Borderlands.
Josh RosenthalSomehow we're still not learning Borderlands.
Josh RosenthalWe still suck at running.
Josh RosenthalWelcome to the Borderlands Trail and Ultra Running podcast.
Josh RosenthalMy name is Josh Rosenthal.
Josh RosenthalI'm the host.
Josh RosenthalI'm the founder.
Josh RosenthalToday I'm welcoming Tommy Lewis.
Josh RosenthalHe's one of my favorites.
Josh RosenthalWhen I say that Borderlands is the heart of trail running, I think Tommy really embodies what I'm trying to do here more than I do at times.
Josh RosenthalHe is very much for the soul and the way he speaks, he speaks to the soul, he speaks from the soul.
Josh RosenthalHe.
Josh RosenthalHe connects really well with people who are aspiring to start running.
Josh RosenthalHe's a net good for the sport by a long shot.
Josh RosenthalAnd I really love anytime I get to talk to him on the podcast or offline.
Josh RosenthalIn this episode, we talk about when the miles that you need aren't necessarily the miles that you want, or when the miles that you have in front of you aren't necessarily the miles that you want.
Josh RosenthalHe lives in London, I live in Paris.
Josh RosenthalBut we both really love the trail.
Josh RosenthalWe really miss it.
Josh RosenthalAnd in this episode we talk about, hey, we can't get to it.
Josh RosenthalSo how are we going to be happy?
Josh RosenthalWhat are we going to do to.
Josh RosenthalTo serve ourselves and to put ourselves in that great mental spot of being happy with what's in front of us?
Josh RosenthalI am trying to get your feedback more often and I want this to be more like a radio show.
Josh RosenthalSo I have a hotline now.
Josh RosenthalThat hotline is Runmore643.
Josh RosenthalThat's 786-667-3649.
Josh RosenthalThat's Runmore643.
Josh RosenthalI'm going to call and leave a message about anything.
Josh RosenthalWe use them, especially on bad runners.
Josh RosenthalTake with Wolf Runner, but anything when I thought it'd be fun.
Josh RosenthalIf you want to call because you're looking for a new trail shoe and you want to ask Taylor Bodine of Believing the run and you want to talk about what you're looking for in a shoe and he can give you one.
Josh RosenthalYou can leave a message about anything.
Josh RosenthalJust know that if you leave the message, I want it to be less than one minute.
Josh RosenthalAnd once you record it, it belongs to me and I will put it on the air, most likely.
Josh RosenthalAlso, Devil's Gulch is in July and I'm super stoked on that.
Josh RosenthalAnd I hope that you run the 100 mile, the 50 miler, or the half marathon.
Josh RosenthalIt's hot as hell, it's hard as hell, and it's what I think heaven would be like.
Josh RosenthalIt is Just a beautiful and perfect American trail race.
Josh RosenthalOn January 18th in Salt Lake City, I'm doing a run with Billy Yang, which is really a dream come true for me.
Josh RosenthalWe're partnering up with path projects, and we're doing the speedboat 5k, just a fun group run in the foothills of Salt Lake.
Josh RosenthalI'm flying back from Paris just for that run.
Josh RosenthalI'll only be in Salt Lake for 36 hours, and we'll do a run together, and then we're gonna do a live podcast before an audience and a Q and A.
Josh RosenthalSo if you are in Salt Lake or you want to be on that day, Saturday, January 18th, I've got details to register for that.
Josh RosenthalSoon it will all be free.
Josh RosenthalIn order to come to the podcast, though, you have to be signed up for the Salt Lake Foothills Trawl Races, and that's how you'll get entrance into the live recording.
Josh RosenthalI imagine that seats will be filled up by those, but if not, it will be open to the public once they've all had a chance.
Josh RosenthalOkay, don't Forget, run more 643.
Josh RosenthalCall me.
Josh RosenthalText.
Josh RosenthalI prefer the call.
Josh RosenthalLeave a message.
Josh RosenthalAnd I want to put you on the podcast.
Josh RosenthalAll right, here's my friend Tommy and I talking about life and the big smoke, the big city.
Josh RosenthalEnjoy.
Josh RosenthalIt's too amazing.
Josh RosenthalIt's too damn cold to welcome.
Josh RosenthalI'm a trail runner, I promise, but I don't run on the trails anymore, and that hurts my heart.
Josh RosenthalLike, legitimately.
Josh RosenthalIt hurts because I just love the dirt so much.
Josh RosenthalI love the open air.
Josh RosenthalI love unfocusing my eyes on really, like, vast landscapes.
Josh RosenthalAnd I love having every excuse in the world or no excuse at all to just stop because nobody can see me.
Josh RosenthalI want to walk up a climb, and I want to do all these sort of things.
Josh RosenthalLike, this is trail running to me.
Josh RosenthalLike, it's.
Josh RosenthalIt's solitary to a degree, or it's volunteer.
Josh RosenthalYou have to.
Josh RosenthalYou have to be intentional for it to be with somebody, and I like that also.
Josh RosenthalBut now my life is on the road, and I'm running on the road.
Josh RosenthalI'm in Paris.
Josh RosenthalI'm not complaining.
Josh RosenthalThis is my dream come true to get to live here for a year.
Josh RosenthalBut I miss the desert and I miss the mountains so much.
Josh RosenthalAnd they have something over here that they call forest running, which is just, like, flat dirt running.
Josh RosenthalAnd that's really cool when I can get to a forest, but I can rarely get to a forest even.
Josh RosenthalSo, my friend today, Tommy, lives in London, and I Would say maybe he's not, he's not going to mope around about it like I do.
Josh RosenthalBut he's got this similar thing.
Josh RosenthalHe runs in a city, but he's also a trail runner.
Josh RosenthalHe's run some really big trail races, he's run some road races.
Josh RosenthalHe's got a hundred miler in his sights in America, which is pretty cool.
Josh RosenthalSo without any further ado, this is my friend Tommy.
Josh RosenthalWelcome back, Tommy.
Tommy LewisGood to be here.
Josh RosenthalSo you're a London runner, huh?
Josh RosenthalWhat's that like?
Tommy LewisLondon is, London is great in many ways and it's awful in many ways as well.
Josh RosenthalAll right, yeah, I'm sold.
Tommy LewisYeah, yeah, yeah.
Tommy LewisI always say I've got a love hate relationship with London because it's, it's where I, it's where I started my career.
Tommy LewisIt's brought me so much from that perspective and it's a lot of fun.
Tommy LewisYou know, the best artists come through London.
Tommy LewisYou know, you have the best of everything.
Tommy LewisLike anything you want, you get it.
Tommy LewisLike it's here in London.
Tommy LewisAnd so it's a great city, one of the greatest cities in the world.
Tommy LewisAnd in terms of its running, it's one of the best cities to run in.
Tommy LewisI guess it has, in my opinion, the best city parks of any capital city in the world.
Tommy LewisLike, we are spoiled here.
Tommy LewisWhether you're, you know, in the north of London like me, and you've got Finsbury park or Hampstead Heath or whether you're further south or further west and you've got, you know, you've got Regents park up here in the northwest and then your Hyde park which is more central.
