19 episodes

The physical benefits of running are well-documented, but how does it aid our mental health and well-being? In each show, host Diane Church talks to a different guest about how running has helped them through a particularly difficult or challenging time. Life feels better after a run. If you are interested in how people overcome adversity and/or are looking for inspiration and motivation to go running, subscribe today. For more information visit: www.whyrun.uk Follow on Instagram at #whyrunpodcast on Facebook @whyrunpodcast

Why Run‪?‬ Diane Church

    • Health & Fitness

The physical benefits of running are well-documented, but how does it aid our mental health and well-being? In each show, host Diane Church talks to a different guest about how running has helped them through a particularly difficult or challenging time. Life feels better after a run. If you are interested in how people overcome adversity and/or are looking for inspiration and motivation to go running, subscribe today. For more information visit: www.whyrun.uk Follow on Instagram at #whyrunpodcast on Facebook @whyrunpodcast

    Turning 80...and running

    Turning 80...and running

    Kate turns 80 this year. Together with her sister Hilary and their friend Ros, who are both in their 80s, they have formed a  highly personal running group called The Old Crones. A lifetime of friendship and around 40 years of shared running experience are membership requirements.   The Old Crones  are a very exclusive group indeed. 

    Through their group,  The Old Crones share their runs, provide support and encouragement and meet up at events when they can. They now live hundreds of miles apart, but keep in touch through their exclusive What's App group of three.

     "We may be shuffling along slowly but we can still do it," smiles Kate. "So while we can, we do."

    Diagnosed with Type-1 diabetes, running three times a week, is an essential part of Kate's physical health too. She also does pilates and has recently started Tai-Chi.

    Kate  watched the first London Marathon in 1981 and remembers her friend saying then that it would be wonderful to do the race. "At the time, I thought 'What! I can't think of anything wonderful about that'...but something stayed with me...and then when it became a race anyone could do...not just elite runners...I thought well...yes."

    Kate has completed the London Marathon and numerous Great North Runs with her son Nick, who loves running too, although he  is somewhat faster than his mother. "In fact the last time  (we did the Great North Run), he was back home in the hotel having a shower before I'd even started," she laughes. 

    Kate is a passionate advocate for ParkRun, with its motto of Movement For Everyone. We both agree, this movement has widened the joy of running to a whole new audience and Kate does her local ParkRun at Wycombe Rye most weekends. And when she doesn't run, she volunteers.

    "Anyone can go...It's very inclusive," says Kate of the ParkRun movement. "There are no judgements. It's terribly encouraging and doesn't cost you anything."

    When asked why she runs, Kate said: "I'm not a natural runner at all, but I think you owe it to your body to do it and, even if you have to drag yourself out on some days,  you definitely feel better when you get back," she smiles.

     



    Thank you for listening today.
    For more details on Why Run? visit: www.whyrun.uk
    Follow @whyrunpodcast on Instagram and Facebook
    And if you've enjoyed the show, do please leave a review and tell your friends.

    • 32 min
    Work pressures... and running

    Work pressures... and running

     
    My guest today on Why Run? is Hasan, who works in finance - a career renowned for its high pressure and stressful lifestyle. In 2010, Hasan quit a job after months of long hours, little managerial support and mounting corporate demands . At the time, he had no other job to go to, but knew that 'a line had been crossed' and that he needed to leave work if he was to protect his mental health.

    In 2017, a friend Hasan hadn't seen for many years commented that he had "ballooned", as a result of his lifestyle. At the time, Hasan said that the comment 'cut him to the heart', but it was the wake-up call he needed to start addressing his physical and mental health.

    Hasan started walking and trained for the 70k Cancer Research UK - London to Brighton ultra walk. Always one for a challenge, Hasan completed the event in 33 hours. He then took up running.

    In 2019, Hasan was made redundant and says that running coming into his life was a blessing, which has help sustain him through the challenges he has had to face. Not only did Hasan lose his job, but the consequences of Brexit and then COVID, made it impossible for him to find a new job. When he had been out of work for six months, Hasan and his wife found out that they were expecting a baby. It was an extremely worrying and distressing time for him and his family.

