As regular readers will know, this blog is where I harp on
and on about me, myself and I – my own impressions, experiences and general
barely-thought-out waffle – but today I want to draw attention to somebody else
entirely.
This morning, over in Dubai, my friend Ed Hawkins started a
self-supported ultraman which will see him cover 10kms of swimming, 448kms of
cycling, and 84kms of running over the next three days.
His schedule looks like this:
Day 1 - 10km swim and a 174km bike ride
Day 2 - 274km bike ride
Day 3 - A double marathon, an 84km run
Day 2 - 274km bike ride
Day 3 - A double marathon, an 84km run
This isn’t an official race (tho Ed will time the run to
coincide with the Dubai Marathon on Friday) – Ed is alone in doing this. So why
is he doing it? To raise awareness for weight-related health problems and
diabetes – major issues everywhere but particularly in the fast-food,
no-exercise, drive-everywhere culture of the Middle East.
I guess this particularly strikes a chord with me as Ed’s
story is similar to my own: both sporty kids who, for one reason or another,
got pretty big and unhealthy in our 20s and, mainly through discovering
endurance sports, managed to turn that around. In Ed’s case, he turned it
around in spectacular fashion, becoming a fantastic triathlete (and Kona
qualifier!) in the process.
So, today, rather than waxing lyrical about ’10 things that
annoy me about wetsuits’ or ‘why I hate treadmills’, I’m just going to be
following Facebook updates to see how Ed (and his superb team of supporters and
cheerleaders led by his wife Sarah) is getting on and doing some online
pompoming.
Follow Ed on twitter: @ehawkins
Check out his blog: edhawkins.blogspot.com
Follow his ultraman progress: facebook.com/ChallengeUltramanDubaiDiabetesAwareness
Check out his blog: edhawkins.blogspot.com
Follow his ultraman progress: facebook.com/ChallengeUltramanDubaiDiabetesAwareness
Finally, if you’ve accidentally stumbled upon this and are
thinking that your life is maybe heading in an unhealthy direction, I’ll give
you the advice that finally brought it home to me: it’s only going to get
harder to put right tomorrow. If you want to be fit, active and healthy at 60, you
need to do the right things at 30, otherwise you’re going to be sat wheezing in
your chair, wishing you’d made changes while you had the chance.
And, of course, you don’t have to become a triathlete or an
Ironman – it may sound overly simple, but turning my life and health around was
as simple as committing to doing 45 minutes of sport or exercise three times a
week (no excuses) and deciding what my single biggest bad eating habit was (pasta,
double helpings, three times a week) and changing it. Those changes created a
snowball that is still rolling and (I hope) getting faster.
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