Tommy LewisSo many great parks and great environments and especially like this time of year, colorful trees.
Tommy LewisYou know, it is objectively good looking, but at the same time it's still a concrete jungle.
Tommy LewisAnd for many people who don't necessarily live right next to a park, yeah, you're still, it's, it's densely populated.
Tommy LewisLike it's an insane number of people are here.
Tommy LewisSo if you're in a bad mood, you're constantly trying to kind of pedestrian slalom and that's not everyone's favorite thing to do.
Josh RosenthalOh no.
Tommy LewisSo, yeah, I've got a love hate relationship with it.
Tommy LewisYou know, I've been running here now for eight years and I've probably done thousands of laps of Victoria park in East London.
Tommy LewisBut yeah, I do, I do sort of sometimes just get a bit bored of the same routes and the same pavement pounding.
Josh RosenthalFor sure, yeah.
Josh RosenthalI mean, I talked to a really notable American runner Jacob P.
Josh RosenthalAnd I've.
Josh RosenthalAnd I've repeated this a lot because it really helped me because he's a known.
Josh RosenthalHe's known as an ultra trail runner.
Josh RosenthalHe's also known as a great road marathoner.
Josh RosenthalAnd he said on the road there's, there's a rhythm that's available only to road runners, just like there's a rhythm only available to trail runners that road runners can't access.
Josh RosenthalAnd I like that, just thinking, hey, there's something beautiful to be found in road running.
Josh RosenthalBecause when we talk about road running, oftentimes we're talking about, like a type of ambition that's different than the type of ambition on the trail.
Josh RosenthalTo me, that's the ambition on the trail is a very, like, romantic ambition.
Josh RosenthalIt brings out this romantic side of me.
Josh RosenthalRoad is bringing out this determined, like, focused.
Josh RosenthalI'm going to do something and I'm going to go at this pace and, and, and all that.
Josh RosenthalAnd I feel like that's.
Josh RosenthalThat's the hard part is, yeah, you're dodging the people.
Josh RosenthalYou get out on the road, you, even if you've got a great place to run, like along the sand here is a really great place to run, but you still have to get there.
Josh RosenthalAnd you go through all the people and you're running on the road.
Josh RosenthalAnd Paris, walking, you know, it's really narrow sidewalk, so you're bouncing off the sidewalk into traffic and back in just a lot.
Josh RosenthalAnd it's new to me.
Josh RosenthalSo how do you find.
Josh RosenthalIn London, how do you.
Josh RosenthalHow do you find that rhythm?
Josh RosenthalThe thing that Jacob Pusey talked about is that rhythm that's available, that one foot in front of the other, that sort of mindless, meditative running.
Josh RosenthalDo you.
Josh RosenthalAre you able to achieve that or find that in the big city?
Tommy LewisYeah, I would have to agree with him there about road running.
Tommy LewisLike I always am.
Tommy LewisI've always been far more attracted to trail running for all the reasons you list.
Tommy LewisLike, it just, it's just more interesting, great scenery.
Tommy LewisIt's, you know, mixed terrain.
Tommy LewisYou can approach it however you want.
Tommy LewisAnd I guess there's more variety, which is more interesting to me.
Tommy LewisBut there is some beauty in road running and, yeah, finding that rhythm.
Tommy LewisYou know, I, I do think there's a.
Tommy LewisThere's a unique flow state that can be found in road running.
Tommy LewisAnd I wouldn't say you can't.
Tommy LewisYou definitely.
Tommy LewisIt's not that I'm saying you can't find that in trail running.
Tommy LewisThat would be stupid to say, but it's different, you know, it's a different kind of flow.
Tommy LewisAnd I quite like, you know, I quite like finding that rhythm.
Tommy LewisIf you're doing sort of loops of a park, you can really find that rhythm.
Tommy LewisLike if I go, if I take.
Tommy LewisOne of my favorite parts to run around in London is.
Tommy LewisIt's like the East London running mecca.
Tommy LewisIt's Victoria Park.
Josh RosenthalYeah.
Tommy LewisAnd it's just got nice wide pavements.
Tommy LewisYou know, you can always anticipate where people are going to go.
Tommy LewisYou're never really having to dodge too much.
Tommy LewisAnd also around those parks you could, there's, there's a plan.
Tommy LewisThere's plenty of little trails that you can sort of dart into.
Tommy LewisAnd so you do have urban trails.
Tommy LewisThey do exist if you find them in the right places.
Tommy LewisAnd you also sort of.
Tommy LewisThere is joy in the speed of running over the roads.
Tommy LewisSo.
Tommy LewisYeah, to answer your question, I mean, I guess I, I sort of plug in.
Tommy LewisYou know.
Tommy LewisOne of the biggest issues I have in London is it's just so loud.
Tommy LewisThe sirens in London are so loud.
Tommy LewisI'm pretty sure they're louder than in Paris.
Tommy LewisI think Paris has a softer siren.
Tommy LewisI don't know.
Josh RosenthalReally?
Josh RosenthalOkay.
Josh RosenthalYeah.
Josh RosenthalBecause they echo through the.
Josh RosenthalBut the buildings aren't very tall here, so maybe the echo isn't as.
Josh RosenthalObnoxious.
Tommy LewisYeah, yeah.
Tommy LewisObnoxious.
Tommy LewisYeah.
Tommy LewisSometimes I feel bad because I'm getting like annoyed at these sirens and all they're doing is saving lives.
Josh RosenthalYeah.
Josh RosenthalIf you think about the bigger picture, you're a real asshole for that.
Tommy LewisI know.
Josh RosenthalMe too.
Tommy LewisBut yeah, I think I plug in.
Tommy LewisSo I put my AirPods in, put them in noise cancellation.
Tommy LewisUsually it's not so bad.
Tommy LewisYou know, you can kind of get rid of the sound.
Tommy LewisAnd so there is joy definitely to be found in running in the city.
Tommy LewisAnd I think especially in London we are spoiled for good.
Tommy LewisFor good.
Tommy LewisLike parks.
Tommy LewisAnd I think it's a case for me it's a case of like mindfulness, like whenever I, whenever I notice anything that is good looking, even if I'm running down, you know, a street and the houses are beautiful.
Tommy LewisI have some, you know, appreciation for the architecture of the houses and the trees and the sort of seasonal that, you know, the time we're in at the moment with the trees still on the le.
Tommy LewisThe leaves still on the trees and on the floor and it's, it's all very pretty but it's not quite mountains.
Tommy LewisRight.
Tommy LewisBut you, you sort of take what you can and for me it's, it's like take finding those new routes.
Tommy LewisFinding those new parks can bring some joy for sure.
Josh RosenthalHow far is your front door to the park, like to your closest park?
Josh RosenthalI don't.
Josh RosenthalIs that Victoria, like the door to that place where you can find that rhythm?
Josh RosenthalWhat's that distance?
Tommy LewisI actually have a really.
Tommy LewisI have a small park really close to me, Cliss Old Park.
Tommy LewisBut it is very small, so I tend to just do like one loop of that before getting to another park.
Tommy LewisAnd then I have Finsbury park, which is.
