Phedippidations Podcast
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Thoughts, opinions, observations and rambling diatribes composed during distance long runs. Steve Runner is a mild mannered middle-of-the-pack distance runner who shares the output of his cranial stimulation with his audience while training for his next marathon. Phedippidations is a PodCast (or “RunCast”) named after the legendary Greek messenger: “Phedippides”. A modern day “messenger” of sorts; Steve runs near his home in Central Massachusetts. Each show is dedicated to an aspect of running, covering topics such as: training, injury, gadgets, nutrition, strategies and his pathetic attempts at breaking four hours. Because many of these programs are recorded “on the run”, Steve tends to drift onto too many off topic discussions, but if you’ve ever wondered what was going on in the heads of those Sunday morning runners you’ve seen plodding through heat waves, torrential downpours or blinding snow storms: then Phedippidations is the PodCast for you. Produced weekly for runners, by a runner, subscribe to Phedippidations at SteveRunner.com.
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Podcast Website: http://steverunner.com/
Fdip285: The Problem with Treadmilling
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Feb 05, 2012
Treadmilling is not a bad thing. But I think everyone listening to me understands that given the choice between running in place for an hour within your home, or at a gym and moving outside, under the sky, within the elements and across the ever-changing terrain of your place: the more significant way to exercise is the one that lets you better experience the world around you.



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Fdip284: My First Time
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sat, Jan 21, 2012
Today we’ll hear from six fellow runners (including myself) who will relate to you their personal stories about “Their First Times”.



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Fdip283: Life 2.0
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Thu, Jan 19, 2012
Today is my 50th birthday.
I was born at exactly 7:48 PM Eastern Standard Time in the maternity ward of Milton Hospital on Reedsdale Road and Highland Street in the town of Milton, Massachusetts on January 19th, 1962.
Turning 50 feels good, because it’s good to be alive. The milestone reminds me to take a walk break in this race, and turn to look behind me to see how far I’ve come. The past 50 years of life included great joy, terrible sadness, and the agony and ecstasy of blood, sweat and tears…but I wouldn’t trade any of it.
Regrets I have, many in fact: but those regrets are all part of a life well lived: a life, lived to its top.



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Fdip282: The Runner and Doctor Shoe
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Tue, Dec 20, 2011
We're traveling back in time on this episode; through six and a half years in PodCasting AND BEYOND!



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Fdip281: Grape Races
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Dec 09, 2011
When oenophiles think about wine, they rarely consider the sport of running with regards to it’s enjoyment; and when runners consider our passion for moving our bodies through space: the topic of wine is not chief among our hydration strategies. Yet these two areas of interest have their complementary intersections.
In this epsiode we'll visit some "Cool Races in Beautiful Places" where wine grapes are grown.



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Fdip280: Summer of the Shark
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Tue, Nov 22, 2011
In the summer of 1975 I was a 13 year old skinny, big eared, pimply-faced teenager with a frown full of braces and a head filled with big ideas. This was the first time I had ever been able to express my creativity to an audience greater than my immediate family, it was the first time I took a thought and converted it into something for others to experience. My words, my story, my imagines, my voice and that of my friends Andy and James…we created a movie that entertained our family, friends and neighborhood for one magical night in the summer of seventy-five: The Summer of the Shark.



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Fdip279: For Love of Wine and Pizza Part 2
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Tue, Nov 08, 2011
Part two of a series of episode where we prepare ourselves to win an argument with a non-runner!



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Fdip278: For Love of Wine and Pizza Part 1
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Oct 21, 2011
In order to start the conversation that plants the seed of an idea into someone’s head that they might want to begin the process to adopt the running life style, you need the right ammunition: you need to commit to memory at least a handful of logical arguments that will make your proposal effective and produce results.



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Fdip277: Existence and the Running Man
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Thu, Sep 22, 2011
“To be or not to be?”, that is only the second question we have to ask ourselves: the first is: Are we? or Are we not? Do we exist or is this all just a dream?
Descartes had something to say about all this, and it’s to Descartes that we will go, as we begin to contemplate that one thing that makes us appreciate the way it feels to run across the Earth, to feel the sweat, effort and joy of getting our miles in and moving these bodies that we either are or inhabit. Descarte can help us begin the process of understanding why, as we run a race or by ourselves on the open road: we feel, very much alive.



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Fdip276: Henry David Thoreau Walker
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Sep 11, 2011
In this episode I present for you an abridged for podcast version of Henry David Thoreau’s essay “A Walk to Wachusett”.
As you listen to these words, think about the excursion you might make wherever you live; knowing that you could cover the distance on a long run, but instead taking the time to walk and explore the world around you.
This is one of the great lessons of Thoreau: that we should savor the journey and experience our environment. It’s as Professor Nancy Etcoff said in my episode 274 on the Pursuit of Happiness: The pleasure system in our brain responds positively to the beauty of the natural world.
I love to run, as I know you do: but maybe every once in a while we should slow down, and just go for a walk.



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Fdip275: In Vino Veritas
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sat, Aug 27, 2011
Philosophers have been asking the question “What is Truth” for thousands of years, as they try to determine if truth is subjective, objective, relative or absolute.
I think that we, as runners: have a special opportunity to both ask and, in some specific way, at least, answer the question for ourselves.
Truth can be found in the hard work and determination we put into every mile; truth can be understood based on our personal experiences about what we can achieve and the goals we can accomplish: and truth can be felt in the exhaustion, sweat, agony and tears associated with the triumphs and failures of a life on the road.



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Fdip274: The Pursuit of Happiness
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Aug 07, 2011
I propose to you that running can bring you great happiness, and since I know that I’m preaching to the choir here, I’ll ask you to consider how running can bring happiness to those in your family, friends and acquaintances whom you’ll meet in your life…and that no matter how sad or broken they and we may sometimes feel: we have an obligation and a certain unalienable right to engage in the pursuit of happiness.



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Fdip273: The Morality of Quitting
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Jul 17, 2011
In this episode we tackle the philosophical question “Is it morally right to quit a road race?”. For help in understanding the question en route to an answer, we call about the great minds of Professor Richard Dawkins, Immanuel Kant, Socrates, and Aristotle.



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Fdip272: The Iron and Candy Anniversary Show
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Jul 03, 2011
The 6th Anniversay of Phedippidations.



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Fdip271: Team Poco Loco
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Jun 12, 2011
This episode of Phedippidations is intended to recreate for you the experience of running with fellow runners and friends. On April 30th Team Poco Loco gathered in Boston Massachusetts to run a half marathon distance around the mighty Charles River.



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Fdip270: When There’s Nothing Left to Burn, You Have to Set Yourself on Fire
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Wed, Apr 27, 2011
This is the story of a fellow runner by the name of Katie who fought a good fight in that all too familiar way where all options are gone and the only thing left to do was to make a terrible agonizing choice:
“When you have nothing left to burn, you have to set yourself on fire”



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Fdip269: el Poco Loco Curso
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Apr 15, 2011
A tour of the Poco Loco Course



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Fdip268: Duncan Rises
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Mar 25, 2011
“From where he tottered before the couch, on muscles immune to elongation and contraction, Duncan contemplated his next move. Opposite the lavatory, on the northern end of this dwelling, was his bedroom: unkempt and festooned with the discarded wrappings of many cakes, candies and snack treats; necessary supplements to his ongoing carbohydrate loading.”
This is the story of Duncan, a man without ambition or purpose who stumbles upon an idea that challenges his very existence and forces him to consider living a different life. In this original story, I try to convey the importance of inspiration and how powerful positive examples can have to those who seek to live a better quality of life.
LINKS:
Trail Slammer's 100 Mile Ultrarunning podcast: http://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/100mileultrarunning/id369305436
Book recommendations:
Core Performance Endurance by Mark Vertegen
Athletic Body in Balance by Grey Cook
http://26for25.blogspot.com/
Manzanita Beach Walk/Run: http://ncrdnehalem.org
The song “Go” was a new track by the band Stray Palace, a side project of Black Lab’s Paul Durham. Go to http://straypalace.com to learn more and you can download this song at http://blacklabworld.com
The song “Make a Wish” was an instrumental composition by Dan and Adam Skinner



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Fdip267: Running Varietals
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Thu, Mar 10, 2011
The term varietal describes an elementary form of something. With wine, it’s the fermented product of a single grape. With running, the word varietal describes the specific practice of a training element.
With running as with wine it’s important to understand the differences between the fundamental elements that go into the final product, so that when the harvest is released: be it after bottling or on race day: the end result can be savored over time; with rich expressive notes and a fine lasting finish.
The concept of varietal is as useful to wine as it is to running. It helps to define the unique elements that make up a good training plan, or great a Bordeaux, Meritage or Blended wine. It’s important to understand each varietal and how they bring out the best in the end product of that which you seek to consume: be it the finish line of a 26.2 mile road race or the lasting finish of a remarkable bottle of wine. Get to know the varietals that comprise your goals, and you’ll savor the glass or medal as you live your life to the top.
LINKS: http://theextramilepodcast.blogspot.com/
http://slowrunclub.blogspot.com/
http://www.fundraiseonline.co.nz/run4chch/
The song “Rocky Road to Dublin” was by the Blaggards stout Irish Rock from Houston, Texas. Check out all their great music over at http://blaggards.com



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Fdip266: Running Builds Bigger Brains
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Wed, Feb 23, 2011
We all know how running can improve our lives, our health and our disposition with the universe around us. We know that running is part of a healthy lifestyle and that it can improve the condition of our cardiovascular systems, and that we have evolved as homo sapien sapiens from Australopithecus Africanus to run across the savanna in search of the meat from fallen animals. The benefits of running are clear, and new evidence is being found that further supports this idea that we should be runners: because as we’ll learn with the workings of the inner brain: running is the smart thing to do!
LINKS:
http://www.cookiesforkidscancer.org.
http://www.stbaldricks.org/participants/GIRS
The song “An Ordinary Guy” was written, performed, and produced by one of the most talented musical artists currently residing in this quadrant of the galactic spirally arm: Matthew Ebel; who creates incredible music right here in the Boston area. Go to his website at http://matthewebel.com
join his email list, see where he’ll be playing live, and buy one or five of his great albums at http://matthewebel.com/store/



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Fdip265: An Interval of Persistence
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Feb 11, 2011
You and I are out on a run together. As we’re getting our miles in we start to talk to each other to pass the time. This is where we get to know each other, where we start to open up a little and reveal ourselves as the persons we really are.
You and I are different, with different backgrounds, different beliefs and different understandings of the universe around us. I want to know what you’re all about, and you might want to know what’s going on in my teenie tiny little head. So today, let’s acknowledge that we really are out on a run together, and I’m going to reveal to you a little bit more about who I am.
These are what I call: Intervals and I’ve even gone ahead and created a couple of podcasts where I express my thoughts in a rambling diatribe format, one is recorded in audio, the other in video, both are available on iTunes.
In running, of course, an interval workout is one where you run hard for a specific duration or distance, such as once around a track, and then you run at a relaxed rate, or maybe even walk…during an interval between the running portions.
So while Phedippidations is a podcast where we have a conversation about running and running related topics; today’s episode will be an interval break from that.
Today I’m going to open up an audio family picture book of sorts, and tell you a few stories from my life. There’s nothing earth shattering of deeply profound here…just a few snippets from a life I’ve lived that will better help you to understand this goofy middle aged, middle of the pack slightly asthmatic fellow runner who you run with each week.
LINKS:
http://runningthegoldenyears.blogspot.com/2011/02/running-golden-years-episode-15.html
http://marcirunsthemarathon.blogspot.com/2011/01/no-words.html
The song “I am a Man of Constant Sorrow” was performed by, in order of appearance: The Soggy Bottom Boys and Dan Tyminski; Norman Blake, and John Hartford: http://www.losthighwayrecords.com/artist/releases/release.aspx?pid=1379&aid=72



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Fdip264: Running Blogcast: Pre-Race Jitters
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Feb 04, 2011
Today I present the second in a series of episodes that I’m calling “Running Blogcasts” featuring the writing of fellow runners in our community who have a talent for the written word. The author of today’s episode is Kim Cowart. (Kow-ahrt).
Kim is one of the writers for the “Reasons to Run” blog over at Deseretnews.com. She’s a 35 year old mother of two from West Jordan, Utah.
Kim spent much of her childhood living in Eugene, Oregon where running is as common as breathing. In her teens, she moved to Utah, where there is a large and very strong running community. Kim has always run off and on, but it was after she had her second daughter that her love of running became more serious.
It started with a 20 minute run, and before she knew it, she found herself registering for her first marathon. She had never run a race before, ever. Her husband says she’s an all-or-nothing kind of girl, and this just proved him right.
Kim finished her first marathon alive and well and even qualified for Boston. Since that day she has run nine marathons including Boston. She plans to run Boston again this April as well as the New York Marathon and the Utah Grand Slam which is a series that requires runners to complete four major Utah marathons over the course of six months. It’s that all-or-nothing part of her personality again.
While Kim loves to call herself a runner, she is many other things. She is a mother of two beautiful little girls, the wife of a curly, red-haired bowling math whiz, a daughter, a sister, and a friend.
Kim is a fitness instructor at a local gym where the members inspire her and bring her joy on a daily basis. She is a jig-saw puzzle addict. She was a high school English teacher in a former life. Her astrological sign is Cancer, although she has no earthly idea what that means, but apparently is it important to some.
She is a cyclist and spends as much time as she can in the beautiful Wasatch Mountain range riding with her friends in the summer. She is a voracious reader of historical fiction. She is an organizer and master list-maker. She is a dancer, but only when she’s playing Dance Dance Revolution with her girls, so that probably doesn’t count.
It was a gym member who attends Kim’s spin classes who asked her to contribute to the “Reasons to Run” blog and it’s been a joy for Kim to be able to combine the two joys of her life: running and writing. Her blog isn’t necessarily always about running, specifically, but it’s always the inspiration. She hopes her honest thoughts about running, exercise, balance and finding joy in the simplicity of life will inspire others to get up and move and realize that it’s never too late to change for the better. It’s her mission to tell people that life is good and it’s worth living well. Running makes it all the sweeter.
I am honored that Kim would agree not only to let me re-publish her article from the Reasons to Run Blog, but that she took the time to read it for us herself….and did so on very short notice. I present for you an amazing fellow runner, Kim Kowart, with her essay on a topic we can all relate to: Pre-Race Jitters.
LINKS:
http://www.deseretnews.com/blog/68/Reasons-to-run.html
http://www.deseretnews.com/blog/68/10011257/Reasons-to-run-Pre-race-jitters.html
Please support The Mojo Loco Fund: http://mojolocofund.com
The song “Bound” was by Black Lab off their new album: Two Strangers. http://blacklabworld.com



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Fdip263: Outrunning Celebrity
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Jan 28, 2011
Celebrities are people too. They wake up in the morning, just as we do, they brush their teeth, they log onto their computers, they lace their own shoes, and they have to put in the same amount of effort as the rest of us in training for their marathons.
You could outrun Will Ferrell, Kim Alexis and President Bush if you dedicated yourself to the task. There’s nothing special about someone who is famous. Their bodies undergo the same physics and chemistry that we are prone to experience…and while they may have financial advantages which give them access to experts and training tools that can help them run faster and further; in the end: they still have to get in their miles to achieve their goals…and if it helps to motivate you, their goals can be your goals…because you are just as good an athlete as they’ve ever been or will be.
LINKS:
http://www.ncm.ca
Please support The Mojo Loco Fund: http://mojolocofund.com
http://www.sportrelief.com
The song “Ya Famous?” was by George Hrab: http://www.geologicrecords.net



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Fdip262: The Poetry of Running
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Jan 21, 2011
IF YOU COULD, SOMEHOW, SEND A MESSAGE TO SOMEONE WHO WILL BE ALIVE ONE THOUSAND YEARS FROM NOW: WHAT WOULD YOU TELL THEM?
The universe has come together to create the unique and special life form that you are, with your hopes and fears, dreams and concerns. The thoughts you form and the words you write and say constitute information, never to be duplicated information born of your mind that goes out into the world and has the potential, however remote the possibility, to outlive you and be shared with far future generations of people.
If you had the opportunity to send a message to someone in the year 3011, what would you say? Would you tell them about yourself and your life? Would you warn them about the dangers of hurting the environment or plead with them not to go to war? Would you talk about love and joy, sadness and pain, life and death?
And if somehow you were granted this chance to speak to someone in the future, how would you get your point across?
I think the answer is obvious: poetry. Poetry is a universal means of communication.
“Poetry is a mirror which makes beautiful that which is distorted”, wrote the English Romantic Poet Percy Bysshe (Bish) Shelley.
“Poetry is an echo, asking a shadow to dance.” Wrote the American poet Carl Sandburg.
And Plato wrote that “Poetry is nearer to vital truth than history”.
It’s poetry, I tell you, that would get your message across the expanse of time. It’s poetry that would most effectively allow you to speak from your heart and mind to a person who lived in a time where everything we know has changed.
You really need to consider what you’re going to say to future fellow runners…because this dawn of New Media and Social Networking is making these opportunities possible.
Although currently in it’s infancy, the infrastructure that is being assembled today will allow you to speak to your great, great, great, great grandchildren and to those of ages to come: and with that opportunity comes a responsibility to speak the truth and pass your information along…because there will never be another living creature like you in this universe again: and now is the time for your poetry.
Poetry is all about emotion and passion. It’s this quality of the message that gets passed on through the ages and gives us that opportunity not only to speak to future generations: but to do so in a voice they’ll understand; for as long as there are human beings to read and understand the words of others, there will be poetry to pass along to common sentiment.
Life and death, joy and sadness, passion and ennui. These are the same feelings and emotions that human beings have shared since our species first began to walk the planet, and until the great technological singularity to come changes the way we might associate the human condition with past and future generations of beings: we’ll have poetry as a way of reaching each other through time and space.
Special thanks to my friends who took the time to read some great poems:
Toni Harvey - http://www.drusy.blogspot.com
Kevin Gwin - http://theextramilepodcast..com
Maddy Hubbard: http://www.maddyruns.com
Adam Tinkoff: http://slowrunclub.blogspot.com
Gordon Scott: http://tiree.blogspot.com
LINKS:
http://www.online-literature.com/homer/iliad/
Please support The Mojo Loco Fund: http://mojolocofund.com
The song “Pretty Colored Lights” written, produced and performed by an amazing musical artist and poet: Warren Lain, from San Francisco, off his new CD: Phonofield. Check out this amazing artist and teacher at http://warrenlain.com



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Fdip261: Running Terroir
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Jan 14, 2011
As a runner, you have to discover and understand your own running Terroir. You need to know how your environment, personality, geography and local climate influences your ability to perform. In this sport, we are taught to listen to our bodies and the symptoms of over-use injuries: but before we can hear and feel these signals from our bodies: we have to know who we are as runners….not in relation to others of similar age, weight, sex and shape…but relative to where and how we train.
Dr. George Sheehan has said repeatedly that we are each an experiment of one;
“Life is the great experiment” he said “Each of us is an experiment of one-observer and subject-making choices, living with them, recording the effects.”
Learn how your Terrior manifests itself in your body to make you the runner you have become, and you’ll better understand the range of your limits; which are far above and beyond what you might expect.
You are an expression of the place where you become the runner you have always wanted to be.
With wine as with runners the stress brought on by the place where they develop has a direct effect on the type and quality of the end product. Step back and consider deeply your own running Terroir, use the knowledge of your place and the special stresses it challenges you with and you will come to train better and become the quality runner that your place in this world can make you.
LINKS:
The song “This Place” was by Derek Clegg from Chicago. http://www.derekclegg.com
Please support The Mojo Loco Fund: http://mojolocofund.com
Join the Runners Round Table: http://runnersroundtable.com



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Fdip260: Steve at SteveRunner dot Com
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Jan 07, 2011
I’m starting off the new year right by answering all of my email (or at least trying to). In this episode of a goofy little podcast I respond to some of the messages I was unable to get to last year with hopes that I’ll be able to answer ALL of my email in the year of our Lord 2011.
Also, join me for a swim in the FROZEN Atlantic with friends on New Years Day, and I get to chat with friend and Mojo Loco Founder Adam Tinkoff as we discuss his vision for el Mojo Loco!
LINKS:
“Whiskey in the Jar” was by the Blaggards http://blaggards.com
Please support The Mojo Loco Fund: http://mojolocofund.com



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Fdip259: What I Did Last Year
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Thu, Dec 30, 2010
This is our time.
With the changing of the calendar year it’s common for us to take the time to look back on the previous solar orbit, or look forward to our future. This is a great exercise, to look forward without dwelling on the past: as we make our way through this adventure called life. But, it think it’s even more important to consider our present….the now that we are existing in…today, right now.
This is our time. The who, that we are has grown and become in such a way that we can experience the Universe around us….we are, in effect: a way for the Universe to know itself; and I know that sounds deep…but it isn’t.
Consider that we, as human beings, are made of flesh and blood whose elemental construction has it’s origins in an enormous universal expansion that began 13.7 billion years ago…we are made of star dust…ever replenishing cells made of carbon atoms, hydrogen and oxygen that have through biology formed into the creatures we are today.
Trillions upon Trillions of inanimate objects and animate lifeforms have existed before us, and ga-zillions of intelligently aware creatures will exists when we are gone; and time will move onward towards an inevitable state of inaction where the universe and all the matter that it ever created will come to a stop: and space will enlarge to a point where time has no meaning, and there will be no way for the universe to experience anything: it’s a depressing thought, this asymptotic heat death of everything that has ever been: when the universe reaches a temperature of absolute zero.
So, this is our time: it’s a reason to celebrate. We are here, today: with a purpose to make the world just a little bit better than it was before we got here. It’s a pretty good purpose, and yes: while the far imagined future may lay waste to all we’ve done and accomplished physically: there is more to life and purpose than that we can touch and see, feel taste and smell. I’m not here to provide spoilers for the significance and importance of the purpose that even the eventual heat death of the universe can’t destroy: but I’ll ask you to think about that…think about your now, and how in 20 years, 30 years, 50 years from right now you might look back and wax nostalgically about the things you’ll do today.
This is our time to live, to experience and to perform random acts of kindness as a way to make the world just a little…teenie…tiny bit better than it was before we got here.
There’s an old Irish blessing and toast that I’ll leave you with, with sincere hope that we’ve left 2010 behind us, that we’ll have a wonderful 2011 and that we can all appreciate the gift of the present.
“May your troubles be less,
And your blessings be more.
And nothing but happiness
come through your door. “
LINKS:
Alde Land Syne by J.E.L.L.i at http://www.jellimusic.com and by Mario Ajero at http://marioajero.blogspot.com



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Fdip258: Dr. George Sheehan: Seeing
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Thu, Dec 23, 2010
Today I’m going to read for you the final chapter of Dr. George Sheehans book “Running and Being – The Total Experience”. I’m doing this in hopes that you might buy and read his book, and as a way of presenting you with an alternate special holiday episode of Phedippidations…a gift you don’t have to unwrap.
This chapter is very special to me, as I hope it will be for you. It was the conclusion to a book that so inspired me, so enthralled me when I first picked it up, that I literally could not put it down until I finished it well into the early hours of the next morning.
I’ve read Dr. Sheehans book, “Running and Being” at least a dozens times since I first read the book; and this final chapter titled “Seeing” really sums up most of the major points made in the previous 17 chapters.
You can purchase the book “Running and Being – The Total Experience” by Dr. George Sheehan, at http://www.georgesheehan.com/books
LINKS:
http://www.georgesheehan.com
http://twitter.com/steverunner/teammojoloco
http://teammojoloco.blogspot.com/
The Linus and Lucy theme was by the band J.E.L.L.i http://www.jellimusic.com
The background music “I Saw Three Ships with Good King Wenceslas” was composed by Doug Boldt.



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Fdip257: The Mojo Loco
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Dec 17, 2010
The friends who I ran the Mojo Loco with are listening to this right now, Chris and Chris, Eddie, Nik, Dan, Mat, Susan, Steve, Samantha, Norm, Adam and Maddy.
They’re wondering to themselves: “How is Steve going to tell this story? How will be express the narrative? What imagery will he call upon? What great message will he send forth throughout the tubes of the Interwebs to tell the world about this Mojo Loco?
So this is for my fellow teams mates; dedicated runners all; who accepted the challenge and call of the Mojo Loco and contributed by their presence to a happening:
Guys, I thought about it…I really did. In the days following the Mojo Loco I had a lot to digest, thoughts and ideas, feelings and revelations.
I know you did as well.
I could have told the story of how we met at the Starbucks in Daytona Beach and drove North to St. Augustine. I could have told the story about the many stops we made along the way and the twelve legs of a run we accomplished together. It would have been a good story: interesting, entertaining and fun to hear; but it wouldn’t have been a GREAT story.
The GREAT story that I wanted to tell was all about YOU.
Each of you brought something of yourselves to this event, where the whole of our group was far greater than the sum of its parts. YOU are the story that needed to be told here, and if you want to call that wishy-washy mumbo-jumbo gobbily goop: go for it, but you know I speak the truth.
What we did, together, as a Team, is something so important…something that everyone who’s listening to the sound of my voice right now, can and must become a part of.
If indeed, we are indomitable as a team of thirteen runners from around the world, then other Mojo Loco events must be organized, and other teams assembled: because think about the good we can do in this world. Think about how we can motivate and inspire others to lace up their shoes and use their athletic potential for creative and social good!
The Mojo Loco wasn’t about bib numbers and racing forms, entry fees and complementary tee-shirts. It was about US, It was about Chris Russells good humor, and Eddie Marathons sincere kindness, Nik’s artistic talent and Dan’s great ability for prose.
The Mojo Loco was about Susan’s perseverance, Marathon Chris’s dedication, Samantha’s joy of running and Matt’s exuberance for sport. It was about Adams creativity, and Norms determination, Steve Choppers generosity of friendship, and Maddy’s inspirational passion.
This was an event, never to be duplicated yet oft to be repeated. The story to be told here was all about the Team: the runners who came together to share the road and our time.
Of this you can be certain: there will be other Mojo Loco’s, and other opportunities for this team and others to meet, run, talk and savor the luxury of each others companionship. Something magical happened on December 11th, between the cities of Saint Augustine and Daytona Beach Florida: something that developed in ten hours the way a fine wine might improve over ten years.
Thirteen acquaintances: like minded souls brought together through social networking and new media met for coffee and became good friends.
That’s the promise of el Mojo Loco…it sounds crazy, it sounds ridiculous: but you who experienced know better: and through each of us, so will our community.
It was, without a doubt, an incredible honor to meet and run with you; but it was a special precious privilege to become your friend.
Viva el Mojo Loco
LINKS:
http://twitter.com/steverunner/teammojoloco
http://teammojoloco.blogspot.com/



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Fdip256: A Brief History of Wine
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Wed, Dec 08, 2010
The history of wine is the history of civilization. It’s a story that dates back to the earliest days of agriculture and encompasses the life and times of our ancestors who consumed wine for both pleasure and ceremony. When we raise a glass today, we are tasting more than just a fermented grape juice which technology has perfected into a form of liquid art; we are tasting the product of history; an ancient beverage that friends have shared over the millennium at the end of their long and arduous days shaping the world into a better place for themselves and us, their descendants.
Links:
http://twitter.com/steverunner
http://www.ustream.tv/channel/phedippidations
http://steverunnerblog.com/
http://teammojoloco.blogspot.com/
Ancient Wine: The Search for the Origins of Viniculture by Patrick E. McGovern and Robert G. Mondavi (Jan 2, 2007)
And the second is titled
A Short History of Wine by Roderick Phillips (Nov 12, 2002)
America's a Nice Italian Name by Allan Sherman
“Wine Woman and Song” by Johnny Ferreira http://www.johnnyferreira.com



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Fdip255: Anatomy of a Running Shoe
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Dec 03, 2010
Get to know the parts and materials that make up your running shoes, and you’ll be a better consumer of the one critical tool needed to reach your goals as a runner. Whether you’re looking to run your first marathon, set a PR or BQ or just want to run at your own pace for the joy of it…wearing the right running shoes will make the difference between surviving through the miles, or savoring every moment you’ll have, on the road.
Links:
http://twitter.com/steverunner
http://www.ustream.tv/channel/phedippidations
http://steverunnerblog.com/
http://teammojoloco.blogspot.com/
The song Skullcrusher Mountain was by Jonathan Coulton at http://www.jonathancoulton.com



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Fdip254: Running Blogcast: A Runners Guide to Balance and Perspective
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Nov 26, 2010
Today’s episode, being my first Running Blogcast features the writing of Neil Bearse, a fellow runner I’ve never had the honor of meeting in person: but I feel like we’re old friends. Neil is the one who first introduced me to my all time favorite musical band: Black Lab…as well as others.
Neil is the manager of web based marketing for Queens School of Business in Canada. He’s responsible for the web presence of 5 MBA programs as well as executive education initiatives in Canada, the Gulf Region and Europe. He is a digital marketing consultant focused on making online communications clear and effective while ensuring creativity and innovation.
Neil’s pioneering work to market the music of independent artists on-line and through the word-of-mouth channels of podcasting and blogging has led to him representing artists from across North America including Black Lab, David Usher, Ingrid Michaelson and My Chemical Romance. In 2007, he was one of the architects of the Bumrush The Charts project, a global viral marketing campaign responsible for placing a Black Lab single on iTunes charts in 16 countries.
Finally Neil is a frequent public speaker and teacher, helping groups understand emerging online technologies and how it affects their business or industry. If you work for a company that is looking for help in online marketing communications and social networking, or are looking for a talented speaker who has been involved in social engineering on the internet since the tubes were first connected: get in contact with Neil…you can get in contact with him at his website: http://neilbearse.com
Links:
http://neilbearse.com
http://www.youtube.com/atch?v=mT4EWCRfdUg
http://www.audiblepodcast.com/phedi
http://channelrunnerreview.blogspot.com/
The songs “See the Sun” and “Always” by Black Lab: http://blacklabworld.com/music/two-strangers/



