
00:40:34
when you can hold such pace for such a
00:40:37
long time yeah so yeah so the the new
00:40:39
Marathon 2018 so that wasn't um wasn't
00:40:41
even a personal be or anything but you
00:40:43
did really well you finished like 20th
00:40:45
yeah 20th and U the New York marathon's
00:40:47
exceptional so I've done I've done New
00:40:49
York and I was just in a Carell group
00:40:52
like you know people running between 3
00:40:53
hours and 3 hours 30 say so were you to
00:40:57
to run 20th were you in like the elite
00:40:58
group at the start no so I was actually
00:41:00
in the sub Elite Group which I'm so
00:41:04
stoked that I was because the elite
00:41:06
woman left maybe like half an hour
00:41:09
before the sub Elites and the sub Elites
00:41:12
actually started with the elite men and
00:41:14
everyone else within that would have
00:41:17
group would have been like three hours
00:41:18
maybe and so we were right at the front
00:41:22
and the first mile or so you run from
00:41:25
Sten Island over to Brooklyn and you
00:41:27
cross the bridge and I was right out the
00:41:30
front so I pretty much LED like
00:41:33
thousands and thousands of people over
00:41:35
that bridge and I just
00:41:36
remember running across the bridge and
00:41:39
looking up and the sun was rising and
00:41:41
then there was thousands of people
00:41:42
behind me and it was just like a very
00:41:45
surreal moment I like am someone who
00:41:48
time stamps and I try and like imprint
00:41:50
memories because I have got a terrible
00:41:52
memory so I have to like force myself to
00:41:54
remember things and that was a moment
00:41:56
where I was like do not forget this
00:41:57
moment forever because this is insane
00:42:00
and that entire race was just Next Level
00:42:04
there was nothing in the world like it I
00:42:06
had the best time out there it was just
00:42:08
like a a party on the streets the
00:42:10
millions of people that come out and
00:42:11
support you so much energy you get to
00:42:14
see so many different things it's a
00:42:16
tough course like it's a really hard
00:42:18
course as you would know but uh yeah
00:42:21
like it was definitely my my favorite
00:42:24
Marathon today um and I I love to do it
00:42:27
again one day but yeah it's a it's a
00:42:29
pretty tough one to get into it's
00:42:31
incredible a I I remember that bridge as
00:42:33
well at the beginning um different
00:42:35
experience to you but it was a windy
00:42:37
year that I did it and all you could
00:42:39
hear was the slapping of people's shoes
00:42:41
on the on the ground which is a just an
00:42:43
incredible sound when there's like 40 or
00:42:45
50,000 people doing that and um just the
00:42:47
sound of numbers flapping on people's
00:42:49
shirts yeah and the faint the faint
00:42:52
soundtrack of Frank SN with New York New
00:42:53
York playing in the background and some
00:42:56
some water cannons and the the water
00:42:58
below the bridge it's just magical it is
00:43:00
magical and you've just done rot on the
00:43:01
weekend as we established it's quite
00:43:03
different like you do a New Zealand
00:43:04
Marathon you might get a couple of
00:43:05
people out with a god dad side but in
00:43:08
New York yeah the whole city shuts down
00:43:11
and you have strangers out supporting
00:43:13
you it's great I feel like in New
00:43:14
Zealand and even in Australia to a
00:43:16
degree if you're running a marathon and
00:43:19
if you're not running the marathon all
00:43:21
you hear is just like oh get these
00:43:23
Runners off the
00:43:24
road yeah yeah yeah you just you just
00:43:29
recently been to um Paris with my mom
00:43:31
and they shut the whole the whole city
00:43:32
down and in Oakland like they'll shut
00:43:34
one lane of the har Bridge down for an
00:43:36
hour in the morning you know yeah yeah
00:43:38
and everyone complains about it it's
00:43:40
such an inconvenience but we're in
00:43:42
America every's just like oh my God like
00:43:44
you wear your medals around and
00:43:46
everyone's so stoked for you I'm like
00:43:48
damn you know I feel that energy over
00:43:51
there is we need some of that down here
00:43:53
yeah 100% we do like um people will mock
00:43:56
you in New Ze if you wear your model
00:43:58
your midal the day after the marathon
00:43:59
over there you get free food and free
00:44:01
coffees and restaurants it's cool um so
00:44:05
Gold Coast Marathon 2019 is that one of
00:44:08
the biggest fails of your life yeah
00:44:10
don't rub it in no no no I'm curious
00:44:13
about that because um I mean failure
00:44:16
failure is never nice but yeah I um yeah
00:44:20
I suppose in the last 5 years or so for
00:44:22
me I've learned to embrace it a bit more
00:44:23
because you realize that that's where
00:44:24
the growth happens so I um I've been
00:44:27
following you on Instagram for a long
00:44:28
time so before that your your buildup
00:44:31
looked insane you moved to LA why did
00:44:32
you move to LA just had a good group
00:44:35
over there that I wanted to train with a
00:44:36
good coach over there blue benad him so
00:44:38
I got to go run with him and his team
00:44:40
and I just needed some I needed some
00:44:43
guys around me who were not Elites um
00:44:46
which meant they weren't like super
00:44:47
selfish about their own training and
00:44:49
they'd be able to jump in and help me
00:44:51
and that was just like the perfect spot
00:44:52
plus I love La I think it's a great City
00:44:54
it's really good for running so yeah
00:44:56
over over there trained with them for a
00:44:58
few months and trained harder than I've
00:45:01
ever trained in my life that's where I
00:45:03
was getting up to 160 to 170k a weeks
00:45:06
and I was
00:45:08
just I wasn't working so I was running
00:45:11
an online coaching company which was
00:45:13
just like all on my own time no stress
00:45:16
at all I'd come from this like pretty
00:45:18
stressful career i' spent the last 5
00:45:21
years in the corporate world just
00:45:23
working with Nike and you know it was a
00:45:25
pretty high pressure environment coming
00:45:27
away from that and and being able to
00:45:30
just like run and that's where all my
00:45:33
energy and my stress came from went to
00:45:35
and came from and uh and I just saw my
00:45:39
performance just like Skyrocket like I
00:45:42
was able to turn sessions around like
00:45:45
massive workouts on Tuesdays and
00:45:47
Thursdays and then huge long runs on
00:45:49
Saturdays and I felt so good um it's
00:45:54
been the last I don't know my
00:45:57
early 20s 20 to 26 I was battling like
00:46:00
pretty severe body image issues and
00:46:02
disordered eating behaviors and I'd gone
00:46:04
through this journey of just like trying
00:46:06
to figure myself out because I I'd had
00:46:10
so
00:46:11
many uh external pressures put upon me
00:46:15
purely based on my Aesthetics and so as
00:46:18
a young female athlete I was constantly
00:46:20
being told that if I was smaller I would
00:46:23
be a bit OutRunner if I was leaner I
00:46:25
would be faster and so really totally
00:46:29
pretty severe
00:46:31
yeah you are you carrying too much
00:46:33
muscle is that what people would
00:46:34
thinking or no you like like yeah we've
00:46:39
known each other for a long time you've
00:46:41
you've always had like a like a I don't
00:46:43
know yeah I don't know that's that
00:46:45
should be it you shouldn't you know I
00:46:47
think um so many women women athlete in
00:46:51
particular but woman feel pressured to
00:46:54
fit into standards that other people put
00:46:57
upon them and so myself as a young
00:47:00
20-year-old that's when it really
00:47:02
started I had male coaches after male
00:47:04
coaches telling me that if I would lost
00:47:06
some weight I'd be a better Runner and
00:47:07
it wasn't like you're overweight lose
00:47:09
some lose some of that it was like oh
00:47:11
just a few kilos here and there
00:47:13
and to give them credit they had no idea
00:47:17
that the words they were using and what
00:47:18
they were saying were going to impact me
00:47:20
the way that it did there's just a huge
00:47:23
lack of Education when it comes to
00:47:24
female physiology and psychology and
00:47:26
sport so for those who don't know only
00:47:29
6% of sport Science research is actually
00:47:31
done on women so when we think about the
00:47:33
ways that we train how we speak to
00:47:35
athletes how we feel how we recover it's
00:47:37
all been based on male Psychology and
00:47:39
Physiology and then just applied to
00:47:42
women and so my coaches treated me like
00:47:44
one of the boys and even saying that to
00:47:47
a boy is not okay you shouldn't be
00:47:49
telling anyone that they should be
00:47:51
changing the way that they look or or
00:47:52
commenting on people's bodies like
00:47:54
commenting on people's clothes or shoes
00:47:57
or whatever is cool but like don't
00:47:58
comment on the way people are built and
00:48:01
so after being told that for many years
00:48:04
as you can imagine my mental health
00:48:06
suffered my body image issues started
00:48:10
and I just restricted my diet because I
00:48:12
took was I really trusted my coaches and
00:48:15
my leaders and I thought because I
00:48:17
wanted to be this competitive athlete
00:48:18
I'll do whatever it takes like if I need
00:48:20
to do that I'll do it and so there was a
00:48:23
point in my mid 20s I cut carbohydrates
00:48:26
out of my diet completely I was
00:48:28
constantly restricting my food I felt
00:48:30
guilty if I was eating too much I you
00:48:33
know I was actually put on diet
00:48:35
supplements when I was about 53 kilos
00:48:37
and what are you now oh who knows no
00:48:40
idea no idea and I don't care yeah and
00:48:43
so it just got to a point where I was
00:48:46
under fueling severely and training to a
00:48:50
point I wouldn't say overtraining I just
00:48:52
was training too much for what I was
00:48:54
giving myself and I my health just
00:48:58
crumbled and so at about the age of 25 I
00:49:01
fell into what is known now as relative
00:49:04
energy deficiency syndrome in sport I've
00:49:07
you know what I've had um Rosa fenan
00:49:09
from two Ro sisters on the podcast Zoe
00:49:11
McBride different sport but AA same
00:49:13
thing isn't it horrific it's so common
00:49:17
so I I suffered from reds I lost my
00:49:19
period And I celebrated I thought that
00:49:23
not having a period as a female athlete
00:49:25
was like Ed of Honor yeah the epitomy of
00:49:29