Tommy LewisIt's got a bit of undulation.
Tommy LewisIt's a little bit better.
Tommy LewisThat's about 2k away.
Tommy LewisAnd then Victoria park, if I'm doing like a 15 loop, 15k loop, I'll go to Victoria Park.
Tommy LewisAnd then one beautiful place that we have is Hampstead Heath.
Tommy LewisAnd Hampstead Heath is one of these places where when you're in it, you really just don't feel like you're in the city.
Josh RosenthalThat's the hope.
Josh RosenthalYeah.
Tommy LewisWhich is great.
Tommy LewisSo, you know, I'm sort of spoiled in that sense.
Tommy LewisBut you still are dealing with the fact that you got to get there, so you got to find different routes to get there.
Tommy LewisAnd I think, you know, when.
Tommy LewisWhen you've been doing it so much, when you run every day in the city, you can find those paths for sure.
Tommy LewisAnd you find, you know, you find pleasure in those.
Tommy LewisIn those routes to get there, I guess.
Josh RosenthalHow do you think about breathing in the big city?
Josh RosenthalI mean, in terms of the quality of air.
Tommy LewisYeah.
Josh RosenthalJust being what it is, you know, like, do you.
Josh RosenthalDo you have any sense?
Josh RosenthalDo you feel it?
Josh RosenthalI don't necessarily feel it unless I'm looking for it.
Josh RosenthalUnless I'm feeling down about missing my.
Josh RosenthalMy mountain running.
Josh RosenthalBut I mean, objectively, it's worse.
Josh RosenthalI mean, just, you know, it just is.
Josh RosenthalBut do you have any.
Josh RosenthalAre you have any awareness for that?
Josh RosenthalDoes it.
Josh RosenthalDo you feel it?
Tommy LewisI don't necessarily feel it.
Tommy LewisLike, I don't think that.
Tommy LewisYeah, I don't think that I feel it.
Tommy LewisBut I have.
Tommy LewisI have seen stats on, you know, air quality and sort of saying that you're better off not going for a run than going for a run, given the bat, how bad the air quality is.
Josh RosenthalHave you ever taken that advice?
Tommy LewisI've never taken that.
Josh RosenthalI have.
Josh RosenthalNot even once in Salt Lake City.
Josh RosenthalSometimes would have the worst air quality in the world on a given day because we get this thing called an inversion and the mountains come in and cover it.
Josh RosenthalI have never once not said, okay, I have time to run.
Josh RosenthalAnd I'm not going to because the air quality, I just figure it'll get me later when my quality of life already sucks at the end of my life.
Josh RosenthalWhat's it going to do?
Josh RosenthalTake off a week?
Tommy LewisYeah.
Tommy LewisI think there are more benefits found in running than breathing high quality air for sure.
Tommy LewisBut yeah, I'm always, I'm, I'm, I'm a bit like you.
Tommy LewisI can kind of relate in some senses too, that just really missing that experience of being out on the trails.
Josh RosenthalYeah.
Tommy LewisAnd for me, I always say that everything I'm doing in the city is in, is in preparation for what I really truly love.
Josh RosenthalYeah.
Tommy LewisAnd so, you know, one of the biggest challenges as, you know, a flatlander or like a big city guy is actually getting that training, suitable training for the mountains.
Tommy LewisAnd so a lot of the kind of mountain specific training I'm doing is in the gym, on the stepper or.
Tommy LewisIt's really sort of repetitive hill reps or strength, you know, strength work in the gym.
Tommy LewisIt's stuff that isn't necessarily.
Tommy LewisDoesn't look like you're kind of mountain prepping.
Tommy LewisYeah.
Tommy LewisBut it just takes a different.
Tommy LewisI guess it just takes a different identity in some ways.
Tommy LewisBut that drives me.
Josh RosenthalOne of the potential upsides to city running is if you are looking for community, you're more likely to find someone who runs your pace and you know, your time of day and all of that sort of stuff.
Josh RosenthalAre you a run club kind of guy?
Josh RosenthalDo you have anybody that you get out with?
Josh RosenthalAre you pretty solo?
Tommy LewisI'm pretty solo myself, but I do speak to people who are not.
Josh RosenthalI'm the same.
Josh RosenthalI love, I love the idea of a solid run club, but by the time I'm able to run, I'm pretty, I'm pretty maxed as an introvert.
Josh RosenthalAnd that's why I like city running, because mountain running, you know, I'm also a bit of a, of what we might call in America a Freddy cat.
Josh RosenthalI get scared pretty easily by, by wildlife.
Tommy LewisYeah.
Josh RosenthalBut here in the city, that's one of the things I like about density.
Josh RosenthalDensity is.
Josh RosenthalAnd you know, rural west Texas density was looked at as terrifying, but density is actually a means of safety to some degree as well.
Josh RosenthalAnd so if there's a thousand people running along the sand at any given time, that, that, you know, feels relatively safe.
Josh RosenthalI like that component, I guess.
Tommy LewisYeah.
Tommy LewisI mean there is, there are actually a huge amount of benefits when it comes to city running.
Tommy LewisYou know, we can talk about the lower air quality or you know, it's more.
Tommy LewisIt's more boring or whatever.
Tommy LewisBut the reality is, when you're running in a city, if you're doing, for example, if you're doing a long run, I actually can get away with doing a really long distance without taking anything with me other than a phone.
Tommy LewisRight.
Tommy LewisBecause I can stop off at a supermarket if I need fueling or.
Tommy LewisYou're always going to have access to something.
Tommy LewisYou're never in the wilderness.
Tommy LewisSo in terms of danger in that sense, like if you go over on your ankle, you can just take a bus home.
Tommy LewisYou're never sort of too far away from a rendezvous or a fuel stop.
Tommy LewisSo you sort of have aid stations everywhere.
Tommy LewisSo that's one benefit I always see.
Tommy LewisIf I'm going on a long run on a Sunday, I don't necessarily need to take all that much with me because I've got it there accessible.
Tommy LewisAnd then the other benefit, which I might not utilize all that much but is real for people, is being able to run with people.
Tommy LewisThere are apps out there that you can kind of use, not to name.
Josh RosenthalOne, but there's one that's.
Josh RosenthalThat.
Josh RosenthalThere's one that's in development that's coming full version end of this year, early next year, called Wilder.
Josh RosenthalGo ahead.
Tommy LewisBut yeah, there are.
Tommy LewisThere are plenty of things that, whether it's run clubs or anything, you can definitely find people.
Tommy LewisI was actually speaking to someone the other day who moved to, like, the outskirts of Wales, really beautiful place on the border of Wales.
Tommy LewisAnd his whole idea was that he'd gain access to the trails and he'd be able to find his people there.
Tommy LewisBut the reality was that his people were all, you know, either 10 miles from him or 15, 20 miles from him.
Tommy LewisAnd so actually meeting up with those people required, like, way more logistics.
Josh RosenthalRight.
Tommy LewisAnd the reality was that although he wanted to be out on the trails, he just ended up being completely lonely.
Tommy LewisAnd, you know, it doesn't actually.
Tommy LewisLook.
Tommy LewisIt doesn't actually.