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Fdip253: New Media and the Art of Running Evangelism
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Nov 21, 2010
You have the same ability to produce content in an artful way that will, no doubt, convince someone you care about to join us on the road as runners…and, if in the course of those public new media conversations, you convince one or two others to rise up of THE COUCH OF DOOM, then all the better!
You and I have an opportunity, today: through the use of blogs and podcasts to write and speak the words that will inspire the people who read or listen to become runners themselves…and by virtue of your experience for having been where they once were…and by telling the story of your life on the road in an entertaining, thoughtful and brutally honest way: you will change their lives for the better and make the world just a little bit better than it was before you spoke.
Links:
http://www.christopherspenn.com/2008/09/social-media-and-new-media-are-not-the-same/
http://www.audiblepodcast.com/phedi
http://myentryblank.blogspot.com/
http://channelrunnerreview.blogspot.com/
The song “Nothing But a Song” was from the new album “Safe Upon the Shore” by Great Big Sea at http://www.greatbigsea.com



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Fdip252: Running in my Sleep
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Nov 14, 2010
The American statesman Ben Franklin once wrote “Early to bed and early to rise makes a man healthy, wealthy, and wise. There may be something to that with respect to our running performance. We sleep, on average a full one third of our lives. So, as a middle aged, middle of the pack, slightly asthmatic 48 year old runner: I’ve already slept 16 years of my life away. It seems like an unfair trade off: 16 years of my life that I could have spent in a conscious state of productivity…but when we consider that the time spent sleeping helps to improve the quality of the two thirds of our life when we are awake: it’s easy to see that the horizontal investment is a sound one.
Links:
http://www.runningresearchnews.com/News_Feed.php
http://www.rrca.org/services/news-entry/running-community-mourns-loss-of-mike-broderick/
http://www.audiblepodcast.com/phedi
http://www.teamsweat.org
http://educatingforjustice.org
The song “Slow Down” was by Black Lab off their new album: “Two Strangers” available on iTunes, Amazon MP3 and at http://blacklabworld.com



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Fdip251: Running Legend Abebe Bikila
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Wed, Nov 10, 2010
Today I will tell you about an amazing person who lived his life to the top. It’s an interesting life with high and low points, with obstacles which were overcome leading towards an eventual spiral into disaster…but in the end, redemption and glory.
Abebe Bikila was the first black African to win a gold medal at the Olympics, winning the Mens Marathon in Rome which he completed barefoot!
The headlines in the Newspapers and on the radio proclaimed the fact that it had taken an entire Italian army to conquer Ethiopia, but only one Ethiopian soldier to conquer Rome!
Links:
http://www.audiblepodcast.com/phedi
The song “Salala” was by Angelique Kidjo; with background vocals by Peter Gabriel. http://www.kidjo.com
http://www.answers.com/topic/abebe-bikila



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Fdip250: Always Look on the Bright Side of Life
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Wed, Nov 10, 2010
How many of us have trained over many months for a race only to perform terribly in the event itself, or how many of us have crossed that finish line in say, oh…I don’t know…a minute and 31 seconds slower than we had hoped.
It happens…a lot. But we know that the sun will rise in the morning, we’ll put the pain behind us, and go forward. Some days we win, some days we lose, some days we don’t even have the opportunity.
Today’s episode is somewhat long over due, the last show I did featuring your email was on March 14th, episode 228 “Dispatches from the Road”. That was just the second episode into a six month hiatus where I produced episodes every two or three weeks apart…but now that I’m back to a regular weekly schedule, I’m going to try to do this once every 4 to 5 weeks, if I can.
So, let’s figuratively jump into the virtual mailbag and see what happens….because today is the tomorrow I was worrying about yesterday…and the sun came up just fine. Yes I had a really crappy week last week…but I’m looking forward today; so lace up your shoes and join me for the ride.
Links:
http://apps.who.int/medicinedocs/pdf/s4926e/s4926e.pdf
http://www.ruggedmaniac.com/
http://twitter.com/#!/adamrisu
http://www.theboringrunner.com/
http://www.audiblepodcast.com/phedi
The song “Say Goodbye” was by Black Lab from their AMAZING new album “Two Strangers” available at iTunes http://blacklabworld.com



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Fdip249: The Running Gene
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Oct 24, 2010
In the area of genetics and with respect to athletics, we are trying to understand what construction instructions are required to build the perfect runner. It would seem that certain attributes exist which we can use to measure the influence of our genetic blue prints to create faster humans…and that our ethnic origins might predict who of us will be able to run faster and farther. But the fact is that we are an infant species, descended from the same Mitochondrial Eve who ran across the African savannah 150,000 years ago…and we’re all related, we all have the same basic building instructions, the same Deoxyribonucleic acid and each of us, everyone: has the same set of running genes.
Links:
The song “That Spells DNA” was by Jonathan Coulton http://www.jonathancoulton.com
Channel Runner Review: B-Hag Running PodCast http://www.corsolameta.blogspot.com



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Fdip248: The 5th Annual World Wide Festival of Races
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Oct 17, 2010
They ran all over the world. They ran in warm places, cold places, rainy places, dry places. They ran alone and with friends; they ran fast and slow, in an organized race and in their back yards. They ran with the sound of each other in their ears and the spirit of each other in their hearts.
The World Wide Festival of Races is a celebration, but this social networking movement does not end on race weekend. We run together every day, all around the surface of a little blue bubble in space: and we do so with the knowledge and understanding that we do not run alone: not as long as someone, somewhere is lacing up their shoes to head out on their local roads. We are a global community of fellow runners; and together we run.
Links:
https://sites.google.com/site/wwfor2010
http://worldwidefestivalofraces.com
http://crawllyflowersgarden.blogspot.com
The song “The World is Upside Down” was by A Band Called Quinn at http://www.myspace.com/abandcalledquinn



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Fdip247: As the World Cheers
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Oct 08, 2010
In a Universe that is thirteen point seven billion years old, on a planet that has only existed for four and a half billion years; our species: homo sapiens sapien, has only been around for two hundred thousand years, in fact modern day homo sapiens with our language, culture, use of tools, barter between groups, art, game playing, music, and reliance on symbolic thought only began to arise 50,000 years ago. Civilization, as we know the word, started to arise around 10,000 years ago in the middle east, near where Iraq is today…you and I fellow runners are a part of an infant species with respect to the age of all that there is.
Think about that for a moment. Everything you know….everyone you know, everything that has ever happened in the ten thousand year history of civilization of fellow human beings has occurred only on this four and a half billion year old planet three orbits out from a four and a half billion year old star in a single, typical spiral galaxy out of a hundred fifty billion in the entire universe?
Our galaxy is moving through an expanding universe that will one day distance itself from all other existing galaxies such that the very atoms which comprise our long past living bodies will no longer exist in motion, and all that ever was will stop within an impossibly long distance between every other point of definable matter.
Why then, do we live in a world where hatred, anger; and distrust seems to prevail? What is it about our human condition that causes us to experience such animosity and distrust? Ignoring that question, if we take the premise as fact: then what are we to do about it?
Well, here’s one thing we can do: and maybe this won’t change the course of the mighty river of war, or hold back the tide of hurt, pain and hate…but if we as a community of fellow runners can demonstrate to those around us that we can be friends despite our many differences: if we can, by example, explain to anyone we interact, socialize or come in contact with that we have friends all over the world, who run together every day…and if we can take a global event like the World Wide Festival of Races and use it as an example where good people of different nationalities, different religious backgrounds, different ethnic origins, different social or sexual lifestyles and different political interests can overcome all those differences and extend respect and dignity across a little blue bubble that we share together in space: then we’ll have done our part.
Thank you for being a part of this fifth annual world wide festival of races. Thank you for being a friend and helping to celebrate this community of fellow runners, who today ran all over the world: in Antigua and Barbuda, Argentina, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, the Channel Islands, China, the Congo, Denmark, Ecuador, Finland, France, Gabon, Germany, India, Indonesia, Israel, Italy, Japan, Korea, Liechtenstein, Malaysia, Mexico, Mongolia, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, the Philippines, Puerto Rico, Russia, Singapore, Slovenia, South America, Sweden, the United Kingdom, the United States, Vietnam and the Virgin Islands.
It is an honor to run with you. Think Global, Run Local.
Show Links:
http://worldwidefestivalofraces.com
Please support http://teamsweat.org in the fight to stop the Nike Corporation from forcing Indonesian workers into slavery.
THANK YOU BLACK LAB!
The Song “Start a Fire” was an exclusive release by the Official Band of the World Wide Festival of Races: BLACK LAB, from their new album “Two Strangers”. Go to http://blacklabworld.com/marathon to download TWO FREE SONGS as a Virtual Goody Bag Gift from Paul and Andy.
Follow Black Lab on Twitter: @paulblacklab and Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/blacklabband and be sure to THANK THEM for the gift of music!
Special thanks to Neil Bearse from http://neilbearse.com for all your iPad wisdom and hooking us up with the ear candy!
Special thanks also to Kevin Gwin from http://theextramilepodcast.com for letting me borrow his HOTLINE (Now that you’ve used the number you can leave him submissions on a regular basis!)
And THANK YOU to everyone who submitted a SHOUT of ENCOURAGEMENT for the entrants of this year event! Be sure to check out all their great blogs and podcasts as mentioned in the show! These are the friends and fellow runners who CHEERED for you!
Cover Art: Mark A, Garlik http://space.art.co.uk



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Fdip246: Running Through PodCamp Boston 5
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Oct 03, 2010
PodCamp is all about podcasting, and using this medium to reach out to a community. Since you and I are runners, and since we all listen to podcasts, you and I are a part of this thing…and since I’m eager to encourage everyone listening to my podcast to start up their own podcast, I thought it would be useful to dedicate today’s episode to what I learned at PodCamp.
PodCamp is first and foremost about community. It’s not about selling a service or a product, it’s all about focusing on building personal relationships with other podcasters. Think of it this way; you and I are a part of a running community of new media creators…we listen to running related podcasts listed on Runningpodcast.org and we run with each other as we train for our next big race, or just get some miles in together because it feels good. This is our podcasting universe: but there are other worlds than these…other podcast universes that have nothing to do with running: such as marketing, story-telling, science, comedy, news, politics, religion, and any other topic and genre you care to think about. It’s here at PodCamp where these universes collide in a good way!
Thank you to Chris Penn who generously spent some time with me during his lunch break to talk about all things podcasting. If you’re interested in social networking and marketing (a key element to the topic of podcasting) you need to get to know Chris Penn.
Show Links:
http://www.christopherspenn.com
http://www.marketingovercoffee.com
http://podcampboston.org/
Look for a PodCamp near YOU here: http://podcamp.pbworks.com/
Here’s the article I mentioned in the show: http://www.edisonresearch.com/home/archives/2010/08/the_calm_surface_obscures_the_roiling_depths.php
http://myentryblank.blogspot.com/
http://www.planet3rry.com
http://worldwidefestivalofraces.com
goodybag@worldwidefestivalofraces.com
www.audiblepodcast.com/phedi
The song “Get Over It” by THE Matthew Ebel http://matthewebel.com



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Fdip245: Life Should be Long Enough
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Sep 26, 2010
The Stanford University study titled “Reduced Disability and Mortality among aging runners” was published in the August 11th, 2008 issue of the journal Archives of Internal Medicine. At the time that the study was conducted: the assumption was that vigorous exercise would cause older people more harm than good. The expectation was that running would lead to an excess in orthopedic injuries and lead to earlier disability with runners over 50.
But the researches found that regular exercise would extend high-quality, disability free life. Frequent running would compress the period at the end of life when people couldn’t do things on their own. This is an idea that has been given the name “compression of morbidity”.
In this episode of Phedippidations, I’ll talk about both the clinical details of this study AND the significance of it’s findings, leading to the obvious conclusion that Life is Short, but it Should be Long Enough!
Show Links:
http://www.runningthenarrowpath.blogspot.com
http://planettinkoff.com
http://worldwidefestivalofraces.com
http://www.iamplify.com/store/product_details/Rabbi-Shmuley-Boteach/Afterlife-Debate-With-Christopher-Hitchens/product_id/8621
www.audiblepodcast.com/phedi
The song “One Monkey Don’t Stop the Show” by Brick Daniels http://brickdaniels.com



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Fdip244: History of the Running Shoe
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Sep 19, 2010
The modern day running shoe is a perfect example of technology and science working to build upon the advances made through history to help human beings walk and run for longer distances and faster speeds in comfort and without injury.
Leonardo di ser Piero da Vinci, the Italian painter, sculptor, architect, musician, scientist, mathematician, engineer, inventor, anatomist, geologist, cartographer, botanist and writer, once wrote: that "the foot is a masterpiece of engineering and a work of art"
Those who conceive manufacture and sell modern day running shoes dare to improve on the use and design of the 200,000 year old evolved human foot. They are doomed for failure, unable to compete with the efficiency of our born to run bodies. But running shoe companies can benefit from five thousand years of experience from those who walked and ran before us, and incorporate the lessons of cordwainers, cobblers, and shoe makers throughout history as they seek to create a better running shoe.
Show Links:
http://runninginhingham.blogspot.com
http://worldwidefestivalofraces.com
Send me your SHOUTS OF ENCOURAGMENT for the runners of the 5th WWFoR:
Email me steve@steverunner.com or Call 206-339-6497
http://theextramilepodcast.com
http://astore.amazon.com/phedthepodcfo-20



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Fdip243: Pregnantly Running
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Sep 12, 2010
While the first part of this episode is dedicated to the precautions a pregnant mother should take with regards to athletic endeavors, there are many benefits to running while pregnant including the prevention of excessive weight gain. Running while you’re pregnant can keep you mood off and help to prevent pregnancy induced hypertension.
If you’re healthy, and you’re having a healthy pregnancy there is no reason not to run. Listen to your body, and check with your doctor. It’s probably best not to run an Ultra marathon, or compete in a major race where you might feel obligated to run hard. Remember, you’re running for yourself and your unborn…and while running can be good for you and make you feel better: what’s most important is that you are healthy and well prepared on your child or children’s birthday as you go through one of the greatest athletic event that a woman will ever experience…the marathon of labor.
Show Links:
http://teammojoloco.blogspot.com
http://amilewith.me.uk
http://worldwidefestivalofraces.com
www.audiblepodcast.com/phedi
SEND ME YOUR SHOUTS OF ENCOURAGMENT: steve@steverunner.com
OR DIAL: 206-339-6497



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Fdip242: Following Thoreau and the West Branch of the Penobscot
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Aug 29, 2010
From Saturday April 14th through the 18th, 2010 my Dad, son, nephew and I traveled up the West Branch of the Penobscot River and across the northern end of Chesuncook Lake in the Northern Maine Wilderness. Through our journey we gained a better appreciation of Henry David Thoreau’s adventure of 1853. While logging in the Northern Woods of Maine continues, the river that we paddled on remains mostly unchanged.
You can imagine the sites and sounds that Thoreau experienced as he journeyed up this river. We saw many moose, every day, stopping to feed and drink at the rivers edge. We saw Eagles and Loons, ducks, geese, ospreys raven, fish, red squirrels and more that we could not identify…but it was the moose, lanky majestic in stature and serenity that captured our imaginations the most.
They are, as Thoreau called them: “God's own horses, poor, timid creatures”; but they are a stark reminder that we are guests in their wilderness; and that they’d continue to roam these woods long after we’ve returned to our creature comforts.
This annual trip is much more than just a canoe ride or camping experience: it is an opportunity to reconnect with nature and our family. It’s also an opportunity to tell stories by the camp fire light.
Here we listen to the stories that give the lives of our friends and family meaning.
These are the moments that make those stories real…my son and nephew will always remember the story of my Dad’s Aunt Penn and her husband Alex, and now so will you: because it is in quiet places; without distractions: that we have deeper conversations and tell the stories that of the people we have known and loved.
The wilderness is beautiful on so many different levels: as a place to reconnect to our planet and more importantly each other.
If you’ve never visited the woods, lakes and rivers of the wilderness; you owe it to yourself to do so. It’s not scary, it’s peaceful, it’s not boring, it’s insightful, it’s not dangerous although it can be extreme…but you’ll never learn to appreciate the universe we live in, and the people we care about until you can absent yourself from the modern world and follow in the footsteps of Henry David Thoreau.



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Fdip241: Dr. George Sheehan and Growing
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Aug 13, 2010
I am a disciple of Dr. George Sheehan, I’m not ashamed to tell you that, I’ve read and re-read everything the man has written…and I’ve come to know him in a comfortable, familiar way.
A man of science and medicine; a man filled with great passion for this sport and a devoted Roman Catholic…Dr. Sheehan and I have a lot in common; but while I yearn to be a writer and use this podcast as a creative outlet: I will never come close to the writer that he was…I will never approach the level of philosophical understanding of life, the universe and everything that he understood so well. Dr. Sheehan was a great thinker…I’m merely a doofus.
But Dr. Sheehan was also human, and prone to human error, selfishness and sin. He understood his weaknesses…he understood his imperfections and he didn’t live his life in wonder and celebration of those sad, dark and lonely attributes: but he did seek to understand himself and to understand how and why to love others.
Today, I’m going to read one of the final chapters of his book “Running and Being: The Total Experience”. I’m doing so in the hopes that you might buy his book and read carefully what he wrote. Profound, enlightening and brutally honest: this is the Dr. Sheehan that I’ve never met, but who over the past 11 going on 12 years of my running life I’ve come to know very well.
Show Links:
You can purchase the book “Running and Being – The Total Experience” by Dr. George Sheehan, at
http://amzn.com/0966631803
Or for $20 US (including shipping and handling) through http://www.georgesheehan.com
Send a check or money order payable to “The George Sheehan Foundation” to
George Sheehan Foundation
P.O. Box 1831
Red Bank, NJ 07704
(732) 758-1611
http://www.nevernotrunning.com/
http://worldwidefestivalofraces.com
Free Audible Book download: www.audiblepodcast.com/phedi
The song “Grow” was by April Start http://www.myspace.com/aprilstartsmusic



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Fdip240: Caffeinated Running
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Aug 01, 2010
As it is with most things in life, taken in moderation: Caffeine can be good for you and improve you’re your health and your performance on race day. But too much of a good thing can lead to disaster. In living our lives to the top we have to learn to savor, with small sips, those things which bring us pleasure and improve our health.
Show Links:
http://www.jsams.org/article/S1440-2440(07)00076-X/abstract
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1478936/?page=1
http://worldwidefestivalofraces.com
http://hearzenrun.com
Free Audible Book download: www.audiblepodcast.com/phedi
“The Java Jive” was by The Inksports (1940)
“Coffee Man” was by Calvin Owens http://topcatrecords.com



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Fdip239: Cruising to the Music
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Jul 25, 2010
This is my annual music show; recorded (as always) while I’m on vacation. This time I’m on the Norwegian Cruise Ship Spirit traveling from Boston to Bermuda with my family as we celebrate the 50th Anniversary of my parents wedding!
In addition to listening to podcasts, I love to run to music! It helps me keep my cadence in check and fills my head with positive images as I get my miles in. The songs on this episode are all from previous Phedippidations shows; so I hope you enjoy them!
Please support the artists by purchasing their music and following them on the various social media networks on the “tubes of the internets”.
Show Links:
Summertime by Brother Love at http://www.brotherloverocks.com
Broken Heart by Black Lab at http://blacklabworld.com
Sweat by Darren Geffre at http://www.myspace.com/darrengeffre
Dare to Dream by Adam Ilami at http://www.myspace.com/adamilami
If This Geek Ruled the World by Geoff Smith at http://thegeoffsmith.com
Talking Bout my Dogs by Boo Boo Davis at http://www.booboodavis.com
Move Your Feet by Dogman Joe at http://www.dogmanjoemusic.com
Say Hey I love You by Michael Franti and Spearhead at http://michaelfranti.com
Tickle Cove Pond by Great Big Sea at http://www.greatbigsea.com
And Die Alone by Ingrid Michaelson at http://www.ingridmichaelson.com
Thank you John Wall for 5 great years of The M Show http://themshow.com
http://twitter.com/johnjwall
http://RoninMarketeer.com
http://www.marketingovercoffee.com



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a BIG Favor
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Jul 11, 2010
Why Cook Well.
We eat because we have to.
Civilization is nothing more than a ten thousand year old human experiment to test the freakish theory that mankind could eat without being eaten. Four million years earlier, our australopithecine ancestors crawled down from some God-forsaken trees to run with sweaty persistence after the meaty goodness left for scavenger animals.
This, they called a meal.
The world we have inherited is only a savannah away from that prehistoric reality. We have to eat to survive, but it’s what we eat and the quality of that food which gives our lives pleasure and meaning.
The question our human experiment should answer is “Why should we cook well?”
If survival is the purpose of culinary consumption then what benefit is served by eating food of higher quality, flavor and beauty? Would not our human condition be sufficiently served through the daily ingestion of ground chicken speckled cheese spread sprayed from a can?
We eat because we have to, we cook because we care.
Through trial and tribulation (and falling out of trees) modern man has come to understand that a meal is much more than a life sustaining substance. A meal is a celebration of life: it is an expression of art and love and a way to communicate through preparation, presentation and sharing.
We eat because we have to, we cook because we care, we share a meal because a meal is a manifestation of our passion for life and each other.
To cook well is to take a food source of vegetable or meaty goodness and convert it into something of pleasing sensations of taste, smell, and texture. It is an act of purest altruism, a performance of sincerity and joy.
Why would a self diagnosed intelligent species take the time and energy to prepare food for the culinary delight of others? Why bother with the triviality of recipes and technique when rawhide shoved into pile of burning coals would sufficiently make food more digestible and a better energy source?
Because we know, instinctually, that life is short, though long enough. We understand that our mortality is wondrous thing, allowing us the luxury of savoring the good things brought before us.
The art of preparing food, and creating from it a meal goes beyond the act of cutting, slicing, baking, boiling or frying: it is the culmination of a ten thousand year in progress experiment where mankind is learning that he might not only eat without being eaten, but that he can cook and care, share and love and live our lives to the top.
We eat because we want to, we cook because we love.
Please vote for my essay and help me get published: http://bourdainmediumraw.com/essays/view/76



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Fdip238: Five Years and Running PodCast Goodness
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Jul 04, 2010
Podcasting is a media so perfectly suited for the running lifestyle. Just as we schedule our runs in advance, we can schedule what we listen to ON those runs, in advance.
We can multi-task the time we spend out on the roads and by listening to a podcast, exercise our brains and feel a camaraderie with the podcast host or producer: especially hosts and producers who are fellow runners like the podcasters you just heard: real people with a shared passion for this sport we love so well.
When I first started producing this goofy little podcast about running, five years ago, the idea of clipping on a microphone and apparently talking to yourself while out on a long run seemed like a ridiculous idea; but today there are over 70 running podcasts listed on the runningpodcasts.org directory! This idea of recording a podcast and listening to other podcasters completes a mode of communication and conversation not possible with traditional old media; such as radio (for example).
The other really cool thing about podcasting is that it allows for the artistic expression of thoughts, opinions, and observations of our lives. You know me as a middle aged, middle of the pack, slightly asthmatic runner from New England who appreciates good wine, like Bordeaux, Malbec and Cab Franc, who enjoy’s a great baseball game with the Worcester Tornadoes or my beloved Boston Red Sox, and likes to rock out to amazing music, like that from Great Big Sea, Jim Fidler, Matthew Ebel or the amazing Paul Durham and Black Lab…these are all elements of my life that you’ve heard on this show: when I’m tasting or talking about wine and telling you about the grapes I’m trying to grow, when you hear me at the old ball park singing “Take Me Out to the Ball Game” or when I present for you some amazing creative commons pod-safe music on every episode of this show.
I think that’s one of the things I most appreciate about running podcasts; that they’re NOT always just about running: they’re about the lives each of the podcasters are living: it’s better than so called reality TV because there’s no pretense involved: we are who we are, for better or worse: but we have this one thing in common: a love for running and for living our lives to the top.
These podcasts we produce are a permanent record of these lives we are living; audio files that will be heard long after you and I have run our last road race, and shuffled off this mortal coil. They are important because they document the way to live as the good animals we were meant to be; and it sets a good example to anyone who listens now, and in the far future: of how to live a life of meaningful joy.
That’s why we produce these shows…because I’m telling you this fellow runner: something you already know deep in your heart but something that we have somehow GOT to get across to others, be it through personal examples or a moving pictures expert group dash 1 audio layer 3 standard digital encoding formatted file downloaded to your iPod:
Life is short, but it should be long enough and to take to the roads and become a runner is one certain way to live that life to the top: which is exactly what is expected of us all.
Show Links:
http://www.runtheplanet.com/trainingracing/training/questionsanswers
http://runningfromthereaper.com
http://runningpodcasts.org
http://drusy.blogspot.com
http://4feetrunning.blogspot.com
http://hearzenrun.com
http://theextramilepodcast.com
http://runnersroundtable.com
runnersroundtable@gmail.com
http://worldwidefestivalofraces.com
http://RoninMarketeer.com
http://www.marketingovercoffee.com
The song “The Real You” was by Black Lab at http://blacklabworld.com



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Fdip237: The 33rd Milton 10K Road Race
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Jun 27, 2010
I had come to the town of Milton Massachusetts to
run a 10K road race that I had run three times before, with a 48:18 finish in
2002, a 52:30 finish in 2003 and a 53:40 finish in 2004. Today I was hoping to finish in an hour and
five minutes, although secretly a sub one hour would make me feel better.
I’ve been injured, I’ve
gained weight, and I’ve not felt as in shape as I have in the past: but today’s
effort might serve to remind me that there was still hope within me to shed
these pounds and run faster and more intelligently with a new strategy of
training.
If the act of running is a
celebration of life, it seemed only fitting that I’d be here in the town where
I took my first human breath, and experienced a childhood of tradition and
love, to celebrate my identity as a runner in training: where my walk breaks
allowed my body to run faster, and this guy named Walker could feel more like a
runner.
Show Links:
http://hearzenrun.com
http://www.gymboss.com.
http://worldwidefestivalofraces.com
Free Audible Book download: www.audiblepodcast.com/phedi
The song “Walk on the Moonâ€
was by Great Big Sea http://www.greatbigsea.com



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Fdip236: Love of Running
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Wed, Jun 16, 2010
Today’s episode is not about my love of this sport; it’s about how
to help others to fall in love with
this sport.
Running is an activity that
fellow runners, like you and I, gather pleasure from. We look forward to these feelings of pleasure
every day when we lace up our shoes.
To the non-runner, or someone
who finds any physical activity abhorrent, this love of running is an alien
emotion. These sufferers on THE COUCH OF
DOOM consider the act of running as equivalent to the act of smashing a brick
into ones forehead: it neither seems like a good idea, nor would it bring
pleasure to do so.
So, how does one fall in love
with running?
Once you start paying more
attention to your body in motion, you’ll begin to feel the urge to take that
daily break out on the roads. You’ll
begin to feel an infatuation with eating and living healthier, to enhance and
improve your daily performance. You
might even start subscribing to a few running related podcasts…especially as
you start to realize that you could run faster than some goofy little podcaster
from New England, who really isn’t all that and a bag of chips…and the next
thing you know you’ll be eating those chips from within a peanut butter and
jelly sandwich for the purpose of sodium replacement and protein muscular
recovery.
And maybe, just maybe your
new found love for running will work both ways and you’ll find that running is
in love with you.
Show Links:
http://buckeyeoutdoors.com
http://worldwidefestivalofraces.com
Free Audible Book download: www.audiblepodcast.com/phedi
“Say Hey (I Love You)†was by Michael Franti
and Spearhead http://michaelfranti.com
“A Glorious Dawn†was part of
the http://www.symphonyofscience.com
project by John Boswell.



