The Rich Roll Podcast

Rachel Entrekin Runs On Joy: How She Won The Cocodona 250 Outright By Letting Go Of The Outcome

69 min
Jun 15, 2026about 1 month ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

Rachel Entrekin discusses winning the Cocodona 250 ultramarathon outright, beating all competitors including men, by shifting from outcome-oriented goals to process-oriented mindset focused on joy and gratitude. She shares her journey from struggling with anorexia in high school to becoming an elite ultrarunner, emphasizing how attitude, nutrition optimization, and spiritual connection to nature transformed her performance and life.

Insights
  • Outcome obsession creates tension and overtraining; process-oriented focus on joy and gratitude paradoxically improves performance by reducing mental friction and enabling better decision-making
  • Elite endurance performance requires outsourcing technical decisions (nutrition, pacing) to specialists, freeing mental energy for attitude and resilience management
  • Recovery from eating disorders can be channeled into healthy ultra-endurance pursuits when reframed as performance nutrition rather than weight management, creating positive psychological associations
  • Multi-day races provide superior storytelling and character-building platforms compared to shorter ultras, allowing athletes to demonstrate resilience, humor, and humanity under extreme duress
  • Belief systems and mindset interventions can overcome objective performance predictions; 'delusional self-belief' grounded in demonstrated capability enables breakthrough results
Trends
Ultra-endurance racing gaining mainstream media attention and cultural relevance (BBC, Guardian, NYT coverage) as athletes become wellness and mindset influencersPrecision fueling and hydration becoming professionalized with sports scientists and data-driven personalization replacing generic sports nutritionMental health and recovery narratives becoming central to athlete branding and audience connection in endurance sportsSpiritual and transcendent dimensions of ultra-racing being recognized as legitimate psychological and wellness benefits, attracting seekers and recovery-oriented athletesFemale dominance in multi-day ultra-racing challenging traditional gender hierarchies in endurance sports and creating new role models for women in extreme athleticsSleep deprivation management and micro-napping strategies being optimized rather than trained, suggesting biological limits are being accepted and worked withinGratitude and joy as performance metrics gaining credibility alongside time and placement in ultra-racing cultureIndigenous wisdom and spiritual encounters being integrated into elite athlete narratives and race experiences
Companies
Precision Fueling and Hydration
Official sponsor providing sports scientist Emily and personalized fueling protocols for Entrekin's race performance
People
Rachel Entrekin
First woman to win Cocodona 250 outright, beating all male competitors; three-time race winner
Rich Roll
Host conducting interview with Rachel Entrekin about her ultramarathon victory and mindset philosophy
Killian Corth
Men's champion at Cocodona 250 2025, finished second overall behind Entrekin; broke men's course record
Courtney Dauwalter
Dominant female ultrarunner and inspiration for Entrekin's joy-focused approach to racing
Emily
Entrekin's nutrition specialist who manages fueling strategy during Cocodona 250
Meg Eckert
Competitor in Cocodona 250 race
Heather Jackson
Competitor in Cocodona 250 race
Dan Green
Previous year men's winner of Cocodona 250 who gained profile elevation from race victory
Manuela Villaseca
Second place finisher in Cocodona 250 2024 whose positive attitude inspired Entrekin's mindset shift
Joe McConaughey
Ran with Entrekin for first 50-60 miles of Cocodona 250 2025
Jeff Browning
Accomplished multi-day runner known for planned sleep strategy during races
Quotes
"You can choose the attitude that you want to have. If I choose to be grateful to the experience itself, I'm going to perform better no matter what."
Rachel Entrekin
"Why can't I be the one leading? Why not just take what I've earned?"
Rachel Entrekin
"I think mindset and responses, my responses that I give to the world are the only things that are under our control."
Rachel Entrekin
"I look forward to things being hard because I don't think one of the things that I've realized over the years is that I want to make sure that I like who I am when things are tough."
Rachel Entrekin
"This is what we came here for."
Rachel Entrekin (referencing Courtney Dauwalter)
Full Transcript
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A great job at doing good. Try Mill risk-free for 90 days and get $75 off at Mill.com slash RichRoll and use code RichRoll. There's 400 people and you're all just trying to make it to Flagstaff. You're battling the weather, you're battling fatigue, wildlife, you're battling all the uncertainty that comes with going that far. We want an only Rachel Eterkin, the first woman ever to win the entire field at the Cocodona 250. You're one of the most absolutely mind-boggling athletic feats of 2026. Things got really hard, physically. You can choose the attitude that you want to have. I did not have a single placement goal. I did not have a time goal. Those were my goals. To have a better attitude at the finish line. If I choose to be grateful to the experience itself, I'm going to perform better no matter what. Why can't I be the one leading? Why not just take what I've earned? All right, Rachel, it's so good to finally meet you. I'm so excited to have you here. For people that don't know, I just want to set the stage. You just won this crazy race called Cocodona 250. It's the third time in a row that you've won it. This time, you ran seven hours faster than last year. I guess so. I don't know. 56 hours. Not only won the women's race, you won the race outright. You beat all the men. I think you beat Killing Corth by over an hour, the men's champion, who also broke the men's record. How did you do this? How did you pull off this unbelievable feat? Well, it has been three years in the making because the first year I did Cocodona, it was not as easy as this time was. It was easier to go seven hours faster this year. I guess it's all relative, right? But yeah, my first year, I didn't know how nutrition worked. I didn't know how to sleep. I didn't know what the course was like, so I didn't know how to pace on it. I had just heard a lot of things about the first 35 miles are really hard, so you have to go slow. I didn't know anything, and so I listened to those. I paced inappropriately. I didn't fuel enough. I bonked really hard at about the halfway point. Then I had to take about three hours off the course just to get my life together. Then I did too much salt, which you can do, and it's terrible. I wound up throwing up for 10 hours as I'm going at a half a mile per hour pace for 10 hours. Then finally got my stuff together, died on the last climb. The second year I did it, there was a lot to improve. You still won? I still won. Yeah, but it's very different than it was three years ago now because we have more information. People can train better. We have so much more knowledge about fueling and how to do it well and sleeping and how to be efficient. The second year I figured, well, if I improve my nutrition, I'll at least save myself five hours. I wound up, I think, beating my time by nine hours, so I had a nine-hour improvement. A nine-hour PR. Yeah, which was pretty cool. I think fourth overall that year. I had a Ramirez past me going up the last climb. It was actually really wonderful because we just high-fived and hugged. I wasn't even mad. This year going into it, I actually didn't know how I was going to beat my time last year. I thought I did a pretty good job last year. Other than dialing in your nutrition and getting super intentional about that, what were the other changes that you made that account for that leap in performance? I have pretty much dialed down how my crew should operate and who I want to be on that crew. I work with Precision Fueling and Hydration. They're one of my big sponsors. They were really interested in working with this race specifically. They sent their whole team out and they sent my sports scientist, her name is Emily. She just is a wizard with fueling. This is the second race she's crewed me at. She just gives me what I need and it's my job to eat it. That is our transaction. That's based upon the work that you were doing throughout the year to figure out how