being a successful female athlete and
00:49:32
that did not last long after about 3
00:49:34
months of had not having a period I
00:49:36
ended up in hospital my body was
00:49:39
shutting down everything was kind of
00:49:41
like out of order and I couldn't run I
00:49:44
could barely get out of bed and so I was
00:49:47
suffering pretty severe fatigue and I
00:49:49
thought that's what it was was just
00:49:50
fatigue and um I also was working that
00:49:53
pretty stressful job so that didn't help
00:49:56
um and so quit my job quit running for a
00:49:59
short period of time but came back into
00:50:01
it after a few months and slowly worked
00:50:02
my way up but it took about 18 months to
00:50:04
get better and that's when I realized
00:50:07
like everything I'm doing to myself is
00:50:10
based on my appearance and why do people
00:50:13
care what my appearance is and how is
00:50:15
that connected to my performance and
00:50:18
it's clearly not working because the key
00:50:20
to being a good athlete is consistency
00:50:22
and if you keep getting injured or sick
00:50:24
then you can't get consistency to make
00:50:26
progress ress and so I took a hard look
00:50:28
in the mirror and realized like this is
00:50:30
not good and ended up just starting to
00:50:33
learn about my female physiology for the
00:50:35
first time ever it was around 27 28 I
00:50:39
learned about my menstrual cycle and I
00:50:42
learned about the fluctuations of my
00:50:44
hormones and I was just like completely
00:50:47
shocked by how little I knew about
00:50:50
myself and not just myself as a woman
00:50:53
but a woman athlete where my body is my
00:50:55
tool and it's my care career and no one
00:50:58
had taught me about my period no one had
00:51:01
taught me that my period and my
00:51:02
menstrual cycle were two different
00:51:03
things I literally thought they were the
00:51:05
same thing and you have to explain that
00:51:08
to me so your period is part of your
00:51:10
menstrual cycle it is one of the phases
00:51:12
of your cycle but it is not your entire
00:51:15
cycle your cycle is from day one of your
00:51:18
period all the way through to your next
00:51:20
day one of your period but throughout
00:51:22
that entire time whether it's 25 days or
00:51:25
30 days or 35 days every every one's
00:51:26
different your hormones are changing
00:51:28
every day so the way that you can
00:51:31
recover the way that you can perform the
00:51:33
way that you could be fueling yourself
00:51:35
can change because of your hormones your
00:51:38
female hormones that are constantly
00:51:40
changing and so once I learned this I
00:51:42
was
00:51:43
like what the [ __ ] like why has no one
00:51:45
taught me this this is such an important
00:51:47
piece of the puzzle that no one has even
00:51:49
acknowledged and now that I know it
00:51:52
everything just makes sense like that's
00:51:54
why I race well on that day and not well
00:51:55
on that day that's why some trainings I
00:51:57
feel good and other trainings I don't
00:51:59
like I can stop beating myself up when
00:52:01
I'm not hitting Paces or being able to
00:52:03
run certain distances because it's just
00:52:04
my female body working like this is
00:52:08
shocking but also really enlightening
00:52:10
that now I know this I can actually use
00:52:12
it to my advantage and so that was year
00:52:15
like 2017 2018 I started actually
00:52:19
adapting the way that I trained to my
00:52:21
cycle and those hormonal fluctuations
00:52:23
yeah I I I know nothing about this as
00:52:25
you can imagine but I I don't feel
00:52:27
uncomfortable talking about it and I um
00:52:30
yeah I feel like you and your friend e
00:52:31
and we'll get to the family stuff soon
00:52:33
you guys have done a great job ldia Co
00:52:35
there was a thing I saw on YouTube Lydia
00:52:36
Co I love lyia Co um some male
00:52:39
commentator was talking about a
00:52:40
tournament and she was like I didn't
00:52:41
play very well because you I'm on my
00:52:43
period or whatever and um just the guy's
00:52:46
reaction it was like he was so awkward
00:52:48
about it so awkward I know and that just
00:52:50
shows like how taboo the subject of
00:52:52
menstrual cycles and period it's um
00:52:54
somewhat comical now but like it should
00:52:57
be a normal conversation it's a bodily
00:52:58
function that 50% of the population have
00:53:00
yeah 100% okay so explain something to
00:53:02
me so say
00:53:04
um so so what happens if if um if you
00:53:07
have your period And it's like on a on a
00:53:09
race week or whatever completely fine
00:53:11
yeah yeah you know I grew up with the
00:53:14
narrative that periods are a nuisance if
00:53:15
you're on your period sit on the couch
00:53:17
and eat ice cream and like be kind to
00:53:19
yourself and like you don't need to like
00:53:21
don't do any movement just chill and
00:53:24
actually during your period is when
00:53:26
you're hormones are at the lowest both
00:53:28
estrogen and progesterone female
00:53:29
hormones and uh you can actually train
00:53:33
really well during that phase so
00:53:35
everyone is different but for me in
00:53:37
particular I feel really good on my
00:53:38
period and so I will go out and like
00:53:41
smash 1K reps and do hard sessions if I
00:53:43
have a race on my period I'm like sweet
00:53:45
whereas like so many women who haven't
00:53:47
been given this education they will
00:53:49
freak and think that being on their
00:53:50
period is like going to be detrimental
00:53:52
to their performance but actually it's
00:53:54
fine you know and it's a good thing so
00:53:57
we're trying to change that narrative
00:53:59
and stop speaking so negatively about it
00:54:01
because when you speak negatively about
00:54:04
your cycle in particular as a woman your
00:54:07
cycle is a big part of your female
00:54:09
physiology and that means you're
00:54:11
speaking negatively about your body you
00:54:13
know whereas we need to start having
00:54:14
like positive conversations about our
00:54:16
bodies because we're been brought up in
00:54:18
this world to have such negative
00:54:19
conversations with ourselves so trying
00:54:21
to change that it's hard but we're
00:54:23
making some
00:54:24
progress okay so if you look at training
00:54:26
schedule and you've got like a tough
00:54:28
training week coming up and it falls
00:54:29
with your period cycle you're not
00:54:31
freaked out about it it's just business
00:54:33
as usual business as usual yeah there's
00:54:35
definitely things in different phases
00:54:37
throughout your cycle you can um feel
00:54:40
not as great and there's definitely
00:54:41
things you can do to like benefit of it
00:54:44
um focusing on things like sleep and
00:54:46
there's some particular supplements you
00:54:48
can take if you are someone who suffers
00:54:50
more but yeah you you just don't freak
00:54:52
out you like you just celebrate the fact
00:54:55
that you've got a healthy menstrual
00:54:56
cycle that's a sign from your body
00:54:58
saying that everything you're doing is
00:55:00
good you're not overtraining you're not
00:55:02
under fueling you're not under too much
00:55:03
stress like this is a good sign to say
00:55:06
you're healthy and to be performing well
00:55:09
you need to be healthy so it's actually
00:55:10
like a really positive thing uh yeah
00:55:13
we're trying to change change that
00:55:15
yeah okay so um you so back to LA so
00:55:19
you're train you're training like a
00:55:20
Savage and you're getting the results
00:55:23
and it's the um the Gold Coast Marathon
00:55:25
2019 what was your what was your goal or
00:55:27
expectation so going into that after
00:55:29
those few years of focusing on running
00:55:32
and being like I'm going to give this
00:55:33
give this a red hot crack and just like
00:55:36
see what I can achieve I had the goal of
00:55:41
making the world team that year so um
00:55:45
the world standard I think was 237 and
00:55:48
I'd run a 239 at that point so I was
00:55:50
like with all this training and with how
00:55:53
I had been able to get by not working um
00:55:56
I was super confident that I was going
00:55:58
to be able to make that time yeah three
00:56:01
three seconds a kilometer quicker yeah
00:56:03
not much at all and so being in La I was
00:56:07
I I want to say which I know you can't
00:56:09
really say this cuz I never did it but I
00:56:11
want to say I was in definitely low 230
00:56:13
shape like some of the sessions I was
00:56:15
doing I was just I knew that I could run
00:56:17
a 230 um and so I went to Australia
00:56:22
after LA and started to prep for Gold
00:56:24
Coast and then I got sick a couple of
00:56:25
weeks out
00:56:27
and that wasn't ideal but in those
00:56:30
instances you just have to not get
00:56:32
consumed by what is going on around you
00:56:34
and just kind of stay calm and focused
00:56:36
on what's ahead and do what you got to
00:56:38
do to get there and so I tried to kind
00:56:40
of ignore the fact that I'd been sick
00:56:42
and just like slept and AED and and did
00:56:44
what I needed to do and then I got to
00:56:47
the race and it was a pretty horrific
00:56:49
day I remember it was like really wet it
00:56:52
was pouring rain at the start line it
00:56:53
was really windy which is like very
00:56:55
unlike gold coast and like a pit Gold
00:56:58
Coast is the the race I wanted to do
00:57:00
flast yeah and um unfortunately it just
00:57:04
wasn't there and I got to I got to
00:57:08
25ks and felt somewhat okay and then by
00:57:11
about 28 I was like feeling like the
00:57:17
whales were somewhat falling off yeah in
00:57:18
28 sort of in a marathon when it when it
00:57:20
begins where it begins and um the
00:57:23
horrific thing about Gold Coast is that
00:57:25
you run past the start line at about
00:57:27
30ks and so you do this big loop and
00:57:30
then at 30ks you run past the start line
00:57:32
then you've got another like 12K to go
00:57:34
and I remember at the 30k running past
00:57:37
the start line and my mom was there and
00:57:38
I was just like no like I'm not feeling
00:57:42
good and I remember her saying you can
00:57:44
pull out like it's okay you can pull out
00:57:46
and I was like no I'm going to keep
00:57:47
trying and then my Pace went from
00:57:49
running whatever it would have been like
00:57:50
340s or something down to like 350s and
00:57:53
4 minutes and and then at about 3ks I
00:57:56
think I dropped down to like 4 15s I
00:57:59
think I was like that I'm not going to
00:58:00