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Fdip235: Behind the Swoosh
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, May 30, 2010
The story behind
the swoosh is much bigger than that of just Nike and its corporate policy of
treating it’s workers as slaves: it’s a story that speaks to the working
conditions of many of the products that you and I use every day, from iPhones
to Droids, from large screen TV’s to these new tablet computers Steve Jobs
keeps whining about.
What is the
morally correct thing to do when we learn the truth about the working
conditions for the people who make all this stuff we carry and use? I can’t answer that for you, that’s something
you have to figure out for yourself.
I’m not here to
talk philosophy with you; remember: I am just a doofus. But I think that the very least any of us can
do is to LEARN about what’s going on in places like Indonesia: just so we can
answer the question, as athletes, regarding this aspect of the running shoes
you and I wear every day.
Think about it:
right now you and I select our shoes based on fit, style, functionality,
weight, price and reputation….what if we were to add to that list of aspects
the adherence to social justice of the manufactures? If, as runners, we focused on just one
company: Nike, the leader in sportswear and running paraphernalia, and just
learn more about how our shoes are made: that we might consider the treatment
of workers in our formula for what we should be purchasing?
No one is asking
you to ban Nike products, this isn’t about you and I: this is all about
learning…and I urge you to consider going to Teamsweat.org just as soon as you
get back from your run today, and click on the upcoming events link: please,
I’m asking this as a friend, and see when Jim Keady is going to be in your area
next; in fact: I’ll go further: if you attend a College or University, why not
contact Educating for Justice at http://educatingforjustice.org and see about
getting someone from that organization to come to your school to talk about
these issues.
This is important
stuff, and I’m not telling you this to make myself feel better about myself as
a runner: I’m telling you this because I think it will make us better athletes,
plain and simple.
This is not about
me, and it’s not about you: it’s about the good people in countries like Indonesia
who just want a little of the life that you and I enjoy. I’ll spare you the angry rant about Nike or
my firm belief that they are most certainly evil: but I hope you’ll listen to
what Jim Keady is saying here, and I very much hope you’ll make an effort to go
see him; I’m going to list some of the places where he’ll be speaking in the
near future; he’s getting ready to head back over to Indonesia, so it’s
important that we learn from what he finds there, and that we think for
ourselves, using the information we can learn from his findings and those
findings of other independent activists.
More than
anything, I hope that in listening to this small portion of Jim’s lecture:
behind the swoosh, you will get at least a little: angry.
Show Links:
http://www.teamsweat.org
http://www.educatingforjustice.org
http://www.educatingforjustice.org/store_main.htm
http://www.nikebiz.com/responsibility/workers_and_factories.html
http://www.brophyprep.org/summit/globalization/wp-content/uploads/2010/03/Behind_the_Swoosh.swf
http://twitter.com/teamsweat
http://www.facebook.com/TeamSweat
http://worldwidefestivalofraces.com
Free Audible Book download: www.audiblepodcast.com/phedi
“Justice Will Roll Down†was by Sandra McCracken; http://www.sandramccracken.com



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Fdip234: Indiana Jones and the Temple of Play
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, May 23, 2010
Greetings fellow canines; my
name is Indiana Jones; I am NOT the fictional American Adventurer and
Archeologist Dr. Henry Walton Jones Junior created by film maker George Lucas
and portrayed by Harrison Ford and River Phoenix; I am the REAL Indiana Jones,
a pure bred lemon beagle puppy born one year ago on March 28th,
2009.
My full name, in fact, is
Indiana Jones Walker…of
the human family Walker; they being the creatures who serve me in every way and
are the best-est family a dog could ever have.
This is my house, I live here
with Mathew, John, my Mom and my Dad: Steve.
Dad is a runner; but he’s not as good a runner as I am.
I love to run, especially
after bunny rabbits…and we have at least two living in our yard. I can smell them every day. Dad doesn’t let me run after them, sometimes
he let’s me run through the yard sniffing for their trail. He doesn’t seem to be able to smell them the
way I can.
I can smell really well. My nose has 200 million scent receptors
compared to Dad’s nose, which has only 5 million. My olfactory bulbs are four times as big as
his so I can smell things from, far, far away.
Dad’s nose would have to be the size of a refrigerator in order to be as
sensitive as my nose!
I can smell that bunny
rabbit, and I want to run after him, but Dad won’t let me because he’s afraid
I’ll get lost or get hit by one of those big “move-me†machines.
But, I just want to
play! Doesn’t everyone love to play?
Show Links:
http://worldwidefestivalofraces.com
The song “Mr. Jones†was by
The Counting Crows http://www.countingcrows.com/



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Fdip233: Can Marathon’s Kill You?
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, May 16, 2010
In this episode I review the
abstract of a study released last March by Dr. Depina Kardara and his team at
the Athens Medical School,Hippokration Hospital titled “Marathon Runners
Have Increased Aortic Stiffnessâ€.
It is important to note that
my skepticism with this study is related to the implied suggestion that
training for and running a marathon is considered extreme exercise. Maybe
it is, or maybe after having run 21 of them…the last not much more than a
controlled crawl, I see the marathon as an endurance event that homo sapiens
have evolved to run as a means of hunting and gathering; chasing down our prey
with persistence.
As we listen to the results of
this research, we need to understand the severity of the impact, and consider
other factors which might invalidate the results; remember: 25,000 runners just
finished the Boston Marathon a few weeks ago, not to mention the hundreds of
thousands who will run such a distance this year; and yet the sample size for
the test group in this study was only 49.
This isn’t to say that those
49 aren’t representative of the entire human population of marathon runners;
nor does it necessarily trivialize the results of this study; but it does put
this study into perspective against the media interpretation that marathon’s
can kill you.
Show Links:
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601124&sid=aIOu08KfQ3LQ
http://health.msn.com/fitness/articlepage.aspx?cp-documentid=100255768
http://www.healthscout.com/news/1/637000/main.html
http://www.examiner.com/x-25448-Boulder-Running-Examiner~y2010m3d15-Marathons-may-be-hazardous-to-your-health
http://content.onlinejacc.org/cgi/reprint/55/10_MeetingAbstracts/A80.E751.pdf
http://www.twitter.com/Frothyfroth
http://twitter.com/reallynotarunnr
http://twitter.com/Moultgard
http://twitter.com/Kieran1209
http://worldwidefestivalofraces.com
The song “Think For Yourselfâ€
was by George Hrab at http://www.geologicrecords.net



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Fdip232: The 114th Boston Marathon
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Wed, Apr 28, 2010
I had come to Hopkinton Massachusetts to run the
114th Boston Marathon, and found myself in the early miles facing the eventual
breakdown of my body. From the joyful
celebration of a New England town, I ran
myself into the unchartered land of exhaustion and pain…and through modern
technology I broadcasted my suffering live through my blog and social
networking sites. I wasn’t doing that to
show off or incite pity, I did it because I wanted to share my experience with
you in hopes that you might want to run this race one day, and perform better
than I did.
I know this course very well,
it’s an old friend that I’ve visited throughout my youth and into my middle
age. I have experienced great things on
this course, witnessed legendary athletes run with artistic form, felt intense
ecstasy and crushing agony and run this race even when I had nothing left
within me to get me to that finish line: but somehow, I always have.
For all my efforts in trying
to distract myself to finish this race, for trying to go, in my mind, to my
happy place…I had forgotten to consider this truth: that This WAS my happy place…this race that
is more than just a race, this marathon that is known by all simply by the name
of the city within which it finishes:
This is my race: Boston. This is my town: Boston. This is my home: Boston
Beantown, the hub of the
universe, the cradle of liberty, the Athens of America…we love that dirty
water, we love our beloved Red Sox, we love our Samuel Adams beer, our Faneuil
Hall, and our Patriots, Pilgrims, and minutemen…and we love our Marathon with
114 years of history dating back to the emergence of distance running in the
world of athletics.
Thank you for listening to
this episode of Phedippidations, thank you for running with me as I took you
with me on my way to Boston, thank you for your kind words and support and for
following my progress on race day; at Intervals, on Twitter and Facebook but most
of all: thank you for your friendship.
You see, THIS is my happy
place, running with fellow runners…and as the sky darkens upon the finishing
line in the shadows of tall buildings and skyscrapers on and around Boylston
Street, I can’t see the sun anymore…I can’t feel the ground anymore…but I don’t
mind…you’re by my side…and I feel fine.
Show Links:
“The Curra Road†was by Fergus http://www.fergusband.com
“See the Sun†was by Black Lab http://blacklabworld.com



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Fdip231: The Qualifying Standards of Boston
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Thu, Apr 15, 2010
The Czech Locomotive, Emil
Zatopek, 3 time gold medalist in the 1952 Summer Olympics in Helsinki once said “If you want to run, run a
mile. If you want to experience a different life, run a marathon.â€The qualifying times of the
Boston Marathon call us to experience a different life. It is not so important that we can meet the
standards and run a BQ; it’s the whole idea that there is this threshold for
excellence out there: a target by which we can measure our own performance.
I stand by the belief that
anyone who runs and finishes a marathon, no matter what their time, has
demonstrated an ability that marks them as athletically gifted within the human
race. This is not to denigrate the
importance or accomplishment of running or walking shorter distances such as a
5 or 10K road race; but in a world where only point one of one percent of our
species has ever run an organized and official marathon road race to
completion: the accomplishment deserves acknowledgement and admiration.
But if you’ve qualified to
run the Boston Marathon, you are a step above we mere mortals. You have proven that you are worthy of
standing at a starting line in a town called Hopkinton to run with runners of
similar abilities towards a finish line in downtown Boston marking your name
for all time in the official races record book as one who set a BQ, a Boston
Qualifying time: and that is an honor you must cherish for all your life.
Show Links:
http://www.randywhitedj.com/
http://www.bostonmarathon.com/BostonMarathon/114thMarathon.asp
“Boston and St. John’s†by Great Big
Sea http://www.greatbigsea.com



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Fdip230: Boston and the 2010 State of the Course
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Mon, Apr 05, 2010
In this episode of The Goofy
Little Podcast, I run the first 18 miles of the Boston Marathon course and I’ll
let you know if there’s anything new to look for on the road before you arrive
to run this thing.
If you’ve traveled from afar,
you might want to find other things to do with your time in Boston besides driving out to the suburbs to
check out the course. That’s where this
episode comes in, as I’ll do my best to describe what I’m seeing: and what
you’ll see as you run the Boston Marathon.
I’ll also give you some
recommendations for things to do while you’re in Beantown, and finish with some
history about the spot where we begin our run towards Boston: the starting line of the 114th
Boston Marathon.
Show Links:
http://www.thefreedomtrail.org
http://boston.redsox.mlb.com
http://www.mbta.com
Call (617) 368-5080 for
more information about the Samuel Adams Boston Brewery tour:
http://www.samueladams.com/contact_tour.aspx
http://www.cheersboston.com
http://www.harvardsquare.com
http://www.johnharvards.com
http://www.newbury-st.com
http://www.jfklibrary.org
http://www.northendboston.com
http://www.ussconstitutionmuseum.org/
http://www.cityofboston.gov/FreedomTrail/bunkerhill.asp
http://www.bostonducktours.com
http://www.faneuilhallmarketplace.com/
http://www.billrodgersrunningcenter.com/
The song “Charlie on the M.T.A.†was performed by The
Barleycorn from Ireland off their album “A Song for Ireland†released in 1995
by digitalpressure/The Dolphin Group.



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Fdip229: Running Legend Tarzan Brown
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Apr 04, 2010
Tarzan Brown was an amazing
athlete who lived a hard, impoverished life but faced the world with dignity and
strength. There are so many legendary
and half-true mysteries about the man and his career as a runner that his many
accomplishments might seem less interesting: but above all know this: that
Tarzan Brown was a free spirit, a man who loved to run and his very life
honored his brave tribal ancestors; the Narragansett people, one of the leading
tribes of New England with a culture that has existed for thirty thousand
years.
His Algonquian name was Attuck-Quock-Wussete
which means “Deerfootâ€; he is a legend in our sport and one of the many reasons
why the Boston Marathon is the greatest of all Marathons.
Show Links:
“Indian On The Mountain†by Red-Hawk http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/redhawkcountry



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Phedippidations Relaunch Promo
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Mar 26, 2010
April 4th, 2010.



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Fdip228: Dispatches from the Road
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Mar 14, 2010
I like eggs.
Show Links:
http://www.fdiplive.blogspot.com
http://qik.com/steverunner/videos
http://feeds.feedburner.com/IntervalsAudio
http://runningpodcasts.org
“Final Broadcast” by the Statistics http://musicalley.com



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Fdip227: Barefoot Patterns and Forces
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Feb 28, 2010
Professor Daniel Leiberman’s (and his team) paper “Foot strike patterns and collision forces in habitually barefoot versus shod runners” looks into how and why human beings can and did run comfortably without modern running shoes. In it, he proves that experienced, habitual barefoot runners tend to avoid landing on our heels and land with a forefoot or midfoot strike.
Most of their research looks into the mechanics of different kinds of foot strikes. He shows that most forefoot and some midfoot strikes, when running barefoot, do not cause sudden, momentary and major force impacts which occur when you land on your heel barefoot.
In a previous episode of Phedippidations, I talked about how Professors Lieberman and Dennis Bramble have shown us that homo sapiens have evolved, and thus are born to run…and with this study “Foot strike patterns and collision forces in habitually barefoot versus shod runners” Professor Lieberman and his team have shown us that we should seriously reconsider the way that we run, with or without minimal running shoes. It turns out that we’ve had the proper biomechanics and shock absorbers with us all along…we’re not only born to run; but we’re born to run well!
At the end of this episode I talk about why I didn’t produce an episode last week, what I’ve been up to lately, some “sad” news about Stephen Walker and changes in this show that are long over due.
Show Links:
http://barefootrunning.fas.harvard.edu
http://educatingforjustice.org
http://www.teamsweat.org
“Move Your Feet” by the Dogman Joe http://www.dogmanjoemusic.com



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Fdip226: GI Distance Running Problems
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Feb 12, 2010
When you run, you’re body is under stress, and that causes your body to increase the levels of certain chemicals to kinda even things out. These chemicals, in turn, may lead to an increase in gastrointestinal problems in distance running.
Our bodies are incredible machines, but while evolution has done a wonderful job of allow up to go forth and multiply; there are some sniggly little issues which come up from time to time to prevent us from going forth at our full potential.
Gastrointestinal Problems in Distance Running are a lot more common than you might otherwise believe, and there’s a thirty to eighty-three percent chance that you are currently, or will one day suffer some kind of an issue with your digestive system that will slow you down or keep you off the road.
Show Links:
http://www.ismj.com/default.asp?pageID=611023489
http://runningfromthereaper.com
http://www.sciencebasedmedicine.org/?p=3716
“Die Alone” was by Ingrid Michaelson: http://www.ingridmichaelson.com



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Fdip225: The Key Note I’ll Never Get to Give
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Feb 05, 2010
I’m never going to be asked to give a speech in front of a crowd of fellow runners. It’s not going to happen; and by saying that I’m not implying that the absent request is a travesty; there’s a good reason why I’ll never be asked: because while you and I are friends and there are at least ten of you listening right now: generally speaking I am not what you call: popular.
I’m not very well known, and never expect to be burdened with fame…not enough at least to be asked to speak to a crowd of runners at the 2010 John Hancock Sports and Fitness Expo - Runners Seminar.
To be honest, that’s probably a good thing. I think you know that I tend to be a bit of a rogue; you never know when I’m going to go off on a goofy comedy riff or a screaming anger-thon…quite honestly, when I clip on this microphone I’m not even sure what’s going to happen…so, it’s probably in John Hancock’s best interest to suppress my speech at this and every Boston Marathon expo.
As I was thinking about this, while out on a long run (where my best thoughts are formed) I asked myself what I would do if I got the call to speak? What if the event organizers called me up tomorrow and asked me to present the key note address at the Boston Marathon Health and Fitness Expo; one of the largest gatherings of runners in the world?
Well, obviously the first thing I’d do is panic, then resolve to respectfully refuse: but opportunity is not a lengthy visitor, so as adverse as I am to speaking in public or standing in the spotlight of attention: I know that I’d have to somehow suck it up; and take to that podium and speak.
I wouldn’t enjoy the experience; I would dread the days and hours prior to my presentation: but despite all that I know that I’d accept the invitation, because like it or not: I do have something to say.
What I’d have to say to a large gathering of fellow runners would require a number of speeches. This being the 225th episode of Phedippidations, I’ve venture to guess that I’d have at least 225 themes that I’d want to cover…but if I only had time for one topic; one keynote message to transmit from my mouth to the ears of an audience of runners it would be what you’re about to hear.
So imagine, if you will, that it’s 2:00 in the afternoon on Sunday, April 18th 2010; the day before the 114th running of the Boston Marathon. You’re sitting in a packed room at the Hynes Convention Center on Boylston Street in Boston, just a quarter mile up the road from the finish line of the Boston Marathon.
You’ve been walking around town and the expo floor for the past three days, and you’re just about ready to head back to your hotel to rest up for the night in preparation for the big race. You’re tired, a little anxious and your patience is getting a little frayed when someone familiar steps up to the podium….
Show Links:
http://ww.runnetcommunity.org
New Podcast: http://www.middleagedathlete.com
Send in your race reports to joe@middleagedathlete.com
“Underground” by Black Lab off the Album Give Us Sugar http://blacklabworld.com/music/give-us-sugar/



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Fdip224: The Call of the Miles
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Jan 29, 2010
Today’s episode is the first to talk about the phenomenon of Ultra Marathons.
There is obviously a lot more to this topic than I can fit in a single goofy little podcast, and as a homework assignment to you and myself, I recommend that we pick up a copy of the book “Ultra-Marathoning: The Next Challenge” by Tom Osler and Ed Dodd published by World Publications. The book appears to be out of print, but you can still pick up a few used copies over at Amazon.com.
I’m intrigued about training for and running an ultra someday. This seems like a much different kind of race than I’m familiar with, and the idea of running 50 to 100 miles or kilometers seems to be an amazing test of the human spirit, and an accomplishment that: as a distance runner, I’d like to try.
Human beings are evolved to be long distance runners; and an ultra-marathon seems like the natural next step progression for anyone who has conquered the marathon and is looking for a new adventure and challenge…out there, on the road.
Show Links:
http://www.snooth.com/wine/beni-di-batasiolo-barolo-2003/
http://www.ultramarathonrunning.com
http://www.teamsweat.org/
Ultramarathoning: The Next Challenge
“Still Walking” by Michael Gaither
http://www.michaelgaither.com



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Fdip223: Dr. George Sheehan and the Church of Running
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Jan 22, 2010
In his essay, IS RUNNING A RELIGION, Dr. George Sheehan makes that point that running is a place, not a system of belief. Running gives us an opportunity to renew ourselves while we’re out there on the road: both psychologically and spiritually.
I’ve heard that phrase before: “Running is your religion” and it makes about as much sense as the phrases “cooking is your politics” or “singing is your manifesto”.
Every time you go out for a run, you are given an opportunity to commune with yourself, with your thoughts and with your God. The sins of yesterday are forgiven on the roads; that extra slice of pizza you couldn’t help inhale; the frustration turned outward anger you expressed at someone who didn’t deserve the outlash is suppressed, your soul is made calm, your body serves it’s good purpose…running takes you to a place that cannot be defined by latitude and longitude.
As you run, you develop the deepest commitment; the most serious mind…your mind begins to focus on “where you are and what you are doing”.
And it does you no good to visit this physical monastery only a few times in your life, or on random occasions when you have the time. You have to visit this place called “running” often; almost everyday if you can.
In other words: If you want to take with you, through the course of your life, the positive benefits of our sport: you have to constantly renew yourself out there on the road.
For those of us who believe in God, running is an opportunity for prayer. You don’t have to always pray in quiet places or on Holy Ground. When you’re out there, running at the perfect pace, feeling the sweat coat your body and moving with the breeze in your face…you are being the good animal you were meant to be; but more than that: you’re performing an act that your body was evolved to perform.
This is the perfect place to have a conversation with God.
When you run, you are acting more human; and as a homo sapian, or thinking man: you are in community both with God, the creator of heaven and earth and with nature and the universe all around you.
Dr. Sheehan makes this point very clearly: Running is a place to commune with God and yourself, it’s a place for psychological and spiritual renewal.
Running is NOT a religion. It is in its very essence: a place.
Show Links:
** WARNING **
This episode ends with another angry (some might say “psychotic”) diatribe as I lash out against the babbling hate-speak of a self righteous bigot who has the audacity to call himself a Christian.
As far as I’m concerned, Pat Robertson can go to hell.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/paul-raushenbush/go-to-hell-pat-robertson_b_422397.htmlhttp://www.digtriad.com/news/national_world/article.aspx?storyid=135964&catid=175http://www.delawareliberal.net/2010/01/13/pat-robertson-haiti-deserved-it/
Please pray for the people of Haiti.
The song “Hey Kate” by The Fire Apes http://www.myspace.com/fireapes



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Fdip222: I’ve Got Mail
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Jan 15, 2010
I know I’ve said this before, but I want you to understand that I read all of your email. This problem I have with answering email is somewhat embarrassing for me; and when I starting having these problems…I considered not saying anything about it here on the show.
I thought that for me to tell you that my inbox was overflowing, and that I couldn’t possibly answer every email I received would be a fairly vain, narcissistic thing to do. But then, I realized that for me NOT to say anything about it, and still being unable to dedicate myself to the task of responding to every message sent to me: would be kind of arrogant and untruthful.
My Grandmother, Helena Viola Walker, daughter of James and Mary MacDonald…taught me the importance of being truthful. It doesn’t matter if your filling out a job application, speaking with friends or typing something on Facebook…you have to be truthful; especially with friends: because they will always be able to see through you, and if you’re dishonest, few will ever trust what you say.
So, the truth is that I won’t be able to answer all of your emails; I wish I could: but with only 118 or so waking hours available to me each week, minus 50 or so for work, 14 or so for producing this podcast, 5 or so for my running, another 5 to prepare for and document the results of my running, that leaves me with only 44 hours every week, or 6 hours a day to drive to and from work, cook dinner, walk the dog, spend time with my family…look, you get the idea because you’re in the same situation…and you probably have even less time each week to fit in the things you wish you could make a priority.
So, when an opportunity arises for me to multitask, to perform more than one activity at the same time: such as producing a podcast and answering email as I’m out there getting my run in…I am going to get it done…because it’s not so much how much time we have to do the things we want to do, it’s how we use it.
Show Links:http://www.amilewith.me.ukhttp://shadowcasts.blogspot.comhttp://twitter.com/snowshadowhttp://www.pbs.org/wnet/humanspark
“A Little Time” by Amy Ayres http://www.myspace.com/amyayresmusic



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Fdip221: The 2010 Spring Marathon Guide
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Jan 08, 2010
This episode begins with another ice cold swim in Boston Harbor with friends, and a stated theory that will become my “law of thermodynamic refreshment”.
Because athletes prefer to run distance races in more comfortable temperatures; the Spring and Fall are often preferred seasons for marathons. Today, in January, we’re getting a couple of inches of snow, and the air temperature wind chill is 10 degrees below zero F, or minutes 23 degrees C; making it a bad day to schedule 114th running of the Boston Marathon or any other 26.2 mile road race.
But come Spring, when the flora and fauna of the Northern Hemisphere begins again to flourish: marathoners around the world will toe the line at their races and run in relative comfort, for the most part.
Today I want to list for some of the Spring Marathons, scheduled for the spring time: and while this will not be an all inclusive list, it should give you some ideas for races you might want to run as the March equinox draws nigh.
Show Links:L Street Brownie Don Bravo:http://www.wickedlocal.com/allston/local_news/x2072785598http://www.wickedlocal.com/allston/fun/entertainment/arts/x668809333
http://www.marathonguide.comhttp://www.bataanmarch.comhttp://www.npmarathon.comhttp://www.comrades.comhttp://www.olimpo.cl
“Tickle Cove Pond” by Great Big Sea http://www.greatbigsea.com



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Fdip220: Four Hour Marathon Part 2 - Endurance
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Jan 01, 2010
This is my first podcast episode of 2010, and my second episode regarding my intentions for running a sub Four Hour Marathon in the Autumn of this year.
Endurance training and Aerobic development are critical elements in good marathon training program. You have to put in the time without worried about the mileage, and you have to develop a base from which to launch yourself at your goal.
This is the year I’m going to break 4 hours in a marathon NOT because I’ll be physically fit to do so, but because I’ll have trained carefully, with patience and dedication: when my friend John Ellis tells me to go out and run for an hour up and down the hills of Oxford: I’ll do it…I may not enjoy it at first but once I’ve got a good and healthy base, once my endurance is up to the point where running 26.2 miles non-stop isn’t such a big deal anymore: I can work on my stamina and then go into a taper period in preparation for the day that I’ll run a marathon in 3 hours, 59 minutes and 59 seconds; or less.
Show Links:http://burning2010.comhttp://science2health.orghttp://www.teampointtwo.comhttp://10in10challenge.blogspot.com
“Run Away” by Natalie Brown http://www.natalie-brown.com



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Fdip219: A Year in Motion and Review
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Dec 25, 2009
Personally, I’ve never really needed the changing of the calendar year as a reason to set and keep a resolution: so any promises I’m going to make are probably a continuation of what I’ve been working towards for the past few years; although I do have a few running-specific resolutions that I’ve set and intend to see through.2009 is finally over and 2010 is upon us. The phrase “Out with the old, in with the new” creates images of hope for a new year, where war and violence come to an end, where the hungry are fed, the sick are healed and the global economic crisis is resolved. Albert Einstein said it best when he said “Learn from yesterday, live for today, hope for tomorrow”. The New Year gives us all a clean slate from which to re-create parts of our live for all the roles we play in life. Here’s a wish that the runners in us, have an injury free, PR setting 2010, and that we all enjoy the happiness of a year in motion.Happy New Year.
Show Links:http://burning2010.com“Maybe You Should Drive” by Craig Cardiff http://www.craigcardiff.com



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Fdip218: The 2009 Phedippidations Holiday PodCast Variety Show Special
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Dec 18, 2009
In the spirit of all those old cheesy classic television holiday variety show specials by the Osmond Brothers, Bob Hope, Donny and Marie, and the Smothers Brothers: I present for you my first Holiday PodCast Variety Show Special complete with special guests, a musical act, and comedy sketches created to make your season merry and bright.
I don’t expect this episode to become a holiday classic, but it will keep you company as you get a long run in on a cold winters day!
Special appearances by: John Michael Walker, Terry Higgins, Gabby Sherman, Steve Chopper, Kevin Gwin, Toni Harvey, Adam Tinkoff, Mat Chasey, Nic Wong, Dan Medeiros, John Ellis, Joe Steindl, Lynn Runner, and Gordon Scott.
Happy Holidays and Merry Christmas from my home to yours!
Show Links:
“Jingle Bells” by Skid Row http://www.skidrow.com (made available by the Podsafe Music Network)
“Joy to the World” by Hairy Larry http://deltaboogie.com
“Joy to the World” by Two Harps http://twoharps.yolasite.com
And a special gift to all by Gordon Scott: http://www.tiree.blogspot.com



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Fdip217: Running Legend: Browning Ross
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Dec 11, 2009
Browning Ross was a talented runner, coach, spokesman, leader and proponent of distance running; at a time when there weren’t too many runners in the world who could actually finish a marathon.
It was through his hard work and passion, that road races in the United States are so popular today. He made it his mission to spread the word about long distance running, and create the buzz which would lead to the Great Running Boom of the 1970’s.
Also, rest in peace Larry “Legend” Olsen: coach, leader, mentor, and fellow runner.
Show Links:
http://www.rrcahistory.org/longdistancelog.html
Please support Sharon’s run to fight blood cancer: http://pages.teamintraining.org/sj/napa10/skoontz
http://thedevotedrunner.blogspot.com
http://www.catholiclab.net
http://runningtimes.com/Article.aspx?ArticleID=18305
Larry’s last race: http://www.coolrunning.com/results/09/ma/Nov26_21stAn_set1.shtml
http://runnetcommunity.org
“Go the Distance” by Danny the Multitracker (aka Danny Fong) from Ontario, Canada.



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Fdip216: Running Through a New England Town
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Dec 04, 2009
Running a race with a friend is always a good thing because the friendly rivalry will tend to push you past your own comfortable limits. When I first started running back in December of 1998, I would run every day with a good friend at work; and we would push each other to finish as fast and as strong as we possibly could. I averaged a 9:10 pace back in those days for my daily and long runs…guess what that pace run over 26.2 miles would get me?
If I had run the race on my own today, I most certainly wouldn’t have pushed myself too hard: I’m still weeks away from the start of my Spring marathon training, and I just had no reason to push myself too hard, risking possible injury.
I had a lot to be thankful for on this day of Thanksgiving; I had my family, my job, my health, and an ankle that was strong enough to let me run a road race. I had the gift of an entry into Boston, and a good training plan to get me there, with that goal of a sub 4 hour race in the new year not too hard to belive. And today; I was thankful that my friend Joe challenged me in this 5 mile road race; pushing me to do my best and making me feel like I really might be; once again: Steve Runner.
Show Links:http://bluedawgsrunning.blogspot.com/http://www.coolrunning.com/results/09/ma/Nov26_21stAn_set1.shtmlhttp://runnetcommunity.org“Changed” by Stray Palace (Paul Durham, Deej Hofer and Paul Bohak) http://straypalace.com



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Fdip215: Inspiring Off the Couch
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Nov 27, 2009
When you inspire someone to take to the road, to join us as runners: you are filling them with the same passion that you have for this sport, you are influencing their behavior by showing them what it means to live this lifestyle. It’s not about looking thin and healthy; although that is a cool consequence of running: it’s feeling good, having a sense of pride in being able to run for a certain distance: and if you can inspire even just one other human being to lace up their shoes and become a runner: you will have made the world just a little bit better than before they did; and like a healthy infection: that person you inspired might go on to inspire someone else, maybe a few people…and they’ll inspire others, and so on, and so forth until we have this exponential growth in the number of fellow runners AND, more importantly: healthy people who are living their lives to the top and living with a better quality of life than they did before you inspired them to run.
Show Links:http://www.teampointtwo.comhttp://www.duffrunner.blogspot.comhttp://www.lachaineguitare.comhttp://runnetcommunity.org
“My Generation” by The Who (presented podsafe by http://www.razorandtie.com)



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Fdip214: Email to my Droid
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Nov 20, 2009
I’ve said before that a podcast is better than a radio show because it embraces communication through social media; in fact: better than that…it IS social media, independent podcast producers can honestly call those who subscribe to their content: Friends; and really mean it. Despite the commercial advertisements on this show; I’m not really going overboard in trying to sell you something…I might recommend some products or services that I think are pretty cool, but the unspoken truth is that it’s rare for anyone producing a podcast today to “sell out” their audience, and we certainly work hard to stay connected.
I get a lot of email that I don’t read on this show that is angry, hurtful and hateful…the hate you can appreciate I will avoid, but if you disagree with me: that’s okay.
Why?
Because we’re having a conversation, we’re creating a social bond; and while time and distance will probably negate our ever being able to meet in person, and share a glass of wine, pint of cold ale or a steaming hot coffee: We can use this social media of podcasting, and these responses by email, Twitter and Facebook to create this community; this Run Net Community as we share the open road together and with others.
In this episode, I’ll answer some emails and enjoy some good conversations with fellow runners.
Show Links:http://www.tomfangrow.com/jsvdot.htmlhttp://chadintheazdesert.blogspot.com/ http://runnetcommunity.org
THANK YOU for your daily VOTE: http://www.podcastawards.com“If This Geek Ruled the World” by Geoff Smith http://thegeoffsmith.com



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Fdip213: Sports Medical Quackery
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Nov 13, 2009
Human beings have always feared the unknown and unknowable. Desperate for cures to our everyday ailments and those conditions and illnesses which cause pain and death, we are willing to try anything that we can justify as a reasonable remedy. Runners, who are often prone to injury, are especially vulnerable to medical quackery. Take a walk around the Health and Fitness Expo of the Boston Marathon, and you’ll find all sorts of samples of alternative medicines, with products and services that claim to relive pain, help you run faster and longer and prevent injury.
Beware promises of un-tested alternative medical treatments or any medical therapy that remains untested by science. Do not fall prey to the lies and false claims of alternative medical practitioners who seek to cheat you with magical magnets, suspicious serums and tacky treatments. Trust your doctor and science, and accept the validity of scientifically proven medical therapies regardless of how complex and unnatural these things may sometimes seem.
Remember that there are people like Jenny McCarthy in the world who would like nothing more than for you to avoid receiving a flu shot; for her own purposes….be that to sell a book, claim her fame or get her nose picked face back on MTV….there are charlatans, impostors, con artists, frauds and quacks out there who think nothing of causing you harm through making you believe that un-tested alternative medicines and medical treatments are the best and only way to cure you, keep you healthy and improve your performance on the road.
Show Links:http://www.whatstheharm.nethttp://www.jennymccarthybodycount.comhttp://www.sciencebasedmedicine.orgTHANK YOU for your VOTE: http://www.podcastawards.comhttp://www.takethesurvey.com/wizzard“Rattlesnake Oil” the Bad Detectives http://www.baddetectives.co.uk