to solve that equation. Yeah, with her specifically. You offload all of those decisions onto her and she just basically takes care of it and says, eat this, drink this. She puts the gas in the car. I just have no idea. It's all witchcraft. I don't understand how any of that works. It's also super personal. What works for you isn't going to work for the other person, but I did read that you were taking in something like 60 grams of carbohydrates and somewhere between 300 and 800 milliliters of fluid every hour on the hour. Pretty much. That's a combination of the precision, nutrition and hydration, but also all these beige foods. You're eating a lot more real food throughout. Yeah, for sure. I think mostly that is just to, there's a lot of sweet. Everything is really sweet with sports nutrition for the most part because it's easy to digest and it's easy on your palate, but eventually you get tired of that. Yeah, that's when the barfing starts. Yeah, so I counteract barfing with beige. Beige helps. Counteract barfing with beige. Yeah. That's like its own mantra. Yeah, I should put it on a T-shirt. Well, the videos of you approaching the finish that went viral all across the world were insane because you looked so fresh. It looked like you were just starting out. No one would have thought. You weren't even, your kit wasn't even dirty. It looked like, wait, this looks like the start of the race and Kylian Corth was like, yeah, take a look at what I look like near the end and he's all hunched over and you look so fresh. That smile on your face and all your family and your friends and your teammates are all running with you. That was like this spark of inspiration that literally just traveled all across the world and you became this viral sensation. This relatively, very successful, but in the grand scheme of things, like obscure athlete suddenly is the person that everybody is talking about, which in addition to just winning this race and achieving this incredible feat must have been very bewildering and strange for you. It definitely was. I had a little bit of practice last year with this phenomenon, I guess, because last year I also got elevated after my finish at this race, but nothing like this year. I remember last year finishing the race, turning on my phone, or I had my phone on airplane mode and turned it off airplane mode and all of my Instagram DMs and stuff, my phone crashed immediately. It just crashed. It was too much. It literally crashed the phone. It crashed my phone. Oh my God. So this year I had the foresight to give my socials to a person on my crew, like that was his job, was just you're in charge of social media because I have a feeling, I didn't expect this, but I was like, I expect something. I mean, you have Courtney in the race, you have Meg Eckert in the race, you have Heather Jackson in this race. There's a ton of, I mean, that's just women. There's also all these huge multi-day men who are doing it as well. So I figured there would be a lot going on on the internet. But yeah, even I just, it was insane to turn on my phone and be like, holy crap, I have 130,000 new followers over the course of three days. Three days. And yeah, so it was definitely wild. Yeah. The BBC, the Guardian, the New York Times, ESPN, like everybody was covering this. And it's not as if, I mean, Coca-Cola has become a much more important race, but it's not exactly UTMB or Western States. Like it hasn't been considered in that same company. Yeah. Which I think is silly, honestly. I think the multi-day space provides so much more of a stage for athletes to tell their stories and to show what kind of person they are. If you're winning Western States, you're doing it in 15 hours or less. That's just not, and your only focus can be running as fast as you can. But during Coca-Cola, I mean, if you're running as fast as you, if you're running at that kind of pace, you're going to DNF by my 100. It's a totally different thing to conflate 100 miles with a 250-mile race. Like it's an entirely different thing altogether. And everybody sort of lumps ultras into one category, but it's really vastly different. Yeah. But I just look at what Coca-Cola did for Dan Green last year. He was the men's winner last year. And it, I mean, it elevated his profile because we all got to meet this person and we all kind of collectively decided that we like this person. You know, he has a good attitude. He finished strong. He finished with a smile on his face. He and his crew just had fun out there. I, yeah, multi-dishes give you a bigger stage to have fun and to show off like the fun side. Or, I mean, with Killing and Court, you can show off like how gritty you are. Just more so, you have, you have more time to do that than something at a high. But that's very counterintuitive. You would think like, oh, it's so much longer. It's got to be less fun. Like, how does it? It's so much more fun. Where's the fun part? Well, the fun part is what you decide, I guess. Me, I, I think that there's nothing at any, any race that I go to, there's nothing I would rather be doing than that race. And so who am I to say that I'm not going to have fun while I'm doing it? I'm choosing to do this. So if I'm complaining about how hard it is, I need to be reevaluating why I'm signing up for these things. So for me, I think I choose for it to be fun. And I think a lot of people must do that or we wouldn't be signing up. You, you mentioned when you finished last year, you won, but you weren't exactly in the most positive mindset. I was not. And am I right to think you made a conscious decision? Like, I don't want to feel this way again about this. And next year, I want to, I want to have that sense of joy and that, that you were seeing in other people that you weren't, that you weren't in exhibiting then. Yeah. I mean, 2024, I, I mean, I bonked really hard going up the last climb. I was really kind of a dick to my pacer. Because I just, I had, I had no reserves on which to draw at that point. I've never done something that hard. And so I just, I was really, really negative in my finish line video. I, I hate watching and I hate seeing because I just, I was so like flat and sad. And then I remember watching the second place woman come in. Her name was Manuela Villaseca. And she was so pumped and she was grateful and she was thankful for the experience. And she was what I wanted to be. And she got second and I got first. And so it just felt really like I felt crappy for the behavior that I was demonstrating at that finish line. And so, yeah, going into 2025, my pretty much only goals were to figure out nutrition. And I started working with precision. So check. And then to have a better attitude at the finish line. I did not have a single placement goal. I did not have a time goal. Those were my goals. And I figured if I, if I did those things well, then I would have a good race. Regardless of placement. And what did that teach you about the relationship between joy and gratitude and performance? Because there is that idea, like, if you're not like just tapped out and have no mental reserves and you're grouchy and barking at everyone, it's because you left it all out on the course. And if you have joy and gratitude, then that's energy that should have been channeled towards moving you forward more quickly. Like that's the very kind of masculine, you know, like go big or go home kind of like idea. But then we have Courtney, who is the embodiment of like joy and gratitude and like just like very aware of like her impact on how she inspires people. And make sure that she is always in that state of mind in these races. And obviously she's, you know, been this dominant queen in the sport for so long. And you're blind if you can't see that there's a lesson there, right? She was one of my biggest inspirations. I think I probably first heard about her in maybe 2016, right before she blew up all over the world with her Moab and I think Tahoe performances. And I don't know whether I saw her attitude and wanted that for myself or if I already maybe recognize that that's how I felt and seeing that displayed with success was very motivating. I'm not I'm not sure which one that is, but I do. I do think that what 2024 coconutta taught me. And then I was able to like exemplify in 2025 is how much of your attitude, how much your attitude can play a role in your performance. You can you can choose the attitude that you want to have. And I think for me, if I choose to be having fun out there, if I choose to be grateful to the aid station, if I choose to be grateful