Tommy LewisThe reality of it isn't actually as cool as he thought it would be because he just doesn't have that kind of connection with others as frequently as he used to in the city.
Josh RosenthalYeah.
Tommy LewisSo I think we take those sort of things for granted.
Josh RosenthalFor sure.
Josh RosenthalYeah.
Josh RosenthalI mean, all right.
Josh RosenthalSo trying to stay on this positive.
Josh RosenthalFor me, it's easy because I've spent, you know, 15 years thinking about what the trail means to the human spirit, you know, and being out there and what I love so much about it.
Josh RosenthalYou know, let's go to this human Spirit level of like.
Josh RosenthalAnd what I mean by that is maybe something that aids in you feeling more like a whole human.
Josh RosenthalLike a real human connected to the world on a larger level where that's meaningful.
Josh RosenthalWhere's the romance on the road for you?
Josh RosenthalHave you found it?
Josh RosenthalLike, you know, I talk about trail feels romantic, road feels like a practical thing.
Josh RosenthalLike, and I'm.
Josh RosenthalIf I'm looking for that romance, like, where can you find it?
Tommy LewisIt's a hard one because I'm the same as you.
Tommy LewisLike, all my.
Tommy LewisAll my romance comes from running the trails, being properly in the outdoors.
Tommy LewisBut, yeah, I often refer to it as sky time.
Tommy LewisSo, like, the reality is, yeah, you're in the outdoors and you are.
Tommy LewisYou know, if you're in the mountains, it's fresher air, it's proper outdoors.
Tommy LewisBut, yeah, you're not.
Tommy LewisYou're not inside.
Tommy LewisIf you're in the city, you're still.
Tommy LewisYou're still outside, you're still under the sky.
Tommy LewisAnd so if you can get that sky time, there's still just as much value in getting that sky time in any way.
Josh RosenthalYes.
Tommy LewisAs there is running through the elements elsewhere.
Tommy LewisSo, like, I think of it as if I'm running in London.
Tommy LewisThe rain's pouring, you know, I've got some sky time, I'm running through nature, I'm still outside, I'm still doing that.
Tommy LewisAnd so it's still accessible to me in some way.
Josh RosenthalYeah.
Tommy LewisBut it might not feel exactly the same as running on the trails and be really feeling like you're in the wilderness.
Tommy LewisSo I find there's.
Tommy LewisThere is some romance in.
Tommy LewisIn the sense that I can still get outside, I can still run around these parks and feel like I'm in the fresh air, as.
Tommy LewisEven though it's not as fresh as it could be.
Tommy LewisBut we sort of take what we can.
Tommy LewisNot everyone's in a position to be in the trails all the time.
Tommy LewisActually, very few people are.
Tommy LewisYou know, if you're thinking about.
Tommy LewisYeah, even if you're not in a city, you might not necessarily be in the trails.
Tommy LewisLike, these are two extremes we're talking about.
Tommy LewisAnd so you have to just take what you can and do what you can with what you've got.
Tommy LewisAnd so I think, like, I can fall into the trap of endlessly complaining about the fact that I'm not out there in the trails.
Tommy LewisIt's there for me when I want it to be, if I want to take a trip out and do it.
Tommy LewisBut what do I have at my.
Tommy LewisAt my disposal right now.
Tommy LewisAnd I.
Tommy LewisI still have sky time.
Tommy LewisI still have good parks.
Tommy LewisI still have the sort of camaraderie of good friends to run with and all that sort of stuff.
Tommy LewisSo it's definitely positives to be taken.
Josh RosenthalIs.
Josh RosenthalIs London anything like Paris?
Josh RosenthalI think it may be even more so in terms of, like, how many sunny days you get in a given year.
Josh RosenthalIs it.
Josh RosenthalIs it pretty cloudy there?
Tommy LewisPretty cloudy.
Tommy LewisI am looking at some blue sky right now.
Josh RosenthalI am, too.
Josh RosenthalI was wondering if we're both.
Josh RosenthalI mean, I know we're like, what, a couple hours away from each other right now, but I'm seeing blue skies, and I'm like, I'm itching to get out in them.
Josh RosenthalSo that sky time is a wonderful perspective that regardless of, you know, what's surrounding me up to even, you know, up to 400ft, whatever, there's a skyscraper above that is that same sky that's with me out there.
Josh RosenthalAnd like, to tap into that is.
Josh RosenthalI like that.
Josh RosenthalThat's a great perspective.
Tommy LewisYeah.
Tommy LewisI used to use it at work as well.
Tommy LewisYou know, stuck behind the desk, and instead of saying, hey, you want to go get a coffee?
Tommy LewisOr whatever, I'd say, you know, skytime.
Tommy LewisAnd people like, yeah, yeah, sky time.
Tommy LewisThat's what we need.
Josh RosenthalEverybody can agree on sky time.
Tommy LewisYeah, we can all agree that we need a bit of sky.
Tommy LewisVitamin D.
Tommy LewisYeah.
Josh RosenthalSo, okay, you say you're.
Josh RosenthalYou're on the road as a means of getting to trail or.
Josh RosenthalOr building towards something on the trail.
Josh RosenthalHow do you.
Josh RosenthalDoes London have hills?
Josh RosenthalIs it pretty flat?
Josh RosenthalLike, how.
Josh RosenthalHow are you accounting for the moment you hit a trail and you have vert?
Tommy LewisIt is pretty flat In London, there are some hills.
Tommy LewisThe ways I try and prep for it is, for the most part, a lot of it happens in the gym.
Tommy LewisUh, so the stair stepper is, you know, just a great way to strengthen legs on the uphill.
Josh RosenthalYeah.
Tommy LewisAnd then, you know, all sorts of gym exercises just strengthen the quads for the downhill.
Tommy LewisUnfortunately, nothing.
Tommy LewisNothing replaces running on trails if you're training for trails at the end of the day.
Tommy LewisSo, you know, you have to prioritize trying, trying to book in trips and actually get out there.
Tommy LewisAnd so I really try as much as I can to do that.
Tommy LewisYou know, it doesn't happen unless you book it in in advance.
Tommy LewisBut I really try and make sure that, you know, I'm prioritizing that.
Tommy LewisLike, any break I'm taking, any holiday I'm taking, for the most part, I'm looking for whether there's good, you know, running routes and whether I can kind of really make the most of being out there.
Tommy LewisSo, yeah, training in the trails is definitely the best way to train for the trails.
Tommy LewisBut yeah, gym work and when it comes to actually finding a hill, just using that hill and, you know, rinsing that hill as much as you possibly can, rinse it.
Josh RosenthalThat's great.
Tommy LewisYeah, there's a, there's a hill, a famous hill here in London, Primrose Hill.
Josh RosenthalOkay.
Tommy LewisWhich is a good hill.
Tommy LewisIt's got like some paths that go sort of around it.
Tommy LewisAnd I do remember prepping for a race at one stage and I was just doing endless reps of that hill, um, which isn't that much fun, but, you know, you've just got guaranteed incline and decline every lap and you can just do 20 of those.
Tommy LewisAnd that is just very good prep.
Tommy LewisYou can't argue with it.