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Fdip212: Four Hour Marathon Part 1: Why?
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Nov 06, 2009
This is the first part in a series I’ll produce over the next year, regarding my efforts to run a sub four hour marathon.
For me, the goal of running a Marathon in less than 4 hours is important to accomplish for many reasons including self confidence, a feeling that I’ve reached a new level in my running, reclamation of my inner youth, setting an example for my son, earning the respect of those who understand what a sub four means, and being able to look back at my trials and tribulations on the road over the past ten years with a new sense of appreciation for the hard work I’ve put in.
A sub four hour marathon finish will mean that I have stepped it up a notch, even if it’s the only sub four I may ever run; and it will be a personal record that I’ll savor and find pride in with the knowledge that even as a middle aged, middle of the pack slightly asthmatic goofy little podcaster runner: I can do anything.
Show Links:http://heartlinerunners.blogspot.comhttp://runnersroundtable.comhttp://seecoreyrun.blogspot.comhttp://www.takethesurvey.com/wizzard
Four Months to a Four-hour Marathon,UpdatedDare to Dream by Adam Ilami http://www.myspace.com/adamilami



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Fdip211: Gifts, Gadgets and Gizmos for Runners
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Oct 30, 2009
I present for you another one of my annual gadgets and gizmos review shows for some ideas on running gear and Apparatus that you might give your fellow runners for the holidays.
But I also ask you to think about the idea of giving the gift of yourself this holiday season. Maybe, instead of heading to the shopping malls this year, you should head to your calendar and start picking out a day or two a week where you’ll make a point of going out to dinner or have a few beers or cup of coffee with a friend you haven’t spent enough time with this year. Better yet, why not plan to go for a run with a friend?
Life is short fellow runners…you know this; and one of the main obstacles to enjoying this life is all the stuff that we clutter ourselves up with: physical things like geeky Motorola Droid cell-phones, mp3 players, laptops, big screen TV’s and electronic game consoles….I’m not saying that those things aren’t cool: they are; but they pale in comparison to friendship; all we really have to spend here on this planet is time….we convert some of that time into money though employment in order to support our families and live a life with more and better stuff; but the STUFF should not be the purpose of our work...because all we have is time; and we need to use that time in a way that brings joy to ourselves and others.
Show Links:
http://www.garmin.com
http://www.polarusa.com
http://www.petzl.com
http://www.gomotiongear.com
http://www.vibramfivefingers.com
http://www.tptherapy.com
http://www.nathansports.com
http://www.asicsamerica.com
http://www.roadrunnersports.com/rrs/products/TDU001/
http://moeben.com
http://spibelt.com
http://www.educatingforjustice.org/store_main.htm
http://www.runnewengland.blogspot.com
http://www.runningwithghosts.com
http://sites.google.com/site/staten7
http://kellyinmotion.blogspot.com
http://www.takethesurvey.com/wizzard
The song “Gift of Love” was by Joe Colledge http://www.joecolledge.com



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Fdip210: The 4th Annual World Wide Festival of Races
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Oct 23, 2009
I live in a world
Where everyone runs
With this one thing in common
We love to run together
Although we live apart
On a tiny blue bubble in space
Where borders are meaningless
Where friendships are cherished
And our experiences are shared
I live in a world.
Where everyone runs together.
...and on this 4th Annual World Wide Festival of Races, it was indeed: an honor to have run these miles with you.
Show Links:
http://www.worldwidefestivalofraces.com
http://runtodream.web-log.nl/runtodream
http://eddiemarathon.blogspot.com/
The song “All Around the World” was by the band After Son from the Netherlands. http://afterson.hyves.nl



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Fdip209: The 2009 Valley Harvest Half Marathon
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Oct 16, 2009
In the course of a long weekend, my friend Joe and I would explore the coastline and harbors of the Annapolis Valley of Nova Scotia. We’d check out rock formations and earthen cliffs, lighthouses and small finishing villages; tidal plains and earthen dykes. We have lunch at a local German café, we’d investigate an outcropping of Devonian limestone in a place called Morden and taste locally created wine in vineyards around the Valley…in short, we’d see the sites, run the course, and race the race in our excursion around the bay.
This is my race report for the Fourth Annual World Wide Festival of Races and my running of the Wolfeville, Nova Scotia Valley Harvest Half Marathon.
Show Links:
http://www.valleyharvestmarathon.com
http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/2039
http://www.bluedawgsrunning.blogspot.com
The song “Excursion Around the Bay” was by Great Big Sea at http://greatbigsea.com



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Intervals208B: Twenty Questions
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Tue, Oct 13, 2009
In this special episode of Phedippidations Intervals, Joe Steindl interviews podcast host and Run Net Community member: Steve Runner, asking him 20 of the most mind numbing, heart revealing questions that listeners to his goofy little podcast have always NEEDED to know.



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Fdip208: Cheers from the Third Planet
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Oct 09, 2009
Nothing lasts forever in this physical universe of ours. We can talk about the eternal world to come, the kingdom of Heaven, Nirvana, Tian, the Celestial, Terrestrial and Telestial kingdoms, the six heavenly planes of Hinduism and the 8 levels of heaven in Islam…but this planet that we ran upon today, this place: will not last.
The Earth is 4.5 billion years old, and in 7.59 billion years from today, it will be dragged from our solar orbit by our sun which will have grown to be 256 times as big as it is today: and the race course of the World Wide Festival of Races will be consumed in fire, forever.
But I have to wonder, what will our evil Robot overlords: or any advanced alien civilization that learns about us over the next 7.59 billion years: come to think about us?
Will they struggle to understand why we went to war with one another?
Why we murdered and killed each other?
Will they dedicate eons in trying to figure out why we’d gather millions of each other into concentration camps and systematically torture and destroy each other?
Would they try to figure out why we’d kidnap a noble people from a beautiful savannah, stuff them into sailing ships and sell them as property to wealthy people in a new land?
What would they say about a shoe company that treated their workers as slaves, paying them only a few dollars a day and not caring that they had to live in slums while their CEO and sports star promoters earned millions without concern?
I have an answer: they’d think WE WERE STUPID.
Yeah, that’s what they’d think: they’d have come to the conclusion that our species had evolved to suffer from a form of brain damage. They’d be happy to know that our planet was about to be consumed by the Sun…they’d consider us as a biological disease in the universe; unintelligent and defective.
An intelligent and advanced alien species would pick apart our genome, see that we differed by only ZERO POINT TWO PERCENT, and conclude that whatever caused us to hate each other: it couldn’t be because of the color of our skin, or from what continent on the little blue bubble we originated from… there could be no other explanation: humans had to be stupid.
But if they could see us now, today: running this World Wide Festival of Races; they’d think differently. They’d have to. Because today, we’re celebrating our community regardless of our differences; in fact: today we celebrate our differences.
This planet is small. It’s a tiny blue bubble of life cruising through the cold vacuum of space, and it’s the only place that we’ve been able to find which can support life. Think of this Earth as a life-raft, adrift on it’s own in the Universe…it’s more than just our home: it’s all that we have…that and each other.
Today you’re running in an event that celebrates that: we live on a small little rocky life raft, but we have each other…to care for, to cheer for, and to encourage. Our lives on this rock are short, but they should be long enough for us to experience love, joy and peace with each other as friends. Fellow runners: this wasn’t some small thing you did today, and today wasn’t just another run: you participated, you proved by your example that whatever differences we have in thought, opinion, and observation is what makes our time here, in this Universe special and interesting. We are so much alike, you and I…and those little differences that we do have, are something to savor: like the nose of a Cabernet Franc over that of a Malbec…they’re both vitis vinifera, but what makes them different is remarkable, and when you blend them together…well, my friends….you get something magical, like a mertiage or a Bordeaux where the sum of it’s ingredients combine to make a wine worthy of sharing with the world.
We are like those grapes, our differences enhance the flavor of our community, and as you run your World Wide Festival of Races today…think about how much we have to give to the world around us….in living this lifestyle, of savoring our time on the road, of sharing our experiences from the perspective of our own bodies and how we have no room for hate in our lives…not when there are miles to be run, and friends to be made.
Show Links:
http://worldwidefestivalofraces.com
The song “Lucky” was by Black Lab pick up your FREE 3 Black Lab songs (from the album “Give Us Sugar”) at http://blacklabworld.com/marathon
The song “The World We Are a’Racin” was by the band “Moneypenny, Walker, Chopper and Scott” with apologies to Mr. Dylan; lyrics by Steve Chopper (http://www.amilewith.me.uk ), vocals by Phil Moneypenny (http://www.runcast.tv ) and some annoying American who apparently thinks he can sing, along with instrumentals and vocals by Gordon Scott. Check out the musical talent of a good friend and bad boy of running at http://tiree.blogspot.com
Think Global, Run Local.



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Fdip207: Chi-Running
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Oct 02, 2009
ChiRunning is a new technique that incorporates traditional Lydiard style training with moving more efficiently, more in tune to the way our bodies were intended to run. It requires and provides a special sense of self awareness of our environment, our bodies and our movement through space. To practice ChiRunning is to embrace a style of running that gives more emphasis to running form and less focus on speed.
ChiRunning makes many promises about your health, freedom from running injury, better self contemplative on the road meditation and with all that: peace of mind. It’s an excellent example of a revolutionary running technique designed to improve your condition and performance on the road. While the science is inconclusive on the benefits of Tai Chi, the personal observations and impressions of its practitioners gives weight to the argument that it’s good for you…and that has a direct reflection on the benefits and worth of ChiRunning: a program designed to help you run long, run strong, and feel one with the road.
Show Links:http://www.chirunning.comhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_UYkAB18wgshttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e-zrH6IOTQIhttp://www.webmd.com/fitness-exercise/guide/mindful-chi-runninghttp://shockofthenews.comwww.nurseontherun.comhttp://worldwidefestivalofraces.comGoody Bag Submissions: goodybag@worldwidefestivalofraces.com“Peace of Mind” by Finniston http://www.myspace.com/finniston



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Fdip206: TO: Steve Runner FROM: You
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Sep 25, 2009
I read every one of your emails, although I’m sorry to admit that I can’t always respond. I want to, I really do…were this production my full time job; email responding would be a welcome addition to my weekly task list; but like you: I have a family to feed, a career to attend to, a sick dog to worry about, my training to embark in, injury to overcome and this podcast that I feel called to produce (however scary that notion might sound).
So I’ll respond as best I can, right here on the show….and if you email me, or leave a comment at SteveRunner.com, the discussion forum or at http://twitter.com/steverunner I’ll always read what you write; ALWAYS…and I’ll do my best to answer; even if only here on this goofy little podcast.
Show Links:http://www.winelibrarytv.comhttp://www.winefornewbies.comhttp://www.graperadio.comhttp://www.3wineguys.comhttp://goosecross.com/go/podcasthttp://www.clovispointwines.com/http://www.macariwines.comhttp://www.teamsweat.orghttp://froggietedrunsboston.blogspot.comhttp://worldwidefestivalofraces.comGoody Bag Submissions: goodybag@worldwidefestivalofraces.com“Lawyers Guns and Money” by Lance Larson http://www.lancelarsonmusic.com
THIS IS THE LAST CALL FOR “SHOUTS OF ENCOURAGEMENT” RECORD SOMETHING AND SEND IT TO ME steve@steverunner.com OR CALL (513)-397-0525 AND LEAVE A MESSAGE ON THE EXTRA MILE PODCAST LINE!



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Fdip205: A Radical Plan for Health Care
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Sep 18, 2009
Health Care is a system of rules and services, offered to help individuals become and remain healthy. Here in the United States, the term Health Care has caused a lot of stress and anger about how our government is going to provide these services and how much each of us will have to pay. I’m here today, offering a different, more effective and certainly more personal solution to what’s been called the American Health Care Crisis…it might seem a bit revolutionary, possibly radical for me to suggest a plan that calls for us to become personally responsible for our own health by protecting ourselves from influenza, eating well and exercising at a certain level and duration each week.
We can chose to be healthy; it’s not a right protected under any governments constitution, but there is a moral obligation for us to live healthier lives so we can contribute in a positive way to the society in which we live. This radical plan for health care is far less expensive than any program the government could offer, and it’s guaranteed to work: giving you a healthy body and consequently a happier life for the rest of your life.
Show Links:http://www.fitnessrocks.org/http://www.teamsweat.orghttp://www.educatingforjustice.orghttp://www.oxfam.org.auhttp://worldwidefestivalofraces.comGoody Bag Submissions: goodybag@worldwidefestivalofraces.comAsk Nike CEO and President Mark.Parker@nike.com what they’re doing to ensure that overseas workers are paid fair wages.Please follow Team Sweat: http://twitter.com/TeamSweat
“Big Strong Man” was by The Brobdingnagian Bards http://www.thebards.net/



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Fdip204: Team Sweat
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Sep 11, 2009
"There is a discrimination in this world and slavery and slaughter and starvation. Governments repress their people; and millions are trapped in poverty while the nation grows rich; and wealth is lavished on armaments everywhere. These are differing evils, but they are common works of man. They reflect the imperfection of human justice, the inadequacy of human compassion, our lack of sensibility toward the sufferings of our fellows. But we can perhaps remember - even if only for a tirne - that those who live with us are our brothers; that they share with us the same short moment of life; that they seek - as we do - nothing but the chance to live out their lives in purpose and happiness, winning what satisfaction and fulfillment they can.”
- Senator Robert F. Kennedy
Please listen to this special episode of Phedippidations, and ask your friends (runners and non-runners alike) to listen to this interview with Jim Keady from Team Sweat and Educating for Justice.
If you never listen to another of my podcast episodes again, I’ll ask you to at least listen to this one with an open heart and mind.
As a member of our Run Net Community, you have the power and responsibility to force Nike (and other companies who take advantage of the poor) to treat their workers with dignity and respect. Help Jim Keady and become a member of Team Sweat: to direct and encourage Nike to “just do it” and pay fair wages to their workers.
Show Links:
http://www.teamsweat.org
http://www.educatingforjustice.org
http://www.oxfam.org.au
Recommended Reading:
When Corporations Rule the World – by David C Korten
Confessions of an Economic HitMan – by John Perkins
Fair Trade for All: How Trade Can Promote Development – by Joseph E. Stiglitz
Made in Indonesia: Indonesian Workers Since Suharto – by Dan La Botz
Let Nike CEO and President Mark.Parker@nike.com know how you feel about Nike Sweatshops.
FOLLOW TEAM SWEAT:
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Team-Sweat/50908420352 http://twitter.com/TeamSweat
PLEASE donate what you can to the 501(c)(3) non-profit tax exempt Team Sweat.
There is an immediate and urgent need for $3K so that Team Sweat can promote presentations and grass roots organizations at College and High School Campuses, as well as in Indonesia. Contribute online or send a check paid to the order of “Educating for Justice”. Mail to:
Educating for Justice106 Meadow Point LanePoint Pleasant, NJ 08742
The song “Sweat” was by Darren Geffre http://www.nativesinger.com



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Fdip203: The Pose Running Method
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Sep 04, 2009
The Pose Method of running incorporates some interesting concepts that may be worth your consideration. It’s a biomechanical model that has you landing on your mid-foot with your supporting joints flexed at impact and hamstrings used to pull your foot from the ground, using gravity to move you forward. It’s a method that takes a lot of practice, some say it can take years to perfect: but the promises are impressive: stronger, faster and injury free running.
Like any running technique, this is something you should look into more; and not rely on this podcast introduction as your sole exposure to the method. Find the way to use your body to it’s fullest without moving in such a way that you’ll get injured and you’ll be closer to becoming the runner and good animal you were always meant to be.
Show Links:http://www.posetech.comhttp://runnerinlv.blogspot.comhttp://vofmarathon.ning.comFdip Blog of the Week: http://runningwithfish.blogspot.comThe song “Hole in the Sky” was by Black Lab http://blacklabworld.com



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Fdip202: Running Legend Paavo Nurmi
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Aug 28, 2009
Some called him Suuri Vaikenija "A Great Silent One" but to the world he was known as “The Flying Finn”. During the 1920s, he was the best middle and long distance runner in the world, setting world records at distances between 1500 m and 20 km. He is often considered the greatest Track & Field athlete of all time: This is Paavo Nurmi. From
Paavo we learn the importance of complete dedication; while most of us seek to lead a balanced life as a way to achieve happiness, Paavo Nurmi was all about focusing on a single goal: he yearned for perfection, he demanded nothing less of himself than excellence and while this unbalance in his life may not have given him the joy that he might otherwise have had; it did give him one thing: victory.
Show Links:
http://www.paavonurmensaatio.fi
http://www.gate.net/~rwms/EvoEvidence.html
http://theextramilepodcast.com
http://www.carreradelcsic.com
Program the Extra Mile Podcast phone number into your cell phone: 513-397-0525
http://www.worldwidefestivalofraces.com
Fdip Blog of the Week: http://barefoot-angieb.blogspot.com
The song “Good Day” was by Black Lab http://blacklabworld.com



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Fdip201: The Dysevolutional Runner
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Aug 21, 2009
We need to recognize the fact that, through cultural changes, we have evolved. It is through modern humanities incompatibility with our natural environment that we are beginning to dysevolve. The Dysevolutional Runner is one who lives in this environment of fast food non-pedestrian and embraces her or his inner hunter gatherer.
Professor Daniel Lieberman, Professor of Anthropology at Harvard University, says that "Dysevolution is a positive feedback loop." When we work to treat the symptoms of our lack of physical exercise and don’t take to the roads and run, we are making the problem worse.
That’s why it’s so important for those of us who run to be positive examples for others; to be the good animals we have evolved into: homo sapien hunter gatherers endowed with the ability to run long distances to find our food across the open savannah; to serve Gods purpose for making the world a better place with these bodies that He has created through the process of evolution.
Show Links:
Mesa 1st NazareneCare of “Donation for Penny”955 E. UniversityMesa, AZ 85203
http://www.worldwidefestivalofraces.com Fdip Blog of the Week: http://www.christopherspenn.comThe song “Not Too Late” was by Black Lab http://blacklabworld.com
**WARNING**
This episode ends with another one of those “angry rants” that I sometimes get into. In the course of this rant I will describe a certain board chairman and his company as EVIL.
I took a few days after I recorded that to think deeply about what I had said. I re-listened to my rant with the idea that I might want to remove it from the show; and decided (in the end) to leave it as is; because after spending many hours of doing research on the subject (as well as refreshing my understanding of the concept of what evil is:(“1. morally bad or wrong; wicked, malevolent, sinful. 2. causing an undesirable condition, as ruin, injury, or pain; harmful, injurious”) I came to the honest conclusion that my premise regarding the owners/leaders of this corporation and indeed the corporation itself was, indeed EVIL.
Defamation: the malicious and false communication given to present a negative image of an individual, product, group, government or nation.
The burden of proof to my declaration that the individual and company mentioned in this podcast is EVIL, is with that person and company. They have to prove that they are NOT the cause for the human abuse and suffering found in the overwhelming evidence.
I don’t consider myself morally superior to these parties; I’m just calling it as I see it. It’s not fun to toss around the “E” word; and I’m a big believer in repentance and reconciliation; and this company is NOT the ONLY giant freakin’ corporation guilty of being EVIL…but they are the biggest and most prominent and thus fair game for asking of them the question “Why?”
My advice? Don’t listen to the ending diatribe of this episode on a full stomach; some of you might not like to hear it. I admittedly went a bit over the top on this one, even though my facts are verifiable. I’ll probably regret this; but I’m only human: and I got really angry about this issue.
See if you get angry as well. Go to http://www.teamsweat.org



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Fdip200: A Goofy Little PodCast
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Aug 14, 2009
In a way, the reason I produce Phedippidations is so I can make the world just a tiny bit better than it was before I started to produce this podcast. I understand that this is something I’ll most likely fail at and that my efforts here might be considered a colossal waste of time, however noble and altruistic this might seem. BUT: there’s always that small conditional word “IF”.
As in: IF I can inspire just one human being, who might by accident listen to this goofy little podcast and become inspired to rise off the couch of doom to live a better and more happier life: then fellow runners; I’m here to tell you: MISSION FRIGGIN ACCOMPLISHED! That will be a day for a celebratory glass of Malbec: because that’s all it takes: just change the world for a single human being among us, and we will have satisfied our purpose in this life…we will have made an improvement through our examples….that’s the challenge: life your life in a way that inspires others to lace up their shoes and take to the road with us, and you’ll have made the universe just a little bit better than it was before they were so inspired.
This life is a gift, and my reasons for producing Phedippidations is both to celebrate the gift and serve a purpose that is much MUCH more important than this middle aged, middle of the pack, slightly asthmatic fellow runner.
Why do I produce Phedippidations each week? Because, in a way, although it’s not easy to explain, and certainly not at noble as it sounds…that’s what feel like I’m called to do.
Thank you so much for supporting me over these past four years and 200 episodes. It is both a pleasure and an honor to call you a fellow runner.
- Steve
Show Links:http://trueconfessionsofamedicalscholar.blogspot.comhttp://theextramilepodcast.comProgram the Extra Mile Podcast phone number into your cell phone: 513-397-0525 http://www.worldwidefestivalofraces.com Fdip Blog of the Week: http://certainintelligence.blogspot.comThe song “Like I Used To” was by Black Lab http://blacklabworld.com



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Fdip199: Producing Phedippidations
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Aug 07, 2009
A podcast should be an expression of yourself, with a deep and open honesty that reveals all of the good things in your heart, as well as your weaknesses. A podcast should not be a “show” per se, it should be a conversation: it should have as many audible elements that fit your personality and the truth of who you are. Fear of being honest is perceived by the listeners…and if you’re doing it right: you’ll not think of those who subscribe to your podcast as mere “listeners”, they’re fellow runners…lending you their ears and their time as you share something of each other through a very personal and intimate new form of media.
This is my podcast, Phedippidations…but it’s also your podcast…and if you’ll take the time to produce your own audio content for your fellow runners to run with; you’ll be producing something that we will feel ownership of: that’s because we’re really, honestly, truthfully sharing the road with these episodes…encouraging each other with words, prayers, hopes, dreams and an all too realistic experience in the Run Net Community.
Show Links:http://www.libsyn.comhttp://www.podcast411.comhttp://www.podcamp.orghttp://marcirunsthemarathon.blogspot.comhttp://groups.google.com/group/fdipgrouphttp://www.facebook.com/phedippidationshttp://www.runfromthesunaz.comFdip Blog of the Week: http://carpathiankittenloss.blogspot.comThe song “The You and Me Show” was by Alicia Marie http://www.myspace.com/aliciamarie



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Fdip198: Walking – by Henry David Thoreau
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sat, Aug 01, 2009
Today, I’m going to read you an abridged version of another book by Thoreau, this one titled Walking, which Thoreau written in 1861. This was an essay that was presented as a lecture and published after his death in 1862, this essay, lecture and book has become one of THE most important written works in the environmental movement.
So why am I reading this on a podcast about running? Is it because I canoed up the Allagash River Waterway in the Maine North Woods where Thoreau himself spent time and experienced the beauty of the wilderness? Partly, yes. But it’s also because I think his message is important, especially today where technology is daring to alter the very nature of our tiny blue bubble in space. This Earth is all we have, the other celestial possibilities for distant continents such as the Moon and Mars are volatile places or rock and rust, deadly radiation and bitter cold.
Henry David Thoreau saw the beauty of nature and sought to impress upon his readers a desire to preserve it. “….In Wildness is the preservation of the World” he wrote. And on the Allagash River, in the wilderness that he so loved; I can think of no better way to tell you of his thoughts, opinions, observations and rambling diatribes.
You and I are fellow runners; and we run across the same blue bubble that Thoreau walked upon. Listen carefully to his message and think about how precious our world really is.
Show Links:http://www.gutenberg.orgThe song “The Wild Rover” was by the band Bill Grogans Goat http://billgrogansgoat.com http://www.worldwidefestivalofraces.comhttp://twitter.com/steverunner



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Fdip197: The Second Question and Answer Show
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Jul 24, 2009
A conversation is an informal talk with someone about opinions, ideas, feelings or everyday matters. A good conversation is an interaction between two or more people, where questions are either explicitly asked or implied.
For many of you, over the past four years you have been having a conversation with a middle aged, middle of the pack, slightly asthmatic fellow runner, but I assure you that that conversation was not one way. And while I admit I’m not able to answer my emails as much as I’d like (not due to the increased listenership to this podcast I assure you; rather it’s a function of my work life getting in the way as it does) this episode, and those which I’ll produce a few times each year is my attempt to respond to things that are on your mind: to give you my impression, opinion, or researched response: because while I have been on the road for 10 years; in my mind: I’m still very much a newbie to this sport. And as for being your running partner over these past four years: I feel it’s only polite to answer any personal questions you might have for me…I mean, why not…we’ve been through some amazing times together fellow runners…good and bad, hot and cold, triumphant and in defeat.Show Links:http://burgerontherun.blogspot.comhttp://runnewengland.blogspot.comhttp://www.zonefivesoftware.comhttp://www.buckeyeoutdoors.comhttp://gowagon.comhttp://twitter.com/steverunnerhttp://www.rundervrun.blogspot.comhttp://www.giant-squid-audio-lab.comhttp://www.thecrazyrunner.comhttp://www.runnersroundtable.comhttp://www.drusy.blogspot.comhttp://www.facebook.com/phedippidationshttp://www.amilewith.me.ukFdip Blog of the Week: http://runfairchild.blogspot.comhttp://www.worldwidefestivalofraces.comThe song “What Have You Learned” was by Carbon Leaf http://www.carbonleaf.com



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Fdip196: Acclimatization and Performance
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Jul 17, 2009
When summer rears its oppressive head of high humidity and heat, fellow runners must take to the road with the solar conditions in mind and heed the warnings to ensure a safe and comfortable run. Acclimatization is an important precursor to taking to the hotter than usual roads, and the better our bodies can adapt to the heat, the greater our performance will be once we put these bodies to the test in a race.
There will come a day when, here in the Northeast, the days will shorten, the leaves will fall and the cold harsh reality of winter will settle around us: but not today, because today the earth tilts sunward in our favor, today the road heats up and our bodies have to adapt to the time before us: because our running goes on despite the conditions that exist outside our doors: we are runners, this is what we do, and our bodies have the incredible ability to adapt to the climate which occurs here in the summertime.
Show Links:http://highlandshashers.blogspot.com
Fdip Blog of the Week: http://www.runblogger.comhttp://www.worldwidefestivalofraces.comThe song “Summertime” was by Brother Love http://www.brotherloverocks.comhttp://www.twitter.com/steverunner



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Fdip195: The Bunion Derby
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Jul 10, 2009
The Bunion Derby was an event like no other, and there will never be another like it. While there have been many cross continental races since 1928, none were organized in the way that C.C. Pyle had organized the event: it was an endurance race, a circus and a harsh and unforgiving competition.
In his book “C. C. Pyles Amazing Foot Race: the true story of the 1928 coast to coast run across America, by Geoff Williams, published by Rodale Press…the author writes “As difficult as his amazing foot race was, for all the car collisions and nervous breakdowns involved, calling it the Bunion Derby was never quite accurate. As winter turned to spring in 1928, the runners suffered blisters, brusies, boils, shin splints, charley horses, sore toes, broken and fallen arches, corns and calluses: but not one of them developed a bunion.”
Show Links:Fdip Blog of the Week: http://rojrunning.blogspot.comhttp://www.amilewith.me.ukhttp://shockofthenews.comThe song “Human Race” was by Darius Lux http://www.dariuslux.com



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Fdip194: Athletic Arthritic?
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Jul 03, 2009
There’s this rumor going around that distance runners are more prone to developing arthritis, a medical condition from by the Greek word “arthro” meaning joint and “itis” meaning inflammation. Many non-runners and medical laypersons have assumed that the constant repetitive pounding forces on our joints, especially in the knees, as we run are too much for our bodies to absorb. In this weeks episode I’ll go through some of the scientific medical research on the subject and present an answer to the question: are runners at higher risk for developing arthritis?
NOTE: I didn’t want to make a huge deal out of it during this episode, but this marks my fourth year producing Phedippidations and I wanted to be sure to thank you, at least here in the show notes, for your friendship, kindness and support over these past 1,461 days since episode #1. It continues to be an honor to run with you.
Run long and taper!
- Steve
Show Links:http://www.drlarrysmith.comhttp://edmundy.blogspot.comFdip Blog of the Week: http://runbif.blogspot.comFeatured http://www.runningpodcasts.org PodCast: “Run Yank Run”http://twitter.com/wwforhttp://www.worldwidefestivalofraces.comThe song “Down to the Bone” by Edwin Holt http://topcatrecords.comhttp://winefornewbies.net



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Fdip193: Running with Ear Candy
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sat, Jun 27, 2009
From a small island in the middle of southern Maine’s Sebago Lake, I present for you my annual review of some of my favorite songs from the past year of Phedippidation episodes. This week, I’m on vacation: giving my ankle a chance to heal and my soul a break from stress as I enjoy my family, lapping waves, a few good books and delicious wine.
“Veni, Vidi, Vici”
Show Links:“Terra Nova” by Jim Fidler at jimfidler.com.“Be Okay” by Ingrid Michelson at http://www.ingridmichaelson.com “Pizza Day” by Jonathan Coulton at http://www.jonathancoulton.com“I Know You’re There” and “A Cautionary Tail” by Matthew Ebel at http://matthewebel.com“Win At All Costs” by Man Bites God at http://www.manbitesgod.com“Run to Your Grave” by The Mae Shi at http://www.mae-shi.com“Ones and Os” by Geoff Smith at http://thegeoffsmith.com“Broken Heart” by “Black Lab” at http://blacklabworld.com



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Fdip192: Theseus’s Paradox and Other Thoughts
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Jun 19, 2009
Beware the contents of this episode, ye who come here to listen to the runner boy run! In this episode, I go out for a run and just let my mind flow, talking about a few things that may or may not have to do with running.
Of particular interest (to me at least) is the contemplation of the ship of Theseus’s, the discussion of which might may you say “Huh?”
We are made of stuff that has a limited shelf-life, but most of the atoms in your body will be completely replaced in just 10 years time, and if you believe in an eternal life after this stuff we wear is gone; then you’ll not worry so much about these bodies of ours breaking down over time: because time is just a construct and we all have a limitless warrantee.
Show Links:http://the22miler.blogspot.com/http://www.teampointtwo.com
Fdip Blog of the Week: http://lacyhansen.blogspot.comThe song “What Are We?” by “Candygram for Mongo” http://www.candygramformongo.com