to the experience itself, I'm going to perform better no matter what. I mean, in 2022, I got really in my own head about the success that I'd had. And I felt very compelled to win everything at all costs. And I had a really humbling 2022. I DNF'd the Santa Monica Mountains 100. It was like the inaugural year. I DNF'd it because I tripped and fell because I was going out way too hard and I busted open my hand. So I DNF'd that. And then I immediately turned around and was like, OK, well, I'm signed up for Cascade Crest and now I really have to win this race. And I was overtrained. I started out way too hard. I took way too much ibuprofen and I wound up with a stomach bleed around mile 70. And I just I mean, I basically hiked my way to the finish and then collapsed at the finish line and was carted off in an ambulance to the. And that for me is what happens when the only thing I focus on is winning. I was not having fun. I was trying way too hard. I was too wrapped up in how things looked to understand how I was actually feeling. And so that year taught me a lot about what not to focus on. So moving forward, it was like, all right, I'm just going to try to have fun. I need to have fun with this. And, you know, obviously with Coca-Cola in 2024, my goal was not to win. My goal was just get to the frigging finish line. But yeah, I kind of lost sight on, especially on that last climb, because it got. I mean, it got really hard. And I didn't emerge from that race being the kind of person that I wanted to be when things got hard. And when you say last climb, that's the last climb. Over the course of 250 miles, where your your the elevation gain is more than Everest. Yeah. Yeah. But yeah. And it's and it's going up Mount Elden, which is a pretty. I think it is ninety three hundred feet. And so you go up about a two thousand, at least, foot climb over a couple of miles. And so it's it's tough, especially at the very end. And you're like, you see flag, you see the finish line. It's like right there. And you just instead of going straight, you just go up a mountain instead. And so it's it's tough. But what I'm hearing is a shift from being outcome oriented to process oriented, like being caught up in outcomes. I have to win the pressure that you're putting on yourself and how that translates into, you know, tension and over training and all the kind of things that you don't want. And then this conscious decision to say, I want to have fun, meaning like it's about the process. Yeah. I mean, over that great distance, there's so many variables that come into play. Like you can't predict what's going to happen and how everybody is going to meet those various obstacles and the unforeseen things that are going to inevitably happen. And some people are going to have good days and other people not so much. And so when lightning strikes and everything kind of works out your way, like you got to just take it. Yeah, like, yeah, it's not bankable. Like, oh, well, this is the way it's going to go every time. No, I you I think the number one quality that will ensure success at Kocodona is your ability to roll with it. There was a moment when I left the because I was I was running with Joe McConaughey and Killian for probably the first 50 to 60 miles. And I enjoyed that pack. I thought that it was we all felt like peers, like my skill sets and their skill sets were very comparable. And so it felt correct for me to be there, too. And deciding to leave that was really hard and kind of scary. It's like, all right, I'm banking on the fact that I think I can do better than what these guys are currently doing. And that was a weird moment. But I just kind of decided like, well, you know, you have the resume to be here. You have the resume to lead this race. You've won it for the women. You've only increased in like my overall performance. So why can't I be the one leading? Like, I'm just going to roll with it. I'm here now. And, you know, if if Killian or if Stringbean or if somebody comes up and passes me, like, that's just how it's a race. I want everybody to do their best on the given day. I don't want to beat everybody just because they decide to let me. Like, I really am appreciative of what of Killian, honestly. He is I'm so grateful that he was the second place person because I knew that he was not going to just let me win. Yeah, he was going to make me work for it. And that thought propelled me when I wanted to walk was like, well, if I walk this, I bet you Killian is running this. And I don't I don't want to give it to him and he doesn't want to give it to me. Yeah. The headline that also traveled around the world was this. Why? Why not me? Kind of like mantra, which is basically what you're talking about. Right. Like, why not me? Yeah. And yeah, I mean, I think I've done this in my professional careers of physical therapists where it's, you know, I talk myself out of getting raises or getting promotions because like there is no real reason. My again, my resume dictates that I've I've had all these trainings and I've done all these things that prove that I'm a correct candidate for this job. And so I think extrapolating that to something like coca-dona, you know, I had won it for the women. I had set the course record last year. I had increased in my overall placement and time. So, yeah, I mean, all signs dictate that there's no real reason, concrete reason for me to not be leading. So why not just? Take this is kind of obnoxious sounding, but like take what I've earned. Yeah, it's not promised. I was fully aware that when I took the lead, it was not guaranteed that I'd stay there. But why not take it when I could and just see what happens. This episode is sponsored by BetterHelp. So I've got a whole script here, all of my talking points that I organized to do this read. But you know what? I'm just going to toss them out. Because I really want to talk from the heart. I am somebody who has a long history with mental health struggles, addiction, avoidant tendencies, depression and security, issues that have really derailed my life more times than I can count over the years. But the reason that I now have the amazing life that I have today really boils down to one thing, and that is the willingness to ask for help. 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Like it's, you know, it's going to work out however it works out. And it's not going to be necessarily because of anybody else. It's like this these races are between you and you and nature. Yeah, I agree. It reminds me in some ways, obviously, it's very different than the Barkley, but in some ways it does feel kind of similar. You know, there's 400 people and you're all just trying to make it to flagstaff. You're battling the weather, you're battling fatigue, you're battling wildlife. Like there's a big rattlesnake this year that kind of scared a lot of people. But like, you know, you're you're battling all the uncertainty that comes with going that far. And I think at Barkley, too, like there's so much uncertainty, you don't know where to go. You don't even know how many books there are. Like it's it's you get a lot or at least I get a lot of, I don't know, confidence in like, yeah, we can do it like a rah rah, maybe from the people that I'm running with. So it does, it almost feels like a group project where it's like you against the course. It's everybody else against the course, which I like those races. And it yeah, I won. But it that to me is almost like who cares? What is it that is going on in your mind when you're, you know, in the harder part of these races? Like, what are you thinking about? What are the mantras? What's the philosophy that's getting you through those darker, really challenging times when you want to quit? Yeah, I mean, I've gotten to a place where I look forward to those times because I don't think one of the things that I've realized over the years is that I want to make sure that I like who I am when things are tough, whether that's in sports or whether that's in life. I think you can practice modeling the behavior that you want to demonstrate. And sports for me is a really great avenue for me to practice. You know, those things we were talking about before, being grateful, being fun, things being fun. So yeah, I honestly, I kind of I look forward to things being hard. And I can't remember it. Honestly, I feel like I'm just name dropping Courtney a ton. But it might have been a Courtney thing where she has said, this is what we came here for. There was a time in Coca-Dona this year around Sedona where things got really