Tommy LewisThat's really good prep for anything hilly.
Tommy LewisUm, and if you're training in the trails, you know, yes, it's going to be great because you've got a lot more hills, but it's not as clinical.
Tommy LewisSo you can't actually bring it down.
Tommy LewisYou can't bring it into one environment and say, right, we've got a 50 meter incline that we're going to smash 10 times.
Tommy LewisYou have to rely on the route that you've plotted for yourself.
Tommy LewisWhereas if you're actually training, you know, over one single hill repeatedly in a city, because that's your limitation, you can use that and rinse as much as you possibly can out of it, I think.
Tommy LewisAnd so that's how I've done it in the past, at least.
Josh RosenthalWhat about with, and I don't even know like the proper terms, proper way to think about it, if it's a bone density thing or whatever it is.
Josh RosenthalBut your responsiveness to.
Josh RosenthalWhen you're, when you're running on trail a lot and you go to the road, you feel it the next morning.
Josh RosenthalI feel it the next morning.
Josh RosenthalIt hurts.
Josh RosenthalWhat's it like going the other direction?
Josh RosenthalLike if you're fit for the road, if your body is optimized for the road, is.
Josh RosenthalIs there a equivalent to that on the trail that you to be careful for?
Tommy LewisI was actually thinking about this today because I knew we were going to be talking about this.
Tommy LewisI think my, my thoughts on this are especially in the road running space.
Tommy LewisAnd I know you've spoken a lot on, on the podcast to real experts when it comes to shoes.
Josh RosenthalOh, yeah, that's true.
Tommy LewisYeah.
Josh RosenthalThomas no one's better.
Tommy LewisNo one's better.
Tommy LewisThey know a huge amount.
Tommy LewisAnd I think what I would say is when you are looking at road running shoes especially, we do have a tendency to try and find shoes that are very forgiving.
Tommy LewisAnd so we have, what we're doing is we're choosing big foamy shoes or carbon plated shoes, which makes it easier on the body.
Tommy LewisSo it's.
Tommy LewisAnd that's a good thing.
Tommy LewisIt's a good thing for recovery, it's a good thing for the speed that you want to get to out on the race.
Tommy LewisBut if you're actually looking to try and build strength and agility when it comes to your own body itself, building strength in the calves, building strength in the labs, in the legs and the feet, then a more minimal shoe is going to do that for you.
Tommy LewisAnd so you do still have the ability in road environments to wear a more minimal shoe and just be a little bit more nimble on what is actually pretty untechnical terrain.
Tommy LewisBut you're sort of, you're sort of pretending essentially that you've got more to dodge, more to run around.
Josh RosenthalYeah.
Tommy LewisAnd you know, as I think the more minimal your shoe is, the more sort of proprioception you have of where your feet are landing, how it feels for the body, you're dodging potholes and all of that sort of stuff.
Tommy LewisAnd you're staying nimble, staying agile, and it's also building strength, especially in the lower leg.
Tommy LewisSo for example, I'll use like currently I'm using, they're a British brand, but Innovate trail flies.
Tommy LewisVery minimal, very minimal shoes.
Tommy LewisAnd they actually just allow me to just feel a little bit more nimble and I'm taking shorter steps and sort of dancing over the pavement a little bit, maybe mixing around the terrain as much as I possibly can.
Tommy LewisAnd what that's allowing me to do is just build my, my body's strength, not necessarily just relying on these big foamy shoes that bounce really nicely off the hard tarmac.
Tommy LewisSo I think there's, there is something that you can do when it comes to like choosing your shoes and choosing shoes that kind of force you to be a bit more nimble and force you to, to build strength where you'll need it on the trails.
Josh RosenthalYeah.
Tommy LewisAnd then when it comes to actually trail and how that translates to the road, I mean, when I've been running, because of such a strong background on the road, when I'm running these trails, maybe on a race or something, once it gets to a flat Tarmac section, which inevitably every race will have something like that.
Tommy LewisYou just feel very, you'll feel, feel very comfortable and so you can just find a rhythm really easily.
Tommy LewisI think people that are just running trail, when they get to those sections on an ultra or something, they, they hate them, they hate the tarmac.
Tommy LewisThey don't, you know, they, they want it to be more interesting.
Tommy LewisWhereas someone who's got a background in road can just absolutely gas down.
Tommy LewisYeah, exactly.
Tommy LewisAnd so I feel comfortable on both in some ways because I'm training on the road for trail.
Tommy LewisBut naturally that road running is going to help me on the sections on the trail race that are easier, that are flatter and might be advantageous for me sort of in comparison to other participants.
Josh RosenthalYeah.
Josh RosenthalHow old are you?
Tommy Lewis29.
Josh Rosenthal29, okay.
Josh RosenthalI'm 41.
Josh RosenthalSo this, this makes more sense for you that I even might answer on your behalf.
Josh RosenthalBut one of the things I feel like road running is doing for me as a 41 year old is that it's giving me some, giving me speed for the first time in a long time.
Josh RosenthalLike to get speed in the past, I would intentionally have to do it now.
Josh RosenthalEvery day it feels like, not that I'm pushing it hard every day, but every time I get out there, there's an element of speed.
Josh RosenthalAnd I'm often looking at my watch thinking so crazy.
Josh RosenthalTo me, I never would have thought I'd been running sub 10 miles, sub 9 miles, sometimes 9 minute miles.
Josh RosenthalI don't know what that is in kilometers, so like a thousand kilometers or something.
Josh RosenthalBut as a 41 year old, I feel like my fastest times at every distance are still in front of me.
Tommy LewisYeah.
Josh RosenthalAnd I think road on some levels is g.
Josh RosenthalThat's one of the gifts that road has given me right now is to say, hey, you know, when my dad turned 40, he looked old.
Josh RosenthalAnd you know, they say 50 is the new 40, but I feel like there's an element of road that's, it's making me really optimistic that I still have a future to get better in this sport and I really appreciate that.
Josh RosenthalI assume as 29 you feel like your best times are in front of you always.
Tommy LewisI don't think I'll ever, ever.
Josh RosenthalIt's the curse of, it's the curse of the entrepreneur as well.
Josh RosenthalLike stupid optimism, Ridiculous optimism.
Tommy LewisYeah, for sure.
Tommy LewisI mean there's, there's huge value in variety and I think one, one problem that road runners will have is that they don't implement enough variety in their running.
Josh RosenthalYeah.
Tommy LewisThey get too used to running on the roads.
Tommy LewisIt is objectively easier, it's faster, it's more satisfying in some ways, whereas trail demands a lot more of you.
Tommy LewisYou have to pay more attention, you may have to go slower, you have to be more agile, that sort of stuff.
Tommy LewisBut I think that there's.
Tommy LewisI will always try and try to encourage people who are used to running on the road to get some mixed terrain in.
Tommy LewisYou know, anytime you see, you know, a path that veers off to the right, that goes off the tarmac, take it, take that path, because it's going to be good for your body to get that mixed terrain in.
Tommy LewisAnd in the same vein, I think, like a lot of trail runners don't really know what it feels like to fully open up.
Tommy LewisThey don't actually.