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Fdip191: Me Heart Takes a Beating
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Jun 12, 2009
This episode is a review of a study published last month in the American Journal of Cardiology titled “Relation of Biomarkers and Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging After Marathon Running”.
We use terms and phrases such as “you’ve got to have heart” and “don’t go breakin’ my heart” as a reference to the symbolic vessel we have within us to harbor our capacity to love.
In reality the heart is an important organ, strategically located in the center of our bodies to provide oxygen rich blood throughout the vessels of our body as a means to sustain life. While these bodies we inhabit are amazing creations, capable of running great distances…it’s important to take care. We’re all soft and squishy creatures; resilient yet fragile, strong yet capable of suffering injury…when you pull a leg muscle or sprain an ankle: you can apply ice and deep massage: it’s not so easy to do that with our hearts.
Training for any distance, any kind of race event: especially for distances like a marathon requires proper training; many of the experts suggest that you don’t even start training to run a marathon until you’ve been out on the road consistently for a full year.
Never, EVER start a marathon training program until you’re doctor gives you the green light…it’s one thing to have to deal with shin splints and muscle soreness, but your heart needs to be prepared for the stress you’ll put it under; out there on the road.
Show Links:http://the22miler.blogspot.com/http://www.duffrunner.blogspot.comhttp://www.teampointtwo.comhttp://worldwidefestivalofraces.comhttp://runnersroundtable.comhttp://twitter.com/steverunnerFdip Blog of the Week: http://highheelrunner.blogspot.comFeatured http://www.runningpodcasts.org PodCast: Fusion ViewThe song “Listen to Your Heartbeat” by Lance Larson (with Bon Jovi) http://www.lancelarsonmusic.com



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Fdip190: A Longer Life with Purpose
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Jun 05, 2009
As simple and exhausting as it sounds: running can be your purpose in life; and if you’re already a runner as I suspect you are: then running can be a purpose you can give to others, by asking them to join us: by making this sport a game, by thinking of it as play and by embracing a lifestyle that helps you to improve the duration and quality of your life.
It’s short fellow runners, this life of ours is far too short…but it should be long enough; and when you find yourself with a purpose to live it, you’ll have savored each experience: you’ll have lived your life to the top, and you’ll have achieved the satisfaction of knowing that your life is not ruled by the random and chaos: your life has meaning, and above all your life has purpose.
Show Links:http://the22miler.blogspot.com/http://www.irunformylife.blogspot.com/http://www.teampointtwo.comhttp://worldwidefestivalofraces.comhttps://www.kintera.org/faf/donorReg/donorPledge.asp?ievent=156947&supid=183491774http://www.challengedathletes.org/The song “Buying Time” was by Great Big Sea http://greatbigsea.com



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Fdip189: The Other Newton’s Laws
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, May 29, 2009
They called him Arthur “Greatheart” Newton. He had been a runner in his twenties, but gave it up after a time, taking to the road again 12 years later when, at the age of 38, he ran his first Comrades Marathon. His contribution to distance running is great in that he chose to use common sense to guide his training methods, rather than formulas found in books on the subject of running. Dr. Tim Noakes, in his book “Lore of Running” outlines 9 of his principles of training that helped to guide Newton’s success in our sport, and revolutionized the way that coaches trained their athletes
Show Links:http://wyotri.blogspot.comhttp://www.teampointtwo.comhttp://worldwidefestivalofraces.comFdip Blog of the Week: http://www.seegirlrun.comFeatured http://www.runningpodcasts.org PodCast: Run Vegan RunThe song “Ghost In Your Mind” was by Black Lab http://blacklabworld.com



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Fdip188: John Michaels Puppy
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, May 22, 2009
This is one of those strange podcast episodes that merges a little of my personal life (you’ll hear us picking up our new Dog Indiana and bringing him home) along with some practical tips about exercising your dog and this history of the beagle.
It goes without saying that I have a lot to learn about dogs; and puppies specifically. While my wife has always owned a dog, growing up: this experience is new to the rest of us in my household. Will I make mistakes: count on it: he’ll end up chewing all my running shoes, leaving squishy wet mementoes as he marks his territory around the house: both inside and out and will undoubtedly follow me around the house as I try to get some work done with the less than few hours that he’ll allow me to sleep, which might beg the question: is this all worth it?
It is worth it to share your day with a creature who loves you unconditionally with all his heart, it is worth it to welcome into your home a being who constantly reminds you that it’s not the stress of life and work that is important it’s play: PLAY is all that really matters, and play is the most important thing we’ll do today and every day. Is it worth it to suffer the weariness of sleep deprivation, the indignation of having to take a puppy out to pee at 2 in the morning, the incontinence of veterinary visits thousands on food, care, crates, accessories and medication? Is it worth it to have what was starting to be a fairly comfortable life of leisure usurped by an animal that demands attention while giving devotion?
Yeah, I’d say that’s a pretty good deal.
Show Links:http://twitter.com/bladerunhttp://www.hockomockswamp.comhttp://runningthenarrowpath.blogspot.comCONGRATULATIONS!: http://itsarunningthing.blogspot.comhttp://www.teampointtwo.comhttp://worldwidefestivalofraces.comFdip Blog of the Week: http://lifeisagift-run.blogspot.comFeatured http://www.runningpodcasts.org PodCast: A Mile with MeThe song “Talkin’ Bout My Dogs” was by Boo Boo Davis http://www.booboodavis.com



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Fdip187: The Running Evolution
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, May 15, 2009
In this episode I present for you the major findings of Professor Daniel Lieberman of the Biological Anthropology department at Harvard University and Professor Dennis Bramble from the University of Utah in their 2004 paper published in the journal Nature titled “Endurance running and the evolution of Homo”. In this paper, they make the powerful case that “The fossil evidence suggests that endurance running is a derived capability of the genus Homo, originating about 2 million years ago, and may have been instrumental in the evolution of the human body form.”
We are by our very nature: endurance runners, meant to run for long distances. The evidence is overwhelming and conclusive: you and I were born to run.
Show Links:http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2004-11/uou-hrm111204.phphttp://www.fas.harvard.edu/~skeleton/pdfs/2004e.pdfhttp://www.smh.com.au/national/dead-babys-parents-ignored-advice-qc-20090504-asmt.html?page=1http://whatstheharm.net/homeopathy.htmlhttp://ihatetheapft.com/http://www.runningbebe.comhttp://www.teampointtwo.comFdip Blog of the Week: http://yumkerun.blogspot.com/Featured http://www.runningpodcasts.org PodCast: Fifty Counting DownThe song “Evolution Rocks” was by Overman http://www.overman.info



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Fdip186: A Life of Present Defense
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, May 08, 2009
A runner lives for the moment, and can rise to call of her or his own character to do what we know we have to do, for our bodies, for our training, for the promise we made to ourselves some time ago. We will have bad days, we will be haunted by the memories of a 4:01:31 finish in Philadelphia back in November of 2007, and we’ll look to our next marathons where we dream of running a sub four…but still, on those icy, rainy, blisteringly hot and humid days when work was a nightmare and everyone wants to carve a little chunk out of us...we find ourselves lacing up our shoes and living the life of a runner: a life nothing short: of present defense.
Show Links:http://www.redhairedgirl.comhttp://www.yarnharlot.cahttp://sjtony.blogspot.comhttp://www.teampointtwo.comhttp://www.runningpodcasts.orghttp://www.worldwidefestivalofraces.comhttp://www.sciencebasedmedicine.comFdip Blog of the Week: http://longrunblog.blogspot.comFeatured http://www.runningpodcasts.org PodCast: Lagan Runner PodcastThe song “The Life I Am Trying to Find” was by Adam and the Walter Boys http://www.myspace.com/adamandthewalterboys



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Fdip185: The Run-Net Community
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, May 01, 2009
Ours is a social network of fellow runners who are using new media and the power of what has become known as Web 2.0 – a second generation of web development and design that facilitates communication, collaboration and above all: sharing of thoughts, opinions, observations and yes, even rambling diatribes.
There’s this question that philosophers and scientists, artists, writers and dreamers have asked for many centuries when they looked above into the heavens. That question is this: ARE WE ALONE?
The question is intended to inquire about the validity of the Drake equation and the possibility of intelligent life, or any life on worlds other than our own. It’s a question that, in it’s asking, evokes a sense of loneliness, as if we are adrift on a tiny blue bubble in space, far from communities in distant galaxies. If I had to guess, I’d say that there is life out there, and very likely intelligent life of some kind: I just don’t think our world and even the life that swarms upon it is entirely unique and special. If life got started here, it has to have started elsewhere, that’s just good science in search of good evidence.
But the notion that we are alone? That’s just silly, because as long as we have each other…as long as there are ways for us to experience a community together: no matter where on the tiny blue bubble we stand, we cannot and will not be alone. That’s more than just good science and logical reasoning: that’s a functioning reality based on many lines of evidence, not the least of which is found in the obvious fact that you’re listening to me right now on a podcast called Phedippidations, and many of us are running, together.
Show Links:http://completerunning.comhttp://runningfromthereaper.comhttp://www.runningpodcasts.orghttp://theextramilepodcast.comhttp://www.runnersroundtable.comhttp://www.drusy.blogspot.comhttp://www.buckeyeoutdoors.comhttp://gowagon.comwww.worldwidefestivalofraces.comwww.runcast.tvhttp://www.racewithpurpose.orghttp://www.planet3rry.comhttp://unholylandnews.blogspot.comhttp://point1of1percent.blogspot.comhttp://the22miler.blogspot.comhttp://www.teampointtwo.comhttp://catholiccitywithzina.blogspot.comwww.rundervrun.blogspot.comFdip Blog of the Week: http://copiaverborum.wordpress.comFeatured http://www.runningpodcasts.org PodCast: Lagan Runner PodcastThe song “Foot in Your Door” was by Geoff Smith at http://thegeoffsmith.com



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Fdip184: The 113th Boston Marathon
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Apr 24, 2009
In this episode I will be completely honest and open up a little to tell you some things I’ve not previously revealed about me, and will run the 113th Boston Marathon with you. A marathon is a very open, public and sincere physical event that puts you out there: for better or worse, revealing all of your weaknesses, as well as physical and mental pressure points. A marathon forces you to face yourself in a very public and very introspective way.
I wasn’t supposed to run this race, and when I was a child the kids on the playground who once laughed at me when I dropped the ball said that I could never do such a thing. But today, I’m running a marathon…an event that is as much an analogy for life as anything you could cover in 26.2 miles. It correlates perfectly mile after mile for every period of your life, from cradle to grave: and it gives you the opportunity to do something special, amazing, inspirational and impressive.
Show Links:http://www.bostonmarathon.orghttp://www.teampointtwo.comhttp://www.worldwidefestivalofraces.comThe song “Curra Road” was by Ger Wolfe http://www.gerwolfe.comThe song “I’m Shipping up to Boston” was by The Dropkick Murphy’s http://www.dropkickmurphys.com



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Fdip183: Boston = The Worlds Greatest Marathon
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Wed, Apr 15, 2009
I do not make my case here with an elitist attitude. I make my case with sound facts which, from my perspective, lends evidence to the fact that the Boston Marathon is, without a doubt and lacking hesitation from my lips to your ears: THE WORLDS GREATEST MARATHON.I made a statement on this podcast, three years or so ago regarding why it is that I’m a runner. Many reasons come to mind; but the one that always rises first and foremost in my thinking might not be one that others would expect from a soon to be twenty-time marathoner: I run because I love pizza and with Boston’s North End of wonderful Italian neighborhoods, from which my family is descended, I run towards Boston with the hope that there’s a slice waiting for me at the end.Show Links:www.americasbestonline.net/marathon.htmlhttp://www.bostonmarathon.orghttp://www.worldwidefestivalofraces.comFdip Blog of the Week: http://keepmovingkate.blogspot.com/Featured http://www.runningpodcasts.org PodCast: Adam 20The song “Pizza Day” was by Jonathan Coulton http://www.jonathancoulton.com



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Fdip182: Running Legend: Jacqueline Gareau
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Apr 10, 2009
There’s something special that marks an elite athlete as a true running legend. It’s more than just their athletic appearance, their healthy bodies and the way they carry themselves when they enter a room. A running legend is someone who has a very humble confidence. Their eyes, voices and motions speak of having worked harder than most of us could ever imagine to reach a brief moment in their lives where they understood that they were experiencing something that only the very dedicated and passionate person could ever hope to experience. They are living examples of what we could be as good animals and good human beings.
Jacqueline Gareau is a running legend because she had that moment of glory stolen from her; but in her heart she knew what she had done that day. Her running is her art, and she showed us on a Spring day in Boston the a true champion celebrates victory in her heart, holds nothing back, and forgives silly transgressions…and when it came to her sport, Jacqueline Gareau made running seem effortless.
Show Links:http://www.davidblaikie.com/david_blaikie/boston/baa_1980.htmhttp://michiganrunner.tvhttp://www.runningpodcasts.org/http://www.worldwidefestivalofraces.comhttp://theextramilepodcast.comProgram your phone for The Extra Mile: (513)-397-0525http://www.cff.orghttp://www.prolifedallas.orghttp://rawendurance.blogspot.comFdip Blog of the Week: http://edmundy.blogspot.comFeatured http://www.runningpodcasts.org PodCast: RunwayThe song “Effortless” was by Allison Crowe. http://www.allisoncrowe.com



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Fdip181: The 2009 State of the Course
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Apr 03, 2009
Two key messages about the Boston Marathon Course:
Hopkinton, Ashland, Framingham, Natick, Wellesley, Newton, Brookline, Boston.Head Away From Nature West Near Ballpark Boston.
and
Only 17% of the course climbs at a rate of greater than 1%.I’ve learned many lessons from this course. The Boston Marathon has taught me to conserve on the downhills, and pace myself on the uphills. It’s taught me to have humility amid the cheering crowds, to smile despite the pain gastronomical discomfort, to savor the race as if it were my last, and to celebrate the achievement no matter how physically and mentally exhausted I might be at the end.
I’m not expecting to set a course PR or even come close to 4 hours in the 113th Boston Marathon. I am expecting to enjoy the day, and appreciate my life all the more.
Patriots Day will be a day to celebrate the successful completion of my 20th Marathon…a milestone of sorts that I can quite honestly feel proud of despite all the pain and weariness I’ve had to overcome.
Life is short, but it should be long enough: and I am grateful for my life and the time I’ve had and whatever happens to me on Marathon Monday will only add to my experience of this course, both of the Boston Marathon and the road of life.
Show Links:http://www.runningpodcasts.org/http://www.the22miler.blogspot.comhttp://www.worldwidefestivalofraces.comFdip Blog of the Week: http://returnrunners.wordpress.comFeatured http://www.runningpodcasts.org PodCast: The Neuman ShowThe Song “Dirty Water” was by the Standells



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Fdip180: From Maintenance Miles to Marathon
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Mar 27, 2009
To run the 113th Boston Marathon with minimal preparation I have to condition my body for constant and repetitive motion for at least five hours. What’s more, I must be able to carry the weight of my body on a gradual 16 mile course into Newton Lower Falls, up the hills of Newton and over a goofy little speed-bump, and finally down the other side past mile 22 with as much strength as I have left.
Traditional marathon training programs begin with a base and gradually work up to build strength and endurance, so this training program, more than the race itself, is the real test of how well the maintenance miles I’ve been running can prepare me for a race like the Boston Marathon.
Boston is more than just a race, and my efforts in these five weeks will be exhausting, painful, time consuming and demanding: but that’s what I’m compelled to do…and if there is such a thing as a siren song from the island of Sirenum Scopuli…the song I hear is coming from Hopkinton Massachusetts and I can’t help but show up on Patriots Day, ready to run as best I can.
Show Links:http://www.the22miler.blogspot.comhttp://www.worldwidefestivalofraces.comhttp://www.mountain-top.orgFdip Blog of the Week: http://sotallytoberrunning.blogspot.com/Featured http://www.runningpodcasts.org PodCast: Early Morning Runner“A Cautionary Tail” by Matthew Ebel at http://www.matthewebel.com



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Fdip179: Morning Runs
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Mar 20, 2009
Despite the scientific rational to the contrary, running in the morning as opposed to other times in the day has many personal benefits which may not seem obvious. We are human beings, called to embrace each day with a vigor and enthusiasm that demands hard work and strenuous effort. We are good animals, moving across the planets surface with purpose and power from the moment the sun rises over the horizon to enlighten our day. We are runners, and the world is our race course: and once they turn on the lights with the rising of that big yellow star in the sky, it’s time to start the whole human race.
Show Links:http://myhealthychallenge.wordpress.comhttp://theextramilepodcast.comhttp://www.worldwidefestivalofraces.comhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steve_Runnerhttp://sqpn.com/2009/02/25/the-sqpn-giving-campaign-2009Fdip Blog of the Week: http://runningteamflash.com Featured http://www.runningpodcasts.org PodCast: The Quad Cast“Crazy in the Morning” by Brene Wilson at http://www.brenewilson.com



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Fdip178: All in Stride
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Mar 13, 2009
The phrase “Taking it all in stride” means to get all you can get within a single step. As runners, we have a special appreciation for longer, stronger strides in that they ensure faster speeds on the open road, and combined with more frequent strides, can turn our back and middle of the pack efforts into something closer to the front. When we train, we are already prepared and pre-conditioned to expect speed work and strength work, long runs and the building on endurance: but within those efforts we also need to focus and dedicate ourselves to improving the quality of our natural strides…because it is in doing so that we improve our efficiency and speed in races and on the road.
Show Links:http://theextramilepodcast.comhttp://www.worldwidefestivalofraces.comFdip Blog of the Week: http://runningteamflash.com Featured http://www.runningpodcasts.org PodCast: Dirt Dawgs Rambling Diatribe Podcast“Highway Run” by Charlie Wheeler Band http://www.charliewheelerband.com



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Fdip177: The Winning Bug by Jackson Scholz
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Mar 06, 2009
This week I present for you the short story “The Winning Bug” written by Jackson Volney Scholz also known as the “New York Thunderbolt”.
Jackson Scholz was an American track and field athlete who specialized in the sprint, was born in 1897 and died on October 26th, 1986.
In the 1920s, he became the first person to appear in an Olympic sprint final in three different Olympic Games. He won the gold in Antwerp for the American 4x100 meter relay, he won the silver in the 100m race in the 1924 Paris games, losing to Britains Harold Abrahams as depicted in the movie Chariots of Fire, and he won the gold in those games in the 200 meter race. He also ran in the 1928 games in Amsterdam, finishing 4th in the 200 meters.
After his running career had ended, Jackson Scholz became well known for his writing, and today I’m going to read you one of his best short stories, an excellent first reading for what I intend to have as an ongoing feature of this podcast. “The Winning Bug”.
Show Links:
http://www.the22miler.blogspot.com
Fdip Blog of the Week: http://mwrunfar.blogspot.com
“Winners” by Solare http://www.solare3.net



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Fdip176: Mailbox Review
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Feb 27, 2009
The greatest reward for producing a podcast like Phedippidations is the electronic messages that you are kind enough to send me, but there’s an old Scottish proverb that reads “What may be done at any time will be done at no time.”
Today I’m making an effort to find some time to go through my email inbox to answer some of the messages you’ve been kind enough to send me over the past three months. Despite good reason and a stressfully increasing workload, I’ve felt guilty for not answering your messages to me, and while I have read every email that I’ve received; my inability to find time to respond to you has been on my mind for quite some time.
If I can’t answer every email the least I can do is produce this podcast every week and go for a run with you. I can’t promise everything I’ll have to say here will be worthy of your listening; but I can promise to follow the same compass as you…heading in the same direction to better health and becoming a good animal.
Show Links:http://winefornewbies.nethttp://www.adam20.comdebs42@mac.comhttp://milebymile.wordpress.comThe story “Patience” was read with permission of the author: Jessica Bold jessicabold@hotmail.com Fdip Blog of the Week: http://the22miler.blogspot.com“Do They Have E-Mail in Heaven” by Jim Terr http://jimterr.com



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Fdip175: Running on the Road Again
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sat, Feb 21, 2009
There are so many beautiful places on this planet that you can find to go for a run which are beautiful, interesting, and memorable. If you are traveling for pleasure, business or any purpose: pack your running shoes, a pair of shorts and a tee-shirt; you’ll see the places you visit from a more interesting and intimate perspective and will be able not only to say you visited that place, but can boast quite proudly that you’ve run there.
In this episode of Phedippidations, I go on vacation to Florida and in the course of my journey I meet a good friend whom I’ve been hoping to meet for a very long time: THE Zen Runner himself: the great Adam Tinkoff.
Show Links:http://www.travelingontherun.comhttp://www.adam20.comFdip Blog of the Week: http://runlucierun.blogspot.com“Road Trip” by “Dirty Proper” http://dustrhinos.com



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Fdip174: A Lecture From Arthur Lydiard
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Feb 13, 2009
In April of 1990, Arthur Lydiard gave a lecture in Osaka Japan as part of a clinic he conducted in Tokyo and Osaka. From that trip, numerous articles were written in running magazines all over the world, and the material he covered led to his publishing a book titled “Running With Lydiard”.
He is without a doubt one of the greatest athletic coaches of all time, and is credited with popularizing and inventing the sport of recreational running and jogging for health. His training methods were all about building a strong base and incorporating periodization and there are many world class runners today who give credit to the man for their impressive success on the track, fields and roads.
This is the exact spoken presentation of his Osaka lecture in conversational form that sometimes wanders outside the rules of grammatical perfection, it lacks the physical expressions that were transmitted during the lecture, and is often a stream of conscious thoughts that converge on more solid themes, but in this episode I’ll read \them exactly as they were spoken because: as a whole; the message is brilliant.
These are the words of the great coach Arthur Leslie Lydiard.
Dictated and edited by Nobuya “Nobby” Hashizume
Show Links:www.grotonroadrace.comhttp://www.sensescotland.org.ukwww.tiree.blogspot.comhttp://twitter.com/gdwscottFdip Blog of the Week: http://agreatdayforarun.blogspot.com/“Run” by “Dirty Proper” http://dirtyproper.com



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Fdip173: The 1st Questions and Answers Show
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Feb 06, 2009
As runners, we all have questions; questions about our experiences on the road, questions about best practices as outlined by the experts, questions about the human body and the science regarding motion and our bodies, and even just questions about each other. How are you doing? How are you feeling? How’s your running going? Have any big races planned in the near future? What’s up? What’s going on? Did John Michael get his puppy yet?
As friends and fellow runners we have plenty of questions as part of an ongoing conversation that we have with each other every day. We are connected by a common interest, in this sport we call running: and with questions to spark new conversations, we offer answers to run with, out here on the road.
When friends hang out and go for a run, they talk about stuff like this, they ask questions of each other and look for answers as a way to get to know each other better. In this episode I’ll pose some of the questions asked by fellow runners, and attempt to answer each as best I can. This is the first Phedippidations Question and Answer Show.
Show Links:
http://runrunlive.com
www.sqpn.com
http://www.dailybreakfast.com
http://www.saintcast.org
http://catholicunderthehood.com
http://runningbymyself.blogspot.com
http://twitter.com/steverunner
http://www.fitnessrocks.org
http://www.drusy.blogspot.com
http://bobspersonalblog.blogspot.com
Recommended Malbecs (yes, I’ve tasted all of these):
07 Pascual Toso from Maipu for $14 US
06 Bodega Aconquila Alberto Furgue from the Uco Valley for $15 US
07 Bodega Belgrano The Head-Snapper from Mendoza for $15 US
07 Chalten Reserva from Neuquen for $15 US
07 Don Miguel Gascon from Mendoza for $12 US
06 Bodega Don Bosco from Maipu for $12 US
06 Durigutti from Mendoza for $15 US
06 Famila Marguery Casa Malbec from Mendoza for $15 US
07 Finca El Portilli from the Uco Valley for $12 US
Fdip Blog of the Week: http://www.half-fast.org
“Question” was by Band That Never Was: http://www.bandneverwas.com



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Fdip172: George Sheehan on Running to Win
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Jan 30, 2009
The book George Sheehan on Running to Win, is a book of wisdom, sage advise and clinical recommendations from a well versed authority on health and fitness. Dr. Sheehan was someone who was passionate about our sport, and cited many reasons why all should join us on the road. Most of all, he promised us that the act of running is fun.
In his book “Running to Win” Dr. George Sheehan perfectly articulated what many of us have been thinking all along. We’re all winners when it comes to this sport, and running to win is to win, through running.
It doesn’t take a miracle or a magic pill, an incantation, self hypnosis or some new age marketing slick definition of the term “courage” to become a runner; it takes determination and dedication…it takes a desire to become a good animal in a physical sense, and a true winner in every sense of the word.
Show Links:Fdip Blog of the Week: http://lifestyle-journey.blogspot.com“Win at All Costs” was by Man Bites God: http://www.manbitesgod.com



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Fdip171: Why Runners Break
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Jan 23, 2009
There are plenty of reasons why runners break. The human body is a fantastically robust and adaptable organism, but it has it’s physical limits that, despite our good intentions through hard and long runs…can often lead to injury. The problem is that our willpower is often far stronger than our bodies power to absorb stress.
You have within you the power to accomplish great things, and run impressive races…while at the same time you have the power to run yourself into the ground, and break that body that you’ve been fortunate enough to inhabit.
Always remember that our human bodies are amazing pieces of equipment but compared to the surface of the planet, they are just small squishy things…and you know what happens when you take a small squishy thing and throw it at the side of a mountain…it squishes.
Don’t squish yourself. Run long, fast and hard…but never over the physical limits that mark your own structural integrity. Your body can do great things, but not if you abuse and overuse it out here, on the road.
Show Links:http://www.runtodisney.comhttp://themouseandmore.blogspot.comhttp://disneyrunning.comhttp://www.confessionsofarunner.comFdip Blog of the Week: http://kelownagurltris.blogspot.com“Broken Heart” was by Black Lab: http://blacklabworld.com



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Fdip170: Thoughts from the Road
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Jan 16, 2009
I don’t want to make a big deal out of it, but the anniversary of my first breath on this planet’s ocean of oxygen takes place on the 19th of this month, just a few days after this show is available for download. It was of course 9 full months prior that I first came to be; and have been growing into a more complex organism ever since.
As my complexity increases, so do the ideas that get formed in my admittedly teeny tiny little brain…and like a balloon in the state of inflation, if I don’t get some of these ideas…both good, bad and frankly quite silly…out of the skull within which they are formed…well, like a balloon, something’s going to pop….and I don’t think you want to be left having to clean up the mess.
Thus we have an episode of this goofy little podcast dedicated to things not necessarily related to running; but let’s go for a run today, you and I…and I’ll do the talking about things that I’m thinking about…the thoughts, opinions, and observations that a soon to be 47 year old fellow runner congers up on a long run.
So let’s go for a run today. Let’s forget, for a moment, that this is a podcast, and that you’re listening to me with your ear bugs jammed in your head…consider that I’m just like you: although I’m betting you’re a little bit faster, healthier and undoubtedly better looking….and that we’re just going out for a run together. The world is moving on, increasing in velocity as the planet revolves, and orbits, and moves outward ever forward…bringing us specs of life with it; and while there’s no possibility or reason to ever stop that motion let’s go for a run today and create a little motion of our own….just you and me and that long road before us. Let’s go for a run.
Show Links:http://revruns.blogspot.comtlongacre@gmail.comhttp://coachdeanhebert.wordpress.com/2008/12/08/coach-i-didnt-run-because-excusesFdip Blog of the Week: http://light_bearer.blogspot.com“Avalonia” was by Jim Fidler: http://www.jimfidler.com



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Fdip169: Massaging the Trigger Points
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Jan 09, 2009
Pain is the body’s way of telling us that something is wrong, and when we ignore those messages we are risking further and more permanent injury.
Myofascial trigger point pain syndrome is problematic because of the nature of referred pain, where a defect in the muscle can cause soreness elsewhere in the body. To resolve this kind of pain, you have to identify its true source, and apply massage as a preventive measure to overcome it. It takes patience and consistency to perform the stretches, exercises and massage that will help you to overcome trigger point associated pain, and allow you to run upon the open road, in comfort.
Show Links:http://www.tptherapy.comFdip Blog of the Week: http://froggietedrunsboston.blogspot.com“Passion and Pain” was by Lance Larson. http://www.lancelarsonmusic.com



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Fdip168: Exercise Induced Asthma
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Jan 02, 2009
If you find yourself struggling to catch your breath during a race or on a particularly cold or humid day, you may have exercise induced asthma. Don’t let it prevent you from taking to the road and reaching your goals.
I have every intention of running and finishing future marathons, and I won’t let my exercise induced asthma keep me from running. There are treatments available to all of us who suffer with E.I.A. which can make our enjoyment of this sport continue through our lives.
Show Links:Fdip Blog of the Week: http://milebymile.wordpress.comThe song “On the Run” was by Stormy Mondays http://www.stormymondays.com
Wines Reviewed by Kevin, Harper, Rob and Steve:2005 Chateau Mirambeau Papin Bordeaux Superieur: 60% Merlot, 40% Cab Sauv.2005 Rodney Strong Vineyards - Alexander Valley Cabernet Sauvignon



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Fdip167: Around We Go Again
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Dec 26, 2008
This episode is a review of the leap year 2008, MMVIII of the Gregorian calendar, Anno Domini of the Common Era.
Like any other year, 2008 had it’s accomplishments and failures, its successes and disasters, it’s good moments and instances of sadness and terror. We lived through it all and each in our own way did our best, wished the best for others and helped to make the world just a little bit better than it was last year.
This week we listen to some of the skits, sketches and audio bits that I produced in an effort to give my family and I a chuckle or two.
Happy New Year!
Show Links:The song “We are Wolves Here” off the new album “Wake Up and Say Goodbye” was by David Usher. http://www.davidusher.com