make the time
00:58:02
and like if I'm not making the standard
00:58:05
then what's the point really and I just
00:58:06
remember stopping my watch like sitting
00:58:09
on the side of the road and just like
00:58:11
balling and just being like because I'd
00:58:14
spent the last three or so years
00:58:16
completely focused on running it was my
00:58:19
identity it was what I did and then I
00:58:21
just like lost all of that in an
00:58:23
instance and I was just like instant and
00:58:25
then I was just like
00:58:27
who am I and what is the point of all of
00:58:30
this you know and so I think that like I
00:58:34
was saying earlier was one of the most
00:58:35
challenging times in my running career
00:58:38
but it was probably the best thing that
00:58:39
happened to me because it changed my
00:58:41
perspective towards running and it
00:58:43
changed my appreciation for what the
00:58:45
sport actually is and what it can do for
00:58:46
me and I only stayed in that kind of
00:58:49
dark place for like 48 hours I was just
00:58:52
like you know I let it all go I went
00:58:56
through the emotion of it all um and
00:58:58
then within 48 Hours I'd signed up to
00:59:00
another Marathon which was like 3 weeks
00:59:02
later and I promise short memory yeah
00:59:06
shortterm memory and I promised myself
00:59:08
that I'm going to go and do that
00:59:09
marathon without looking at my watch and
00:59:10
just enjoy it because I want to prove to
00:59:12
myself that there is way more to the
00:59:15
sport than just teams and times and
00:59:17
places and
00:59:18
so uh yeah I went and ran the sunny
00:59:21
Coast Marathon like 3 weeks later and
00:59:23
and one it wasn't my goal it was a
00:59:26
pleasant Supply prize to win it got the
00:59:29
record and didn't meet the time that at
00:59:32
that point um qualifying um times had
00:59:35
actually shut so even if ID run it I
00:59:37
wouldn't have made it but I didn't have
00:59:40
that pressure I was just like just go
00:59:41
and run and and um my relationship with
00:59:44
running has changed ever since then and
00:59:46
it's um for the good it's good yeah yeah
00:59:48
it's funny because um before we started
00:59:50
recording today um we were talking about
00:59:52
the road Marathon over the weekend and
00:59:54
you told me you were feeling like [ __ ]
00:59:55
you your parents were there and they're
00:59:57
like come on lyia you know get on with
00:59:59
it you're in Gold Coast did you your mom
01:00:01
was saying if if you're not feeling good
01:00:03
you can just pull out yeah it's funny do
01:00:05
you think it was like a mother's
01:00:06
instinct at the time or I don't know
01:00:08
because my mom and my dad I think are
01:00:10
both very competitive
01:00:12
and I have very high expectations of
01:00:15
myself and I think particularly my mom
01:00:17
has probably even higher expectations of
01:00:19
me and so seeing her in the weekend and
01:00:21
she was just
01:00:22
like keep going like you have to finish
01:00:26
yeah whereas in goco she was like I
01:00:28
remember her saying like it's okay if
01:00:30
you if you need to stop um I don't
01:00:33
really know where where her head was at
01:00:36
in the two different races but I think
01:00:39
um she's seen the evolution of me and my
01:00:42
running and my perspective of running
01:00:45
and now being a founder and a CEO and
01:00:48
she's seen the the expectation that I
01:00:50
put on myself in both those positions
01:00:52
and I think um she wants to support me
01:00:55
as much as she can and I think she knows
01:00:58
that I do Thrive under pressure and I
01:01:00
think she wants to put the pressure on
01:01:02
for me to just keep pushing but uh yeah
01:01:05
and the weekend I was just like Mom this
01:01:07
sucks like do I have to keep going and
01:01:10
she just wanted me I think to get the
01:01:12
middle so I was like okay I'll do it for
01:01:14
you guys yeah and and that that Gold
01:01:16
Coast event were you um immediately
01:01:18
after pulling out were you like were
01:01:21
were you mad or disappointed at yourself
01:01:22
for not even you know hobbling it into
01:01:24
the Finish or you just felt like you
01:01:26
were done I was done I think I had so
01:01:29
much pressure put upon me leading into
01:01:32
that race as well I remember my coach at
01:01:34
the time saying to people he'd
01:01:36
introduced me to people and he'd be like
01:01:37
oh this is Lydia she's going to the
01:01:39
World Marathon Champs and I'd be like
01:01:41
haven't qualified yet that's how
01:01:42
confident he was in me and I was also
01:01:44
there but I did feel a lot of pressure
01:01:46
and so I think once I pulled out I just
01:01:49
remember I think they took me to the
01:01:50
ambulance I didn't definitely didn't
01:01:52
need to be there well maybe for my head
01:01:54
but I was um just balling and just like
01:01:58
lost and I suppose because so much work
01:02:00
went into that moment so much work and
01:02:02
money and there's not a lot of money in
01:02:04
running so it's all off my own back and
01:02:07
I don't do it for the money at all but
01:02:09
when you're pouring your own you know
01:02:11
your own savings into into the sport and
01:02:14
then not getting the result there is
01:02:17
that pressure as well so yeah a lot a
01:02:19
lot went into it but a lot more has come
01:02:23
out of it and um yeah I'm I'm glad I
01:02:26
went through it and that pressure that
01:02:28
you talk about how much of that um do
01:02:30
you think is um is is internal like
01:02:34
pressure on yourself and pressure from
01:02:35
other
01:02:36
people a lot of it is internal yeah I
01:02:39
have pretty yeah pretty high
01:02:41
expectations of myself I am pretty
01:02:45
addicted to success I think I like will
01:02:48
do anything to see myself progressing I
01:02:51
think it's the progress to success which
01:02:53
is what I like Thrive off so it's um
01:02:57
it's hard because there's days where I
01:02:59
should just like relax and smell the
01:03:01
roses as people would say but I just I
01:03:04
just can't like I want to constantly be
01:03:06
making progress whether that's in my
01:03:08
career or my relationships or in my work
01:03:10
and or in my running and I'm just like
01:03:13
it's um it can be a pretty difficult
01:03:14
position to be in but I think it's
01:03:17
exhausting you're always chasing
01:03:18
something definely yeah but I think the
01:03:21
fact I'm aware of it is really good uh
01:03:25
but making change I don't know how to do
01:03:28
that and I don't know how I can like be
01:03:31
kinder to myself but still be content
01:03:34
because I wouldn't say that I'm like
01:03:37
ever feeling the that
01:03:40
content I suppose it's just pausing from
01:03:42
time to time and taking stock of what
01:03:44
you've done and where you're at but
01:03:46
still keeping an eye on the future and
01:03:48
being better yeah I think that's it yeah
01:03:51
being proud of where you are as well
01:03:52
yeah um we haven't even talked about
01:03:54
your career stuff so you you you don't
01:03:56
work for Nike anymore but you had a
01:03:58
fabulous career career with Nike you
01:03:59
were in marketing yeah I'm still with
01:04:01
the brand y uh I Nike hits to always and
01:04:05
every Instagram yeah by the way um most
01:04:08
of your Instagram stories you're wearing
01:04:10
almost like the Nike sort of bike shorts
01:04:12
yeah Pros why um yeah why do you wear
01:04:14
them and not the not sort of like flappy
01:04:16
flappy shorts just prence yeah I just
01:04:19
like them um yeah I mean I've been with
01:04:22
the brand now for going on 14 15 years
01:04:25
years so I feel like kind of part of the
01:04:28
furniture at Nike now and I've had such
01:04:31
an amazing career with them and I
01:04:34
actually started with Nike as an athlete
01:04:36
so back in 2009 or 10 um I got picked up
01:04:41
by them when I won my first national
01:04:43
title and I was just like right place at
01:04:45
the right time actually this is a pretty
01:04:47
funny story which yeah I think for me
01:04:50
shows how powerful our minds can be and
01:04:53
how important confidence in yourself is
01:04:55
for because I actually went into a Nike
01:04:58
store um when I was like 19 and blessed
01:05:02
myself but like asked the woman behind
01:05:04
the counter if I could get sponsored by
01:05:08
Nike I like someone working like the St
01:05:11
Luke's BR it was the new store please
01:05:13
pleas please pleas and I just you know
01:05:17
the woman would have just looked at me
01:05:18
and been like lady I'm just working R
01:05:21
there's no way that I can give you a
01:05:22
Nike contract you know oh hang on I'll
01:05:25
just ring still night yeah yeah and
01:05:29
so all the naivity that's gorgeous
01:05:31
gorgeous and so I left the store
01:05:33
obviously and then I remember a few
01:05:35
weeks later actually being offered a
01:05:36
contract with another brand just to to
01:05:39
know I wasn't a great Runner like I won
01:05:40
nationals but I wasn't performing on the
01:05:42
global stage or anything and anyway this
01:05:44
other brand offered me a contract and I
01:05:45
remember turning it down because I was
01:05:47
like adamant that I was going to get
01:05:48
sponsored by Nike and um hang on yeah
01:05:51
we'll just take some of Tiger Wood's
01:05:53
money away and Michael Jordan's little
01:05:55
little we teenage girl in New Zealand
01:05:58
and um and so yeah I just had this
01:06:01
belief and then I'm not kidding you
01:06:02
within about two months I want to say um
01:06:05
I got offered a placement on a squad
01:06:08
here in New Zealand and our main sponsor
01:06:10
was Nike and that was just like whether
01:06:14
it was the power of the mind or just
01:06:16
like the confidence that I deserved it
01:06:18
and was worthy of it I ended up getting
01:06:20
that contract and I was an athlete for
01:06:23
about 2 years and then I
01:06:26
I'm very much a yes scal so I'll say yes
01:06:28
to pretty much every opportunity and
01:06:32
maybe maybe not so much yes now but
01:06:34
definitely back then and uh I as an
01:06:38
athlete got given opportunities as a
01:06:40
Nike athlete you kind of get asked to
01:06:42
come along and like speak at events and
01:06:44
be attendees at events and I just went
01:06:47
to everything and said yes to everything
01:06:49
and I think the brand saw that in me and
01:06:52
they actually offered me a position in
01:06:54
the marketing team when I was about 21
01:06:56
um and so that was like pretty amazing
