Chris Hobson
Well-Known Member
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 2
I was diagnosed in May 2013 and started doing the parkrun regularly as part of the fitness program that I embarked on in response to that. As I got better at running and it became easier I gradually stepped up the distances. I ran my first Marathon in Hull in 2016 and did the Hull Marathon again in 2017. Running a Marathon was set to become an annual event for me but at the start of 2018 I was beset with a mystery illness which meant that I had to put entering any future events on hold. I did manage to complete all but one of the events that I had already entered as, over the year, I have gradually recovered. Having left it so late in the year, most of the available Marathons were either too close for me to get the training in, already passed or already full. Normally by this time of the year I would be winding down my fitness level a little so that I could just keep ticking over for the winter. Not so this year, to make up for not having done a Marathon, my wife and I have entered The Rudolph Romp which takes place on Saturday December 1st this year. This is a 24 mile trail run over the Yorkshire Wolds. Not only is it tougher than a Marathon due to it being very hilly, but you also have to find your own way to a certain extent, there not being a marshal at every corner to tell you which way to go.
One of the biggest events, Marathon wise is the London Marathon but it is hard to get into as it is always oversubscribed. There are various ways to get in. You can qualify by being a very good runner for your age, I do OK but I'm not good enough to do that. You can buy your way in by handing over a big pile of cash to a charity. You can do the charity thing but try to persuade friends, family and colleagues to stump up the cash. I've never felt comfortable about blagging money from people for doing something that I was going to do anyway. If you are in a running club the club can apply for a limited number of places which the club can award to members as it sees fit. Then there is my way of entering the ballot for a limited number of places that are allocated at random. I would then fail to get a place, breath a sigh of relief and enter Hull or York instead. Except that this year it hasn't quite gone to plan as I have been awarded a place for 2019.
So, it will be a huge occasion, lots of pressure to post a halfway decent time and the possibility of getting my fizzog on the telly. I'm looking forward to it already.
One of the biggest events, Marathon wise is the London Marathon but it is hard to get into as it is always oversubscribed. There are various ways to get in. You can qualify by being a very good runner for your age, I do OK but I'm not good enough to do that. You can buy your way in by handing over a big pile of cash to a charity. You can do the charity thing but try to persuade friends, family and colleagues to stump up the cash. I've never felt comfortable about blagging money from people for doing something that I was going to do anyway. If you are in a running club the club can apply for a limited number of places which the club can award to members as it sees fit. Then there is my way of entering the ballot for a limited number of places that are allocated at random. I would then fail to get a place, breath a sigh of relief and enter Hull or York instead. Except that this year it hasn't quite gone to plan as I have been awarded a place for 2019.
So, it will be a huge occasion, lots of pressure to post a halfway decent time and the possibility of getting my fizzog on the telly. I'm looking forward to it already.