hard physically. I was really the idea that I still had a hundred miles left. Killian's right behind me. My legs are really tired. I'm really tired. And yeah, I mean, I still have a hundred miles to go and I really want to keep this lead because that would be really cool. If I stuck this landing. Yeah. And that's a lot of pressure. And yeah, things got really hard. And I got, you know, I I was starting to go down this negative spiral of like, oh, you're never going to be able to keep this. Oh, you're so tired. Like if what happens if he passes you right now, like, you're not going to be able to respond. And it's like, OK, hold on. Things are getting really hard. I need to make a plan to address my physical issues right now. Like I was getting some blisters and I was getting hot and I needed some salt. So like let's make a plan to address those things and then like let's adjust our attitude because I don't learn as much about myself when life's going great. Because life's going great. I don't need to change anything. But when things are getting hard is when I need to double down and figure out what kind of person I want to present to the world. Yeah, that that idea that you want to like who you are when things are hard. And that being a choice is pretty powerful. I think one thing to make that choice, like when you're annoyed, you know, waiting in line to order your coffee. It's another thing to make that choice when you're under just absolute physical exhaustion and like, you know, yeah, physical pain and duress and fatigue and the like. Yeah, but I mean, for me, it almost feels easier to be happier when I'm physically under distress than it is to be waiting in line for coffee or on the phone with somebody. Well, it's just now I've practiced the sports part more. Like I honestly need to take that and apply it to my real life. Right. You're like, I can be happy on mile two, 30 of this race. But if you put me on hold for too long, I'm going to be upset. But I mean, again, I need to. Yeah, I need to remember those things too. And I try often. But like when I remember when I was living in Los Angeles, like it's very hard to live in LA and PTs don't make a ton of money. So I was I was always really overworked and stressed out financially. And I remember the first or I guess it was 20. Yeah, 20, 24, the first time I did a coconut. And I remember being like, holy crap, I was a not great person. And so one of the ways that I practiced, I guess accidentally, improving my mindset was in work situations when somebody was being rude to me and I was seeing three patients at a time. And my boss was saying this and his boss was like, all this stress, I would practice not letting that get to me. And because that's I mean, that is a skill at coconut or during these multiple or during anything really is like external stress. Don't let it get to you because if you focus on how stressed out you are, it's certainly not going to help you. It can motivate you to make a plan for how to manage your current situation. But if you're just upset, that's not that's not a useful emotion to have. Being upset. And it's just your reaction to things that you don't like, that you wish were different, that you have no control over. And it can be low stakes, like somebody's being difficult with me and my job or high stakes where like, I don't know if I'm going to survive. The couple of miles. Yeah, I mean, kind of. It's funny because we not for nothing, somebody passed away at Coca-dona like somebody died. So if you had to translate that into a life lesson for somebody who's watching this or listening to it, who, you know, isn't an ultra athlete, maybe they're not even an athlete. Like what is the kernel of truth that is applicable in our daily lives? I think mindset and response, something other than therapy, are the only things that we really have complete control over. The mental kind of therapy, not the physical therapy. Yeah, mental therapy, not physical therapy. Wait, say it again, say it again because I interrupted you. I'm sorry. I think mindset and responses, my responses that I give to the world are the only things that are under our control. And they are under your control, even if it feels like things are happening to you, you get to be in charge of how you respond to those things. And nobody is going to make you act anyway. Nobody is going to convince you to do anything that you don't want to do. Yeah, this idea like that person makes me so mad. Like they're not making you mad. You're deciding that it has nothing to do with them. It's all about like how you choose to respond or react. Yeah, one of the things that I've had to reframe a lot over the last couple of years is this idea that people cause me to act a certain way or things cause me to act a certain way. And they don't. I choose to allow them to influence me. Yeah. It was really frustrating because when things are hard, I like to blame or I liked to blame. Now I don't like to blame. It's it was just easier. It's easier. Take some of the stress off of us. But that just because it's a hard pill to swallow doesn't mean it's not true. And so nobody makes you any certain way. You allow them to let you react that way. And so, yeah, you're in charge. Don't forget that you're in practice. That in your daily, everyday experiences or under extreme sports situations like going and running a 250 mile race. But fundamentally, it's a it's a mindfulness practice. Like when you're present and aware and you can buy yourself that extra moment to really think about how you want to show up in a certain set of circumstances. That's kind of how you put it to use and to work. I think. Yep. Sleep deprivation. Oh, yeah. So 19 minutes of sleep over 56 hours is insane. Your first nap didn't even happen until you were almost at the 200 mile mark. Right. So you hadn't slept at all. Nope. Hadn't. Yeah. And then that nap was like five minutes. Yeah, it's funny because Courtney, Meg and I were all on a panel and one of the questions was, do you train for sleep deprivation? And all three of us were like, no. Can you? Like, I don't think you should. I don't. I mean, even if you try to, I don't know that it would make you any better at it. What my plan is going into the race is I try to really make sure that I'm sleeping like as much as possible, 10 hours every single night for a week. Because I know that the night before the race, I'm probably not going to sleep that much. You have to wake up at three. You're just not going to be able to sleep that much. And then I'm obviously, if the goal is get to Flagstaff as quickly as possible, that means that I'm not going to be sleeping. I'm going to be mostly running. And so, yeah, just try to build up that reserve. But yeah, I've always been somebody who's who can function on very little sleep. I do think that that is a superpower that I possess. Yeah, I was going to say, like, I think it is like some people can do it. Some people can do it. Better than others. They just can. And I also don't really hallucinate. So I'm just really good at staying awake for a long time and being relatively lucid. And for me, one of the ways that I check to see how OK I am is can I make a stupid comment or like a joke? And if I can, then I'm doing OK. But yeah, for me, my plan, you know, and again, I've done this race two times now. And I think this was my sixth or seventh 200 mile race. And so I've learned what my body needs with regards to sleep. I'm not going to be someone who's able to plan sleep. I know Jeff Browning, who's really accomplished multi day runner, he's like, all right, at mile 87, I'm going to take it 25 minutes. Like, I'm not going to do that. I can't plan these things. So I just I just go until I'm tired. And once I am literally falling asleep while running, I'm going to curl up on the ground and I'm going to set a timer for five minutes. And if I wake up and I'm not ready to go, I can set another timer for five minutes. But I'm going to I'm going to do it in five minute increments. I know that when I am ready to sleep, I'm going to be able to fall asleep if I'm actually tired. Usually I once I start to feel sleepy, I think, OK, well, do I am I sleepy or am I just bored? Do I need to eat something? Do I need? Do I just want to try some caffeine? Do I need to just talk to somebody? Because you're out there a long time by yourself and like maybe you're just bored. So I usually try to kind of sit with that feeling for I have a 20 minute rule. If I notice something, I give it 20 minutes before I decide whether it's something that I need to