01:07:01
to get that experience I was still
01:07:03
studying at University to get the time
01:07:04
and so it was the dream job like I drove
01:07:07
this massive Volkswagen van around with
01:07:09
about 250 pairs of running shoes and go
01:07:12
out to runs Park runs and the Nike run
01:07:15
Club I think was just kind of kicking
01:07:16
off at the time and we just kit people
01:07:18
out on running shoes and just talk to
01:07:20
people about running and it was just
01:07:21
like so epic I think it was like my
01:07:23
first experience
01:07:25
of community running like seeing Runners
01:07:28
that weren't Elites and and mingling
01:07:31
with people who didn't just run and it
01:07:33
was like so cool to see how they loved
01:07:37
the sport and what they did like how
01:07:38
they could benefit off the sport away
01:07:40
from just being competitive athletes and
01:07:41
so yeah I was very lucky to kind of be
01:07:44
in that position and um and spent about
01:07:47
five years in the brand Team um and
01:07:49
alongside being in the brand Team I took
01:07:52
on the Nike run Club coach role which is
01:07:55
the title I still hold today um and have
01:07:58
now been in the coaching position for
01:07:59
about eight years wow and it's just yeah
01:08:02
again like amazing it's um yeah I think
01:08:05
it's it was hard for me as a 22y old
01:08:08
working in the brand Team at Nike I
01:08:10
ended up leaving University and just
01:08:12
focusing on that
01:08:14
and I just remember thinking at 22 like
01:08:17
I found my dream job like what do you do
01:08:20
when you found your dream job at
01:08:23
22 because I was traveling I was was
01:08:25
like living and breathing running I was
01:08:28
talking about the best brand in the
01:08:29
world like it was just so cool and um
01:08:32
yeah I remember being like well this is
01:08:34
going to turn into a disaster because
01:08:35
where can I go from here and uh I didn't
01:08:38
I guess I didn't have like huge
01:08:39
Ambitions to become like directors of
01:08:41
the brand or anything like that and um
01:08:44
yeah I think that's I I found myself in
01:08:47
a position where my health was suffering
01:08:49
and um I needed to look after myself and
01:08:52
I ended up leaving the brand Team but
01:08:54
stayed with the brand and and in this
01:08:56
coach role until now and um it's been
01:08:58
just like a whirlwind and I'm so
01:09:00
grateful to the brand like I definitely
01:09:02
wouldn't have had the opportunities that
01:09:04
I've had without the brands I'm just
01:09:06
like very very grateful it's good that
01:09:08
you still like it because often you know
01:09:09
you you you have these goals or
01:09:11
aspirations and then you know when you
01:09:14
when you get up close and personal
01:09:16
that's when the cracks start to show in
01:09:17
any sort of organization um so the fact
01:09:20
that you're still passionate about it I
01:09:21
think that's really cool definitely I
01:09:23
think every company and organization has
01:09:25
it's like pros and cons it's hard times
01:09:27
and good times and I think um I just I
01:09:30
didn't come from like a brand marketing
01:09:32
background I just found myself in that
01:09:34
position and I just learned so much um
01:09:38
so yeah they've always been so
01:09:39
supportive to me and it's a mutually
01:09:42
beneficial relationship we have with one
01:09:44
another and now with FEI like we are in
01:09:47
partnership with Nike so we get to work
01:09:49
together and we're all chasing the same
01:09:51
outcome you know we want to get people
01:09:52
moving and we want people to feel good
01:09:54
in their bodies and um it's just cool to
01:09:57
be working with a company with a brand
01:09:58
that is so passionate about the same
01:10:00
things yeah and you shared on Instagram
01:10:02
some stories um of you running around
01:10:05
the 400 meter track at um um Nike HQ yes
01:10:09
and Eugene is it Eugene Oregon yeah what
01:10:12
that track looks beautiful just 400 met
01:10:15
track but it's surrounded by it's like
01:10:16
it's in the middle of a bush yeah yeah
01:10:18
it's incredible it's the most beautiful
01:10:20
track in the world it's so cool the
01:10:22
whole Nike headquarters is just like
01:10:23
Dreamland it's incred
01:10:25
incredible the only problem with um a
01:10:28
400 met track in Bush how how do you
01:10:30
know where your opponents are you
01:10:33
don't remember D we're out there just to
01:10:35
have fun and focus on yourself and just
01:10:38
compete with yourself so no it's um I
01:10:40
haven't raced on the track but it would
01:10:42
be quite hard to know like where
01:10:43
everyone is at because you can't see
01:10:45
across the track you'd see them every
01:10:46
like I don't know 100 meters or
01:10:48
something like there is one section
01:10:50
where you can see across but the rest of
01:10:51
it you're pretty lost but it's cool it's
01:10:53
really cool amazing we we've been going
01:10:55
for over an hour we haven't even got to
01:10:56
the FI stuff yet we'll get to that soon
01:10:58
I promise um one thing I wanted to know
01:11:01
you you were stuck in Melbourne during
01:11:03
Co Melbourne was like a [ __ ] show hey
01:11:06
Melbourne was like kind of similar to
01:11:08
ockland I guess it felt like Melbourne
01:11:09
had a worst lockdown yeah than anyone
01:11:12
else in Australia um how was that and
01:11:14
how was your mental health during that
01:11:15
time yeah it was it was challenging I
01:11:17
think early on in the lockdown I
01:11:19
thankfully found myself in a position
01:11:21
where I actually wasn't in the city I
01:11:23
was out of the city um up a place called
01:11:25
ham which was just like really beautiful
01:11:27
and secluded um I ended up going there
01:11:30
with an ex partner and it was just like
01:11:33
good timing that we ended up being there
01:11:35
and then we were actually away from the
01:11:37
city for the first kind of section of
01:11:38
lockdown for a few months but the in
01:11:42
2021 um I think it was 2021 I was in a
01:11:47
much more difficult position in my
01:11:49
apartment I had an apartment in
01:11:50
Melbourne by myself and spent probably 8
01:11:54
months in lockdown Al lot own
01:11:55
essentially and that was like really
01:11:58
tough yeah um I think that was 22
01:12:01
actually yeah it was really hard it was
01:12:03
just like a lot of alone time and
01:12:06
running was my only outlet and it was
01:12:08
the only way we could connect with other
01:12:10
people but even running was like we had
01:12:13
60 minutes and if you ran for 61 you'd
01:12:15
get told off by everybody and um there
01:12:19
were like policemen on horses that would
01:12:21
stop you while you're running and check
01:12:23
your watch to make sure you weren't
01:12:24
running for more in an hour which is
01:12:28
insane but it is you look you look back
01:12:30
and it's only like a couple of years ago
01:12:32
it seems crazy crazy I just can't
01:12:35
believe that that was like reality for a
01:12:37
while um but yeah it was hard it was
01:12:40
hard and and your your dad got sick
01:12:42
about the same time I remember you
01:12:43
shared um uh I think it was a post from
01:12:46
miq yeah um and you were running outside
01:12:50
by the way you were lucky the EMQ I was
01:12:52
and we weren't even allowed to run if
01:12:54
you broke into a run in the exercise
01:12:56
yard um there was a guy that would blow
01:12:58
his whistle um so yes how is your dad is
01:13:01
he okay now um yeah he he is a fighter
01:13:05
yeah so he got diagnosed with at the
01:13:08
time they found the cancer in his brain
01:13:11
um and that's when we first found out
01:13:14
that he had cancer and uh we soon after
01:13:18
found out that it had stem from melanoma
01:13:20
so that was kind of the primary source
01:13:23
was melanoma but had metes to his brain
01:13:26
by the time we founded and um that was
01:13:29
pretty severe and that was 3 years ago
01:13:32
now and he's he's fighting he is an
01:13:36
absolute Legend like he's super positive
01:13:38
about the whole thing and um he wants to
01:13:42
be here you know so it was really
01:13:44
challenging coming back and being put
01:13:45
into demq by myself two days after I
01:13:48
found out dead head cancer and that was
01:13:50
like one of the most challenging times
01:13:53
of my entire life M so the you're locked
01:13:55
up for 14 days and there's nothing
01:13:57
nothing you can do while Dad was going
01:13:58
in for brain surgery yeah it was pretty
01:14:02
horrific uh but I think in those
01:14:06
instances
01:14:08
you really learn how strong you are and
01:14:12
like you really see your resilience and
01:14:15
I think it's um yeah again like some of
01:14:18
the shest times in my life but has
01:14:19
helped me become who I am today and now
01:14:23
like running a business and all the
01:14:24
stresses that go on I feel like I don't
01:14:26
really get too phased vatal because I
01:14:28
feel like I've been in instances where
01:14:29
like life has actually been so hard and
01:14:33
and it feels like your world is
01:14:34
crumbling um and you get through it you
01:14:36
know and so I'm like you know what
01:14:38
things that work don't work out exactly
01:14:40
how I imagined it it's okay because
01:14:42
we'll get through these tough times yeah
01:14:44
one thing that you get from um from
01:14:46
following you whether it's like
01:14:47
listening to you on podcast or listening
01:14:50
to your own podcast on FY or following
01:14:52
on Instagram um you're you're very very
01:14:54
positive of very glassful also um very
01:14:57
grateful is this um is this just like
01:15:01
your your DNA or is this something
01:15:03
you've worked on like do you do you
01:15:04
practice gratitude mindfully do you
01:15:07
Journal definitely I think
01:15:10
gratitude I think it really does come
01:15:12
back to my journey and my sister in
01:15:16
particular and like seeing the journey
01:15:17
that she's taken and where she's ended
01:15:19
up and like just being so grateful that
01:15:22
I am here um and
01:15:25
I think gratitude is everything like
01:15:27
honestly I feel like if you can't be
01:15:29
grateful for where you are today then
01:15:31
what what's the point you know um it
01:15:35
allows you to appreciate what you have
01:15:37
and in a world where we are constantly
01:15:40
finding ourselves comparing ourselves to
01:15:42
others and wishing we had what they had
01:15:45
or looked what how they looked I think
01:15:47