Josh RosenthalYep.
Tommy LewisYeah, they never.
Tommy LewisThey never sort of really going for it and getting that speed.
Tommy LewisAnd speed can be really fun.
Tommy LewisYou know, some of.
Tommy LewisSome of the best.
Tommy LewisSome of the sort of most exciting runs of the week are the ones where you're like, I've got a tempo run, I can really open up on this one, see what I'm capable of on the tarmac.
Tommy LewisAnd that translates so well onto trail running, whether it's just because you got that power output with each stride or you just got better form because you're really going fast.
Tommy LewisYeah, you can't really sprint over a trail unless you're really agile.
Tommy LewisUh, I'm really, really great at that.
Tommy LewisYou can't really sprint over a trail, uh, whereas you can absolutely gun it round a track or in the city if you've got space.
Tommy LewisUm, so I think mixture of both, you know, variety is.
Tommy LewisIs really the.
Tommy LewisThe aim, I reckon.
Josh RosenthalI love what you're saying here.
Josh RosenthalOne of the things I'm taking away from it is in ultra trail, the thing that.
Josh RosenthalOne of the things I love that makes me feel strong, makes me feel capable, is the distance I went.
Tommy LewisYeah.
Josh RosenthalAnd I never look at the pace.
Josh RosenthalOne of the things in road that makes me get that, it gives me a similar feeling is when I look down and see how fast I'm going, it makes me feel strong, makes me feel capable.
Josh RosenthalAll of those really cool feelings that you don't get to feel in everyday life or, you know, no matter how good you are at your job or being a, you know, partner, spouse, parent, whatever you are, you very.
Josh RosenthalYou very rarely get these moments where you can look at something objective and say, oh, that for me is very fast.
Josh RosenthalThat for me is very far.
Josh RosenthalSo trail gives me the feeling of far.
Josh RosenthalI've never looked for speed.
Josh RosenthalAnd on the road, I'm, I'm, I'm happy running three to four miles.
Josh RosenthalWe're on trail three to four mile.
Josh RosenthalI wouldn't, I won't even go to a trail if that's all I have time to do.
Josh RosenthalWe're on the road three miles and I'm going fast.
Josh RosenthalI feel really great about myself, and I think that's one of the gifts of road.
Tommy LewisYeah, absolutely.
Tommy LewisAnd I mean, you're, you're a numbers guy.
Tommy LewisI can imagine you.
Tommy LewisYou really like to, you know, see that data.
Tommy LewisExactly.
Tommy LewisAnd I think one advantage of road running is you can really clinically get exactly what you're trying to get out of that run.
Tommy LewisYou know, there's obviously always going to be variables whether you've eaten properly and slept well and all that sort of stuff.
Tommy LewisBut it is a far more clinical environment where if you're looking to get a perfect negative split, you can get a perfect negative split round a flat park.
Tommy LewisYou know, you can, you can look at your data on Strava or whatever you're using, and you can see that split perfectly.
Tommy LewisAnd there's some satisfaction that can be had in that.
Tommy LewisAnd then when you move to trail, you can kind of go, okay, hands up.
Tommy LewisI'm not gonna, not gonna look at any of that stuff.
Tommy LewisIt doesn't matter.
Tommy LewisThere's way, way too much variety in the, in the trail.
Tommy LewisAnd then you can kind of maybe focus on the joy of it and different aspects of what you're trying to achieve.
Tommy LewisBut road running, people fall in love with that.
Tommy LewisYeah, I guess, like, I'm not really a numbers guy.
Tommy LewisI'm not, you know, I'm more about feels than numbers.
Tommy LewisBut, yeah, I, I still find some satisfaction, absolutely, in the, in the sort of really accurate data and making sure each is absolutely perfect.
Tommy LewisAnd you can objectively compare one.
Tommy LewisOne run to another because you're saying, okay, this was a flat run.
Tommy LewisI did it at the same time on a Saturday.
Tommy LewisYes.
Tommy LewisThis is, this is comparing to last weeks and have I made progress or not?
Tommy LewisUm, obviously, always be careful about how you're comparing yourself to your previous self.
Tommy LewisBut there's more, there's more objectivity when it comes to trail, when it comes to road running.
Tommy LewisOver trail running, for sure.
Josh RosenthalWhat about track?
Josh RosenthalDo you ever get out on a track and, you know, because you can really objectively test speed and all those.
Josh RosenthalIn those workouts that come with that, are you track guide all?
Tommy LewisI'm not massively But I have done my fair share of running around the track and if you want your fastest splits.
Tommy LewisYes, you can go around a track.
Tommy LewisYeah, there you go.
Tommy LewisSo in the same way, you know, if you, if you've got some brand new carbon plate shoes and you want to see how fast you can truly run in them, get yourself to a track and you can, you can get some really good.
Tommy LewisYeah.
Tommy LewisSplits there.
Tommy LewisYeah.
Tommy LewisAnd yeah, it's the same as road, you know, it's just more, more controlled environment.
Tommy LewisIt's not as, not as mixed.
Tommy LewisYou're not kind of dealing with as much variety.
Josh RosenthalYeah.
Josh RosenthalWell, speaking of not dealing with as much variety as great segue, you don't have a job anymore.
Josh RosenthalFrom what I understand, your variety has lessened and your focus has increased on your new day job.
Josh RosenthalAnd I think that's, that's a fun, fun topic because I obviously love entrepreneurship.
Josh RosenthalNot everybody does.
Josh RosenthalBut the reality is, is for those who enjoy what you put out now, running, and I'd love to know how you put it, running, running, related content, all that sort of stuff, that's your day job.
Tommy LewisYeah, I was cringing.
Tommy LewisSomeone says run fluencer or something like that attitude, man.
Tommy LewisI guess, I guess so.
Tommy LewisBut how do I put it?
Tommy LewisYeah, I'm trying to make an honest living out of encouraging people to get out the door and go for a run, basically.
Josh RosenthalYeah.
Josh RosenthalOh man, that's, I mean, that's a great way to put it because I mean, let's talk from a business standpoint, a market sizing standpoint.
Josh RosenthalLike there's a, that's a big market and there's a lot of people who are talking about that in a variety of different ways.
Josh RosenthalBut I think the way that you talk about it specifically is quite unique just from following your content.
Josh RosenthalAnd I'll put a link in the show notes, of course, but I mean, what do you, how would you word what you think your sort of niche is within this space of encouraging people to get out and go?
Tommy LewisI think for me it sort of morphed over, over time.
Tommy LewisI think I came into it very much as like someone who had a love for the outdoors, a love for trail running and a love for running itself.
Josh RosenthalYeah.
Tommy LewisAnd trying to just encourage runners to approach it in a way that's not necessarily the same as everyone else.
Tommy LewisYou know, I think there's, there's definitely a problem that I see in the industry, in the running industry is that there's a bit of an obsession with carbon plated shoes, with looking good, with getting perfect Splits with what I like to call the classics, which are, you know, the 5K, 10K half marathon, marathon.
Tommy LewisAnd that's fine, that's fun, and it has its place.
