Run Long After 60

Mark Vega

Run Long After 60 is a podcast about durability, curiosity, and continuing to do hard things as the years stack up. Hosted by Mark Vega, the show features long-form conversations with runners, endurance athletes, coaches, creatives, and professionals who are still showing up — often well past the age when society expects people to slow down. This is not a podcast about speed, podiums, or shortcuts. It’s about adaptation. Perspective. And learning how to keep moving forward — physically, mentally, and creatively — over the long arc of a life. Episodes are often recorded in motion, including running intros captured mid-workout, because this show isn’t about talking around endurance. It’s about living it. Conversations explore training, aging, setbacks, reinvention, discipline, failure, resilience, and the quiet decisions that allow people to keep going long after others have stopped. Run Long After 60 is for anyone who believes that endurance doesn’t expire — it evolves. 🎙 New episodes weekly📍 Hosted by Mark Vega

  1. 29 JAN

    Episode 17 – Ruperto Romero | Quiet Excellence, Family, and Racing with Humility

    In this episode of Run Long After 60, I’m joined by Ruperto Romero — a Southern California trail legend whose accomplishments are extraordinary, and whose presence is defined by humility, generosity, and deep respect for the sport. Ruperto was open about feeling self-conscious being on camera and speaking English — and then proceeded to be superb. Thoughtful. Honest. Grounded. At one point, his kids step into the room to help show off his trophies, and the pride runs both ways: they’re proud of him, and he’s proud of them — and of the life he’s built through running, family, and consistency. Ruperto is 62 years old. He has completed 69 ultramarathons. He’s finished 65 of them. And 59 of those finishes were podiums. Those numbers are real — but this conversation isn’t about chasing stats. It’s about how you carry yourself through decades of effort. We talk about discovering trail running in his late 30s, racing without ego, and learning — sometimes the hard way — when to push and when to protect the body. Ruperto shares what it was like entering his first 100-mile race with almost no knowledge of fueling or pacing… and finishing in the Top 10 anyway. We talk about grief, purpose, and how family has always been part of his running story — whether crewing, pacing, or simply believing. His relationship with the Angeles Crest 100 is historic: podiums across decades, two overall wins years apart, and earning the rare Eagle buckle when you run the race 10 years in a row. But what stands out most is his perspective — why DNFs can be acts of wisdom, why the fire to compete doesn’t fade with age, and how excellence matures instead of disappearing. This is a quiet, powerful conversation. No hype. No chest-beating. Just lived experience, respect for the miles, and a reminder that legends don’t always announce themselves. As this audio episode is published, Ruperto is toeing the line at the Sean O’Brien 100K — and I’ll be out too. The only time I'll be on the course with him. He may come in first. I may come in last. And that feels exactly right. Run Long After 60 is a show about people who continue doing hard things because movement, challenge, and curiosity still matter. Note: These early episodes were originally recorded for video. Audio quality may vary slightly from episode to episode, but the conversations remain intact and unedited. 🎧 New episodes weekly📍 Hosted by Mark Vega

    1h 26m
  2. 29 JAN

    Episode 16 – Cliff Matthews | Service, Happiness, and Racing in Wheee! Mode

    In this episode of Run Long After 60, I’m joined by ultrarunner, mountain servant, and joyful disruptor Cliff Matthews — known to many on the trails as Young Lazy Deadhead. Cliff is one of those rare people who trains hard, listens deeply, and shows up when it matters. He’s run long miles, rucked longer ones, paced countless friends, served in search and rescue, and quietly helped hold together parts of the trail community when no one else stepped forward. And when it’s time to race, Cliff flips a switch and enters what he calls Wheee! Mode — a philosophy rooted in joy, grit, presence, and mountain play. This conversation could have gone on for days. Cliff and I are both talkers — and listeners — and what unfolds is a wide-ranging, heartfelt exchange about service, endurance, and meaning. We talk about helping others finish their dreams, including being part of the moment that helped Gunhild Swanson reach the Western States finish line with seconds to spare. We talk about joining the search for Caballo Blanco, carrying the emotional weight of the Bataan Memorial Death March year after year, and keeping grassroots trail traditions alive when they’re at risk of fading. Cliff shares his perspective on celebrating DNFs, attempting and finishing everything from classic 100s to 200-mile races, and why joy matters just as much as toughness. We also talk about life shifts — caring for his aging mother, changing priorities, and how running sometimes takes a backseat without ever losing its place in the heart. This episode is about training hard, serving others, and remembering why we do this in the first place. It’s about laughter, long stories, shared silence, and the kind of wisdom that only comes from showing up over and over again. Congratulations to Cliff on his selection for Hardrock 2026 — a return to one of his favorite places, in full Wheee! Mode. Run Long After 60 is a show about people who continue doing hard things because movement, challenge, and curiosity still matter. Note: These early episodes were originally recorded for video. Audio quality may vary slightly from episode to episode, but the conversations remain intact and unedited. 🎧 New episodes weekly📍 Hosted by Mark Vega