being able to stop and just like be
01:15:50
happy with what you have is like the
01:15:52
most important thing to enjoy life and
01:15:56
uh yeah I've definitely had my struggles
01:15:58
with it too but gratitude I think has
01:16:00
like really saved
01:16:02
me yeah well you think about your you
01:16:04
know your dad the day that he found out
01:16:07
he had brain cancer he he would give
01:16:09
anything to be feeling how he was the
01:16:12
day before you know what I mean totally
01:16:15
um yeah it's it's hard the way sometimes
01:16:17
I don't know life life gets in the way
01:16:19
or you just get caught up in your own
01:16:20
[ __ ] um yeah but it does take it
01:16:23
does take if a it's like a musle and you
01:16:25
have to train it the the whole gratitude
01:16:26
thing it is yeah and I think um it
01:16:30
really plays into
01:16:31
like building a life that you are proud
01:16:34
of and that you are you are happy to
01:16:38
live you know like I think happiness is
01:16:40
is a forever growing Beast it's not
01:16:43
something you can wake up and just be
01:16:44
happy every single day but I definitely
01:16:46
think like building a life that you can
01:16:49
wake up and say you know this is the
01:16:51
life that I've always wanted to live and
01:16:53
like I don't know feel like um I was
01:16:56
saying this the other day I think I put
01:16:58
up a post about it around
01:17:02
um that it takes time to figure out like
01:17:06
who you are and where you want to be but
01:17:08
uh like the the moments along the way
01:17:11
are what really matter you know and so
01:17:13
for me I'm just like I am really proud
01:17:15
of this life and I'm so grateful for the
01:17:19
life that I live and some days are
01:17:21
harder than others and that that's okay
01:17:22
just take it as it comes like I'm really
01:17:25
yeah I'm just like I don't know I think
01:17:28
everything in your life does there's
01:17:30
meaning behind it all and it's taking
01:17:32
you on this journey you know as wooo as
01:17:34
maybe that sounds like I look back at my
01:17:36
experiences as a teenage girl and what
01:17:38
Rose taught me and I then I think about
01:17:41
the challenges that I've been through in
01:17:42
my life and they've all like kind of led
01:17:44
to these moments and the work that I do
01:17:47
now and the impact that hopefully I feel
01:17:49
like I'm having um yeah like I just
01:17:52
don't think I would be doing this if all
01:17:53
of those challenges and things didn't
01:17:55
happen to me earlier so yeah I think
01:17:58
you're in a great position too because
01:17:59
um if you're a professional Runner like
01:18:01
it hasn't very very short window a an
01:18:04
expiry date on it um but what you're
01:18:07
doing you can do for the rest of your
01:18:08
life ideally fabulous yeah well it's not
01:18:11
really wrapped up in times or medals is
01:18:14
it no it's not and I I yeah me and
01:18:16
Esther talk about this too because
01:18:18
Esther was who's my best friend and also
01:18:20
my co-founder like she was an amazing
01:18:23
athlete when she was a teenage girl she
01:18:24
won World cross country Champs when she
01:18:26
was like 14 or 15 which is just the best
01:18:30
in the world obviously like beating all
01:18:31
these incredibly talented athletes
01:18:35
and yeah and we try to think about like
01:18:38
if we had made the Olympics and
01:18:40
fulfilled these potential dreams that we
01:18:42
once had would we still be would we be
01:18:45
feeling like we've we're having the
01:18:47
impact that we're having today you know
01:18:49
versus what we're doing through FEI and
01:18:51
the work that we're doing and we would
01:18:53
both 100% take this path of like
01:18:57
building building a safe and supportive
01:18:59
environment for females and for female
01:19:01
Runners to connect to them to each other
01:19:04
to learn about themselves to have
01:19:06
appropriate guidance and to empower
01:19:07
women in movement like that is our goal
01:19:10
and I just don't think you can do that
01:19:11
when you're just like this athlete
01:19:12
focused on your performance it's really
01:19:15
hard to if you're going to be an athlete
01:19:17
I suppose it's too much of a self
01:19:18
selfish Endeavor in a way you don't have
01:19:20
the energy or the heartbeats for so
01:19:22
let's talk about F let's get into that
01:19:24
now so so this this started with um
01:19:27
Esther who you're talking about yes the
01:19:29
bestie the best is that what you call
01:19:32
each other the besty she doesn't quite
01:19:34
have the same one for me but even yeah I
01:19:36
definitely refer to her as s the bestie
01:19:39
oh wow it's loow hanging fruit so so
01:19:42
you're working at n how does this work
01:19:43
so she's in um she's in toonga you're
01:19:46
you're in Melbourne you're working for
01:19:48
Nike it seems like um it seems like a
01:19:52
[ __ ] show starting a business together
01:19:53
when you're in different countries so at
01:19:55
the time this was in 2020 So Co
01:19:57
obviously happened at the start of 2020
01:19:59
kicked off then went for a few years but
01:20:01
at the end more closer to the end of
01:20:03
2020 ether was in Melbourne and I was in
01:20:06
Melbourne so we're actually in the same
01:20:07
place okay at the time ether had um been
01:20:11
working as a personal trainer for a we
01:20:12
while but she had lost her job because
01:20:14
of the lockdowns and I had at that point
01:20:17
had been running my own coaching company
01:20:18
for about 3 or 4 years and it was um
01:20:22
writing programs for runners all over
01:20:23
the world and and uh it was awesome like
01:20:27
not a lot of stress and still felt like
01:20:29
I was having impact on people so I was
01:20:31
really enjoying it but I couldn't really
01:20:33
scale it beyond what I was doing to that
01:20:35
dat like I couldn't really build a
01:20:38
company off the back of it it was just
01:20:39
myself and so Esther and I had gone
01:20:43
through this experience as as female
01:20:45
athletes and come out the other side of
01:20:46
it and we' both just spent the last two
01:20:48
years like learning about our
01:20:50
bodies and we both had been coaching
01:20:55
and also working with the likes of Nike
01:20:57
and other big Global sporting Brands and
01:21:00
we both knew there was a huge
01:21:02
responsibility on our shoulders to take
01:21:06
what we had learned through our
01:21:07
challenges and the education that we'
01:21:09
gone through ourselves and spread it to
01:21:11
other people
01:21:13
and we just thought if we if we build
01:21:17
something to do that then we can impact
01:21:19
people woman more than just telling them
01:21:23
how to run faster
01:21:25
and so we kicked FY off in 2020 as a
01:21:29
onetoone coaching company and it was
01:21:31
very much about providing woman Runners
01:21:33
guidance around their cycle and adapting
01:21:35
their running training to their cycle
01:21:37
and educating them about their bodies
01:21:39
because almost all of us had just not
01:21:42
learned anything about ourselves and um
01:21:45
that's where it started and I guess we
01:21:46
saw really quickly like the need for
01:21:49
this type of service for women and we
01:21:52
spent the last 3 years working on onet
01:21:54
toone coaching but alongside building
01:21:57
the coaching company we realized that
01:22:01
there was just like this huge lack of
01:22:04
software to support women in sport
01:22:06
there's just like pretty much 99% of
01:22:09
Fitness software is being built for men
01:22:12
so not taking into account female
01:22:15
physiology is a massive mess and we just
01:22:18
couldn't find a toour where we could
01:22:19
like get women to track the menstrual
01:22:21
cycles get given the appropriate
01:22:23
guidance around their side CES get given
01:22:25
them training guidance around their
01:22:26
cycles and then just like connect women
01:22:28
to each other and we like very quickly
01:22:31
realized that there was a huge
01:22:32
opportunity for us to to build something
01:22:35
that could serve women better and so
01:22:38
neither of us are techy at that point
01:22:40
neither of us knew anything about
01:22:42
startups the startup World raising
01:22:44
Capital none of it like we were so naive
01:22:46
and we're like we just build this app um
01:22:49
and so we went on that journey and we
01:22:51
first buil out prototypes and tested
01:22:53
that with people and and we just had no
01:22:55
idea really where to go or what to do
01:22:57
and so it took about 18 months or so
01:23:00
before we actually got accepted into an
01:23:01
accelerator program called start mate
01:23:03
which is the biggest accelerator program
01:23:05
in Australia and New Zealand and they
01:23:07
have about 500 companies apply each um
01:23:10
cohort and in our cohort only 12
01:23:13
companies got selected so we got
01:23:16
selected um in such a massive group of
01:23:19
other companies that applied and and
01:23:21
that was like just a huge confidence
01:23:22
boost for us cuz we were like not Ticky
01:23:25
firsttime Founders building something
01:23:27
that doesn't exist like there were a lot
01:23:29
of things working against us but we got
01:23:30
in and that gave us confidence and it
01:23:33
gave us our first investment so from
01:23:35
there we were able to make our first
01:23:38
hires which Tagan and Stefan who are
01:23:40
still on our team today and um and that
01:23:43
the build of the FI app started at the
01:23:45
end of 2022 and so we launched in
01:23:49
November 2023 um and now we've been in
01:23:51
the app store for about six or so months
01:23:53
and um it's just just been awesome like
01:23:55
such a journey to be on and just to see
01:23:57
the impact that we're able to have like
01:23:59
one of the um one of our users our
01:24:01
community members came up to Tagan in
01:24:03
the weekend at the road to a marathon
01:24:04
saying you know like the F apps changed
01:24:07
my life and to hear that from women it's
01:24:09
just like so rewarding so it's pretty
01:24:12
cool I'm just really excited about where
01:24:13
we're going in the future that's so
01:24:15
humbling isn't it and you guys making
01:24:18
okay money from it no no not yet got the
01:24:21
life of an entrepreneur eh it's it's
01:24:23
terrifying it's it's it's funny because
01:24:25
I feel like a lot of um I talk a lot
01:24:28
about what being an athlete taught me
01:24:31
around resilience and hard work and
01:24:32
taking risks and like making sacrifices
