erzer wrote:
Mentallity Games wrote:
Mental fatigue has been the major issue with trying to run for 12+ hours per day, day, after day, after day. Both of the US Transcon (Sandy VI and Pete K) record setters suffered from that. Cinder Wolff who captained the Mother Ship for both of those record runs said, more or less, you wouldn't believe how hard this [day after day of running] is. Getting the runners up each morning was a major event. The body wants to stop and sleep and recover. Dave is going through exactly the same thing.
The major concern for him is his back. It is not worth a long-term injury to press on through. That is what Mimi Anderson tried to do. She ended up stopping after she eroded away her knee cartilage, and was starting to grind away the leg bones at the knee. Reluctantly she quit. According to a recent blog on her website, a year after her US Transcon attempt, she is no longer able to run. "I missed lacing up my trainers and being able to leave my front door and go for a run – I simply missed my running."
http://www.marvellousmimi.com/2018/03/29/learning-new-skills-its-not-all-plain-sailing/Didn't Mimi quit because she was exposed here as a cheat?
That was not entirely clear. Her team did everything it could to discourage random observers during most parts of her event. Her approach was: tells you want to join Mimi, and we will tell you where to see her running. That was complete unlike what Pete K and Sandy Vi did—anyone could join them at any time; follow the Garmin GPS,
Mimi's knee appears to be damaged beyond repair. For someone who was addicted to running, like her, that has to be the worst outcome. But she refused to stop and ran through an injury that got worse and worse.