    2h 31m
  3. 29 JAN

    Episode 15 – Jim Glenn | Rebuilding the Body, Rediscovering the Joy of Running

    In this episode of Run Long After 60, I’m joined by runner and comeback story Jim Glenn — known to many as @rebuiltrunnah, and affectionately claimed here as the Robo Runner. Jim lives in New Hampshire and runs with two knee replacements and one hip replacement. Born bow-legged and in pain for much of his life, he was told repeatedly that running wasn’t in the cards. Decades later, after multiple surgeries and a complete rebuild of his lower body, Jim is running again — not cautiously, but joyfully. He’s racing regularly, has completed marathons, and has logged more than 70 races since returning to the sport. This conversation is unlike any other. Jim describes, in precise and honest detail, what it actually feels like to run with artificial joints — the clicking, the mechanics, the strange sensation of your brain not quite recognizing that your legs are moving. We talk about tibial oscillation, co-contraction, balance, proprioception, and how learning to run again at 61 really does feel like starting from scratch. But this episode isn’t about hardware. It’s about freedom. We talk about the moment Jim realized pain no longer controlled his life, about running with his daughter, about winter miles in New Hampshire, and about the quiet confidence that comes from reclaiming movement after being told “no” for so long. His smile — especially now — says everything. This is one of the most hopeful episodes in the catalog. Not because it promises miracles, but because it shows what’s possible when curiosity, gratitude, and persistence meet modern medicine and a willing spirit. Run Long After 60 is a show about people who continue doing hard things because movement, challenge, and curiosity still matter. Note: These early episodes were originally recorded for video. Audio quality may vary slightly from episode to episode, but the conversations remain intact and unedited. 🎧 New episodes weekly📍 Hosted by Mark Vega

    52 min
  4. 29 JAN

    Episode 14 – Paul James Johnson | Storytelling, Distraction, and Thriving in the 200-Mile World

    In this episode of Run Long After 60, I’m joined by ultrarunner, retired trial lawyer, and master storyteller Paul James Johnson. Paul is 69 years old and has discovered that his true stride — both physically and mentally — lives in races of 200 miles and beyond. He’s started the Cocodona 250 four times, finished it three, and is already lining up for another run in 2026. Along the way, he’s found a rhythm that blends endurance, intellect, and imagination. Paul calls his approach the Art of Distraction — a skill he believes is essential for surviving and thriving in massive efforts. Rather than fighting the distance, he leans into curiosity. He turns races into narrative projects, researches courses deeply, records his own audio notes to coach himself on trail, and uses story as a way to move forward when fatigue sets in. We talk about what it’s like to bring a lawyer’s problem-solving mindset into ultrarunning, how research becomes memory deep into a race, and how storytelling can keep you engaged when the miles stretch endlessly ahead. Paul shares lessons learned from runner’s lean, glute issues, aging inside 200-mile races, and the constant recalibration required to stay healthy and upright. We also talk about running with his son and crew chief C.J., why he loves inaugural races, and what keeps drawing him back to events like Cocodona, Across Florida 200, and the Thai 500. Somewhere along the way, Paul invites me to pace him at Cocodona 2026 — an offer I gladly accept during the conversation. This episode is thoughtful, funny, and relentlessly curious — proof that at 69, you can still come in hot, find new gears, and keep chasing the next big adventure. Run Long After 60 is a show about people who continue doing hard things because movement, challenge, and curiosity still matter. Note: These early episodes were originally recorded for video. Audio quality may vary slightly from episode to episode, but the conversations remain intact and unedited. 🎧 New episodes weekly📍 Hosted by Mark Vega