actually address. And yeah, but every time I because I took a five minute nap at about 200 and then I took two seven minute naps at. Somewhere between like two twenty and two thirty. And yeah, each time I was literally unable to keep my eyes open. And the first time I took a nap, I was running into my pacer because my eyes were closing and I was like drifting into my pacer. And it's like, OK, I need to I need to sleep and I need to sleep right now. And shockingly, five to seven minutes makes a huge huge difference. Like you wouldn't think. But yeah, suddenly you're like a different person, which makes me think like, well, maybe a few more five minute naps because it seems like it compensates for so much, right? Yeah, I don't know if my body or my brain maybe just needed to do something else for a minute, because, you know, all I'm doing is running and eating and drinking. And like that's the navigating, I guess. And so you get you just kind of it's almost like when your computer is going haywire and you just turn it off and back on again. Like I think that's what I need to do is I just need to reboot for five minutes. And then I'm good to go. Usually so crazy. Yeah. That that's all you slept. Yeah, it is pretty weird. I think I only slept. I don't remember what I slept last year. It was under 30 minutes, though, last year. And then in Mammoth 200 that I did in September, I didn't sleep at all. And it was 214 miles. So over the course of forty four or forty six, I don't remember what my time was. Zero. You mentioned that you don't really hallucinate, but you did hallucinate in this race. You had kind of a crazy one. This year. Yeah, unless I miss one year, one year, I saw myself. You you saw yourself. OK, I want to hear about that. But what I read is you met a Native American woman. Oh, that was real. Yeah. Oh, that was real. That was real. That was real. OK. Yeah. And I did. I'll talk about that because I love that story. I think it's super sick. We'll tell it. And I do know that it was real because. I found it on the live stream. I found the moment on the live stream. And I was like, yes, you weren't sure that it was real. I knew it was. But there was a lot of naysayers that say it wasn't. But OK, so I'm going up the last climb. So Mount Elden, which I have a personal history with of not having a good time and then deciding I'm going to have a good time with a pacer. So I can I can offload some of my mental anxiety to that pacer last year. This year, there were no pasters allowed. And so I really liked that idea because I went from failing to succeeding with help. And now I get an opportunity to succeed by myself. So, yeah, going into this climb, I was I was really looking forward to the story that I was going to get to write. And, yeah, so I'm going around, you know, I start climbing up. You go around Little Elden first, and then you get to this junction where you're about to start the big climb up to the top of the summit. And it's about five miles or something. And there's this woman in street clothes standing in the middle of the trail in this junction. And I know she's real. And and I had a camera person following behind me. And we weren't talking because I didn't want to. I wanted to do it by myself. I didn't want. So I just pretended like she wasn't there. But I do remember the woman saying, hey, I would like you to not film this. And so there's a moment where you see the woman on the live stream and then the camera turns away and I found that moment. So it was real. But yeah. And so this woman is she starts talking in a it's like a mix of English and whatever the native language was. But she told me that she was a Hopi woman and she's holding on to something. And she, you know, her presence was so shocking that she starts talking to me and I just immediately stop. I'm in the middle of a race and I'm winning. And I don't know how far Killian is behind me, but like I'm stopping right now because it just feels like what I'm supposed to be doing is I'm supposed to stop and I'm supposed to receive what this woman is about to tell me. And so she she tells me like she's not a runner and she's never followed this race before, but she heard what was happening. She heard that I was leading and she was just a flabbergast. Like it was it was amazing what I was doing. And to be told that when you're about to climb up 1500 more feet is pretty cool, admittedly. And, you know, she told me that like the implications that I had for women in general, like athletes or not, was massive. And it was beyond what I could comprehend. And I was, you know, I'm just out of my mind. I've slept 19 minutes. And so I'm just sitting here weeping when this woman is telling me all this stuff because it's just it's like it was so comforting to hear this. And so she gives me she's holding it looks like sand, but she gives it to me. And it's cornmeal, I guess, in Hopi culture. That's very symbolic of like community and. Yeah, like, I don't know, togetherness and strength. And so for her to give that to me when I needed it most was it was almost like she knew I hated that climb. And she was giving me the strength to do it. And so she was like, you know, this I want to give this to you. This is yours. You can do whatever you want with it. And she just gives me this cornmeal and I'm standing in the little trail holding this cornmeal and I'm just like, I don't know what to do with this. So I put it in my pocket and then I have some cornmeal residue on my hands and I just like wipe it on my thighs. And that's the moment that I decide that I'm climbing this entire thing. I'm going to run this entire climb. And I do. And it was awesome. And it was like it was almost an out of body experience because. I it's almost like the race. Like I would have never predicted that I won this race outright. I would have never in a million years been like, oh, yeah, I'm going to climb the whole Elden Climb. But I did. I mean, I dropped my camera person. My camera person who was fresh could not keep up with me. And I had just run 240 miles. And that was like, I remember in the moment being like, holy crap, like I'm dropping my camera person, but just being like, doesn't that like keep running? You like, you've got to keep running. And so I got, I didn't make it to the, well, I did make it to the summit, obviously, but I remember there's a section of single track and it's really beautiful. It's very heavily wooded. There was some snow and so it was just really magical. And I remember there's like two little climbs. And then you go down and then there's a forest service road to get you to the top of Elden and the top of the second climb. I'm still on single track. I remember I like just stopped and I get my hand in my pocket and I just like take the cornmeal and just yuck it off the side of the cliff. And I don't know, I don't know why I did that, but it just felt like the right thing to do. I remember thinking like this gave me so much strength. Like I want to give, I was thinking about killing actually. Cause I knew that Killian was somewhere behind me and I also knew from my crew that he was struggling really hard. And so it's like, well, this is for whoever's behind me. You know, I was given this and now I've, I'm good. So like it's time to pass it on. Yeah. It's not yours to hold on to. You, it gave you what you needed. And now it's time to pass it along. Well, not a hallucination. So, so she, she blesses you with this extra. I mean, it feels like a hallucination. It felt wild. Yeah. I'm going to decide that it still was. I don't care what the live stream said. Like it's a better story. I just magically had sand on it. She, she, uh, yeah. The ineffable was, was made material for you. Right. Maybe. Element has been with this show for a very long time, but it has been really fun to watch them expand first into sparkling cans. And now into something brand new, lemonade, iced tea, which is now the newest addition and my morning go to in my home gym. 