Go big. Quit waiting. You know what I am talking about.

10 08 2010

“Today is your day! Your mountain is waiting.  So…get on your way.” -Dr. Seuss

High up on Mt. Crested Butte, looking into the village of Crested Butte, CO.

It had been too long.  It had been way too long and I knew it.  I didn’t want to admit it, but I knew it.

I love big places that take your breath away and can create an instant change of perspective.  Years ago I had spent lots of time in places like this.  It was crucial to the kind of person I was developing in to.  The more time I spent in the backcountry gazing up at infinite peaks or into flowing rivers, the more I felt connected….and I liked it.

I have lots of reasons why it took me so long to get back.  Looking back on it, my reasons were probably more of excuses.  A reason becomes an excuse when you use it to justify not doing something you want to do, but don’t do just because it isn’t easy.  It sucks to put that out there, but its true.

However, a week in the mountains can do wonders for your perspective.

If you have an adventure you have been waiting for, quit waiting and get your ass in gear.  If there is a place that fires your soul, hurry up and get there.  Before these pictures were taken a good friend passed away, and he was way to young.  I heard lots of of great stories from his friends and family in the days following, but I didn’t hear a word about the stuff he had or if his laundry was folded.  You are not here for a long life, you are here for a good life.

My wife, oldest daughter (and son in the mobile baby oven!) It was a dream to share it with them.

Pretty freaking happy! Sweaty...but happy.





#1-Running and Happiness; It’s A Choice.

13 04 2010

“Could I be a better runner by utilizing the same tools I would for the pursuit of happiness?  Could I train to be a happier person in the same way I would train to be a better runner?”

Perhaps in my years of running these thoughts had come across my mind, but up to now I had never decided to answer it.

Until convinced otherwise, I believe the active pursuit of both running and happiness are the to best tools for meaningful and inspired living.  The more thought I have put into this concept, the more examples I can find that reinforce this notion that I just might be on to something (Self-fulfilling prophecy anyone).  My most fulfilling runs have been times when I had some type of epiphany or I found peace with an issue that had been weighing heavy on my heart.  There were also epic runs in which total exertion created an environment that fostered extreme gratitude and personal reflection.  Conversely, when I think about my top ten most impactful days of the past ten years, a high percentage if not all of them had a run involved some where in the day.  Getting married, new lives coming into the world and special ones leaving it, all occurred on days that had runs some where in them.

I also believe that being happy and running are two of the most natural and best parts about being human.  Aristotle (not be be confused with Aeropostale) is said to have believed that “happiness is characteristic of a good life, that is, a life in which a man or woman fulfills human nature in an excellent way”.  Recent anthropological data suggests that running is an activity you were born to do. So if I am born with the tools to be happy and a runner, it should be really easy.  Right?

At the end of the day, I would like to consider myself a student of both (not an expert in any way).  But admittedly there is a big distinction between student and practitioner.  To know about something is not necessarily to do it.  And it really pains me to say this publicly, as I can recall lots of things I studied well but did nothing with the knowledge that I acquired.

That’s where The Flow Running Project comes in.  Could I and others use the experience in both segments (happiness and running) to take living to the next level?  It sounds more audacious than it really is.  It is just making sure that the time spent on this planet is pretty freaking awesome.  Running and happiness intersect in lots of ways, I think it would be cool to see just how many.

As I explored the areas where running and happiness intersect, I found the following true for both. (Change it to either term)

•     You have to make yourself vulnerable, if you want to be great at it.  It means some times you will come up short, and it may even happen in front of a group of people you know.  You will have to try new things and if you get too comfortable you will get stuck exactly where you are.

•    If you don’t train for it, nothing will change. This sounds obvious but just wanting to be happy, or wanting to be a runner is different than being it.  Cut the excuses, because everyone has a better one than yours.  You have to get your ass off the couch.  Get sweaty, hug a stranger and do not freaking settle for a life that is anything but inspired.  There are people who know more about running and happiness than you.  Seek these people out and don’t be such a big deal that you can’t admit there is some one on this planet who knows more about things than you.

You are ultimately your biggest obstacle to being successful at it.  I said it, so what are you going to do about it?  I know its true and you know its true.  People who have no legs, have gone on to complete marathons.  A generation of Europeans who survived concentration camps found ways to be happy.  What is the difference between them and you?  People in really tragic circumstances are forced to pursue a life worth living or no life at all.  However, we are all pretty much cut from the same cloth.  Generally you must choose greatness.  Being a runner or being happy doesn’t just happen to you, you have to choose it.  This isn’t preachy, but just the way it is.

Patton

Feedback can be posted in the response section or sent to info@flowrunningproject.com.








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