D.C. runner wrote:
So it's page 3 and no one seems to have gotten Flagpole's point. Flagpole is implying that OP was ALWAYS a hobby-jogger, because he wasn't getting paid for it, and that creating some dichotomy between his former runner self and his new less serious persona is a silly, self-serving distinction. The broader point is that runners are always doing this, creating hierarchies that place themselves higher in the moral/lifestyle pyramid over someone else, slower runners, cross-fitters, 5 hour marathoners, etc. Like this great article
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/23/sports/23marathon.html?pagewanted=allin which a 4:05:52 marathoner says "“I always ask those people, ‘What was your time?’ If it’s six hours or more, I say, ‘Oh great, that’s fine, but you didn’t really run it," to which i want to say, you're slow too dude.
Point is, all but a handful of us are doing this as a hobby. It should be possible to enjoy the sport without putting other people down in the process; OP falls into that trap unintentionally.
I wish I had flagpole's PRs and fail to see how they have any impact on how we read his posts one way or the other.
I think there is a distinction between running as a hobby and running as a sport, even if the sport is technically a hobby too. I mean really, speed is irrelevant to whether or not you're serious about the sport. It's about how much training you're putting in. And if you're putting in high mileage weeks with a good deal of quality, then even if you're not that fast you're probably doing this for something more than a hobby.
The distinction is in what drives you to run and in your training volume. It's not a binary thing, but ignoring its existence is pretty silly.
To the OP, whatever makes you happy, man. Personally I can't imagine not doing a sport competitively. When I tried to half-ass swimming in college (club) I ended up quitting the sport altogether and becoming a competitive runner. So I highly doubt this point is anywhere in my near future, and the thought of just going for leisurely runs without training to get faster actually gives me a little bit of anxiety.