01:24:35
all of it is exactly the same as being a
01:24:36
founder and so uh no like the goal is to
01:24:40
Monday make money but right now we're
01:24:42
just building the best possible platform
01:24:45
software app for women who run and we've
01:24:48
got some incredible investors who are on
01:24:51
the journey with us and like are
01:24:52
supporting us to get to where we know we
01:24:55
can go but um yeah it's it's all new to
01:24:58
me like being a CEO and being a Founder
01:25:00
is just like an entirely New Journey but
01:25:02
one that I'm like really enjoying so
01:25:05
you're just learning so many new skills
01:25:07
so many new skills yeah is it's cool um
01:25:10
yeah that's neat and it's it's how how
01:25:12
big is the community can you put a
01:25:13
number on it oh it's hard to say we have
01:25:16
at the moment 14 physical run location
01:25:18
so every Friday our woman meet and go
01:25:21
for a run and get coffee and just hang
01:25:23
out and they were just really like safe
01:25:26
supportive environments for women to
01:25:27
meet um so we have that community and
01:25:30
then we have our kind of wider Community
01:25:32
we have our podcast community so it's
01:25:34
hard to say how many members are in our
01:25:37
in our community we've got thousands
01:25:39
people on the app using the using the
01:25:41
app and following our trading guidance
01:25:43
so it's um yeah it is humbling it's
01:25:46
really cool and um you even um ambushed
01:25:49
cornered I don't know what the correct
01:25:50
phrasing is Steven Bartlett from Diary
01:25:53
of a CEO yeah
01:25:56
yeah how how did you accost one of the
01:25:58
world's biggest podcasters it's so funny
01:26:01
so I've been listening to Steven butlet
01:26:03
for like maybe like two no three maybe
01:26:06
three or four years ages and it's just
01:26:09
hilarious when you listen to someone on
01:26:10
a podcast and you like feel like you
01:26:12
know them um but I got the opportunity
01:26:15
to go to his show in Oakland a few weeks
01:26:16
ago and he is an investor himself he is
01:26:20
one of the sharks on Shark Tank and I
01:26:22
know he's pretty actively invested at
01:26:24
the moment and so I as I said I'm a yes
01:26:28
girl and I try and take every
01:26:29
opportunity I decided to get a ticket to
01:26:32
meet and greet him and uh I don't know
01:26:36
if you know his conversation cards he he
01:26:38
has conversation cards that he builds
01:26:40
off yeah at the end of the podcast every
01:26:42
guest has to write a question for the
01:26:43
next guest in a book and he tuned into a
01:26:45
game Y and so we took the design of his
01:26:49
conversation cards redesigned it and
01:26:51
called them the Fe conversation cards
01:26:53
and pretty much had questions about the
01:26:55
lack of support women Founders and women
01:26:57
and Sport G and um had a QR code there
01:27:00
to go direct to our pitch deck and so I
01:27:03
gave them to him and said to him you
01:27:06
know theel about F and cuz how long do
01:27:09
you reckon you had I reckon I had 3
01:27:11
minutes at the most yeah so it was
01:27:13
pretty quick but through all the
01:27:15
accelerated programs that we've been
01:27:17
part of you definitely learn how to
01:27:18
pitch quick so the experience was there
01:27:21
helped heaps but immediately when I said
01:27:23
where got a fem tech company and we're
01:27:25
building tech for female athletes uh and
01:27:28
women in sport he was like we're
01:27:30
investing into fem Tech right now like
01:27:32
gave me an email and um yeah I pitched
01:27:35
to their team last week so things are
01:27:37
looking positive it's very exciting but
01:27:39
he was a legend like he as I knew he
01:27:41
would be he's just such a genuine dude
01:27:43
and I've just I've never seen someone
01:27:46
present the way he presented like he
01:27:48
pretty much rattled off a speech 2 and a
01:27:50
half hour speech word for word didn't
01:27:52
mess up at all I was just shocked by how
01:27:54
well spoken he is you just don't get
01:27:57
that when you just listen to the
01:27:58
interviews um on his podcast cuz
01:28:00
obviously the guest is mostly speaking
01:28:02
but uh he's like he's he's an awesome
01:28:05
guy and hopefully can become an investor
01:28:07
for us well that's amazing um you're
01:28:09
very courageous on your part how nervous
01:28:11
were you like compare the nerves of so
01:28:14
you're in line so you buy you can either
01:28:16
buy a g ticket or you buy a VIP ticket
01:28:18
where you get to meet afterwards so
01:28:19
you're in line in that line as he's
01:28:22
getting closer and closer how nervous
01:28:24
were you compared to like say at the
01:28:26
start line of a marathon oh way more
01:28:30
nervous way more nervous I thankfully in
01:28:34
the line behind me was my friend Robin
01:28:37
who owns a company called Hollow period
01:28:40
period cups and menr cycle discs and
01:28:43
she's awesome and so thankfully I had
01:28:45
her to kind of chat with and laugh about
01:28:46
the situation with her before I went up
01:28:49
and spoke to him but yeah I was like as
01:28:51
soon as I got up to him I'm I just like
01:28:52
I feel like I've met quite a lot of
01:28:55
celebrity aletes through the work that
01:28:58
I've done over the last 15 years and I
01:29:00
just don't really get that like wowed by
01:29:02
too many people I think people are
01:29:04
amazing but I don't get nervous as such
01:29:06
but I think for meeting him I was just
01:29:09
like not so nervous about meeting him
01:29:11
but nervous about missing the
01:29:13
opportunity for what it could be if I
01:29:15
did it well um and so also not a fan
01:29:18
girl situation just performance nervous
01:29:19
about getting your pitch right oh yeah
01:29:22
like love him but I feel like I love our
01:29:26
community more and the work that we do
01:29:28
at F That's What mattered to me was just
01:29:30
like get the pitch so he sees the
01:29:33
opportunity um get that right and then
01:29:35
you never know and I wanted to say to
01:29:37
him CU everyone was getting photos and I
01:29:39
wanted to be like we don't need a photo
01:29:40
because I'm going to see you again soon
01:29:42
just give him the confidence is that
01:29:44
what you said I ended up getting the
01:29:46
photo I
01:29:48
know yes but we got it on Instagram and
01:29:51
actually his investment fund saw all of
01:29:53
the content on Instagram cuz we posted
01:29:55
about it um the day after and tried to
01:29:58
get well we asked the community to be
01:30:00
involved and talk about how fies helped
01:30:02
them and that was the most rewarding
01:30:05
thing was just seeing these comments
01:30:06
these women are incredible and to see
01:30:10
how Fe has helped them on their own
01:30:12
Journeys
01:30:13
like I can't even speak about it like it
01:30:16
was just it's mind-blowing and and then
01:30:19
flight fund his investment fund saw that
01:30:22
and I think that's what got them excited
01:30:25
it's funny a because I suppose you do
01:30:27
any sort of business venture because you
01:30:28
want it to be you know financially
01:30:30
viable or you you know you want to
01:30:31
better keep the lights on or however you
01:30:33
want to phrase it s like the same with
01:30:35
me with this podcast I guess but
01:30:37
ultimately even more important than any
01:30:40
amount of money is the impact you're
01:30:41
having definitely so it's like the nice
01:30:43
comments that I get from people about
01:30:45
the podcast means far more than any sort
01:30:48
of financial reward you guys God you
01:30:50
guys must be so proud of what you've
01:30:51
built yeah it's funny being in the St
01:30:54
world now because it is very much about
01:30:56
how much are you raising how much are
01:30:58
you valued at what is the potential what
01:30:59
are you going to be worth in five or 10
01:31:01
years and and I've never been someone to
01:31:04
be focused on the money and it's not a
01:31:07
way I do it and I am very much about the
01:31:11
impact is how much impact can we be
01:31:13
having and can I be having and and
01:31:16
that's what matters to me and so it's I
01:31:18
find it difficult as a founder and CEO
01:31:21
to like talk about the numbers
01:31:24
because that's what the investors want
01:31:26
to see and I should I should be chasing
01:31:30
that and and I think it's exciting to
01:31:31
think about if we could reach those
01:31:33
numbers but it's more exciting to think
01:31:35
about the impact we can have if we reach
01:31:37
those numbers that's that's really why I
01:31:39
do it suppose they all go hand in hand
01:31:41
ultimately and you get to start it with
01:31:42
your best friend that must have been um
01:31:44
scary as well because um anytime
01:31:47
you I don't know would you say
01:31:49
commercialize a friendship like it's
01:31:50
It's A Dangerous Ground like you could
01:31:52
have a Fallout it is coulden it's a
01:31:54
marriage you know like we're pretty much
01:31:56
married at this point and we are just so
01:32:00
we're so lucky to have each other like I
01:32:02
could not be doing this by myself and I
01:32:04
wouldn't want to do it with anyone else
01:32:06
and we have hard times and then we have
01:32:09
amazing times but I think with Esther
01:32:11
and myself we just know each other so
01:32:13
well and we know exactly what each other
01:32:16
is thinking and we know what
01:32:18
environments we thrive in and we just
01:32:21
compliment each other it's funny because
01:32:22
I think there's so much advice you get
01:32:25
given as a Founder from you know
01:32:27
successful business owners that have
01:32:30
done it in the past and a lot of them
01:32:32
are men um and they're trying to give us
01:32:34
guidance on how to run our business um
01:32:37
but ultimately Esther and I we know what
01:32:39
we need to be doing and we know what's
01:32:41
right for our women in our community and
01:32:43
so we're both just like really committed
01:32:46
to making this thing into what we know
01:32:50
it can be and um trusting ourselves I
01:32:53
think that's the biggest thing is like
01:32:55
trusting each other trusting our team I
01:32:58
think is incredibly important and then
01:33:00
trusting ourselves that we can do this
01:33:02
because female Founders are few and far
01:33:05
between only less than 2% of venture
01:33:08
capitalist money actually goes into
01:33:09
female Founders so most of the companies
01:33:13
that have been built as startups have
01:33:15