Tommy LewisAnd you can definitely enjoy a half marathon or a marathon, whether it's like the spectacle of the event or, you know, just that comparison of one marathon time to another.
Tommy LewisAbsolutely.
Tommy LewisThat's cool.
Tommy LewisBut where I think I would like to try and encourage people to consider where they would be in the.
Tommy LewisIn the running space is there's just so much more that you can do within running that people don't necessarily focus on.
Tommy LewisAnd there's so many different events out there.
Tommy LewisLike, different.
Tommy LewisI like to call concept races of different formats, where by their format, they are very inclusive.
Tommy LewisSo you might have like a backyard ultra, which is actually very inclusive because you're just going out and trying to go as far as you can, or you might have, you know, there are.
Tommy LewisThere are all sorts of races, whether it's like a.
Tommy LewisGoing up to a hill and seeing how many times you can rep that hill and getting an award for a mountain that, you know, correlates to the height that you've managed, the elevation you managed to gain, or, yeah, you're trying to Everest a hill or come close to it.
Tommy LewisYou know, there's all sorts of different events.
Tommy LewisDifferent.
Tommy LewisYou know, there's.
Tommy LewisThere's, you know, obstacle events.
Tommy LewisYou know, like, we have tough mother out here.
Tommy LewisOh, yeah.
Tommy LewisAnd that sort of stuff.
Tommy LewisYou know, there's loads of different ways you can get involved in it.
Tommy LewisThat.
Tommy LewisThat doesn't have to be a marathon.
Tommy LewisI think what I see from people is, oh, I'm not really a runner, you know, because I haven't run a marathon, or I'm not really a runner because I don't really want to run a marathon or half marathon.
Tommy LewisAnd what they see is they see a runner and they see the classic stuff, and they don't really necessarily look outside of that to engage with running in their own way.
Tommy LewisYou don't even have to do events.
Tommy LewisI think there's.
Tommy LewisI want to try and have people realize the benefits of running and not racing.
Tommy LewisYou know, the benefits of just being a runner because you're a daily.
Tommy LewisYou're someone who is a daily runner who gets out there and runs in your own way.
Tommy LewisAnd so I guess redefining what it means to be a runner in inverted commas and actually having people realize that they are a runner simply because they're a human who can run and it's accessible, it's available to you, you can approach it in any way you want.
Tommy LewisAnd yeah, I don't want people to be put off by the classics because quite often people, I see this so much and I think anyone you speak to who has mates who run, there's often this tendency to sign up to a marathon before they've even necessarily got into running.
Tommy LewisAnd then what happens is they start training too late and then the training's really intense, it's too clinical.
Tommy LewisThey haven't found a joy for running before they've even signed up.
Tommy LewisThey do the event, they're under trained, they hate the whole thing and then they never run again.
Tommy LewisAnd it's just a.
Tommy LewisIt's a standard story.
Tommy LewisI see it all the time and I personally think it's a real shame because I have loved the marathons I've done, I've loved the events I've done.
Tommy LewisI find them enjoyable.
Tommy LewisBut really for me, what has been far more enjoyable has been being a runner, has been the daily practice of running and having that in my life.
Tommy LewisAnd so if I can have people just apply that simple daily practice and sort of carry on being a runner in their own way, then I would say that's a success in what I'm trying to achieve.
Josh RosenthalI had a buddy who has a company called Roman Run and they had a shirt that said marathons are for quitters.
Josh RosenthalAnd that was their whole point with is what you just said.
Josh RosenthalIt's like that, that whole thing, the number of people that just run one marathon for that exact reason that you just laid out, I thought it was a funny shirt, but because that's an absolutely accurate phenomenon.
Josh RosenthalAnd I love that you call these 5K 10K half marathon, the classics, I think that's brilliant as well.
Josh RosenthalAnd to not overlook those, like, you know, to embrace even the person who aspires to run a hundred miles or 200 miles like that.
Josh RosenthalDon't overlook like the fun of a 5k, the enjoyment of a 10k and that people that you're running alongside of, for some of them, that's their 200 mile race.
Josh RosenthalThat's a massive thing for that person to endeavor.
Josh RosenthalAnd so really at all distances, that's somebody's hardest race, that's somebody's thing that they never thought they could do 5k.
Josh RosenthalI know I have people that I know that think they can't do a 5K.
Josh RosenthalAnd if they ever endeavor to do it and I'm out there like I'm running alongside someone, that's like, that's the thing for them.
Josh RosenthalAnd they, you know, they're, they're teaching themselves that they are capable and that's an absolutely beautiful thing.
Tommy LewisYeah.
Tommy LewisAnd kind of defining what that is for them rather than letting other people define it for them.
Josh RosenthalYeah, yeah.
Tommy LewisI think definitely the marathon, the marathon distance.
Tommy LewisThere's a problem with the marathon distance in that it's become the kind of pinnacle of what it means to be a runner.
Tommy LewisLike if you, yeah, if you don't run a marathon, then you're not a runner.
Tommy LewisOr you know, I've even had people say to me, I'm, I'm not really a runner, I haven't done a marathon yet.
Tommy LewisAnd I'm sort of like, you don't have to, you don't have to.
Josh RosenthalWe got to kill that.
Tommy LewisYeah, yeah.
Tommy LewisLike there's no.
Tommy LewisIf you're not interested in doing a marathon, then don't do it because it's not that cool.
Tommy LewisIt's just a certain distance.
Tommy LewisIt really means, it's pretty arbitrary.
Tommy LewisIt really means nothing.
Tommy LewisAnd it's the same as any sort of milestone time in the marathon, whether it's the sub four, sub three, whatever that is, that define that they're sort of defining themselves and their self worth by some other's definition of what it is or even an idea of what other people might think that is.
Tommy LewisYou know, it's so, yeah, it's such a strange kind of phenomenon I think that we, yeah, we need to eradicate because yeah, it really means nothing and you should only be doing the stuff that is attractive to you.
Tommy LewisI know people who have not run any of the classics and the first event they did was an ultra and they fell in love with running because they did a 60k or you know, the next run they did was a 50 miler and they approached in a completely different way.
Josh RosenthalYeah.
Tommy LewisAnd anyone who's run an ultra and also run the classics, the road running events will know is essentially a different sport.
Tommy LewisYou know, it's not even the same thing.
Tommy LewisYeah, there's so much more to think about.
Tommy LewisIt's a different adventure, it's a different sport.
Tommy LewisAnd that might be the space that you fall in love with.
Tommy LewisFor me, I never really fell in love with all the classics.
Tommy LewisIt wasn't really why I became a runner.
Tommy LewisIt was only when I found ultra running and that whole culture that I was like, ah, this is, this is what I'm into.
Tommy LewisThey get it.
Josh RosenthalYes.
Josh RosenthalYeah, I think to me too like that I so connected with the ultra culture of being celebrating that you did it and there being very Little discussion about time, which I don't judge someone if that's what they want to ask.
Josh RosenthalI, I'm curious again, I'm a data person.
Josh RosenthalI love time.
Josh RosenthalBut there was, it was so just like, man, I don't know how to describe it.
Josh RosenthalIt's the inverse, but similar to like going into a bar and seeing people that are like you and just like, I just want to hang out and chat with you for a little bit.