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So check it out, try out Elements new lemonade iced tea, get a free eight count sample pack of Elements most popular drink mix flavors with any purchase at drinkelement.com slash rich roll. This episode is brought to you by AG1. So I'm in the middle of writing this book about change and transformation and the deeper I delve into what actually moves the needle, what underscores every single stunning before and after story you've ever heard. It's always the same thing. It's the small, easy to sustain actions repeated religiously that actually are the things that subtly nudge your life in a more positive direction over an extended period of time. And that's why I love AG1 because it is one of those subtle nudges that is going to improve your life over an extended period of time. So what is it? AG1 is a daily health drink, one scoop in cold water. That's all you need. First thing in the morning delivers 75 plus high quality nutrients that support steady energy, healthy immune system and much more. And the part that I appreciate is that they actually back it with rigorous clinical research, which in this industry is rare than it should be, which is why it travels with me wherever I go. One small habit that holds no matter where summer takes me. Check it out. Go to drink AG1.com slash Rich Rolled. Get a free morning person hat and a free AG1 flavor sampler in your welcome kit with your first AG1 subscription in $82 value. That's drink AG1.com slash Rich Rolled. What have you learned about human potential? Like you've tapped into something that I would suspect, you know, I don't know five or eight years ago, what you wouldn't have imagined you were capable of. Certainly not. I think it's kind of what we've what we've been talking about is I shouldn't assume that I'm not able to do something just because the data doesn't necessarily support it. Like again, if we're looking at my spreadsheet, I was 61 30. And obviously I beat that by I don't do public math, but I beat that by a considerable amount. I mean, I did 56 hours. I knew that I'd put in a lot of work. It wasn't it wasn't foolish optimism, but it was. Killian Corth calls it delusional self-belief. Like it's not necessarily delusional. I think we're talking down on ourselves a little bit, but like I had put in the work. I had had success previously. I had shown improvements. I think what drove me at this coconut was a curiosity more than it was anything else. Like, all right, well, I'm running really well right now. How long can I run this well? I don't think that trying to discover that outer limit. That's not going to be something that I need to chase. I think I'm just going to naturally get there by being curious. But I think to this year's Coco Dono is so fascinating, because if you do look at Killian Corth, who I'm going to give his flowers to, like nobody picked him. I didn't even pick him to win because he's never had a successful race here. You know, he has allergies and he tore his hamstring and he's DNF this race twice and then finished in like 20th once. How in the world he PR'd that race by 24 hours or 25 hours? Like wild stuff. A day. A day. A full day. Like, I'm not an idiot for not picking you. I was just using logic. But I don't know. I think I think that the chase for human potential does involve some sort of like it does involve some sort of why not? Like some sort of delusional version of self-belief kind of has to be there in order for you to believe that you could accomplish something that nobody else has. Well, there's the belief and then there's the objective potential that somebody has, right, in order to tap into that potential or manifest it. You need that belief and the more the deeper, you know, you want to tap into it, the more kind of elevated the belief has to be. But fundamentally, like we all have untapped potential, right? Like you've been able to tap deeply into yours, but, you know, could have gone. Like it's not like you were running competitively, collegiately and have been your entire life like something some switch could have got inflicted and you would have never even gone into running, you know, and you would have lived your whole life not knowing that. I had all this. This capacity, you know what I mean? Yeah. All right. Well, let's take it back. I want to hear the, you know, the hero's journey, the origin story. You're from Birmingham, Alabama, Southern girl. Yep. Were you like athletic as a kid? Were you playing sports or no? I was playing sports. Yeah. I would say I was good at exactly zero sports. But what I lacked in skill I made up for in enthusiasm. I played basketball and soccer, I would say the most. And both of those are sports that involve running in some capacity. Right. But I tried out for the cross country team in high school and I did not make it because I was too slow. You didn't make you didn't make the cross country team. Yeah. You had to run five miles and I think it was an hour. And I did not. Usually there aren't even tryouts because like no one wants to even do that sport. I don't think I was formally cut, but it was kind of this understanding of like, if you can't do this, you don't need to come back. So I didn't make it or I saw myself out. I feel like you need to go back and visit coach Gaines. Yeah. Oh, I know. I know who it was. At least send an email. Yeah. Hey, by the way, I'm not sucking now. Yeah. No, I mean, I think I always liked running if there was a purpose. I didn't understand that running could be the purpose at the time. But but yeah, I played sports, but I wasn't very good at them. I was overweight as a kid. Had zero self-esteem at all. And so one of the things it's my origin story with running is a little bit muddy because one of the big reasons why I got into running was actually because I was anorexic for a while. So my junior year to my senior year, a lot of personal drama and family drama and relationship drama happened. And I just like I had had poor self-esteem growing up mostly around my body image. I was I was really good friends with a girl who is literally a model. And so I was kind of always getting seconded because everybody really wanted to talk to her. And I was just like the funny fat kid kind of thing. And what was going on at home that was contributing to the low self-esteem? Or was that outside? Was that just your friend circle that was driving? I don't think anybody was saying anything. I think it was just, you know, I growing up in the late 90s, early 2000s, there were people on the covers of magazines and they did not look like me in the sense that like I was overweight. And the idea of beauty was not what I looked like. And, you know, my my parents and my friends and all these, you know, they were always very positive, like no one ever was like, well, you're fat. So that's why your life sucks. But I told myself that enough that eventually it became true. And so, you know, I had I had a couple of different, like I said, family and personal drama that basically convinced me that like, well, if I'm thinner, things will be better and I'll be better. And I'll, you know, if I can't have happiness, at least I can have this. And like I can be beautiful, you know? And so and as it turns out, I was I'm very good at doing one thing. And so the thing that I decided to be good at was not healthy, not healthy. And I discovered running in that way because it was, you know, obviously, we know how calories work and when you exercise, you know, you burn them. And so I would go to the gym kind of as a way to escape my home life, too. I would just go after school and I would just run on the treadmill for hours. And even when I wasn't calorically meeting my own needs, I could still do it. And I liked how I felt when I was doing it. And so, you know, obviously that had a short shelf life because eventually I got to a point where I recognized that I needed help and I was not going to live very long if I kept doing what I was doing. And I wasn't able to. Working out like a maniac, not eating at all. And I was. Belie me, too. Or just no, just anorexic. Thank goodness, because I can't imagine how much more difficult it is to have to manage that, I think. But but it's I mean, all of them are hard. And all of them I was unable to fix on my own. And I recognize that like, all right, I need I went to rehab actually twice. And you were when you were in high school, still. I had just graduated from high school when I like, instead of going to college my first year, I went to rehab twice. So I missed the full year. But, you know, I'm. I don't know. For me, it was like, I was always going to have to go to rehab twice because I needed to learn it the hard way, as is my custom. I faked it. I've been there. We fake it. Yeah. We're like, oh, we'll be fine. I just need to get out of here so I can go back to doing my thing. Yeah. And get these people off my back. Exactly. Like, they don't know what they're talking about with talking about my feelings. And so, you know, I faked it for three months. I got out within a month. I was like, wait a second, I'm still miserable. I still hate this. I'm still lying to