been built by men and men are great
01:33:19
Founders but so are women women are
01:33:21
incredible leaders incredible Founders
01:33:23
and have amazing ideas yet they're just
01:33:25
not getting back to the way that men are
01:33:27
uh and we want to build a you know equal
01:33:31
future for everyone and we need females
01:33:34
to be building that future as well and
01:33:36
so we're both just like so passionate
01:33:39
about breaking down gender equality
01:33:41
barriers not just in sport not just in
01:33:44
Tech but in the startup world as well
01:33:46
because we just want the next generation
01:33:48
of of girls to have the opportunity that
01:33:51
we didn't have or that people before us
01:33:53
didn't have I've got no doubt you'll do
01:33:54
it too you guys have both got the
01:33:56
passion have you had any um any sort of
01:33:59
even shortterm falling outs it's yeah
01:34:02
yeah yeah with just like creative
01:34:04
differences or whatever you get off a
01:34:06
zoom with each other and I we we
01:34:10
actually haven't and I'm sure it's to
01:34:11
come I'm sure there will be times that
01:34:13
will be really hard and there has been
01:34:15
hard times but for sure yeah we care
01:34:18
more about each other than anything so
01:34:22
what's the most important thing is our
01:34:25
health and our friendship um and so we
01:34:29
will like if we need a pause meetings
01:34:31
and step away from work to just like
01:34:33
have a friendship discussion we'll do
01:34:35
that you know because it's it is the
01:34:36
most without us getting along the
01:34:39
company will fall apart so like it is
01:34:41
the most important thing um but we're
01:34:43
just we're both very empathetic um and
01:34:46
maybe that's the hardest thing is we
01:34:48
both like do both impath yeah oh that's
01:34:52
good though no you're both sensible
01:34:53
people and you're both well adjusted so
01:34:56
um when you guys get together and run is
01:34:57
this all you talk about I try not to I
01:35:00
try to like not talk about work all the
01:35:02
time but um well you're both passionate
01:35:04
about it yeah but like there'll be T
01:35:06
days when maybe is will start talking
01:35:07
about work and we're out running and
01:35:08
I'll just say let's not talk about it
01:35:10
now like we're just try and change the
01:35:11
subject and neither of us take you know
01:35:13
offense to it we're just like yep cool
01:35:15
we'll talk about dogs or something
01:35:17
instead so we both love
01:35:20
dogs um oh you mentioned before some of
01:35:22
the yeah when we about Steven Bartlett
01:35:24
some of the athletes you met through
01:35:25
Nike and stuff um do you want to drop
01:35:27
some names oh honestly like I just like
01:35:31
don't really get that wild I couldn't
01:35:32
really even say tell you like who are
01:35:35
the most I mean the most famous person
01:35:37
I've probably met she's not an athlete
01:35:39
but she's pretty well known as Ellie
01:35:40
Golding I met her through Nike oh yeah
01:35:42
yeah she loves her 10k run clubs she
01:35:44
runs yeah yeah yeah yeah but like
01:35:46
athletes I'm like oh I feel like I've
01:35:48
like encountered so many of them there
01:35:50
are some like amazing amazing athletes
01:35:52
just in Australia there um we be at
01:35:55
events together and like J was an
01:35:57
amazing Runner but she's I also consider
01:35:59
kind of one of my friends you know um so
01:36:02
oh even yeah you're good mates with um
01:36:03
Lucy Bartholomew as well who's an
01:36:05
Absolut Savage like an endurance when
01:36:07
did she start doing endurance events
01:36:09
like when she was ran her first Ultra
01:36:10
when she was about 15 that's right with
01:36:12
her dad yeah yeah so she had to run with
01:36:15
her dad in order to get past the
01:36:16
organizers yeah she's got some pretty
01:36:18
crazy stories that one she's like wild
01:36:21
but she's yeah probably one of the most
01:36:23
resilient people I've ever met she's
01:36:24
pretty amazing she hasn't um got you
01:36:28
interested in urance events well I did
01:36:31
my first Ultra last year it was probably
01:36:34
the worst race I've ever done no I
01:36:36
wouldn't say worst but hardest it was
01:36:38
50ks and I think it was over 2,000 M of
01:36:41
elevation and I just signed up the week
01:36:43
before which is not recommended do not
01:36:46
do that um but I signed up ran this 50k
01:36:50
through the back of Brisbane I can't
01:36:52
remember mount cther I think it's called
01:36:54
and oh I remember it's just a different
01:36:57
sport like I remember calling James my
01:37:00
husband and probably at about 40ks or so
01:37:04
crying this sucks why did I do this why
01:37:07
did I sign up I don't want to be here
01:37:08
but like when you're that deep into an
01:37:11
ultra particularly on those Trails you
01:37:13
can't get out like you have to run so
01:37:15
you don't really have an option so poor
01:37:17
James is just like I can't do anything
01:37:18
to help you and um and then I remember
01:37:22
at like five case ago there was 1K climb
01:37:24
which was like you're on your hands and
01:37:26
knees pretty much and I just remember
01:37:29
looking at a race organizer there was a
01:37:30
race organizer up the hill and I just
01:37:32
looked at him and I was like this is
01:37:33
[ __ ] insane as though like it was his
01:37:36
fault that I was on this hill at 45k or
01:37:40
something on my hands and knees and he
01:37:42
was just like and anyway I got to the
01:37:45
end and super proud I did it but I don't
01:37:47
know if I'll do I think I'd like to do a
01:37:50
flat 50k but not the Hills I I've done a
01:37:54
similar sort of one I did one called the
01:37:55
mot Tapo which is a 52k run goes from um
01:37:59
wanica to aot toown I thought it' be a
01:38:01
good entry level ultra distance yes same
01:38:04
sort of thing lots of elevation there
01:38:06
was even a period in there where the
01:38:08
field is so separated I couldn't see
01:38:10
anyone in front of me couldn't see
01:38:11
anyone behind me I had like a
01:38:12
transponder thing but if I if I press
01:38:14
the button on that the helicopter comes
01:38:16
in and unless you're severely injured
01:38:18
you have to pay for it so through my in
01:38:20
my head I was just I was actually sort
01:38:22
of drafting the in stag post of how I
01:38:25
was going to frame me pulling out of
01:38:26
this event yeah that's funny and then I
01:38:29
feel like I've definitely done that and
01:38:32
then I got to the next the next
01:38:33
checkpoint and it was I had some jet PL
01:38:35
planes and some coke and the the
01:38:37
volunteers were very nice so I kept on
01:38:39
going it is a different sport like I
01:38:41
look at what that 50k and then I look at
01:38:43
a road Marathon I'm like there's just no
01:38:46
similarities like I was walking so much
01:38:50
of that 50k
01:38:52
and I don't know it's Le about the watch
01:38:54
isn't it you're not looking at your
01:38:55
splits you can't some kilometers might
01:38:58
take you eight or N9 minutes and it's
01:38:59
like not a big deal but I just love
01:39:01
running you know so I just remember
01:39:03
being like this isn't running like no
01:39:05
offense doctor Runners it is running but
01:39:06
it's just different running and it's not
01:39:08
the running that I like I would say that
01:39:10
I loved but maybe I'll be back there
01:39:14
like Never Say Never but it was hard I I
01:39:16
feel exactly the same way as you I just
01:39:19
love it it's given me so much like I
01:39:21
don't think I understood until maybe
01:39:23
like the last 5 or 10 years the mental
01:39:25
health benefits that I got from running
01:39:27
um but it's just the whole thing it
01:39:29
makes me feel so good makes me
01:39:31
appreciate so much stuff it's like 99%
01:39:34
of people I reckon would get out of bed
01:39:35
in the morning turn on the shower have a
01:39:36
shower at 37 38 degrees and not even
01:39:38
think about it if if you're out on a
01:39:40
long run and you're drenched and it's
01:39:43
cold you appreciate that shower like
01:39:46
nobody else oh oh my gosh I know yeah
01:39:50
I'm such a routine person cuz I will
01:39:51
like get up have a coffee go for a run
01:39:54
or have some toasts go for a run
01:39:57
and the other morning or before the
01:39:59
marathon you know like just waking up
01:40:02
the day before and not going for the run
01:40:04
I'm like it's so weird to like not have
01:40:07
that but I do it because it sets my day
01:40:10
up so well like whether I'm going out
01:40:11
for a 30 minute jog or a 2 and 1 half
01:40:14
hour long run like it just sets my
01:40:17
mental state up so well it's my
01:40:20
non-negotiable I just won't budge on
01:40:23
that time by myself particularly now
01:40:25
when work is so hectic I'm pretty much
01:40:28
every day I'm in meetings from like 800
01:40:30
or 9: in the morning till 5:00 at night
01:40:31
and back to back you know getting pulled
01:40:34
left right and center and and there's a
01:40:36
hick of a lot of pressure in the work
01:40:38
that we're doing right now
01:40:39
and I just need that time in the morning
01:40:42
to myself and it is truly the only time
01:40:45
where I can like disconnect from the
01:40:48
chaos of the world and what's going on
01:40:49
and and just be super present in the
01:40:52
moment and um
01:40:53
yeah I I hope I can do it for as long as
01:40:56
possible God your life sounds stressful
01:40:58
start your own business they said it'll
01:41:00
be fun go my mentor every time he calls
01:41:02
me he's like running a startup is fun
01:41:03
isn't it and I'm like don't get me
01:41:05
started it's um it's pretty long days
01:41:08
it's mess of days you got married
01:41:10
recently like November last year you've
01:41:11
you've mentioned your husband a couple
01:41:12
of times does is he a runner um did he
01:41:15
know what he was getting himself in for
01:41:16
so when we first met he definitely
01:41:18
claimed he was a runner on one of our
01:41:20
first dates we went running up a
01:41:21
mountain cuz he told me that he ran um
01:41:24
did he go right yeah or was it obvious
01:41:27
to you that he's hasn't run since he ran
01:41:30
15K up Mountain so that's really good
01:41:33
but um I wouldn't say he's done a heck
01:41:35
of a lot of running since like he'll run
01:41:37
with me every now and then but he
01:41:39
definitely sucked me in at the
01:41:41
start made it out like he this big
01:41:43
Runner you're you're a big commitment
01:41:45
