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#FITDAY SERIAL LICENSE#
There is no test to pass, no license to earn, no membership card to get. It doesn’t matter if today is your first day or if you’ve been running for twenty years. It made me think of one of my favorite quotes about what makes a runner – and no, it’s nothing to do with your distance. But no one deserves to have their own significant running achievement – whether it’s running for 20 minutes without stopping, or running a 100 mile race – to be disparaged. Maybe she was joking and unaware she was being overheard. Maybe that runner was poorly expressing their pride in their own distance achievements. I can’t imagine where the attitude that a shorter distance was “the kids’ race” came from. From what I know of the ultra running community, it seems to be a very inclusive and encouraging group, which is why when someone has an experience like this, it is so jarring and unexpected. Most runners I know, though, don’t think less of runners who take on shorter distances as they themselves increase their own distance. I vividly remember each milestone in my running career and how exciting it was to reach a mileage that I either wasn’t sure I would be able to complete, or had never imagined possible. I understand the pride and sense of achievement that comes with each new distance milestone. Your distance does not define you as a runner – the fact that you go out and run defines you as a runner. But that’s my personal opinion – it would never occur to me to denigrate anyone based on their distance choice. Give me a half marathon over a 10K any day as well – those shorter distances are hard for me. When did the longest distance become the one that was somehow more important? I have only raced one 5K in my life and I actually think the training for that distance is more stressful and harder than the training required for a marathon. Someone else said if it was their first racing experience, they would have quit, thinking it was an elitist sport.

One person told her it had made running less fun for her. Afterward she got in touch with some other people who had run and heard the same opinion from them. She also detected a dismissive attitude toward runners who were running at a slower pace than required to make the cut off for their distance. She felt like the focus for the organizers and support staff were the longer distances. My friend described the atmosphere at the race as mirroring that person’s opinion. The runner was talking about the shortest distance on offer – the 50k distance my friend was about to run – as if it was somehow not worth doing, something easy a kid could handle. That’s what a friend of mine heard from a fellow runner recently at an event of several ultra distances.