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Fdip166: It’s Not About Courage
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Dec 19, 2008
This week your goofy little host goes “off the deep end” again with a podcast filled with critical thinking, loud enunciation and a very un-holiday-like disposition.
This episode is a statement of my opinion.
Not all will agree with that opinion, and all are invited to consider and challenge what I have to say here. I suspect many will consider my premise faulty and my conclusion to be wrong; but this is just MY OPINION, and if I sound angry and passionate in my argument it’s because it bothers me when fellow runners suffer the appeals of a marketing pitch designed to ridicule them without their conscious understanding in an effort to sell books.
Just because someone says that it takes courage for you to run your first mile, does not make it so. It does not make noble the action by affixing such terms to explain how you came to be. Terms and words like “indomitable spirit”, “intelligent choice”, “dedication”, “perseverance”, and “commitment” better describe how you became a runner; and credits you with the hard work associated with your effort and success on the road.
In this episode I will prove that “it takes dedication to start running” is no longer a hypothesis, it’s a well founded theory. I will show that this is a well established principle created from repeated observation and testing. There are better and more positive ways to inspire and motivate non-runners to take to the road with us than to call them “scared, powerless little misfits”.
Don’t ever let anyone tell you that it takes courage to start running. They are offending you, they are appealing to your instinctual desire to be congratulated for doing something noble and brave.
You deserve MUCH more…you have earned the right to be credited with rising off the couch of doom not because you were once a cowering, fearful couch potato who overcame some dangerous risk to your life; but because you made a choice…you accepted a challenge to yourself: and that doesn’t take courage fellow runners; that takes dedication.
Show Links:http://theextramilepodcast.comhttp://tiree.blogspot.comhttp://www.bluedawgsrunning.blogspot.comFdip Blog of the Week: http://fittalklive.comThe song “You and I” was by Ingrid Michaelsonhttp://www.ingridmichaelson.com



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Fdip165: Running Legend: Ted Corbitt
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Dec 12, 2008
Ted Corbitt was without a doubt the “father of long distance running”. He was a pioneer in ultramarathons and a big part of the running revolution of the 1960’s and 70’s. He was once called “a spiritual elder of the modern running clan". We will remember him in many ways: as the quiet guy in the background working to establish rules for age groups and course measurements. As a promoter of distance running who worked behind the scenes. He was an amazing athlete who was able to cover distances that is considered impressive by any standard, and he was a kind hearted, soft spoken fellow runner who overcame hatred and prejudice to embrace a sport that he loved so well.Most importantly, he was someone who loved to run. It was his life long passion, it was his daily joy and it was something that defined him, improved him and gave his life meaning and a happiness that inspires all who knew him and know of him…because Ted Corbitt was a man with an indomitable spirit who came into this world to live his life to the top, and he left this world a better place for his having run here.
Show Links:http://bluedawgsrunning.blogspot.comhttp://www.usatf.org/about/committees/LongDistanceRunning/RoadRunningTechnicalCouncil/history/corbitt.pdfhttp://lelievreetlatortue.blogspot.comFdip Blog of the Week: http://beginjd.blogspot.comThe song “What Child is This?” was by Black Labhttp://blacklabworld.com



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Fdip164: A New England Five Miler
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Dec 05, 2008
In this episode I run the 20th Annual Whiten Five Thanksgiving Day Road Race in Whitensville, Massachusetts; a village in Northbridge. It wasn’t my fastest five miler, but I had fun running it never the less. I came to celebrate the holiday of Thanksgiving, to enjoy the morning with fellow runners, to compete against those around me and most of all, to run. Old New England towns remain preserved while merging with the modern world and new technologies. You can see that most clearly when you go for a run in such a town such as Northbridge Massachusetts, and the village of Whitensville.
Show Links:http://www.tinkoff.comhttp://4feetrunning.blogspot.comhttp://badgirlsofrunning.blogspot.comhttp://badboysofrunning.blogspot.comhttp://tiredmamarunning.blogspot.comhttp://www.runcast.tvhttp://www.dumprunnersclub.comFdip Blog of the Week: http://www.runtodisney.comThe song “Run to Your Grave” was by The Mae Shihttp://www.mae-shi.com



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Fdip163: Running Clubs
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Nov 28, 2008
Running clubs are local organizations that you can join to gain the support of fellow runners as a way to motivate, inspire, invigorate and improve your performance on the road. But for all the great benefits that joining a running club will give you, there’s something else you should consider in deciding whether or not you should join such an organization. When you join a running club you are not doing it only for yourself but as an opportunity to help others improve as runners: you are signing up to encourage others, to prove by your participation that running is a worthy effort, and to help others who are members of that club to run faster and farther, over and above what they might have otherwise thought they were capable of. In today’s episode I’ll list some of the great running clubs that are out there.
Thank you to everyone who responded to my “Twitter Tweet” for running clubs!
Show Links:http://theextramilepodcast.comhttp://www.runnersroundtable.comhttp://www.rrca.orghttp://www.teamcrossworld.com/runninghttp://runmdra.orgwww.kiltedrunner.blogspot.comwww.wanderersrunningclub.orgwww.portlandfit.comwww.hughesvillerunningclub.comhttp://bobrunner.blogspot.comhttp://www.arunnerscircle.comwww.elementsoferin337.blogspot.comwww.thesaa.cawww.e-venti.cahttp://www.lifetimefitness.comhttp://www.jsrc.org/www.runnersandwalkers.comhttp://www.trailrunnersclub.com/www.guelphvictors.cahttp://www.guelphrunning.ca/http://www.redhairedgirl.comhttp://www.runracine.com/www.runningramblings.comhttp://mcrrc.orghttp://gvltrackclub.clubexpress.com/http://www.fitnesssports.com/November_races/LivHistFarms/lhf_index.htmlFdip Blog of the Week: http://run350.blogspot.comThe song “Some Christmas Huggin and Kissin’” was by Geoff Smithhttp://thegeoffsmith.com



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Fdip162: Catching Up
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Nov 21, 2008
When you are out there, running a race, and you find yourself (point A) behind another runner (point B) whom you are working to catch up to…there is a relative velocity between the two of you that is much smaller than you can imagine…and today, I want to help you imagine it…because once you’ve come to realize how small that difference is, then you’ll be better able to summon the energy required to exceed that speed and close the gap between you and that runner ahead of you to the point where you’ll beat him or her to the finish. When you consider the difference, you’ll gain the confidence to catch up.
Show Links:http://theextramilepodcast.comhttp://www.runningpodcasts.orghttp://www.runnersroundtable.comhttp://www.tribballin.blogspot.comhttp://www.teamworldvisionozarks.orgwww.fleetfeetstlouis.com http://www.fleetfeetstlouis.com/flyer/main.htm#bookhttp://www.homesforourtroops.orghttp://www.zachermedia.com/marathonhttp://www.ama-assn.org/ama/pub/category/13638.htmlhttp://whatstheharm.netFdip Blog of the Week: http://royinireland.blogspot.comThe song “You Can’t Catch Me” by Cottrell Ganthttp://www.cottrellgantt.com



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Fdip161: Gifts for the Holiday Runner
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Nov 14, 2008
So what is the point of giving gifts to each other during the holiday? It is to express our feelings of appreciation, care and fondness for one another…and the best way to do that, with respect to gift giving, is to make the gift a personal reflection of what you know the person you’re giving to would appreciate.
Runners appreciate the little things; a good book on our favorite subjects, or something simple like a pair of gloves, socks or a water bottle…items which help to protect and comfort us during our daily runs…these are things that will be appreciated every day and serve as reminders that you, as the gift giver, really understood and cared enough to give something related to our passion for this sport and the importance we give to the gift of running.
Show Links:http://www.roadid.comhttp://www.roadrunnersports.comhttp://www.runningpodcasts.orghttp://audiblepodcast.com/phedihttp://www.runarmagh.comhttp://www.trithemango.comhttp://www.coopamerica.orgFdip Blog of the Week: http://www.runcast.tvThe song “The Gift You Always Wanted at the Bay” was by Jon Caspihttp://www.joncaspi.com



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Fdip160: Strong to the Core
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Nov 07, 2008
Our core is our center; it is where our arms, legs and head meet to create the human body we inhabit and control. It is where, just a few inches or centimeters above, resides the all important heart, pumping oxygen rich blood to all of our extremities. In an anthropological sense, the heart is the focused center of our emotional and mental character….it is the mystical source of our kindness, charity, and love. In this same way, our core…the very central characteristic of who and what we are is sometimes associated with our human identity.
To excel physically you must have a strong and powerful core, to excel as a human being you have to have a resilient and resolute center. Work on that part of yourself, both physically and emotionally and there will be nothing you cannot accomplish. Focus on developing your core and you’ll discover the power within yourself to run long and far and then you’ll find the strength to go on.
Show Links:http://amilewith.me.ukhttp://runningfromthereaper.comhttp://www.catiefunrun.orgFdip Blog of the Week: http://runningismental.blogspot.comThe song “The Strength” was by the Brothers Falloon http://www.brothersfalloon.com



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Fdip159: Responsible Shoes
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Oct 31, 2008
This episode will serve as proof that I’m an totally independent new media producer, and will guarantee that I never get that huge contract with a major running shoe label. But when running shoe companies enable their outsourced suppliers to treat their workers poorly, in unhealthy working conditions for long hours with wages that hardly allow them to feed and shelter their families…they are being evil…either by direction or failure.
You and I can support the fight for human rights and the environment every day with our dollars…by purchasing products and services sold only by those companies and businesses who treat their workers with dignity and promote the basic human rights to life, liberty, freedom of expression, equality before the law and in society, the right to participate in culture, the right to food, the right to work, and the right to education along with ensuring that the production of goods does not negatively impact the environment.
My expose here about some of the major running shoe manufacturers in operation today will most assuredly guarantee that I will never earn millions of dollars on this podcast through an advertizing contract with any of these companies…but morality dictates that I consider the big picture…and I’m going to do my best, in this episode of Phedippidations, to be honest, truthful and above all independent when it comes to giving you the 4-1-1 on what are, and are not responsible shoes.
Show Links:http://www.corpwatch.orghttp://www.oxfam.org.auhttp://www.thegreenguide.com/doc/122/athleticshoes/3http://runningintothesun.blogspot.comhttp://unabuonaforchetta.blogspot.comhttp://www.hampo.bigblog.com.auFdip Blog of the Week: http://www.movember.comThe song “Not Responsible” was by Laura Clapp http://www.lauraclapp.com



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Fdip158: The 2008 Bay State Marathon
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Oct 24, 2008
Life is all about making choices. Choices between what’s right and wrong, choices between what’s good and evil, choices between altruism and egotism, of giving and taking, of sharing and selfishness and choices between what’s smart and what’s dumb.
I chose to run the 2008 Bay State Marathon just as 25 years ago this month I chose to take part in a project to help etch my college radio station’s name in the history of a Northern Massachusetts city.
Sometimes we do things without thinking it through, or considering the consequences. Sometimes we do things on impulse or instinct and throw caution to the wind for ideals and purposes which seem like a good idea at the time.
Whatever we do, for whatever reason we do it: one thing is perfectly clear. We all have a choice.
Show Links:http://www.baystatemarathon.comhttp://www.wuml.orgThe song “Choice” was by Jon Miller http://www.jonmilleronline.com



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Fdip157: The Third Annual World Wide Festival of Races
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Oct 17, 2008
Over 1,100 runners from more than 40 countries took part in the 3rd annual World Wide Festival of Races. This really was a festival; it was a celebration of life, of community, of doing something of importance, endurance and strength. It was a day where we took to the roads and ran together although we were apart.
There were many reasons why we all took part in this event: to celebrate, to share, to make friends and to inspire others. We did it to prove that national and territorial boundaries on a map are nothing more than dotted lines meant to keep us physically apart, and that our own customs, religions and social environments do not exclude us from the privileges of friendship and camaraderie. What makes us different from each other locally does not prevent us from going out into this world, under the same sky on the same little blue bubble in space, and celebrate those things that we have in common.
We just want to live a good, happy and healthy life. We just want to live in peace and harmony with each other…and above all, we just want to Be OK.
Show Links:http://www.worldwidefestivalofraces.comhttp://www.amilewith.me.ukhttp://www.dirtdawgramblingdiatribe.blogspot.comhttp://www.theextramilepodcast.comhttp://www.showemyoucare.com
Fdip featured blog of the week: www.richruns2.blogspot.comThe song “Be OK” was by Ingrid Michaelson http://www.ingridmichaelson.com http://www.standup2cancer.org



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Fdip156: Cheers from a Little Blue Bubble
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Thu, Oct 09, 2008
"It's hard to appreciate the Earth when you're down right upon it because it's so huge. It gives you in an instant, just at a position 240,000 miles away from it, (an idea of) how insignificant we are, how fragile we are, and how fortunate we are to have a body that will allow us to enjoy the sky and the trees and the water ... It's something that many people take for granted when they're born and they grow up within the environment. But they don't realize what they have. And I didn't till I left it.''
-- Jim Lovell, Apollo 8 and 13.
Greeting Fellow Runners… The average distance from the Earth to the Moon is 384,403 km, that’s 238,857 miles. To put that into perspective, it’s exactly 2,462 miles or 3,961 km between New York and Los Angeles…so the moon is 156 times the distance away from the Earth as New York is to LA.
When the Apollo Astronauts went to the moon, they noticed a few things which probably should have been obvious and expected. First, the moon is dead; Buzz Aldrin stepped out of the lunar lander, looked around and gasped “Magnificent desolation”. He witnessed first hand that the moon is beautiful, but void of life.
The second thing the astronauts noticed when they looked back at the earth was that it was the only thing in the sky that had any color. It shone of deep blues, white wisps, dark greens and browns. The Earth was, in fact, a magnificent oasis of life.
The third thing the astronauts realized when they stood on the surface of the moon was that, if they lifted up their arm and stuck out their hand, holding it out to towards the little blue bubble that was hanging in the lunar sky, they could cover the entire Earth with their thumb.
Everyone who has ever lived was hidden behind that thumb. The entire history of the human civilization was hidden behind that thumb, every creature that had ever swam, crawled, slithered , hopped, walked, or flew had lived (or were living) their whole lives, hidden behind that thumb.
Wally Schirra, the astronaut who flew around the earth on Mercury, Gemini and Apollo missions once said “I left Earth three times. I found no place else to go.”
Think about the profoundness of that statement. He found no place else to go because there IS no place else to go. Seen from space, this little blue bubble we run upon is our home and is very likely to be the only place in the entire Universe that we will ever be able to live.
I know that we’re talking about going to Mars and we can imagine a future where we terraform planets or create starships to take our descendents to extra-solar planets over the course of a millennium; but this one planet that we live upon is a precious bubble of life in space. It’s our home, it’s small, and we have to take care of it.
But today, I’m going to suggest that before we can take care of this little blue bubble that we first take care of each other.
Perspective might be the key to that.
I’m a science fiction fan. I love “Star Trek” and “Star Wars” and anything to do with space travels and alien encounters. I’ve often wondered what alien visitors to Earth would think as their spaceship got close and they saw this little blue bubble of life.
Wouldn’t they assume that all of the intelligent creatures of the indigenous civilizations on this planet lived in peace and harmony as a single tribe of the human species?
Wouldn’t they believe that conflicts would be rare on such a tiny world where global cooperation was the only logically sensible way for such creatures to co-exist.
Wouldn’t they expect that such creatures, born of the same species, evolved from the same ancestral lineage, and with essentially similar physical features…would live, love, share and care for each other throughout their short lives?
On this podcast, I’ve tried to make the point that if we’re going to live up to those expectations (and as the so called intelligent self aware species on this planet, I think we should probably make peace, love and understanding a common goal) and if that’s a noble and good goal, then it has to start somewhere.
Where’s it going to start? With religion? Maybe…but religious differences hasn’t been particularly effective with the whole “ensuring world peace thing” over the last thousand years.
I’m saying that as a devote practicing Roman Catholic…religion without the underlying foundation of tolerance, understanding, acceptance, charity and love for all of the people on this little blue bubble, no matter how they worship or what they believe…isn’t helpful to a world in desperate need of peace.
Will the goal of such peace start with governments? Ummm…I’m not very good with understanding the whole socio-political strategy of the modern world, but I’m pretty sure there are a few wars going on that started because “So and So said that So and So had weapons and the other guy called So and So part of the axis of evil…and…ahhh…my head it going to explode!!
No: world peace and the idea of a planet of creatures living together in harmony is not going to start with any of the traditional avenues of diplomacy, it has to start WITH US.
You are a runner. You are now running in a global event with friends from all over the world. We all have our differences, we all carry our baggage of fear and shame, anger and frustration with us…but that’s okay: that’s part of being human. The one thing I can say that we have going for us, as runners, is that we do not hate. Today we’re not individuals from other countries and cultures: today we are all runners: fellow runners.
It doesn’t matter what you look like, how you dress, or what you do in your spare time. Right now, this moment, you are out sharing an experience with other human beings who are feeling the same heart pounding exertion that you are feeling.
And it’s a good feeling, tiring, yes…but think about it: we are living our lives to the top as the good animals we were always meant to be…out here, we can imagine a world full of friends who believe in the ideals of love, joy and peace…out here we can afford to be a little idealistic and possibly naive…because we’re running a race that transcends borders, cultures and rules that have been set in place to keep us apart.
You are a runner; and when you live your life as part of a community where you have friends all over the world, as you do, you begin to appreciate each other more, you begin to see the world from each others eyes and perspectives.
If each of us, running across the Earth could imagine the view of our planet from the surface of the moon, or Mars or from the very edge of our solar system and beyond, we’d have to appreciate how precious this little blue bubble really is…and more importantly, how precious we are to each other.
You and I are fellow runners…and we set positive examples for every human being that lives on this little blue bubble in space…and when it comes to having a world full of healthy, happy, peaceful, kind, generous and thoughtful creatures…it all starts with us.
Show Links:http://www.worldwidefestivalofraces.comSend me your WWFR Race reports steve@steverunner.com or record an audio report: +1 206-338-3211
The song “New Prayer” was by Black LabDownload it for FREE at http://blacklabworld.com/marathon
Ambient music included in this episode came from Aaron English, Amb26 and Adhesion.



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Fdip155: Pondering as I Pronate
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Thu, Oct 02, 2008
These are some of the things that have been on my mind lately…random thoughts that I dwell upon while I’m getting my miles in…and that’s one of the great things about running…it can sometimes be a time for you to reconnect with yourself, to dedicate the duration of your run to thinking about politics, hate, wine and endurance….so let’s go for a run together, and indulge me the privilege of telling you what I’m pondering today.Show Links:http://www.worldwidefestivalofraces.comLeave a message: +1 206-338-3211Fdip featured blog of the week: http://running-with-coffee.blogspot.comThe song “Ones and Os” was by Geoff Smith http://thegeoffsmith.com



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Fdip154: Running Legend: Sir Roger Bannister
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Sep 26, 2008
It was once thought to be impossible for any human being to run the distance of a single mile in less than four minutes. Roger Bannister knew that if he focused on the task, if he used both his medical knowledge and physical abilities in a good and effective training program he could break the four minute barrier, and accomplish the impossible. This is his story.
Show Links:http://www.worldwidefestivalofraces.comPLEASE SEND IN YOUR WORDS OF ENCOURAGEMENT FOR FDIP156 Audio Messages needed by no later than October 6th.Leave a message: +1 206-338-3211Fdip featured blog of the week: http://arizonarock-n-rollmarathontraining.blogspot.comThe song “Impossible” was by Luthea Salom. http://www.lutheasalom.com



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Fdip153: Running Over Cancer
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Sep 19, 2008
Running will not prevent you from developing cancer, but it may save your life by retarding it’s growth and by increasing your bodies natural resistance. Life is worth fighting for…and moderate exercise such as a 2 to 3 mile easy run every day is something that can both ease the stress from dealing with cancer as well as help us to fight against it’s uncontrolled growth.
Researchers aren’t sure how much exercise is needed to help prevent cancer, but they all agree that consistency is the most important factor. Cancer as a disease and as an idea is something we must fight against. Do not go gentle into that good night.
Show Links:http://www.fitnessrocks.orghttp://medals4mettle.orggoodybag@worldwidehalf.comhttp://www.worldwidefestivalofraces.comPLEASE SEND IN YOUR WORDS OF ENCOURAGEMENT FOR FDIP156 Audio Messages needed by no later than October 6th.Leave a message: +1 206-338-3211Fdip featured blog of the week: http://texasrunningjournal.blogspot.comThe song “I Know You’re There” was by Matthew Ebel. http://www.matthewebel.com
PLEASE VISIT: http://marcirunsthemarathon.blogspot.com



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Fdip152: Running PodCasts
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Sep 12, 2008
A podcast is so much more interesting, entertaining, informative and intimate than a radio show. When you subscribe to a podcast, you’re really joining a social club of like minded enthusiasts for whatever the topic of conversation may be. Running podcasts are special in that they can be listened to while you, yourself, are out on your runs…or on a treadmill, or in the car on your way to or from work, or after your run as you do chores around the house. A podcast is better than a radio show because it’s a conversation between the podcaster and you, produced and intended to be heard on a computer or, most naturally, an MP3 audio player with little ear bud head phones plugged into your head.
You know all this because you’re not just a listener to Phedippidations…you are a fellow runner; we’re in this together…and there are other running related podcasts out there that are much better than this one, that I know you’ll enjoy if you’ll give them a listen.
Show Links:
All of the PodCasts discussed in this show can be found at http://www.runningpodcasts.org/
PLEASE SEND IN YOUR WORDS OF ENCOURAGEMENT FOR FDIP156!
Leave a message: +1 206-338-3211
Fdip featured blog of the week: http://www.andrewisgettingfit.com
The song “Independence Day” was the band Jesta, aka Bryan Page from the UK. http://www.jesta.co.uk



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Fdip151: Starting a Beatless Heart
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Sep 05, 2008
Cardiopulmonary resuscitation is a procedure that can postpone the condition of clinical death, where the heart has stopped beating and the victim is not breathing. There is no guarantee of successful resuscitation, but you can act as the heart and lungs of a victim to provide the body and brain with life sustaining oxygenated blood while waiting for a trained emergency responder or doctor to arrive on scene.
The person you save through something like CPR may be a person who helps make the world just a little bit better, either directly or by enabling another to do so. Human beings have the potential to do good in the world, and every human life is worth saving for that reason alone.
NOTE: The information contained in this episode is NOT intended to be medical advice, or to replace proper CPR training. Do NOT use the methods or techniques described in this episode to provide emergency cardiopulmonary resuscitation: Please DO consider attending a CPR class and obtaining proper certification as a lay responder.
Show Links:http://www.americanheart.orghttp://www.runnerssociety.com/4millionsteps.htmlCall me: +1 206-338-3211Fdip featured blog of the week: http://batmans.blogspot.comThe song “Good Hearted Man” was by Roscoe Chenier http://www.black-and-tan.com



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Fdip150: Running for the Bases
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Aug 29, 2008
Running is a universally important skill to have in life; no longer solely for the purpose of hunting, gathering and chasing down wild animals that lack the endurance we possess…but as a way to keep our bodies in shape, to help strengthen our muscles and cardiovascular system and to become the good animals we were meant to be. In baseball, it’s one…two…three strikes you’re out; but in life you only have this one chance to live your life to the fullest, to rise off the couch of doom and to run the way you were meant to run; fast and far across the planets surface. And just as in baseball, when you’ve run well and covered all the bases…at some point near the end; we’ll all have the chance to run home.
Show Links:http://eatdrinkrunwoman.comhttp://www.ovenstobetsy.comhttp://www.littlemarathon.com/Tunnelhttp://www.worldwidefestivalofraces.comhttp://www.buckeyeoutdoors.comCall me: +1 206-338-3211Fdip featured blog: http://www.Dashfordad.comchristine@zerocancer.orgThe song “Field of Dreams” was by Mary Ellen Kirk http://www.myspace.com/merryellen



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Fdip149: The Mens Marathon of the 29th Olympiad
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Wed, Aug 20, 2008
The mens marathon of the 29th Olympiad will feature the fastest and most prestigious distance runners in the world today. Those few hours and some minutes will mark the greatest race of their lives, and we will witness inspirational feats of athleticism as they run through an ancient city which is being transformed into a modern world. While these are the best runners on an elite level which many of us will never reach, do not forget that they are also our fellow runners….they have the same passion, the same determination, the same indomitable spirit that you and I share. For those who have or will one day run a marathon, the distance that the Olympians of the mens marathon in Bejing will run is perfectly identical to that which you will cover in your own events. Watch the race unfold before you and think about how you’ve felt or will feel when you’re at the mile and kilometer markers that they will cross: and appreciate the association you share with those runners in the marathon of the 29th Olympiad.
Show Links:http://www.runnersroundtable.comhttp://www.drusy.blogspot.comhttp://runningfromthereaper.blogspot.comhttp://4feetrunning.blogspot.comhttp://www.tinkoff.comhttp://www.planet3rry.com/gravity1053JPL Slideshow: http://www.yousendit.com/download/Q01GWWVncG9rUm14dnc9PQCall me: +1 206-338-3211Fdip featured blog: http://trainingfornycmarathon2009.blogspot.comThe song “The Theme from the 1984 Olympic Games” was by Griddle http://griddlemusic.com----------------------------------------------http://www.theextramilepodcast.comPLEASE enter this number into your cell phone contact list and leave a message (from time to time) for The Extra Mile PodCast:
+1 513-397-0525



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RRT01: Some Time with the Good Doctor
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Mon, Aug 18, 2008
This is episode one of a new podcast, created and presented by fellow runners around the world.
The Runners Round Table!
http://www.runnersroundtable.com
Episode 1 - Join us at the table as we share some time with our good friend Dr. Monte from the great podcast, Fitness Rocks. He shares insight he gained from an interview with Dr. Eliza Chakravarty of Stanford Medical School about how exercise (namely running) can play a major role in reducing your disability and even morbidity as you get older. Amazing stuff. Also we discuss the new developments on The Worldwide Festival of Races and a little company called Nike who is staging a vaguely similar event in 2 weeks called The Human Race 10K. We also mention our dear friend Kevin of The Extra Mile Podcast - and his call for submissions. So get out there folks and record your training for all to share and send it along...Thanks for joining us for this live show and remember there's always an open chair waiting for you at the table.