    'Running became a big thing for me (at this time),' said Hasan. 'I'd go for a half hour run and clear my mind and get away from job applications and just come back refreshed.'

    Today, Hasan has run five marathons; organises a lunchtime running group at his workplace; and is part of various running movements, including: Adidas Runners,  Muslim Runners, parkrun and the Run Grateful movement 

    With so many people facing extreme work pressures at the moment and suffering from burn out, Hasan's story is particularly poignant and has valuable pointers for those seeking to manage work pressures.

    Instagram - thechallengerinme


     
    Thank you for listening today.
    For more details on Why Run? visit: www.whyrun.uk
    Follow @whyrunpodcast on Instagram and Facebook
    And if you've enjoyed the show, do please leave a review and tell your friends.

    • 33 min
    Running...with gratitude

    Running...with gratitude

    Mark White founder of  Run Grateful - a movement that links gratitude with movement. 

    On this episode, Mark candidly shares his story  of how he went into rehab for drug and alcohol dependency at  the shockingly young age of 18. At the time, he didn’t want to go, but once there, rehab gave Mark the opportunity to reboot his life: to get clean; to make new friends; and to learn about the importance of gratitude.
     
    Mark started running more than ten years ago and, over the years, has consistently used  running as an opportunity to meditate about gratitude. Like me, Mark has experienced serious ill-health, having once been so ill he was in hospital with pleurisy and pneumonia and unable to get out of bed. The fact that he recovered and his body is now strong and healthy is something he often returns to when he 'runs grateful'. 

    Today Run Grateful is a movement that inspires runners (and walkers) around the world. The concept is simple: when you go for a run or walk, dedicate a mile to someone or something that you are grateful for in your life.

    At the heart of Run Grateful is the importance of how hope is vital element in our lives - however difficult times may be - and how focusing upon all the good things in our lives that we are grateful for, can transform our mood and state-of-mind. 
     During lockdown, Mark launched a phenomenal personal challenge. He ran a mile -  every hour - for 24 hours and  dedicated each of his runs to something or someone, he was grateful to have in his life. His posts and the stories around them attracted worldwide attention and now runners in more than 80 countries have connected with the Run Grateful movement.
     
    Mark is also host of the Move with Gratitude podcast which can be found on Spotify, Apple podcasts and all podcast providers.

    Instagram - 1gratefulrun
    YouTube - Run Grateful
    Facebook - Run Grateful
     
    Thank you for listening today.
    For more details on Why Run? visit: www.whyrun.uk
    Follow @whyrunpodcast on Instagram and Facebook
    And if you've enjoyed the show, do please leave a review and tell your friends.

    • 49 min
    Living life to the full after 40...and running

    Living life to the full after 40...and running

    In her 30s, Annie Simpson experienced  birth and loss - both of which have very much influenced how she approaches life today.

    Desperate for a baby, Annie  was told  by her consultant in her mid-30s that the only treatment for her fibroids was a hysterectomy. Annie loved children, had always dreamt of becoming a mother, and the thought of infertility was devastating.

    "Every time someone got pregnant, I'd get tearful and think 'why not me?' 'what have I done?' and it got to the point where I just felt my body was letting me down."

    A second medical opinion gave Annie hope and after successful surgery to remove her fibroids, Annie became pregnant. However shortly after receiving the joyful news , Annie found out that her  mother had terminal breast cancer. She died after a brief illness.

    "My mother-in-law said that she was really worried my little boy would come out crying, as I grieved so much during my pregnancy. But if anything, it's made him strong... he's quite a strong little boy."

    Life brings many challenges ...more as time passes...and how we come to terms with the painful and distressing experiences in our lives has a huge impact upon our mental and emotional well-being today.

    In her early 40s,  Annie started walking to be more active. A keen track and field athlete in her teens, Annie was aware that movement could help her physical and mental health. It was also to give her some "me time" from a busy life teaching and bringing up small children. Within a year, Annie decided to complete the Couch to 5k. Running on her own, Annie didn't see any other black women on the streets and connected with Sabrina Pace-Humphreys of Black Trail Runners and then Tasha Thompson of Black Girls Do Run Uk (BGDRUK), movements aimed at increasing black women's representation in running.