my friends. I'm still lying to myself. And I don't want to live this way anymore. Like, I want to believe that my life does not have to be this grim. And at the same time, I loved the confidence that running gave me even when I wasn't feeling properly and even when I was like early in my eating disorder and I didn't look any differently. I felt more confident and I felt more capable after I ran. And so I knew after once I got into rehab the second time, I knew I was like, OK, I need to figure out how to do this safely when I get out of here, because I obviously just tried to do it unsafely again and got the same result. So if I want this to be a part of my life, if I want to use this to build confidence, I need to figure out how to do it properly so that I can do it forever. Yeah. Well, psychologically, they're both ways of exerting control. Yeah, whether it's through food or whether, you know, movement, exercise, fitness and these things. And if there's, you know, chaos at home or whatever, it's a it's a it's a very comforting. Yeah, I choose this. Yeah. Anything can be unhealthy. Yeah. So yeah. Too much of a good thing. Like learning how to do it in a healthy way. Yeah. Is still confronting you with that control impulse and forcing you to figure out how to balance that against like the obsessive. Yeah. Version of it. You do it by running 250 miles. Yeah, super normal. Yeah. It took me a while to, you know, I got out of rehab and I was healthy and my brain was still just like halfway in and halfway out. But at least I was halfway in. And then over over the years, like I realized that if I want to be like, I'm good at running. I was always, you know, as soon as I started long distance running in particular, I ran my first marathon as a freshman in college and I did that. And I was like, holy crap, like I did pretty well. And I also don't feel that tired. So I think I might be good at this. And then I realized if I want to be good at this, then I have to treat eating like it's a part of my job. And so it took me probably four years to figure out how to do that, how to bring enough fuel on runs where I wasn't bonking. And obviously that's a work in progress as the things get longer and longer. And now I've just somewhat outsourced it to professionals who can who can just put gas in the car and I just run. But, you know, too, I think that is a is a skill in and of itself, because I remember at Keyanti, they precision puts out data and they had three athletes there. I was one and then there were two more and they put out all of our grams of carbs per hour that we were doing. And with eating disorders or any addiction, a lot of it is a comparison game. And I remember, you know, mine was 60, a person's was 120, and then another person's was 80. And my first thought was like, how do I get that number higher? Like they're all here and I'm down here. And like maybe if I get that number higher, I could unlock even more potential. And that was my first thought. And then my second thought was like, holy shit, have I come a long way? Because if I were still ill, my first thought would be like, I only did 60. I'm better because I did less. And I'm I'm somehow this like superior person because I can do the same thing on less. And that's like, yeah. And so I remember in that moment being really proud of like how far I've come. Yeah, it represents this shift in perceiving, running not as a like a weight management strategy or weight loss strategy, but as a like a performance. Yeah, you know, yeah. Minded relationship. Come a long way. Yeah, long way. Because I mean, but I'm sure people say to you all the time, like you traded your addictions or whatever addiction. I don't think this one's going to kill me fast enough. That one, I mean, anorexia until like fentanyl came around was the or I guess eating disorders were the number one mental health killer in human beings. I don't think if I'm, you know, and I say this again, understanding that people died during ultramarathons sometimes. But like, I think I'm a little bit safer on this one. So what is your message directly to the person who is struggling with an eating disorder right now? I mean, I guess it's sort of similar to, you know, running is just this like life in a day, right? Why not believe that it can get better? You know, why not choose right now to make the choice that has the potential for long term positive effects? For me with anorexia, I mean, my my number one. Issue was intake. Once it was there, it was my job to work through the feelings associated with, you know, eating. Um, so all I could really ever do is just like, all right, like believe that this is the right thing and like, don't try to undo it. Like don't try to, oh, I ate something. Now I can't eat for the next day or now I have to go and I have to like work it off in some way. Like no, like the correct thing to do is like, do the right thing and continue that up with doing all the right things and believe that it's going to get better. Believe that you're going to get to a place where you truly believe that nobody cares how you look and like you love the person that you are, regardless of how you actually look. Um, so yeah, just believe, do the right thing and believe that it'll get you to place that you want to be. Well, you have this joyful relationship with running and with your sport and clearly you've figured out how to tap into gratitude and, and, you know, like the kind of happiness quotient with, you know, this torturous sport. But I would imagine at the beginning, at least there were times when running was what you would use to punish yourself. Like if you would, oh, like I, I, I ate too much and now I have to go run 20 miles or whatever to work it off. And that's a, that's a negative association. Like I have to, I have to like martyr myself because I'm bad because I ate whatever I ate, you know. Yeah. I might have done that some when I was sick, but I think a big part of that actually came when I was like, when I was little, because we would do sports and if you messed up, you'd have to run laps and like that kind of associated running with this punishment. So it's been fun to kind of take that back of like, nope, this is actually what I, it's always been that way. Yeah, it has. I don't get why. You're in trouble. Now you have to go run. Like running is what you do when you're, you're being shamed. I know. You know. Yeah. So yeah, I mean, I think when I was, when I was struggling with my stuff, um, I don't think running, I don't know if I ever really, I used that as an example earlier, but looking back, I don't ever think I used it as a punishment. I would always do the run because I enjoyed it. I would just follow it up with behaviors that were not productive. Um, but I always, I don't know what, I guess it was that switch that flipped when I needed it to, and I needed to feel good about something running was there to be like, actually you feel good when you do this. Cause yeah, I've never necessarily looked at it as like a way to punish myself. Yeah, that's good. Which is nice. Yeah. There's so many different kinds of running. There's, there's the, you know, recess, you're in trouble run. There's track and field. There's cross country, you know, the hundred meter dash. And then there's the super long ultra trail runs, which I associate with being perhaps the most primal, like kind of DNA embedded sort of type of running because of our ancestry as persistent hunters. Is there a spirituality to any of it? Like just being in the largest of nature out there. I mean, I'm thinking of your stints in rehab. Like I don't know what the healing modality was, but, uh, you know, in typical 12 step addiction recovery, you're introduced to ideas of surrender and turning it over to a higher power. And it is a spiritual program fundamentally, at least the 12 step version of it is. And so I'm curious around your relationship with that, with respect to your recovery from meeting disorders and your relationship with like being an ultra runner and how, like your immersion in nature contributes to that. I think that being, particularly being either alone in nature, especially when I'm way out there or with being with a small group of people that I love and trust. When I'm out in the middle of nowhere, solo or in a group, it feels so big. And it feels so beyond me. It's like, it's insane. Um, I don't know what my stance is necessarily on religion, but it's hard not to just feel like in awe of however this came about. But it allows you to inhabit on wonder. Yes. Yeah. Yeah. And there's