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Fdip148: The Womans Marathon of the 29th Olympiad
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Wed, Aug 13, 2008
The athletes who will run in the woman's marathon of the 29th Olympiad in Beijing China are some of the very best distance athletes in the world. Each of them have worked incredibly hard to reach this level of competition, and to qualify to stand at the starting line in Tian'an Men Square. What happens during this race will be historic; the moments of the event will be forever seared in the memories of those who participate and those of us who will watch the race. We will witness the pinnacle of Athletic Achievement in a way that will inspire us to do our best, to push ourselves past our own limitations and to reach our own Olympic dreams.
Show Links:
http://revruns.blogspot.com
http://www.olympictruce.org
http://www.boston.com/sports/articles/2008/08/13/noguchi_wont_defend_her_marathon_title
http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/feedarticle/7718316
http://www.runnersroundtable.com
Call me: +1 206-338-3211
Fdip featured blog: http://beachrunner411.blogspot.com
The song "China Girl” was by Lena http://www.lena.fm



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Fdip147: Low Impact Living
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Aug 08, 2008
When you make a stand and decide to change the amount of natural resources you use, such as the oil and gas used by generators to produce electricity to run your water heaters, and lights, and when you install insulation in your home to keep the heat generated from escaping into the cold and low water use shower heads to reduce the amount of clean water used in the bathroom…you are reducing your dependency on the fuel and water needed by others and the next generation who will run across this planet in years to come, after we’re gone.
The Earth does it’s best to heal itself from man made impact. Given time and natural conditions, nature will reclaim what mankind has paved over and modified to suit our needs for resources and space. There is such a thing as living in concert with nature, and a duty that each of us has to make the world just a little bit better for the next generation of runners to live in a world with clean fresh air, clean clear water and the beauty that can exist without impact of mankind.
Show Links:
http://sierraclub.com
http://www.drusy.blogspot.com
http://pages.teamintraining.org/nce/seagull08/jjacksoco6
http://www.worldwideraces.blogspot.com
Fdip featured blog: http://www.triguinness.com/blog
The song “Terra Nova” was by Jim Fidler http://www.jimfidler.com



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Fdip146: Running in the Ancient Olympics
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Thu, Jul 31, 2008
The Ancient Olympic Games where part of a festival, where fairness and athleticism where considered sacred. For over twelve hundred years the games were played in the Athenian city of Olympia and served as a cultural event to promote trade, commerce and diplomacy. The athlete was respected and set powerful examples for all who came to watch them compete. Their stories became the part of an ancient legend that inspired the modern games to revive the Olympic Spirit.
We owe this spirit, this sense of peaceful competition and international friendship to those who created the ancient Olympic Games and set forth a precedent that has been reinforced through history.
Show Links:
http://jpl.nasa.gov
http://swiftshoe.blogspot.com
http://www.saintcast.org
http://theextramilepodcast.blogspot.com
Fdip featured blog: http://www.teamworldvisionozarks.org
The song "History” was by Jason Silver http://jasonsilver.com



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Fdip145: Running Legend Frank Shorter
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Jul 18, 2008
Frank Shorter is one of those rare living legends whose legacy is seen in every runner who seeks to better him or herself, and who runs with an infectious joy and passion…and sincerity. There are legends in our sport, as there should be…but Frank Shorter is much more than a legend, he is an Olympian, a leader, a teacher, a good person and above all: a fellow runner.
Show Links:
http://rosaryarmy.com
http://catholiccitywithzina.blogspot.com
http://catholicfamilypodcast.com
http://sqpn.com
http://eshmultisport.podbean.com
http://runrunlive.com
http://www.worldwidehalf.com
http://www.worldwideraces.blogspot.com
http://zenrun10k.ning.com
http://theextramilepodcast.blogspot.com
http://www.austinhastings.com
Fdip featured blog: http://theadventuresofjeneureka.blogspot.com
The song "Good as Gold” by Admiral Twin http://www.admiraltwin.com
The episode is sponsored by Audible.com Go to www.audiblepodcast.com/phedi for your free audiobook download



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Fdip144: Moving to the Music
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Jul 04, 2008
This episode of Fdip is much different than all the others, and for those of you who dislike the musical selections that I include in each episode, this one is probably not for you. But music marks our life and times. Itâs more than just the poetry or melody: itâs the soundtrack that touches us; it expresses and reflects our feelings, it captures our emotions and it gives voice to our hearts. In this show youâll hear ten independent artists (nine musical) and songs from previous episodes as we celebrate my three years of podcasting and I go for a run around a tiny little island in the State of Maine, because this week: Iâm on vacation!Show Links:I Am Not Afraid by Majek Fashek http://www.majekfashek.comIm Not Running by Big Rain http://www.bigrain.netLife Less Ordinary by Carbon Leaf http://www.carbonleaf.comIn the next life by Al Stravinsky http://www.myspace.com/alstravinskySee The Sun by Black Lab http://blacklabworld.comLet me Know by the Fire Apes http://www.myspace.com/fireapesOrdinary Day by Great Big Sea http://greatbigsea.comTom Cruise Crazy by Jonathan Coulton http://www.jonathancoulton.com/Pre by Phil Wells www.garageband.com/artist/PhilWellsThe episode is sponsored by Audible.com Go to www.audiblepodcast.com/phedi for your free audiobook download



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Fdip143: The 2008 Fall Marathon Guide
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Thu, Jun 19, 2008
Planning your Fall Marathon is all about setting a goal, with many months ahead of you within which to prepare. What marathoners learn as we engage in this preparation is that the joy, passion and discovery takes place during our training: in many ways the marathon itself is merely a celebration of what we have been able to achieve through the hours and miles that we’ve spent in training to get us to that starting line.
Now is the time to pick our races, now is the time to make our commitments, now is the moment to promise to ourselves and others that we will train well and hard, and complete a 26.2 mile course with dedication, determination, strength and honor…and these are the races that you and I will run.
Show Links:
http://www.marathonguide.com
http://www.princeedwardislandmarathon.com
http://sqpn.com
http://sqpn.com/2007/11/24/rosary-army-video-gregs-first-marathon/
http://runningfromthereaper.blogspot.com
http://www.runningpodcasts.org
http://anotherrunner.blogspot.com
http://zenrun10k.ning.com
goodybag@worldwidehalf.com
Fdip featured blog: http://yllek82.blogspot.com
The song “Lost My Way” by Matthew Ebel www.matthewebel.com
The episode is sponsored by Audible.com Go to www.audiblepodcast.com/phedi for your free audiobook download



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Fdip142: Dr. George Sheehan - Personal Best
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Thu, Jun 05, 2008
Today, I'm going to tell you a little bit about a book written by Dr. George Sheehan titled “Personal Best: The foremost philosopher of fitness shares techniques and tactics for success and self liberation, published in 1989 by Rodale Press. It’s a book of 37 chapters, each one an essay and study into an physical of cerebral aspect of running.
For anyone looking to read a sample of the right brain/left brain writings of Dr. Sheehan, this book gives you a good sense of his style. He challenges us to think about our lives, our running, and our purpose within each page. George Sheehan understood that running was more than just an activity; it is an expression of life and love.
Show Links:
http://runningfilmfestival.com
http://www.worldwidehalf.com
http://theextramilepodcast.com
http://www.runforthefallen.org
Fdip featured blog: http://kelownagurl.blogspot.com
The song “Better Life” was by the band Common Ground from Texas. http://texasrockband.com
The episode is sponsored by Audible.com Go to www.audiblepodcast.com/phedi for your free audiobook download



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Intervals141B: Vino Corrispondenza
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, May 30, 2008
Have a glass of wine with me while I catch up on some emails from fellow runners. Wine is one of my many passions. In order to appreciate wine you have to come into it with a clear head, a clear palate and a clear nose. Wine making dates back to 6000 BC and is a major part of the culture of many societies and religions. Wine is also a social beverage, something to share with friends and enjoy with a good meal. It’s good for you as well, consumed in moderation wine has been found to have both cardioprotective and chemoprotective effects. In this short format version of my podcast, I’ll be resting my ankle and enjoying a glass of wine with you as we hear from fellow runners across the planet.
http://fitnessrocks.org
http://sierratrailrunner.blogspot.com
http://www.fatcyclist.com
http://runwithme-cindy.blogspot.com
http://runningintothesun.blogspot.com
http://unabuonaforchetta.blogspot.com
http://www.worldwidehalf.com
http://anotherrunner.com
http://www.boglewinery.com
http://santarita.com
http://www.bodegasluzon.com



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Fdip141: Running Barefoot
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Thu, May 22, 2008
Today I’d like to point out something that’s really obvious; so obvious in fact, that we tend not to think about it much. In this episode I present for you a very basic, truthful, scientific and historical bit of trivia that both describes and explains the premise which propose, and that piece of trivia is this: Fred Flintstone never wore running shoes. Running shoes are not evil: you’ll have to pry my NB 426’s off my hot sweaty feet if you ever want me to give up my running shoes: but we should entertain the idea that running without shoes on the open road may be a more natural, less injurious way to run.
Show Links:
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v432/n7015/abs/nature03052.html
http://web.wits.ac.za/NewsRoom/NewsItems/feet.htm
http://www.profleeberger.com/files/YFOOT1001.pdf
http://nymag.com/health/features/46213/
http://www.barefooters.org/medicine/med_sci_sports_exer-23.2.html
http://www.vibramfivefingers.com
http://www.23goingon60.blogspot.com/
http://twitter.com/steverunner
http://ustream.tv/channel/phedippidations
Fdip featured blog: http://mwrunfar.blogspot.com/
The song “Running Wild Child” was by Lance Larson from New Jersey; the song featured Richie Sambora check out his amazing music at www.lancelarsonmusic.com
The episode is sponsored by Audible.com Go to www.audiblepodcast.com/phedi for your free audiobook download



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Intervals140B: Pacing Kathy
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, May 16, 2008
I have known my friend Kathy for many years, through many life adventures and glasses of quality wine. In this short format episode of Phedippidations, we run the Long Island Marathon Festival of Races 10K road race in New York, with the goal of finishing in an hour or less. This is also the story of how I met my wife and the contentious angry beginnings of a friendship that will last a lifetime, and about my incredible victory in a epic battle which took place during an all night drive to Pennsylvania a long time ago in an automobile far, far away.
http://www.thelimarathon.com



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Fdip140: Remembering Boston
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sat, May 10, 2008
In this episode we'll hear the stories of others who ran the 112th Boston Marathon. When you write up a race report you"re not just doing it for yourself to memorialize the even, you're doing it for others; passing on your observations so that they can incorporate it into their own form of opinion as a way to better understand the event so that we can improve our performance on race day. Its" not enough to just run the race, or even run it well, you have to tell others about your race. Race reports are a big part of the process of running, racing and competing with each other. It’s in this way that we give something back to our fellow runners; and with a sport that gives us all so much in terms of joy, passion, and health: the verbal or written telling of your story from the races you run is an important way to give back to this community.
Show Links:
www.bostonmarathon.com
www.runningstories.blogspot.com
www.zjruns.blogspot.com
www.worldwidehalf.com
www.buckeyeoutdoors.com
www.theextramilepodcast.com
www.syrentha.org
Fdip featured blog: www.mikemowery2.blogspot.com
The song "I feel fantastic�? was by Jonathan Coulton at www.jonathancoulton.com
The episode is sponsored by Audible.com Go to www.audiblepodcast.com/phedi for your free audiobook download



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Fdip139: The 112th Boston Marathon
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Tue, Apr 29, 2008
This is a race report and audio recording of my 7th time running the Boston Marathon. This year was different in that I approached the starting line unprepared for the task ahead of me. Suffering from a case of peroneal tendonitis, my training was minimal throughout the winter months. On April 21st, 2008 I made the decision to ignore common sense setting a bad example to friends, family and fellow runners by ignoring my pain and pushing myself through a 26.2 mile race. What you'll hear in this episode is neither inspiring or noble, but it will raise the question: "Why?‿
Show Links:
www.worldwidehalf.com
steverunner.com/PatriotsDayResults.htm
www.bostonmarathon.com
The song “Curra Road‿ by Sharon Shannon off her 2007 album “Renegade‿ sung by Mike McGoldrick and produced by Daisy Entertainment in Dublin, Ireland. www.sharonshannon.com
O Fortuna was recorded by the Boston Symphony Orchestra www.bso.org
The parody “Finish Line‿ was inspired of the song “Still Alive‿ by Jonathan Coulton www.jonathancoulton.com



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Intervals138B: Race Day
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Apr 20, 2008
It really means a lot to me that you’d come out to have a beer with me, send me such kind words, good wishes, hopeful prayers, emails, blog posts, and voice messages to the Extra Mile PodCast…and for being with me, in spirit, on race day. This is a short episode of Intervals, produced for race day of the 112th Boston Marathon, with thanks to everyone who have been so thoughtful to a middle aged, middle of the pack, slightly asthmatic, curiously injured fellow runner.



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Fdip138: The Great Race of 1983
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Wed, Apr 16, 2008
The Boston Marathon is a race that challenges an athlete in a way that most courses do not, neither buy design or intent. It is not a fast course. It is not a race where any runner, elite or back of the pack, will set a marathon PR, but it is a race for which all other marathons seek to enable athletes to arrive in a small New England town for the eastward run into the heart of bean town. This is the story of the 87th running of this event, where the last American male runner won the day, and a woman athlete named Joan ran a race for the ages.
Show Links:
http://www.bostonmarathon.com
http://theextramilepodcast.com
Fdip featured blog: http://gotlactate.blogspot.com
The song “Rearrange New England’ was by the band “Carlotta’s Gift‿
http://garageband.com/artist/CarlottasGift



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Fdip137: The 2008 State of the Course
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Apr 11, 2008
What happens in Boston, starts in Hopkinton. In this episode I take my last 16 miler from the starting line of the Boston Marathon through the bottom of Newton Lower Falls. For those of us who will run the race, you’ll eventually come to Hereford Street where crowds will block your forward progress and urge you to turn right. You’ll run this short block with the screams of spectators echoing off the buildings and will finally make your left hand turn onto Boylston Street, with the finish line just ahead of you…with the promise of a well earned time and an ice cold beer there beyond the portal.
Thank you so much for your incredibly kind words, good wishes and thoughtful prayers in both emails and audio comments on episode 21 of The Extra Mile Podcast. It means so much to me that you’d take the time to wish me luck, and a happy taper. In the words of the ancient Romans: “Omnia vincit amor‿ (love conquers all).
Show Links:
http://www.bostontrials2008.com
http://www.bostonmarathon.com
http://theextramilepodcast.com
www.runningpodcasts.org
The song “Still in Massachusetts‿ was by “Refuse Resist‿ http://www.myspace.com/refuseresistband



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Fdip136: Running Legend Kathrine Switzer
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Apr 04, 2008
It takes courage to stand up to authority. It requires an act of bravery to break the unfair rules so as to start the discussion. K.V. Switzer, Kathrine…didn't lace up her shoes on a cold and snowy April day in Hopkinton Massachusetts to prove a point, or to make a statement…she lined up because she had and has a passion in her heart to run.
Show Links:
http://www.katherineswitzer.com
http://www.spencerusvi.blogspot.com
Marathon Woman: Running the Race to Revolutionize Women's Sports Fdip Blog of the Week: http://eatdrinkrunwoman.com
The song "I am Woman‿ was by “Planet of Women‿ www.planetofwomen.co.uk



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Intervals135B: Invitation
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Mar 21, 2008
I have been invited to run the 112th Boston Marathon, and today I’d like to invite you to join me through this goofy little podcast. In this short format episode of Phedippidations “Intervals‿ I extend to you an invitation to follow my progress on Patriots Day, April 21st, 2008. Also, I talk about my gratitude for the thoughtful gift of an invitational entry to this race from a good friend and the Massachusetts Wing of the Civil Air Patrol.
http://mawg.cap.gov
http://www.bostonmarathon.org
http://groups.google.com/group/fdipgroup



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Fdip135: Who do you run for?
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Mar 14, 2008
We run for ourselves, for our health, for our family and friends, we run to honor, to celebrate, to achieve, and to accomplish. We run because we can…because at a very basic level we are good animals who were meant to move with purpose. We are runners; no better or worse than those who chose to practice an alternate motion of sport, or dance, or action…but we all have good reasons for being out there…and while we might not always be self aware of why we’re doing it: when someone asks you the inevitable question; you might want to consider what your answer will be…who do you run for?
Show Links:
http://www.racewithpurpose.org
http://www.guardianangelsocietysyr.org
http://rundaverun.spaces.live.com
http://marcirunsthemarathon.blogspot.com
http://www.amilewith.me.uk
http://www.mtdisappointment50k.com
http://www.msteechur.com
http://www.worldwidehalf.com
http://davefleet.com
www.runningpodcasts.org
Fdip Blog of the Week: http://torontorunner.com
The song “Irish Rover‿ was by The Blaggards http://blaggards.com



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Intervals134B: Living with Steve Runner
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Mar 07, 2008
My name is John. Today I am going to take to the microphone and, on this special episode of Intervals, give you a sense of what it’s really like to live under the brutal and maniacal dictatorship of my Dad: Steve Runner.
For today I hope to uncover the truth for you: that my father is a warped, twisted old man who refuses to buy me a puppy. As you listen to this episode, I hope you’ll come to appreciate my plight and do everything you can to rescue me from a life with Steve Runner.



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Fdip134: Online Training Logs
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Mar 02, 2008
Because of my new intermittent schedule, this episode of Fdip has the distinction (and curse) of being the longest I’ve produced thus far. The internet has created a way for runners to find and use resources for research, community, asking questions, sharing ideas, and for tracking our running performance. Free online training logs are available for us to use to help us reach our running goals. You should consider using an online training log to share your running log and upcoming schedule with a larger community of runners who can offer your advice, warn you in advance of injury and join you in your journey on the road.
Show Links:
http://www.pegasussoftware.com
http://www.buckeyeoutdoors.com
http://runningahead.com/
http://www.runstoppable.com/
http://www.running-journal.com
http://www.running2win.com
http://www.therunninglog.com/
http://www.running-log.com/
http://www.active.com/donate/runoffthosecookies
www.runningramblings.com
http://runningwithchris.blogspot.com/
http://beyond05.blogspot.com/
Fdip Featured Blog: http://pigtailsflying.wordpress.com/
http://www.worldwidehalf.com
The song “Keep on Movin’‿ was by David Mansfield http://www.myspace.com/mansfieldspace



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Fdip133: Pushing Past Exhaustion
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Feb 10, 2008
To push yourself past your zone of comfort you need to smile, think positively, focus on something other than the pain and weakness and dedicate yourself to a higher purpose other than “just finishing‿. Most of all, you have to have the insatiable desire to reach your goal by making your efforts on the road more important than just yourself. If you can do this you will find that you can accomplish great things through your running, and be the runner and human being you’ve always known you could be.
This episode ends with an announcement about the future of Phedippidations.
Show Links:
http://www.worldwidehalf.com
The song “All I Really Wanted‿ was by Jim Fidler www.jimfidler.com



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Fdip132: Marathoning FIRST
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Jan 27, 2008
The Furman Institute of Running and Scientific Training stands by their philosophy of training as being the best scientifically proven method to improve as a runner, and gain fitness as an athlete. By limiting your time on the road to three intense workouts each week, and supplementing your training with cross training, they insist that you will become a better, more efficient runner…able to meet and exceed all of your running goals.
Show Links: www.furman.edu http://www.worldwidehalf.com
Fdip Blog of the Week: http://squirrel1-1.blogspot.com
The song “Wasting My Time‿ was by Matthew Ebel. www.matthewebel.com



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Fdip131: The Big Boom
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Jan 20, 2008
Running was adopted by a society who had been lulled into a false sense of security within the confines of their all too comfortable, technology empowered life of sedentary doom. In America, as in other countries…technological advances negated our need to rise off the couch and hunt, gather and endure physical labor. But as the population grew unhealthy and overweight, they turned to both the sports and medical experts for an answer…and that answer was so basic, simple and pure that the appeal to lace up a pair of running shoes could not be denied. The explosion resulting from the first running boom was a revolution which continues today…a revolution which you and I are very much a part of, as we take back our bodies and our lives and become the runners we all were meant to be.
Show Links:
http://runningintothesun.blogspot.com
http://www.firstgiving.com/waitingforruns
http://www.firstgiving.com/runjcrun
Fdip Blog of the Week: http://backofthepackbaby.blogspot.com
The song “Revolution‿ was by Albert Aguilar http://www.albertaguilarmusic.com



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Fdip130: The Benefits of Running
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Jan 13, 2008
When confronted with all of the positive advantages associated with becoming a runner, it helps to consider all of the reasons why running can help you to become a better person, both physically and, in a sense even spiritually. Because it’s all about living a happier life; a life filled with personal satisfaction along with the physical ability to participate in the world around you.
Show Links:
http://petraruns.blogspot.com/
http://www.savetherhino.org
http://www.firstgiving.com/sherrydisney
http://milestogo-babciaruns.blogspot.com/
http://www.drusy.blogspot.com/
http://www.guidedogs.com
Fdip Blog of the Week: http://schumph-runningwild.blogspot.com
The song “Run‿ was by Hollow Horse at http://www.hollowhorse.co.uk



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Fdip129: The Hazards of Running
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Jan 06, 2008
ust about everything in this life offers hazards and benefits. We balance comfort with pain, satisfaction with disappointment, and safety with danger every time we lace up our shoes and take to the road. It’s quite obvious, to those of us who call ourselves runners, that the benefits of our sport far outweighs the dangers, it is important for us to be conscious of those hazards not only for our personal safety, but to allow us to logically counter the arguments that the non-runner might offer as an excuse not to join us on the road.
Show Links:
http://www.marathonguide.com
www.drusy.blogspot.com
http://www.justgiving.com/toni_harvey
http://anotherrunner.com
Fdip Blog of the Week: www.confessionsofarunner.com
The song “Remember‿ was by Black Lab at http://blacklabworld.com



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Fdip128: Another Loop Around the Sun
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Dec 30, 2007
In a very real sense, you and I are “the hope of the world‿. We had some fun last year and some good times. We made new friends, we enjoyed successes on the road, we had some amazing experiences both together and apart. The lesson to be learned from last year, and the year before that…is that next year, and the year after next…has the opportunity to be the best year of our life and the best year in the life of those around us. There were some terrible things that happened last year as well, but when we live our lives as good animals, behaving with social responsibility, then we are spreading hope…and that ensures that the years to come can always be better that those which came before. Happy New Year!
Show Links:
The song “Auld Lang Syne‿ was by the band Caledonix from Germany http://www.caledonix.de



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Fdip127: The In Box Special
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Dec 23, 2007
Handwritten letters and cards, email messages and our written words written throughout the year and especially during the holidays are a way to keep in touch, to maintain that fellowship that we have with each other. It’s the stories that are contained in those messages that help to educate and inform us, they help us to relate to each other and put our own experiences into perspective. In this week’s episode, I’ll read to you some of the email messages that I have in my “in box‿, and invite you to hear the stories of other runners who are living their lives and experiencing their unique experiences all over the world at the very same time that you are. We are members of a community where the cost of entry is your contribution of thoughts, opinions and observations with each other.



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Fdip126: Base Training
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Dec 16, 2007
How can running slowly help us to achieve better performances later? It is particularly challenging to go from the relative intensity of pre-race workouts to a speed and pace that is much, much slower. However, if you come to the realization that many runners stagnate on a plateau of performances because they run too few miles, and these miles that they do run are are run too fast, then you open yourself up to the possibility of significant running improvement. Proper base training requires patience and discipline, and this week's guest host, Steve's running advisor John Ellis, explains how the hard part of this period of training comes with the dedication to running "easy."
Show Links:
http://www.billrodgers.com
http://getguts.com
Fdip Blog of the week: http://atlantatrails.blogspot.com
The song “Starting Over‿ was by the band “Dark Horse‿ from the UK. Check out their great music at http://www.isound.com/darkhorse



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Fdip125: Running Legend Billy Mills
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Dec 09, 2007
Today I will tell you the story of a great and compassionate warrior from the Oglala Latoka tribe named 'Makata Taka Hela'. Billy Mills bravely faced loneliness and isolation in his college years, and went on to serve the country he loved in the United States Marines. He is a warrior for justice, an advocate for the young, and a person of character and honor who respects the earth and speaks on the virtues of understanding across all nations, both those defined by governments, and those identified by their people: over 550 tribes within the continental United States. Billy Mills is not only a Running Legend, he is an American Legend.
Show Links:
http://www.indianyouth.org www.thefinalsprint.com
Fdip Blog of the week: http://runningandphilosophy.blogspot.com
“As Sure as the Eagle Flies‿ was by Mo Pair from Austin, Texas. http://www.mopair.com/
“Ewa-shakin-tae‿ was by Joseph G Vincent from British Columbia, Canada http://www.unsigned.com/josephgvincent



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Fdip124: The 2007 Philadelphia Marathon
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Dec 02, 2007
The Philadelphia Marathon is a fantastic race, run through and about an incredible city. This was the best marathon performance of my life where my dreams for a sub four hour finish were possible and within my reach. I have run 16 marathons prior to Philly, but was able to accomplish something on this day that has eluded me before. In running through the streets of Philadelphia I gained a new confidence, increased my stamina and improved my endurance to ensure that I would never hit the “wall of doom‿ again.
Show Links:
http://www.philadelphiamarathon.com http://bluedawgsrunning.blogspot.com
The Song “Ordinary Day‿ was by Great Big Sea from St. John's in Newfoundland, http://greatbigsea.com



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Intervals 123B: Giving Thanks
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Thu, Nov 22, 2007
On Thanksgiving Day here in the United States, and in holidays around the world, we feel compelled to offer thanks for the receipt of our good fortune. It’s a uniquely human need that we have to offer thanks for the good things which occurred to us in the previous solar orbit. I’m taking a break from my podcast this week, but wanted to thank you for your thoughts, prayers, kind words of congratulations and encouragement. Thank you for being a fellow runner and a friend, and thank you for helping me to come ever so closer to reaching my dream.



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Fdip123: Holiday Gifts for Runners
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Nov 18, 2007
Consider using this holiday season as a way to invite someone to become a runner. If to show appreciation or admiration you want to give someone a gift, consider giving them the gift of running by means of some item that is related to our sport. There are many products out there perfect for holiday giving, and they need not be all that expensive or difficult to find. To give someone a gift that encourages them to run, you are showing a special kind of caring through your action…and as we wind down the year, through this holiday season, it is a time for us to share the love, joy and peace of the season; by inviting others to run. Show Links:
Zurlocker@hotmail.com
http://www.motionlingo.com/
http://www.drymaxsports.com/
http://my-skye.com/
http://www.roadrunnersports.com/
Fdip Blog of the week: http://cameronkjack.blogspot.com
The song “Re-Gifting for the Holidays‿ was by “The Alice Project‿ from New York. Check their great music at http://thealiceproject.com



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Fdip122: Performance Eating
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Thu, Nov 08, 2007
You wouldn’t fill the fuel tank of an airplane with half the fuel needed to land it safely on the ground. You wouldn’t lift off in a spaceship that had a leak in it’s main propulsion rocket, and you certainly wouldn’t fill the gas tank of your car with chocolate pudding if you ever expected to successfully drive our of your parking lot. You need to fuel your body with the correct balance of carbs, fat and protein at a time prior to your race event that benefits your performance without leading you to some destiny with the glycogen wall.



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Fdip121: Things to do Before You Die
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Thu, Nov 01, 2007
There is just so much to do in this world, so much to experience, and it would be so terribly wrong of us not to do so. As runners, we have an opportunity, every day, to rise above the tedium and experience life to the fullest; and having a list of things to do before you run your last mile is a way to keep yourself focused not on the finish line of your life: but on the joy of your life’s race, while you’re in it.



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Fdip120: The 2007 Bay State Marathon
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Thu, Oct 25, 2007
With three solid hours of sleep, the depressing notion that my beloved Boston Red Sox had lost a crucial game in extra innings, and the understanding that I was about to run my 16th marathon, fellow runner John Ellis and I crossed the chip mat at the starting line of the Bay State Marathon in Lowell Massachusetts, and I ran the best marathon of my life. What happened next was not magic. It wasn’t some kind of impossible stroke of luck, and it wasn’t completely unexpected: to be a runner is to accept the same kind of challenge that a profession ball team accepts when they compete in the World Series. It’s all about overcoming barriers to success and celebrating those successes when the challenge is overcome.



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Fdip119: Results from Beyond the Couch of Doom
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Oct 19, 2007
Over 12 hundred fellow runners ran the second annual Phedippidations World Wide Half Marathon and Kick the Couch 5K. It was an event that demonstrated the fraternity and fidelity of athletes all over the world, of widely different physical condition and abilities. When we accepted the challenge to run in this event, we accepted the role of becoming a runner. We ran in official events, back country roads, in parks with friends, on military bases, quiet places, and organized races. We ran together though apart, thinking globally yet participating locally, setting an example for those around us who might not understand the significance in running a World Wide event, but will always be invited to join us…on the road. ***WARNING*** this episode ends with an angry, (almost psychotic) rant about accusations made of runners at this years Chicago Marathon.



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Fdip118: Cheers from the World
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Thu, Oct 11, 2007
Today we run all over the world, at the very same time and encourage each other to push ourselves past our physical limitations. We are living for the moment, and nothing else matters. Each of us has an unstoppable power within us, earned through dedicated training, determination and the friendship of fellow runners near and far. Over a thousand of us will run today across 45 countries, 6 continents and one small blue bubble in a lonely vast, cold and empty universe, but we are not alone: Today we think global, and run local.



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Fdip117: The Perfect Pace
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Oct 05, 2007
There is a pace you can run which will get you to the finish line of your race totally spent and with nothing left. There is a pace you are able to run that will have you crossing the finish line knowing that you ran as fast and strong as you possibly could. You need to find that measure of minutes and seconds per mile or kilometer, by testing yourself, reviewing your most recent past performance and making a best guess at what will be your perfect pace.



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Fdip116: Where Are We Going?
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Sep 28, 2007
So where are we going when we lace up our shoes? Where are we going when we head out that door? Where are we running, not why or how…but where? There has to be a purpose to all this…and it’s only logical that that purpose is our direction, and that direction has a name, and that name is “Joy‿.



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Fdip115: Running Legend Fred Lebow
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Sep 21, 2007
Fred Lebow was a showman and a promoter who was one of the main reasons why distance running and marathons became so popular as the running boom exploded. He transformed the NYC Marathon from a local event in Central Park with 55 finishers to one of the world’s largest running events with over 25,000 finishers running through all five boroughs of New York City. He lived his life to the fullest, against the dangers and odds of both the Nazi and Soviet occupations of Romania, and although fate handed him a shorten race, with his gall and love of life he turned it into a marathon.



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Fdip114: Hard Days
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Sep 14, 2007
You need to incorporate hard workouts into your training program if you’re looking to extend the duration of your runs, and improve the speed at which you compete. Hard runs are the key to your adaptation as a faster, more efficient runner….they are the only way you can achieve your goals on the road. As a runner you need to experience physical stress with the understanding that when it comes getting your miles in: The harder they come, the harder they fall.



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Fdip113: Periodization
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Sep 07, 2007
Periodization is a way to incorporate different phases of training through out your athletic life. It’s a system custom fit for you and your running goals, and is a way to remain fresh, focused and motivated throughout the year. You build a base, you prepare for your race, you taper well and you’ll find that on race day, it’s easier to run.



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Fdip112: The Mile
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sat, Sep 01, 2007
The human body is a remarkable vessel capable of impressive action, best displayed within the course of running a statute mile. A milerembraces a style of running that demands all of her or his faculties: physically, mentally and spiritually. To watch a mile race is to watch an extreme form of performance art, but it is also to behold the beauty and wonder of the human body, in motion, as it was meant to be: running fast, and hard, moving smoothly with purpose and a searing determination that is a wonder to behold.



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Fdip111: Climate Change and the State of the World Wide Course
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Aug 24, 2007
The state of the World Wide Half Marathon race course is in jeopardy if the projected global temperatures increase as they are expected to do. We owe it to our fellow runners, and future generations to use the natural resources of our planet with care, respect and intelligence. Ignorance of the truth is not an option, and it does not matter who or what is to blame for Global Warming: what matters is that we be responsible and take action, today, right now, not later; today, not tomorrow, this very hour.



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Fdip110: The 2007 Falmouth Road Race
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Mon, Aug 20, 2007
For the 35 th Annual Falmouth Road Race, I’m once again running with my friend Joe. It’s summertime on Cape Cod, with the promise of an ice cold beer waiting at the finish line, and what better way to share such a delicious frosty beverage than with an old friend.



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Fdip109: Dr. George Sheehan: This Running Life
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Wed, Aug 08, 2007
Dr. Sheehan taught us that this running life sets us apart from the sedentary, but not necessarily above them. There is a runner in all of us, even for those who sit on the “Couch of Doom‿ because the body is willing, but it is our spirit that needs ignition. As runners, we are required to live a life of work, and a life of play, but above all, a life less ordinary.



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Fdip108:Running Without the Hurt
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Thu, Aug 02, 2007
We all understand the concept behind the phrase “no pain, no gain‿. As runners, we can accept some level of aches and injuries for our efforts on the road; but we must not invite pain as an expected and acceptable consequence for hard training…we must prepare our bodies for the pressure and force that we’ll put upon it by taking preventative measures that will help us to run without the hurt.



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Fdip107: The Joy of Junk Miles
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Wed, Jul 25, 2007
Junk miles and recovery runs are important elements of a good training program as they can help you run faster and longer. They allow you to enjoy slow easy runs while your body is healing from the stress forced upon it in the hours before you hit the road and they allow you to reach some whole number goal of daily or weekly mileage to appease the guilt you might carry for running below a self made threshold of distance that you consider significant and a source of pride.



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Fdip106: Run Walking
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Thu, Jul 19, 2007
As runners, our intent in a race is to meet and exceed our goals by moving as fast as possible towards the finish…but while the motion of running is always going to be our primary method of locomotion, you should not ignore the benefits of incorporating walk breaks as a means towards finishing fast and strong, as well as to ensure a faster recovery.



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Fdip105: Running Over Fifty
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Wed, Jul 11, 2007
When you get to an age where the world tells you that you’re quote “old‿, when society begins to classify you as a “senior‿ and treats you with the respect that the elderly deserve: don’t reject the kindness or attention; but neither should you “act your age‿. If you are a runner, training and taking part in a road races: then you are NOT old.



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Fdip104: Run, Blog and Share
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Wed, Jul 04, 2007
You owe it to yourself, and to the rest of the running community, to start writing a blog, or producing a podcast. Write about your thoughts, your opinions and share your rambling diatribes…because at some point you’re going to write or record something that will touch another fellow runner, somewhere in this world, in such as way that it will have an important and positive influence in their life.