    Within a year of taking up running, Annie completed the London Marathon and numerous other races.  She is now having swimming lessons - as she  never learnt as a child. This is because she wants to complete her first triathlon this year.

    Dressed in bright, colourful outfits and full of kindness and encouragement, Annie has now become a mental health ambassador for BGDRUK and is using her fortysomething energy and outlook to support others. She has also started personal coaching and is aiming to complete more than 19 events this year.

    "You've only got one life. Make sure you're living it for you - (whatever your age). When I turned 40, my perspective really changed revealing more to me about life. We have to be brave enough to take the first step."

    Instagram: Coach_anniebee
    Facebook: SweetSimpson
    Linktr.ee: Coach_anniebee



    Thank you for listening today.
    For more details on Why Run? visit: www.whyrun.uk
    Follow @whyrunpodcast on Instagram and Facebook
    And if you've enjoyed the show, do please leave a review and tell your friends.

    • 38 min
    Running...while my son is on chemo

    Running...while my son is on chemo

    At the end of 2021,  life took a dramatic turn for Jen and her family when her five-year-old  son Eashan started to lose his sight. After extensive tests and an emergency scan, Eashan was diagnosed with a chromozone disorder - neurofibromatosis  or NF-1, which will make him susceptible to internal tumours growing within his nervous system for the rest of his life.  The reason Eashan was losing his sight was because he had a tumour on his optic nerve. 
    For 18 months,  Eashan is having regular chemotherapy to reduce the tumour. Coming to terms with Eashan's diagnosis, supporting him through his treatment and continuing with family life has required strength that Jen didn't know she had. During this time, Jen has turned to running as a coping mechanism. She says that when she goes for a run, it  is as "a pause button" on her extremely stressful and worrying life.  She  says that, without running, she  would be in a very dark place.

    Whilst Eashan is having chemo, Jen has committed to run 100k a month..sharing her experiences and achievements on Instagram at : mother_wren_runs.

    Jen also ran the Great North Run last year, raising £5,000 for her son’s oncology ward at Nottingham Hospitals charity. 

    Listen to her story now. 


    Thank you for listening today.
    For more details on Why Run? visit: www.whyrun.uk
    Follow @whyrunpodcast on Instagram and Facebook
    And if you've enjoyed the show, do please leave a review and tell your friends.

    • 37 min
    Eating disorder, becoming a mum... and running

    Eating disorder, becoming a mum... and running

    My guest today is Vicki, who developed an eating disorder  in 2011.  This was a particularly busy and stressful year for Vicki with lots of changes going on in her life. She moved area, she got married, she started a new job and she struggled to cope with all the changes. Initially, restricting her eating and focusing upon food gave Vicki  a sense of control over her life, but it wasn’t long before she realised the eating disorder was controlling her and not the other way round. 
     
    Vicki struggled with her eating disorder  for seven years with it resurfacing after the birth of each of her two children. In 2017 she was diagnosed with anorexia. Fortunately she was able to access support and received treatment as a day patient at a specialist eating disorder service. 
     
    1n 2019, Vicki decided to start running. Her family were concerned that it could be a new purging activity to control her weight, but instead, it has transformed her life. It’s given her strength, a sense of fulfilment and friendship through her running group the Chippenham Harriers. 
     
    This year, Vicki says, life came full circle when she ran her first marathon – the  London Marathon  - raising funds for Oxford Health, the charity that supports the specialist eating disorder service where Vicki was treated. 
     
    This is a particularly poignant interview for me, for as some of you know, I had an eating disorder and was bulimic during much of my teens and 20s and this is referenced in the interview. ..because we do share common ground in some ways. And like Vicki, running is a key part of my relationship with my body today – but in a really positive way.  
     
    TW - Issues around eating and eating disorders are discussed in this show.  for any of you out there struggling with eating issues at the moment.

    You can follow Vicki on Instagram @vickidoesnotlikehills 
    Thank you for listening today.
    For more details on Why Run? visit: www.whyrun.uk
    Follow @whyrunpodcast on Instagram and Facebook
    And if you've enjoyed the show, do please leave a review and tell your friends.

    • 34 min

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