undeniably like this. It's clear like you're doing what you're supposed to be doing. Like you're living in integrity with who you are. Like you're on your correct path. I think so. Yeah. And I, and I think to particularly when you do get an opportunity to share that experience with somebody else, even, even Coca-dona, I was one on one experiencing it with my Pacers and my crew, but I feel a connection to every person that even toed that start line because we all were in the same place trying to do the same thing. And so I've talked with Kylian quite a bit about this idea of like universal human consciousness. I don't know if that's necessarily tied to spirituality, but that is something that I fully think is I, I understand that part of it. Like the oneness of everything. Yeah. I'm very into like this. It's almost like a yogi principle of like, we're all in this together, you know, and, and what you put out into the world that you're going to, I like to believe that you'll get that back. And so if I'm putting out, you know, if I'm, if I'm choosing to be this positive, happy person and I'm putting that, if I'm throwing the cornmeal off the top, I'll get the cornmeal back at some point. And I'm not doing it so that I can have this quid pro quo of like, well, if I'm good, then I get stuff to like, no, I'm doing it because I think it feels like the right, it feels like the correct path for me to be on. I feel like I want to give back to the world that's given me so much. And assuming a just world, like maybe there's a chance that I can get something back from that too. Yeah. I think that the reason why so many addicts in recovery, you know, end up at the starting line of these old days, you know what I mean? There's it's, it's too lazy to just say, oh, they transferred their addiction. I think that fundamentally, you know, addicts are seekers and they're seeking answers to very uncomfortable and difficult questions and they end up doing it in very unhealthy ways and bottom out, but they're still seekers. And I think these ultra races are like incredible, like spiritual oddities that force you to confront yourself in ways that you can't run away from. So there are opportunities for self understanding and they have their moments of transcendence. You know, you can't go 250 miles without meeting yourself exactly who you are. Haggard and Stack and Cross. Yeah, like having to confront like, you know, there's, you just cannot run away from whatever you're compartmentalizing. It all comes up, right? And you have to contend with that. And then you have these, like, you know, breakthrough moments of feeling like you're at one with everything and they are transcendent by nature. I think they are really like, they're not athletic competitions. They're like, they're, they're more like psychedelic journeys. Kind of, you know what I mean? I definitely, I agree. I feel like that's part of the allure for, you know, somebody who comes from that, like, you know, kind of struggle. Yeah, I think for me, running has become this thing where it makes me a better person. And whether that's, you know, I think particularly where you, you have a good point with you're unable to run away from who you are when you're out there by yourself. Like there are thoughts that are going to come up and you alone have to manage and deal with those thoughts. And that's the opposite of addiction, which is using something to run away from whatever it is that makes you uncomfortable. Like you're running towards the thing that makes you uncomfortable. When I sign up for a race, I fully understand that at some point out there, I'm probably going to cry. And it is, it could be good. It could be bad. It could be I'm having to, like during Cascade Crest, I mean, that race, during the time it was the worst and I was very unhappy. But like looking back, I'm so grateful for that experience because it showed me that I am focusing on the wrong thing. And when I was out there, I very quickly came to the conclusion, you know, I'm yacking up my guts at mile 80. And I'm just like, boy, focusing on winning, not making me very happy. Like this is something that I'm going to have to do a lot of uncomfortable work on improving. And without that negative experience, without signing up for that race, I would not have gotten that opportunity. And so, you know, again, I don't, I don't think I'm endorsing everybody going out and running ultramarathons in order to find their nirvana. But I think we are in a society where we can pick up our phones and we can we're talking about offloading our response. Like we get offload the responsibility of looking inward onto like, well, I'd rather watch this reel of a guy punching a penguin. Like we're almost addicted to. Not being uncomfortable nowadays. And I think that. When we're sitting by ourselves and we're. Forced to. Not turn away from our uncomfortable thoughts. That's when a lot of work is done. And that is what running does for me. Maybe I would have found it with something else, maybe cycling or maybe. Meditation or maybe knitting, I don't know, like whatever. But I just I hope that. We become a society that's a little more OK. With confronting uncomfortable thoughts. And then not turning away from them the moment that we notice that's what we're doing. Like they're uncomfortable because it means that something needs to change. And you have the power to enforce that change. But you have to. Give yourself the space to even notice it first. What's your pitch to the somebody who's now flirting with the idea of getting involved in this world? I mean, please don't go out there untrained and die. Yeah, but like. I don't know if why not try to do you're going to learn a lot more about who you are, if you try to do something that sounds crazy, then you are. If you are just going to sit there and wonder what would happen if you were to try. Because I mean, I flirted with the idea of doing Koko Dona for years before I signed up for it. And then I remember in 2024, I didn't have the money to do it. I didn't know how I was going to do it. But I was like, you know what? It'll it'll I'll figure it out. I'm just going to sign up for it. Um, and it wound up being the start of this incredible journey that I'm I'm so stoked happened to me. Yeah, I think it's fair to say that. I mean, it changed my life and it changed it only for the better. And it's given me tons of opportunity sense. So, yeah, I mean, if you're if you're flirting with the idea of doing something that sounds crazy, it probably means that you're thinking about things the right way. What's coming up for you? What are you training for right now? The UTMB going to that. So that sounds crazy to me. The UTMB. Yeah, the Super Bowl of Ultra Running. Yeah. And again, I'm not I it's the first time I've done this race. I have no expectations on any placements. My goal is to. Have a good time that week. I think it'll be really fun. I'm going I get an opportunity to go out well in advance. I'll be leaving at the end of July to go and I'll do the whole loop before I do the race. So I'm you know, I'm I'm doing something crazy, but I'm setting myself up to at least be able to complete it safely. So I feel like I'm I'm trying to put myself in a spot where I can perform to my potential while still remaining curious about. What it's going to look like when it's all said and done. Yeah. So I'm really excited. Well, you're super inspiring. You're you're really a bright light in this world. And I appreciate the service oriented kind of commitment to giving back, like understanding that your success comes with not just a responsibility to make this world better and make it more accessible. And and aspirational for people, but that that is like just it's not a responsibility, like a burden, it's more like, oh, this is this is the way of living. You know what I mean? Like this is a way of life. And I think that's applicable to all of us in whatever kind of, you know, context. Yeah. Is it the Spider-Man quote that's to who much is given, much is expected? That's something that I've had to really try to apply is like I've been I have been given a lot. And so there should be a lot of things that are expected of me. And I am in a place where I need to try to do them when I can. I think you have been doing this for a long time, but I also feel like you're just starting. Yeah. Yeah. Certainly this part. It's pretty cool. Yeah. Well, I'm a super fan. Oh, stop it. This was this was really fun. Yeah. Thank you for having me. Thanks for doing this and best of luck at UTM. Thank you. Cheers.