Josh RosenthalThis is great.
Josh RosenthalWe're, we're like minded in a certain way.
Josh RosenthalAnd so that community I loved.
Josh RosenthalAnd so my friend Brian Wolf Runner, he talks about how like he knows trail runners who've never run on trail before.
Josh RosenthalJust.
Josh RosenthalAnd it's this mentality, it's that exact mentality of like, what are we out here doing and why are we out here doing it?
Josh RosenthalIt's just different.
Josh RosenthalNo judgment on the other people.
Josh RosenthalBut this is kind of what unifies us is this sort of dirt bag.
Josh RosenthalWe're out here because we love it approach.
Tommy LewisYeah.
Tommy LewisAnd I think I see the same.
Tommy LewisAnd there's plenty of spaces that I see.
Tommy LewisThere's a bit of teasing and ridicule.
Josh RosenthalYeah.
Tommy LewisYou know, you have a bit of trail runners will tease, road runners and all that sort of stuff.
Tommy LewisAnd it's the same with surfers and bodyboarders.
Tommy LewisYou know, you have the same kind of teasing of each other, but they're still out there enjoying the waves.
Tommy LewisThey're still doing ultimately the same thing and they have a love for the same thing.
Tommy LewisAnd I see the same in running, really.
Tommy LewisRoad running, trail running, whatever kind of running.
Tommy LewisIt's all running.
Tommy LewisIt's all moving body in the same way.
Tommy LewisAnd I have realized that I actually just have a love for running.
Tommy LewisI have a love for running and being outside and being under the sky and no matter what that looks like, I still get to do it.
Tommy LewisAnd so you can.
Tommy LewisYou kind of try to appreciate what you have at your disposal, what's in front of you on a daily basis.
Tommy LewisAnd that might not be running up beautiful mountains every time, but it is that daily practice.
Tommy LewisAnd then when you're doing that daily practice in preparation for what you love, when you do actually get to do what you love, then you appreciate it more.
Tommy LewisI have a sneaky suspicion if I had the trails at my doorstep every time, I still complain about that one route.
Tommy LewisI do every day, you know.
Josh RosenthalYeah, yeah.
Josh RosenthalWe are human in that way.
Josh RosenthalWell, all right, last question then.
Josh RosenthalWhat?
Josh RosenthalSo now that this is your life, now that you don't have to go Clock in, punch in at the day job.
Josh RosenthalThis is your day job.
Josh RosenthalWhere's your ambition at?
Josh RosenthalLike, what do you, what do you hope to see happen in the next year?
Josh RosenthalWhat do you, what hills are you climbing?
Tommy LewisSo many.
Tommy LewisSo many.
Tommy LewisYeah, it's.
Tommy LewisIt's day one today of actually fully being self employed, so it's very cool.
Tommy LewisYeah.
Tommy LewisYou know, I always said that I would be self employed by the time I'm 30.
Tommy LewisAh, that happens in February.
Josh RosenthalSo I think putting timetables on it like that.
Josh RosenthalAnd maybe that's just.
Josh RosenthalAgain, I'm a sentimental type person, but I have always.
Josh RosenthalI had this one really weird one.
Josh RosenthalBy the age of 30, I either want to be in the discussion that I'll be nominated for a Grammy or I'm done with music.
Tommy LewisYeah.
Josh RosenthalAnd I wasn't even close.
Josh RosenthalAnd so I thought, you know what, there's power in this.
Josh RosenthalLike, so you wanted it by 30 and you got it.
Josh RosenthalLike, it wasn't arbitrary.
Josh RosenthalLike you're, you're even your subconscious is driving you toward that and as well as your conscious.
Josh RosenthalAnd you did it.
Tommy LewisYeah.
Tommy LewisAnd I feel very privileged to be doing it in a space I adore.
Josh RosenthalYeah.
Tommy LewisYou know, and really trying to have something that has some value to others, and that's what really drives me.
Tommy LewisAnd so, you know, building that's runnable, which is the podcast, it's the newsletter, it's events and anything else that I can build on that brand and that's runnable, really is just an extension of my own ethos, which I feel has sort of resonated with a lot of people on social media.
Tommy LewisAnd we'll see where it goes.
Tommy LewisBut I really want to have a bit of a community of people who believe in defining their own, defining what's runnable for them, you know, defining what is doable for them and approaching running in a way that's not comparing themselves to others and having to slot into whatever, you know, slot they think currently exists.
Josh RosenthalYeah.
Tommy LewisSlotting into how?
Tommy LewisDefining it however they want, you know, approaching it however they want.
Tommy LewisAnd a focus on having running in your life for a long time rather than approaching it unsustainably.
Tommy LewisActually approaching it with a view of longevity and appreciating its value for you as an individual, rather than just, I'm going to go out and get these times and be a better runner.
Tommy LewisIt's actually about being a runner, keeping it in your life, enjoying the process and kind of having fun with it, I guess.
Josh RosenthalYeah.
Josh RosenthalWell, I'll be paying attention, of course.
Josh RosenthalI hope to be doing more of this with you.
Josh RosenthalAnd I know, gosh, I'm trying real hard to see you in America.
Josh RosenthalI know you'll be there next summer, and there's going to be more about that coming up soon.
Josh RosenthalBut congrats.
Tommy LewisYeah.
Tommy LewisThank you, man.
Josh RosenthalDay one.
Josh RosenthalCongrats.
Tommy LewisJust.
Tommy LewisJust starting out, you know, had a couple meetings today, and you sort of working from a cafe.
Tommy LewisThis is good.
Tommy LewisYes.
Tommy LewisThis is good.
Josh RosenthalYeah.
Tommy LewisMy.
Josh RosenthalSo my life.
Josh RosenthalI can only work out a coffee shop, so I cannot work in an office.
Josh RosenthalI just can't be at the same place two days in a row.
Tommy LewisYes.
Josh RosenthalAn absolute curse and a blessing because I just.
Josh RosenthalThat's how I move all around Paris.
Josh RosenthalLike, that's what I love in Salt Lake.
Josh RosenthalI'm moving all around Salt Lake, and I love that.
Josh RosenthalI love officing out of cafes.
Tommy LewisYeah.
Tommy LewisAnd I guess to.
Tommy LewisTo make it relate to the episode.
Tommy LewisI think I'm excited to be able to, you know, manage my own week, and maybe if I want to just drive out of the city and get to some trails midweek, you know, that sort of stuff is exciting to me.
Josh RosenthalYeah, that's part of the.
Josh RosenthalThat's part of the gift.
Josh RosenthalI mean, as an entrepreneur, you're going to carry more weight, but as an entrepreneur, then you can do that if you want to.
Josh RosenthalYou just count the cost and count the weight, the weight distribution.
Josh RosenthalYou'll have a heavier weight later, but for today, you get to trail.
Tommy LewisExactly.
Tommy LewisYeah.
Josh RosenthalAll right, man.
Josh RosenthalWell, congrats.
Josh RosenthalLet's do this again.
Tommy LewisThanks, Steve.
Josh RosenthalIt's too cold.
Josh RosenthalToo.