    1h 58m
  5. 29 JAN

    Episode 13 – Bernie Rhinerson | Lifting Heavy, Starting Late, and Training for the Long Game

    In this episode of Run Long After 60, I’m joined by Bernie Rhinerson — a relentless advocate for strength, mobility, and what he calls power aging. Bernie didn’t grow up in the gym. For decades, he lived a high-stress professional life in public relations, rarely worked out, and ran on Diet Coke, Chardonnay, and fast food. Everything changed after he read Younger Next Year. What followed wasn’t a quick fix — it was a complete reorientation of how he wanted to live the rest of his life. Since then, Bernie has lost more than 35 pounds, quit drinking, built a full garage gym, and committed himself to lifting heavy and moving well well into his 70s. At 74, his daily training posts have become a study in persistence — not perfection — and an inspiration to tens of thousands of people who see themselves in his late start. We talk about turning retirement into a new kind of purpose, why muscle is the organ of longevity, and what it means to train not just for today, but for your 80s and beyond. Bernie shares how strength, speed, and mobility have reshaped his energy, sleep, and mindset — and why clarity often follows consistency. This conversation isn’t about aesthetics or shortcuts. It’s about discipline, humility, and showing up every day — especially when you didn’t start early. Run Long After 60 is a show about people who continue doing hard things because movement, challenge, and curiosity still matter. Note: These early episodes were originally recorded for video. Audio quality may vary slightly from episode to episode, but the conversations remain intact and unedited. 🎧 New episodes weekly📍 Hosted by Mark Vega

    1h 10m
  6. 29 JAN

    Episode 12 – Kevin Brunson | Run Streaks, ADHD Energy, and Keeping It Fun After 60

    In this episode of Run Long After 60, I’m joined by ultrarunner and legendary run-streaker Kevin Brunson — 66 years young and eighteen years into a daily running streak. Kevin didn’t set out to become a streak runner. It started with a simple answer to a simple question: “Do you run every day?” One mile a day turned into one hundred days, and by then, he couldn’t stop. What makes this even better? Kevin didn’t really start running seriously until age 48 — which means that after eighteen years, he’s only now “getting good at it.” Today, Kevin sits in rare company: fewer than 150 people worldwide have maintained a run streak between 15 and 20 years. Out of more than 5,000 officially tracked streak runners, that places him firmly in the top few percent — though accolades aren’t what this conversation is about. What is this conversation about? Joy. Curiosity. Restlessness. Laughter. And the sheer pleasure of moving every single day. Kevin and I laugh more in this episode than in almost any other — not because we’re particularly funny, but because running has given us permission to be playful, imperfect, and fully ourselves. We talk about ADHD, gear evolution over decades, shoes and watches and packs, ultrarunning highs and lows, Boston Marathon memories, runner’s highs after 60, and why participation still matters deeply. This episode is long, unfiltered, and full of heart. You’ll hear medals clinking in the background, stories spanning decades, and the unmistakable sound of two runners who genuinely love what they do. Kevin’s message is simple and enduring: make it easy to get out the door, keep learning, and celebrate every mile — especially the ordinary ones. Run Long After 60 is a show about people who continue doing hard things because movement, challenge, and curiosity still matter. Note: These early episodes were originally recorded for video. Audio quality may vary slightly from episode to episode, but the conversations remain intact and unedited. 🎧 New episodes weekly📍 Hosted by Mark Vega

    2h 39m

About

Run Long After 60 is a podcast about durability, curiosity, and continuing to do hard things as the years stack up. Hosted by Mark Vega, the show features long-form conversations with runners, endurance athletes, coaches, creatives, and professionals who are still showing up — often well past the age when society expects people to slow down. This is not a podcast about speed, podiums, or shortcuts. It’s about adaptation. Perspective. And learning how to keep moving forward — physically, mentally, and creatively — over the long arc of a life. Episodes are often recorded in motion, including running intros captured mid-workout, because this show isn’t about talking around endurance. It’s about living it. Conversations explore training, aging, setbacks, reinvention, discipline, failure, resilience, and the quiet decisions that allow people to keep going long after others have stopped. Run Long After 60 is for anyone who believes that endurance doesn’t expire — it evolves. 🎙 New episodes weekly📍 Hosted by Mark Vega