like you like you have running holidays
01:41:47
where you be in a camper van and you'll
01:41:48
get up and yeah like it's not it's not
01:41:51
for everyone I know feel for so does he
01:41:54
run with you when you have these running
01:41:55
holidays or does he just stay in the van
01:41:57
and last month we went to the South
01:41:59
Island so I've actually only seen him
01:42:01
for like two weeks this whole year
01:42:02
because of work but um last month we had
01:42:05
a week together we went to the South
01:42:06
Island and one of the Mad campers which
01:42:08
was so cool and yeah we pretty much just
01:42:11
went on like a running tour and he had
01:42:13
no idea that that was going to be the
01:42:14
case but good
01:42:16
communication he he did run with me yeah
01:42:19
he did we ran the um we ran the AI track
01:42:22
um up Mount Cook and it's it's 10K so
01:42:25
it's not a heck of a long run but it's
01:42:27
just like the most beautiful run in the
01:42:28
world if you haven't done it you should
01:42:30
cuz it's just stunning so no he he can
01:42:33
move well like he's he can run but um
01:42:37
there's a bit of complaining that goes
01:42:39
on and I'm just like if you're not
01:42:41
having fun don't come complaining from
01:42:45
you because you to run slower than what
01:42:46
you normally run no no no no the thing
01:42:48
is he can run fast it's more just like
01:42:50
every like 5 10 minutes and we're like
01:42:52
can we stop and like okay oh for [ __ ]
01:42:55
sake and and what about um what about um
01:42:58
Jimma Flynn Jimma McCoy how how how do
01:43:00
you guys know each other you're not from
01:43:01
a hockey background are you no I'm not I
01:43:03
she sucked me into hockey when I was a
01:43:05
kid but I do you know each other through
01:43:07
to so we we met when we were five she's
01:43:10
probably my longest standing friend yeah
01:43:11
so we met as a really as really young
01:43:14
girls she was like my best friend all
01:43:16
through Primary School in high school
01:43:17
and she is like one of the most
01:43:21
naturally talented speaking natural
01:43:23
Talent naturally talented athletes I've
01:43:26
ever met she was so good with like
01:43:29
soccer and hockey and everything When We
01:43:32
Were Young she could just pick up any
01:43:34
sport and do it and do it so well um
01:43:36
whereas I was like I can run but like I
01:43:39
don't have much coordination
01:43:41
so she definitely pushed me she was like
01:43:45
I don't know if you could tell now but
01:43:46
she was a real tomboy when we were
01:43:47
little like we were both quite like
01:43:50
tomboys but she was very much she two
01:43:51
brothers and she just like
01:43:53
grew up yeah running around kicking at
01:43:55
ball really um so yeah we both like just
01:43:57
loved sport and pushed each other quite
01:43:59
a lot and we both fished quite a lot
01:44:02
when we're little we'd go fishing quite
01:44:03
a lot our dads are best friends so um
01:44:06
they're still best friends today which
01:44:07
is super cute they've got each other and
01:44:09
um they still go out fishing which is
01:44:10
cool that's so cool what an enduring
01:44:12
friendship and you and you've um I've
01:44:14
seen this on Instagram you do some like
01:44:15
training runs with Richie you've done
01:44:17
some like 1K repeats with them and stuff
01:44:19
Richie is uh he goes all right for big
01:44:22
well I was down in Queenstown with them
01:44:24
a few years ago and um I was training
01:44:26
for um a marathon and I had like a 5k I
01:44:31
think it was a 5k repeat session where I
01:44:33
was doing 4ks at marathon pace and then
01:44:35
1K float and I think I had like maybe
01:44:38
five or six of them so a big run and I
01:44:41
remember Richie being oh yeah I'll come
01:44:43
just like real downplaying it you know
01:44:45
and I was like good luck at Hanging On
01:44:48
he's like twice my way you know I was
01:44:50
like yeah how mean I feel like he's got
01:44:53
um smaller as he's gone on with his um
01:44:55
endurance Journey but he yeah was he
01:44:56
still playing rugby then he wasn't
01:44:58
playing rugby but he was still quite
01:44:59
recently retired yeah so quite a big
01:45:01
dude yeah and anyway he came out and
01:45:05
like we were running the five the 4ks on
01:45:07
at probably like 345s maybe and um I was
01:45:10
like oh he'll hang on for one maybe two
01:45:13
and I think he stuck around for like
01:45:14
three or four reps and I was just like
01:45:16
what that's insane like for a guy that
01:45:19
pig to be running that well so I think
01:45:21
it's like as a kid more than anything
01:45:23
he's just mentally strong yeah I was
01:45:25
going to ask you that because obviously
01:45:26
you need to be physically fit but um
01:45:27
yeah mentally he it's feels like he's
01:45:30
made of something different right yeah
01:45:32
yeah he's just like he will just work
01:45:36
work and work to like make progress but
01:45:38
some of the stuff the two of them
01:45:40
actually do I'm just like crazy yeah
01:45:42
they love their love their sleep
01:45:44
deprivation it seems say like 48 hour
01:45:47
Adventure races and stuff no thanks no
01:45:49
thanks hey well it's been wonderful
01:45:52
today it's this long EST podcast ever
01:45:53
you I feel like it is yeah I got to run
01:45:56
to meet an
01:45:57
investor oh really if I Ki you no you're
01:45:59
fine it's um it's been so nice to chat
01:46:01
with you AB absolutely absolutely I've
01:46:03
known you for a very long time and I'm
01:46:05
just so so proud of the work that you
01:46:07
and E are doing um with f me and um like
01:46:10
everything you do it's it's it's going
01:46:11
to be wildly successful and good than
01:46:14
it's just it's just how you wired I
01:46:16
appreciate it all right and you with the
01:46:18
podcast it's amazing to see I'm just
01:46:19
like super excited to see what comes out
01:46:21
in the future thanks l yeah awesome
01:46:24
[Music]

Podspun Insights

In this episode, two long-time friends, Lydia and her guest, dive into the world of running, identity, and the emotional rollercoaster that comes with being an athlete. They reminisce about their quirky beginnings, including a memorable competition where they lived in a Mini Cooper for days, all while wearing bikinis—a bold move that sparks laughter and reflection on feminism and self-empowerment. As they discuss their running journeys, Lydia opens up about the pressures of competitive sports and the importance of separating one's identity from athletic achievements. The conversation takes a heartfelt turn as they share personal struggles with injuries, mental health, and the impact of family dynamics on their lives. Lydia's candidness about her sister's battle with addiction adds a layer of depth to the discussion, emphasizing the transformative power of sports and community. The episode is a blend of humor, vulnerability, and inspiration, as they explore the challenges and triumphs of being female athletes in a male-dominated world. Lydia's journey from a competitive runner to a co-founder of a female-focused running community highlights the importance of support and education for women in sports. The episode wraps up with a sense of hope and camaraderie, leaving listeners inspired to embrace their own journeys, no matter how chaotic or unpredictable they may be.

Badges

This episode stands out for the following:

  • 95
    Most inspiring
  • 93
    Best overall
  • 92
    Most heartbreaking
  • 90
    Most emotional

Episode Highlights

  • The Power of Identity
    Exploring how identity can be shaped by perceptions and achievements in sports.
    “Your identity can be whatever people think of it, but I want to set my own.”
    @ 03m 08s
    June 26, 2024
  • Lessons from a Coach
    Reflecting on the impact of a coach who emphasized enjoyment and patience in sports.
    “No one remembers a young athlete; wait until you're older and have fun.”
    @ 17m 17s
    June 26, 2024
  • The Balance of Talent and Hard Work
    Exploring how dedication often outweighs natural talent in achieving success.
    “Hard work beats talent when talent doesn't work hard.”
    @ 20m 56s
    June 26, 2024
  • Sport as a Lifesaver
    How sport became a crucial element in overcoming personal challenges.
    “Sport saved my life.”
    @ 34m 45s
    June 26, 2024
  • Falling in Love with the Marathon
    The journey of discovering a passion for marathon running and the thrill of competition.
    “Definitely, that was my first moment of falling in love with the marathon.”
    @ 38m 33s
    June 26, 2024
  • The Importance of Female Physiology
    A discussion on the lack of education regarding female athletes' health and performance.
    “Only 6% of sport science research is actually done on women.”
    @ 47m 29s
    June 26, 2024
  • A Turning Point in Running
    After a challenging marathon, she reevaluates her relationship with running.
    “It was probably the best thing that happened to me because it changed my perspective.”
    @ 58m 39s
    June 26, 2024
  • The Power of Gratitude
    She shares how gratitude has shaped her outlook on life and challenges.
    “If you can’t be grateful for where you are today, then what’s the point?”
    @ 01h 15m 29s
    June 26, 2024
  • Building a Life of Gratitude
    It takes time to figure out who you are and where you want to be. 'The moments along the way are what really matter.'
    “The moments along the way are what really matter.”
    @ 01h 17m 06s
    June 26, 2024
  • Navigating the Startup World
    The journey of building a fem tech company from scratch is filled with challenges and learning experiences. 'Being a CEO is an entirely new journey.'
    “Being a CEO is an entirely new journey.”
    @ 01h 25m 05s
    June 26, 2024
  • The Challenge of Ultra Running
    A recount of a grueling 50k ultra race experience.
    “I remember calling James... crying, 'This sucks, why did I do this?'”
    @ 01h 37m 00s
    June 26, 2024
  • Enduring Friendships
    A reflection on a long-standing friendship that has endured since childhood.
    “She’s probably my longest standing friend...”
    @ 01h 43m 10s
    June 26, 2024

Episode Quotes

Key Moments

  • Friendship Origins00:27
  • Mini Car Competition01:15
  • Running Identity03:02
  • Toxic Environment28:31
  • Health Misconceptions49:23
  • Empowering Women1:19:01
  • Ultra Race Struggles1:36:31
  • Morning Routine1:40:10

Words per Minute Over Time

Vibes Breakdown

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