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Fdip103: Running Around the World
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Thu, Jun 28, 2007
This year, the Phedippidations World Wide Half marathon will take place on the third planet from the sun, 26,000 light-years from the galactic center. It’s a tiny blue bubble of life swarming with fellow runners who will be thinking of this global community while running on their local portion of the planet. As we travel around the globe, or look to imagine those places where our fellow runners take to the roads and paths, we should consider that at only 25,000 miles in circumference the Earth really is a small, small world.



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Fdip102: Repulsively Running
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Wed, Jun 20, 2007
The embarrassing things that can happen to our bodies may not be a good topic of conversation at a dinner party, but they are all a part of our human condition, and need to be understood and dealt with as we push ourselves past our physical limits, on the road.



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Fdip101: Running Legend: Jesse Owens
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Wed, Jun 13, 2007
Jesse Owens represented the United States in the 1936 Olympic Games, held in Berlin. It was here that he showed the world that human beings are endowed with unalienable rights, as well as incredible talent. Jesse proved that ethnicity and skin color were meaningless and that all men are truly created equal.



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Fdip100: Thoughts
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Wed, Jun 06, 2007
Let’s talk about what Phedippidations is, what I believe in, whether I am delusional, what running means to me, and what this podcast means to me. These are the thoughts that go through my head during a long run in the back country roads where these Phedippidations are born. Thoughts, opinions, observations and rambling diatribes are all composed while we’re out on these long distance runs across the planets surface.



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Fdip99: Marathon Fueling
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Thu, May 31, 2007
You need to experiment with what you use to fuel yourself before, during and after a marathon. It is as important as stretching, and following your training schedule as you prepare your body for the miles you have before you.



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Fdip98: Running Etiquette
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Thu, May 24, 2007
These rules of running etiquette are common sense items that most runners follow without much thought. They can all fit under the single heading of “being respectful of our fellow runners‿ whether we’re out training, in a race, or just getting a few miles in with friends. It really comes down to that ol’ phrase “Do unto others as you as you would have done unto you‿.



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Fdip97: Monitoring of the Heart
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Thu, May 17, 2007
Monitoring the rate at which your heart pumps blood around your body is one way to measure your cardiac fitness, but having a feel for your body’s perceived exertion is just as important. A heart rate monitor device may give you some useful information you can use to help improve your running performance.



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Fdip96: Recipe for a Distance Runner
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, May 11, 2007
Just as it is with any recipe, the one that will comprise your existence as a distance runner will be varied and unique. But just as you require eggs for an omelet, flour for cake and potatoes for making French fries…you will have basic ingredients required of you as you re-create yourself into an endurance athlete.



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Fdip95: First Marathons
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Wed, May 02, 2007
The stories about a runner’s first marathon are filled with emotion,well deserved pride, and a sense of satisfied accomplishment. You will hear how they set themselves a seemingly impossible goal that,through hard work, persistence, and an indomitable spirit they were able to achieve. These are changed people who have come to understand that nothing is impossible if they have the desire and dedication to run, quite literally, towards their goal.



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Fdip94: More Memories of Boston
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Thu, Apr 26, 2007
There are 20,348 stories, from 20,348 runners who ran the 111th Boston Marathon this year, and each one is special, unique, inspirational, entertaining, and worthy of your interest. In this episode we hear from a few of our fellow runners, who ran 26.2 miles in a New England Nor’Easter.



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Fdip93: The 111th Boston Marathon
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Thu, Apr 19, 2007
The 111th Boston Marathon took place during a Nor’Easter, with major flooding, driving rains, cool to cold temperatures and a sustained wind of twenty miles per hour with gusts up to forty miles per hour. A record number of qualified entrant chose not to run the race, but the hearty few who accepted the challenge experienced the race of their lives. This podcast was recorded as I ran the Boston Marathon.



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Intervals 92B: Marathon Monday
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Apr 15, 2007
Thank you, fellow runners, for all of your kindness. In this episode of Intervals; I thank many of the people who helped me in small and large ways; I get some last minute advice from John Ellis and a surprise guest who formulated the plan that I followed to prepare for the 111th Boston Marathon; and we talk about the Nor'easter that I'll be running the race in (something I like to think of as a perfect condition rather than a perfect storm). Have a great Patriots Day everyone! As you listen to this, I'll be out there: running down a dream!



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Fdip92: A Duel in the Sun
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Tue, Apr 10, 2007
The story of the 1982 Boston Marathon is more than just a story about two elite athletes and a closely contested race. It is the story of the underdog facing the champion, and was one of the most intensely exciting finishes in modern race history. This is the story about Alberto Salazar and Dick Beardsley in the 86th Boston Marathon.



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Fdip91: Running Legend Joan Benoit Samuelson
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Wed, Apr 04, 2007
Joan Benoit Samuelson won the Boston Marathon twice and was the first Olympic Gold Medalist in the Woman’s Marathon. She is an inspiration not only to women runners, to but all runners who suffer from overuse injuries with hopes of recovery. She continues to be an amazing athlete, a passionate proponent of children’s charities, and a true legend in every sense of the word.



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Fdip90: The 2007 State of the Course
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Wed, Mar 28, 2007
A detailed description of the Boston Marathon course for the 111th running of this world famous event.



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Fdip89: A Pain in the Knee
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Wed, Mar 21, 2007
This episode is all about the knees...runners knee is the most common runners injury. In Fdip#89 we talk about how it happens and what to do about it.



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Fdip88: The Acidity of Motion
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Wed, Mar 14, 2007
Lactate Thresholds and what they mean.



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Fdip87: Children Running
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Wed, Mar 07, 2007
Should our children run road races and marathons? Is it safe? Is it even a good idea to let our kids join us on the road?



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Fdip86: C25K
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Mar 04, 2007
Non-runners need a goal to slowly move them off the couch onto the road to the point where they can carry their bodies a mere 196,850 inches from a starting line to a finish line. This is the C25k running plan.



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Fdip85: Running Legend: Steve Prefontaine
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Feb 25, 2007
Steve Prefontaine was a runner, and an artist in motion: all beauty, and passion, fire and guts encased within a body that sought perfection.
www.bumrushthecharts.com
www.newenglandpodcasting.com
Fdip Blog of the week: beenthererunthat.blogspot.com
The song “Pre‿ by Phil Wells: http://www.garageband.com/artist/PhilWells



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Fdip84: Sympathy for our Spouses
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Feb 18, 2007
You have to have respect and be considerate when you’re in a relationship with a significant other….but most of all, you have to be sympathetic to their needs, and mindful of the way they’ll feel when you’re out on the road.



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Fdip83: Better Sounds to Run With
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Feb 11, 2007
Thanks to new media and portable technology and the technological advances made in the last decade, you can take to the roads and listen to whatever YOU want to listen to, and if you learn something new along the way, you can tell your friends that you heard it on a podcast.



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Fdip82: The Stigma of Steroids
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sat, Feb 03, 2007
Runners have a gift. To enhance our performance with anabolic steroids and muscle-building drugs is to deny that gift. If you pollute your body with steroids you are cheating, and become a fraud. Steroid abusers can never enjoy the pride of personal, natural achievement in athletics.



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Fdip81: Race Directing
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Jan 28, 2007
A race director is part event organizer, part manager, part orchestra leader and part head chef. In this episode I talk about some of the things a race director will need to think about to conduct a successful race, and I take a run through the Las Vegas Strip, where nothing is real, but at least everything is pretentious!



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Intervals 80B: Steve Runner's Neighborhood
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Mon, Jan 22, 2007
Over the past 80 episodes you and I have been running together every week, often in my town of Oxford, Massachusetts, yet I’ve never really described the places that I run through every day. In this episode of Intervals, my friend Joe goes for a run with us and tries to describe my neighborhood.



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Fdip80: Dr. George Sheehan: Running and Being
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Jan 21, 2007
Dr. George Sheehan returned to the road at the age of 45 to become “fully functional‿ as a good animal. His book, “Running and Being‿ became a philosophical bible for runners around the world. In it, he taught us that this is our moment to live, and that we should not let life pass us by: we must run and be in order to know the total experience.



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Fdip79: Heading for the Hills
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Jan 14, 2007
If you can incorporate hill training into your training program, you will gain a competitive edge with those whom you race against on the road. You will gain strength and be more comfortable and confident as you meet the challenge and reach the top of the hill.



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Fdip78: Charity Running
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Jan 07, 2007
Charity is one way to give back to the world around you. By finding a noble purpose to your running, you will have lived a good and honorable life that will inspire others to behave as you, and that, in the end may be your most charitable gift of all.



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Fdip77: In Review of Our Last Solar Orbit
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Dec 31, 2006
In this episode we look back on some of the possibly more amusing moments of this PodCast. In a year of sad and bad news, war and disasters: it’s important to remember that it was a year worth living, and hoping that the next one is an improvement over the last. Happy New Year!



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Fdip76: The Moderate-Consistent Marathon Plan
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Dec 24, 2006
I’m following a new marathon training plan for my Spring race. It’s no longer about just getting the miles in. It’s about learning what marathon pace feels like, and teaching my body to achieve that speed through moderate distances on a consistent basis.



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Fdip75: The Burnt-Out Syndrome
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Dec 17, 2006
It happens to the best of us, the Burnt Out Syndrome is a very real thing, and it’s important to listen to your body as well as your spirit to detect the symptoms…because if you push too hard or run a mile too far, you’re going to snap.



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Fdip74: Even More Gadgets and Gizmos
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Dec 10, 2006
The tradition of gift giving during the holidays has become part of our culture, so in advent of the day we present an independent review of a few items that your fellow runners might hope to receive should some fat man in a gaudy suit shimmy down your chimney bearing even more gadgets and gizmos.



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Fdip73: Argumentum Adversus Integritas Curriculum
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Dec 03, 2006
There are those who believe that middle of the pack runners should never be allowed to run a marathon. Twice a year, so called journalists and essayists embark on a controversial attempt to discredit our fellow runners, and ridicule our efforts on the road. In this episode, we dissect one such attempt from a writer “wanna-be‿ and give him a piece of his own medicine.



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Fdip72: Running Legend Jim Fixx
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Nov 26, 2006
Jim Fixx was the guru of running, he was the one who told the world about the benefits of our sport, and even in his death: he taught us to remember the heart: both for it’s biomechanical wonder and frailty, and the romantic property we bestow upon it with our love for life.



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Fdip71: The Cost of Running
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Nov 19, 2006
Increased longevity, a better quality of life, a more profound sense of self satisfaction and personal fulfillment are all yours for the cost of a pair of running shoes, some time to train and the energy to move your self across the planet. This is the cost of running, and the benefits are endless.



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Fdip70: Exercise Addiction
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Nov 12, 2006
There is a popular misconception that runners are afflicted with a compulsive physiological and psychological disorder. It is said that some runners are addicted to exercise. In this episode we look into some of the research surrounding this, and search for the truth about exercise addiction.



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Intervals 69B: After the Marine Corps Marathon
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Tue, Nov 07, 2006
In this short format show we go back to Virginia, to meet up with my friend Joe after our successful running of the 31st Marine Corps Marathon, I also introduce you to a few other PodCasts which you’ll want to check out, and I read some race reports and emails from fellow runners.



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Fdip69: The 31st Marine Corps Marathon
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Nov 05, 2006
In this episode I have the honor of running a 26.2 mile marathon with the assistance and protection of the United States Marine Corps through the streets of Virginia and Washington DC. It’s an amazing thing when you meet the people who guarantee your freedom to run across your country. These are the soldiers who risk their lives so that my family and I can sleep peacefully at night, safe from harm. God Bless the US Marines.



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Fdip68: Bravery
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Oct 29, 2006
It takes true courage to take that first step and become a runner, it takes a promise to oneself that you will abandon the comfort of a stationary life and accept the long hours and miles, sweat, pain and sinusoidal discouragement and joy that your new life, as a runner will bring you. It takes dedication, perseverance, and above all: bravery.



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Fdip67: Results From Around the World Wide Half
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Oct 22, 2006
578 runners registered for the 1st World Wide Half, and 49% recorded a finishing time. Of all the things you earn in running a road race, your finishing time is the most important evidence of your performance. Aside from the satisfaction of having taken part in something special like a World Wide Half Marathon you have an official time to call your own.



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Fdip66: The 1st Annual Fdip WWHalf Challenge
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Oct 15, 2006
Over 560 runners from 23 countries took part in the First Annual Phedippidations World Wide Half Marathon Challenge.
“Think Global, Run local‿ is not an ethereal concept. It’s a real challenge to real runners all connected through their own thoughts, opinions observations and rambling diatribes and spaced only 104 thousand half marathons away from each other.



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Fdip65: Shouts of Encouragement
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Oct 08, 2006
With over 470 runners in 23 different countries, many of whom have never run a half marathon before, this episode celebrates life through the simple act of running. Produced to inspire, support, encourage and comfort: this special edition of Phedippidations will help all of us who are running this and other races as we “Think Global, Run Local‿.



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Fdip64: Race Day Strategies
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Oct 01, 2006
Your pre-race strategy doesn’t end when you cross the starting line, but when you cross the finish line and beyond. You need to experiment with your own unique race strategy to find one that works best for you.



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Fdip63: Running Legend Bill Bowerman
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Sep 24, 2006
Bill Bowerman was one of the greatest track coaches of all time, who coached some of the greatest runners of all time. He was also co-founder of a famous running shoe company and inventor of the modern day running shoe. This week, we look back on his life and his contribution to the sport of running.



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Fdip62: Mental Training
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Sep 17, 2006
In this episode we look into the techniques needed to train the mind for the psychological challenges of running. We need to be prepared for those running events that are difficult to imagine, and troublesome to contemplate. You have the power to overcome any lack of confidence you may currently harbor, and in this episode of a goofy little podcast we’ll talk about ways that you can overcome your minds propensity to panic on the road.



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Fdip61: Running Around Town
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Sep 10, 2006
Get to know the places where you run. Understand and appreciate the history, art and nature of the places that you run through and upon. You owe it to yourself to hear that story, as an added benefit to your ability to run fast through and upon that land, while running on the open road.



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Fdip60: Predicting Performance
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Sep 03, 2006
Here in New England, if you don’t like the weather: wait 10 minutes and it’ll change for the better or worse. Predicting your finishing time in a half or full marathon is a more scientific venture based on a variety of different formulas all of which attempt to help you set your race goals and give you something to laugh at as you run past the limits set by fuzzy math.



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Fdip59: Those Who Support Us
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Aug 27, 2006
There are people in your life who in a major or minor way support, enable and encourage you to take your body through the pains of training to the glory of race day; and we owe these people our deepest gratitude. In this episode we talk about our support team, friends and family who enable us to reach our personal best through running.



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Fdip58: 2006 Falmouth Road Race
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Aug 20, 2006
Sometimes you come to the race with you’re “A‿ game being only a C minus.‿ I came to the Falmouth Road Race less prepared than my friend Joe, but I did have one trick up my sleeve, one strategy to try. In this episode, we’ll see if my strategy to beat Joe in this years Falmouth worked!



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Fdip57: On the Surface
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Aug 13, 2006
From the shores of Wells Beach in Southern Maine, this week I run a twelve miler on the sand and talk about running surfaces. One of the great things about our sport is that you can run on just about any surface, anywhere in the world. But not all surfaces are created equal.



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Fdip56: Running Legend Eric Liddell
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Aug 06, 2006
Eric Liddell believed that everything he did should give God pleasure. As a runner he was the fastest and had achieved the highest glory, and as a religious man he found that his greatest strength came from God. In this weeks episode we look back on the life of a Scottish hero whose missionary work in China outshined his unlikely success in the Olympic games. We’’ll also hear from Mal reporting from the war zone in Northern Israel.



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Fdip55: The Maine Woods of Thoreau
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Jul 30, 2006
As runners, we need to experience the peace and tranquility of quiet places, if only to refresh our commitment to the Henry David Thoreauian ideals that made us runners in the first place. This week I paddle up the Allagash with my son, father and nephew on an adventure that is as fulfilling as a marathon road race.



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Fdip54: Cross Training for Runners
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Jul 23, 2006
In this episode we talk about cross training, and tell you what some of the experts say about the best exercises to perform as a means to complement the running that you do.



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Fdip53: The Perils of Overtraining
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Jul 16, 2006
In this episode we look into the problems of overtraining, and try to consider listening to our barking bodies. I re-enact a meeting I had with my sports doctor several years ago, and you’ll hear me at batting practice and at a Worcester Tornadoes ballgame where my son and I cheer until our throats are raw!



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Fdip52: Forgive us our Trespasses
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Jul 09, 2006
You should be able to approach your run each day with the ability to forgive yourself for the way you’ve eaten, your lack of sleep, or laziness in the previous days.



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Intervals 51B: Independence from Mainstream Media
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Tue, Jul 04, 2006
As part of a collaboration with photographers, bloggers, podcasters and vloggers, July 4th is a day to declare our independence from mainstream media. In this episode of Intervals, I play three “PodSafe‿ songs that you’ll probably not hear on the radio.



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Fdip51: A Life of Passion
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Jul 02, 2006
We need to encourage those who face life with sadness and emptiness to fill their lives with a passion for something, anything, and everything. Don’t let someone you know live a life without purpose or passion: One way to help them might be to inspire them to run.



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Intervals 50B: The 3rd Annual Sharon Timlin Memorial 5K Road
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Mon, Jun 26, 2006
The Angel Fund is a non-profit organization dedicated to supporting ALS investigations at the Cecil B. Day Laboratory for Neuromuscular Research at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. In this show I run 5K race which serves to raise money to fight ALS.



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Fdip50: More Gadgets and Gizmos
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Jun 25, 2006
Fdip50: More Gadgets and Gizmos



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Fdip49: Hot Weather Running
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Jun 18, 2006
The earth is 93 million miles from the sun, but humans are fragile creatures and if you’re pushing your body up to and past it’s operational limits during a long run, you need to defend yourself from the solar radiation that might turn your distance long run into a life threatening crawl.



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Fdip48: Becoming a Good Animal
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Jun 11, 2006
The phrase: “To become a good animal‿ means to be the creature you were meant to be. As a runner, you are obligated to first be a good animal, before you can become a good human being.



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Fdip47: Vitamin Vitality
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Jun 04, 2006
In this episode I tell you about the thirteen essential vitamins that human beings require for good health. I also discuss a study that links antioxidents to a decrease in muscle damage after a marathon.



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Fdip46: Running Legend: Terry Fox
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, May 28, 2006
Terry Fox was a true runner in every sense of the word. In this episode I tell you the story of this Canadian hero who faced a life threatening disease with courage and defiance; and taught us all how to live our lives to the fullest.



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Fdip45: The Kindness of Runners
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, May 21, 2006
In this episode I talk about the kindness of runners, and make the case that through their example the world is at least a slightly better place.



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Fdip44: The Need for Speed
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, May 14, 2006
In this episode we discuss all things aerobic and the methods by which you can train your body to move faster across the planet.



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Fdip43: Marathon Recovery
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, May 07, 2006
In this episode we talk about marathon and race recovery, we talk about what you should and shouldn’t do in the minutes, hours and weeks following your target race.



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Fdip42: Memories of Boston
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Apr 30, 2006
What happens in Boston, stays in Boston…but you carry the memories with you. In this episode we talk about some of the things we couldn’t fit into the previous show.



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Intervals 41B: Interview with MWCAP at the Athletes Village
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Mon, Apr 24, 2006
Recorded on Patriots Day, I interview two officers from the Air Force Auxiliary, an organization I have represented at Boston for the past three years.



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Fdip41: The 110th Boston Marathon
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Apr 23, 2006
Despite his weakness on the field of battle, Steve Runner attempts to complete the 26.2 mile Boston Marathon, facing a barrier to glory that he never trained for, never anticipated, and was ill prepared to overcome.



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Fdip40: The History of Boston
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Apr 16, 2006
The origin of the Boston Marathon, the heros, and the stories that defines it as one of the greatest road races in the world.



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Intervals 39B: Race week, thank you and athlete alert
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Mon, Apr 10, 2006
The short format show “Intervals‿ is not a new PodCast, rather it’s an extension of the previous weeks show, presented infrequently so listeners can hear more up-to-date information. I’ll have a few of these during the Boston Marathon.



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Fdip39: Running Legend: Johnny A. Kelley, The Elder
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Apr 09, 2006
Johnny Kelley ran the Boston marathon a total of 61 times in his lifetime, finishing 58 times. He won the event twice, and came in second a total of seven times. He was truly a man who defied age and a legend whom everyone loved.



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Fdip38: A Tour of the Boston Marathon Course
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Apr 02, 2006
The first 16 miles of the Boston Marathon are downhill, but it’s what happens coming out of Newton Lower Falls that separates the weak from the strong.



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Fdip37: Stretching for Prevention
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Mar 26, 2006
The majority of experts agree that you should stretch, but should do so consistently and rarely before a long run.



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Fdip36: Boston's Run to Remember Half Marathon
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Mar 19, 2006
In this episode I run the Boston’s Run to Remember Half Marathon, a race dedicated to the memory of 294 Massachusetts Law Enforcement officers who gave their lives in the line of duty.



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Fdip35: W/O Volunteers There Would be Darkness and Chaos
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Mon, Mar 13, 2006
In this episode I talk about the importance of race volunteers, Terry from Knoxville interviews the volunteer coordinator for KTC and I come across something strange on my 18 mile run.



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Fdip34: The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Mar 05, 2006
In this episode we talk about being alone on the open road, and how running can be the cure to true loneliness.



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Fdip33: The Marathon Mystique
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Feb 26, 2006
There is a mystique to the marathon that by it’s very name leaves an impression to those around you, and inspires others to follow in your footsteps. In this episode seek to answer the question “Why do so many runners chose to run a marathon?



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Fdip32: The Form of a Runner
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Feb 19, 2006
In this episode I talk about something called “running form‿ which is simply the way that you should move your body during the motion of running. It’s not enough to go out and “just run the way you feel‿, you need to train yourself to run efficiently, in a way that’s fluid and relaxed.



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Fdip31: Running Safety
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Feb 12, 2006
In this episode we list safety tips for when you’re out running on the roads. We make the point that, compared to the mass of an automobile, runners are “small squishy things on legs‿ that need to take measures to ensure their own safety.



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Fdip30: Running High with Endorphins
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Feb 05, 2006
What is the “Runners High‿, and is it real or imagined? In this episode we investigate the truth and fiction behind this “feel good‿ phenomenon.



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Fdip29: Running Legend: Emil Zatopek
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Jan 29, 2006
This is a biographical review of the Czech runner Emil Zatopek. He was the first to run the 10K under 29 minutes and the first to run the 20K in an hour and set 18 world records in his 15 year career.



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Fdip28: Running Rituals
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Jan 22, 2006
However you approach your training runs or road races, you’ll find comfort in finding a ritual: a method of psyching yourself up to the task ahead of you. As you develop a familiar routine, you’ll feel more relaxed and at ease before you run.



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Fdip27: Mind Games
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Jan 15, 2006
Focus, concentration, internal conversation, planning and visualization are all key elements to a successful mind game in pushing your body past the limits of your own belief.



Download File - 38.7 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Fdip26: Programs and Plans
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Jan 08, 2006
In this episode I talk about the basics of most training programs, and discuss items such as the maximum weekly distance you should run each week, the number of weeks you should train, and the length of your longest “long run‿.
You need to determine the best training schedule for yourself that will help you meet and surpass your own goals. For some of you, just finishing a race of any distance will be a satisfying achievement.



Download File - 44.9 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Fdip25: Revolutions and Resolutions
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Jan 01, 2006
Those New Year resolutions we make for ourselves should be balanced with a promise of altruism. Use the occasion of this new year to help change the world for the better, both for yourself and for others.



Download File - 42.5 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Fdip24: Despite the Scorn of Others.
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Dec 25, 2005
Runners are both patient and understanding. We’ve found something to improve the quality of our lives and should make some effort to save the non-runners from themselves. We should not be afraid to be laughed at or ridiculed, if we can save another human being from the fate of inert uniformity.



Download File - 37.1 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Fdip23: Cold Weather Running.
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Dec 18, 2005
It’s important to dress warm and in layers. The fabric available on the market today is on par with the most advanced space suits constructed by NASA.



Download File - 30.5 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Fdip22: Gadgets and Gizmos.
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Dec 11, 2005
Since it’s the season to be jolly and all that, I list four gadgets that a geekoid runner like myself would love to receive during the Holidays, or any time of the year that you’re in the mood to give.



Download File - 36.5 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Fdip21: Eating on the Run.
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Dec 04, 2005
I discuss eating for runners, and go through the basics that your Mom probably gave you as you were growing up. I mention some “fad‿ diets, and talk about an interesting study in the Britich Medical Journal that justifies a daily consumption of wine and chocolate! (How cool is that?!)



Download File - 33.5 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Fdip20: Running Legend Bill Rogers
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Nov 27, 2005
Bill Rogers is one of the most respected, influential distance runners in the United States, having won the Boston Marathon and New York Marathons four times each. He’s run a total of 57 marathons in all, 28 of them in under 2:15.



Download File - 33.1 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Fdip19: Rambling Diatribes
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Nov 20, 2005
Diatribe – a noun meaning a bitter, abusive denunciation. From the Latin “diatribe‿ meaning learned discourse and the Greek “Diatribee‿ which itself is derived from the word “diatribeen‿ made up of the prefix “dia‿ meaning completely and Tribeen‿ meaning to run.
This PodCast includes what I can only consider to be “rambling diatribes‿ when I’m out here running along the back roads of Central Massachusetts. My use of the term is intended to explain the gloppy streams of consciousness that dribbles out of my head while I’m out here running in an oxygen deprived state.



Download File - 35.0 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Fdip18: The Marathon Blues
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Nov 13, 2005
Each of us needs to find a way to fill the void, to recapture that incredible feeling we had when we were climbing that Mt. Everest of running events. The experience of the Marathon Blues is common, and the cure is as easy as lacing up your running shoes.



Download File - 29.7 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Fdip17: The 2005 Cape Cod Marathon
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Nov 06, 2005
One of the things that makes the Cape Cod Marathon such a pleasure to experience, is the way the local residents come out to cheer, volunteer and entertain the runners as we work the miles. In this episode, I run the 2005 Cape Cod Marathon in Falmouth Massachusetts, attempting to set my second PR is as many weeks.



Download File - 50.4 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Fdip16: Run Long and Taper
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Oct 30, 2005
Too short of a taper period will leave you tired on race day, too long of a taper will leave you unprepared physically. In this episode I cover the basics about “tapering‿ as documented from the experts, and I confess to my own failures at properly preparing in the days before most of my marathons.



Download File - 30.7 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Fdip15: The 2005 Bay State Marathon
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Oct 23, 2005
Listen as I run the first of two Fall 2005 Marathons, this time in Lowell, Massachusetts: home of the American Industrial Revolution. This is a very flat course where, despite hitting the eventual “wall‿ I attempt to set a new personal record in the Marathon.



Download File - 39.0 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Fdip14: The Official Runner
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Oct 16, 2005
According to section 2.00 of the Major League Baseball rule book: A runner is an offensive player who is advancing toward, touching, or returning to any base.‿ In this episode we discuss the "Runner verses Jogger" debate.



Download File - 29.8 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Fdip13: Observations
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Oct 09, 2005
The human brain is a fascinating organ, and while few completely understand its true operation; some of its properties can be found in the way that it retains such high resolution memories from observations made during extreme physical exertion.



Download File - 33.7 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Fdip12: The Long Slow Run
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Oct 02, 2005
Of the many ways that we can prepare our bodies and minds for the act of running a road race, it’s the long slow run that is most effective, both physiologically and psychologically. Your body needs to change: BOTH muscularly and metabolically.



Download File - 31.9 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Fdip11: Healing Thyself
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Sep 25, 2005
There’s an interesting behavioral quirk that many runners nurse and foster over the years, myself included. We develop this need to seek acceptable answers to our medical questions which meet our demanding requirements, rather than submit to the expertise of our own assigned doctors.



Download File - 30.4 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Fdip10: Life to the Fullest
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Sep 18, 2005
Life is meant to be pounding, screaming with sweat and power: explosive and breathtaking with all the energy you can bring to a boil. You are most alive, as a runner, living life to its fullest: on the road, as fast and far as you possibly can. Greg Gumbinner lived his life to the fullest. I run a race dedicated to his memory this week, and ponder the concept that all runners are living their lives to the top of their game.



Download File - 31.5 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Fdip9: The Power of Pronation
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Sep 09, 2005
What is pronation, and why do we need to understand our unique running gait? I’ve often been told that I don’t pronate. Other runners have been found to pronate "too much". What does poor pronation mean to a runner, why is it a bad thing and what can be done about it are all questions answered (to some degree) within this weeks episode. Also: I run the Charlton Old Home Day 5 miler road race.



Download File - 27.3 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Fdip8: Why We Run
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Sep 04, 2005
There must be a reason. There must be some compelling motivation to get any none runners out there to want to lace up their shoes and join the fun. This episode was recorded from the Upper Richardson Lake in northwestern Maine, during a camping trip with my Dad, son and nephew.



Download File - 32.8 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Fdip7: 2005 Falmouth Road Race
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Aug 21, 2005
Seven thousand, five hundred twenty seven runners ran the 2005 SBLI Falmouth Road Race on Sunday August 14th and I beat four thousand eight hundred and sixteen of them!



Download File - 34.8 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Fdip6: The Importance of Rest
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Aug 12, 2005
Fdip6: The Importance of Rest



Download File - 19.8 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Fdip5: Starting Out
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Thu, Aug 04, 2005
Fdip5: Starting Out



Download File - 26.5 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Fdip4: Dodging the Dodge
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Fri, Jul 29, 2005
Fdip4: Dodging the Dodge



Download File - 23.6 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Fdip3: Marathon Sports Five Miler
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Jul 24, 2005
Fdip3: Marathon Sports Five Miler



Download File - 17.2 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Fdip2: Shoe Evolution
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Jul 10, 2005
Fdip2: Shoe Evolution



Download File - 16.3 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Fdip1: Dropping the Ball
steve@steverunner.com (Steve Runner)Author: Steve Runner Sun, Jul 03, 2005
Fdip1: Dropping the Ball



Download File - 12.2 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
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