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Student who ‘does not like running' aims to run 500km in 10 days

Student who ‘does not like running' aims to run 500km in 10 days

Sean Tilson, 21, hopes to raise £5,000 for the cancer charity Sarcoma UK.
Last year, he completed four challenges in four months, which included a 100-mile run and Ironman triathlon.
For the past eight months, Mr Tilson been training for his latest endurance feat.
The University of Exeter student is setting off on Thursday from the city and will be stopping off at schools along the route to talk with students about mindset.
His route will take him from Exeter to Fleet in Hampshire, via Birmingham and Eton and Windsor.
He credits mindset with turning his life around after he lost his mother at the age of 14 to sarcoma, a term that describes bone and soft tissue cancer.
'I'll be talking to them about mindset and my belief that the only voice that limits you in your life is your own,' he said.
'For a large chunk of my life I felt pretty powerless, like I was alone in a crowded room and didn't quite fit in, but through mindset I was able to turn that narrative around.
'I did this by imagining the person I wanted to be and defining the values I wanted to live by – courage, curiosity, kindness and integrity – and using those four values as the framework to evaluate my decisions.'
Mr Tilson, who will graduate later this year with a degree in business management, has been the president of five societies while at the university, including the endurance society IronFit.
He said that while being a good runner, he does not enjoy it.
'For me it's very much a discipline, a way to measure what I can accomplish when I stick with something,' he said.
'But it's a fascinating sport that's taught me so much about resilience and how, even in your lowest moments, like when I did my 100-mile challenge and was struggling to stay in the race, you can turn things around.
'These days I find running meditative, so I think I will enjoy this challenge, especially as I've got such a great team around me.
'Realising that mindset is where true growth lies has really helped me make the most of my time here at Exeter.
'I want to encourage others to take a step forward, be kind to yourself, but always be guided by that vision of the person you want to become.'
In the autumn he will start a graduate job in New York as a business analyst.
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Derby doctor with one kidney completes 15 half Ironmans
Derby doctor with one kidney completes 15 half Ironmans

BBC News

time2 days ago

  • BBC News

Derby doctor with one kidney completes 15 half Ironmans

A doctor who donated a kidney to help her mother has completed a gruelling challenge by swimming, cycling and running in 15 consecutive half-Ironmans. Meg Pragnell, an A&E doctor at Royal Derby Hospital, underwent surgery to have a kidney removed for daughter and mother made a full recovery, with Dr Pragnell going on to become a world record holder after finishing a 2km swim, a 90km bike ride, and a half marathon, everyday for 15 days across the UK's national 28-year-old said: "There were times where I felt like I wanted to give up but you dig deep and realise you have a bit more." Her journey took her from the start line in Scotland to Devon, battling through Storm Floris, and ending with a homecoming finish in the Peak Pragnell, who lives in Derbyshire, said her mother Aly Pragnell, 60, began to feel unwell while on a family holiday on 2023."She was bruising really easily and getting tired, she just wasn't herself it wasn't liker her at all - I always knew her as the fittest, healthiest woman."A blood test showed Mrs Pragnell, of Overton in Hampshire, had end-stage renal disease and "effectively no kidney function".She was taken to hospital where she started dialysis. After Dr Pragnell was confirmed as a match, surgery was lined up for them both. After the surgeries were booked in, "intense work" took place for the mother and daughter to prepare for the Pragnell said she had numerous doctor appointments before the surgery and kidney donation could take the first four weeks post-op, Dr Pragnell said she could "barely do anything" but some time later following her recovery, began training for her 15-day Pragnell said: "I knew I wanted to do everything I could to help get her life back."But I know mum would have done the same for me." Dr Pragnell has some experience with mammoth physical challenges already. She has already taken on a "bonkers" 10-day triathlon challenge in 2022 which saw her climb the Three Peaks, swam England, Wales and Scotland's largest lakes, and cycled between the locations to raise money for Alzheimer's UK and St Michael's Hospice after they supported her during the challenge, Dr Pragnell learned one of her best friends, Emma Hodges, had been diagnosed with soft tissue cancer, sarcoma."She went through a really difficult year of treatment, lots of chemotherapy, big operations and then further chemotherapy," Dr Pragnell said."Then a year and a bit after she started her treatment she was able to ring the bell and she remains in remission today which is a testament to the amazing team of doctors looking after her and her own utter determination."It was from this, Emma's family "threw themselves in to fundraising" and Dr Pragnell decided she wanted to help raise money for the Sarcoma UK charity by taking on another challenge of 15 half-Ironmans in as many days. Dr Pragnell admitted there were some tough moments during the momentous challenge but described the feeling of finishing as "pure euphoria".She added she "could not have done it" without the support of friends and family."Looking back now, it's been a massive whirlwind the last 15 days, I really enjoyed it," she said."The storm made it significantly less fun in the North Yorkshire Moors with massive headwinds and turning the water in what resembled a washing machine."The middle ones were a massive blur and I blinked and I realised I was on day 13. I went on to finish and I can't quite believe it, it's not properly sunk in yet."There were points where I looked to my incredible support team and said to them that I don't know if I can do this."But you do dig deep and find it from somewhere and just to remember why I'm doing it. I laughed more than I cried, so that's a win."Dr Pragnell has so far raised more than £7,000 for Sarcoma UK.

Lucy Charles-Barclay's career was dogged by injuries until she discovered why. Now she's back for another shot at the Ironman world title
Lucy Charles-Barclay's career was dogged by injuries until she discovered why. Now she's back for another shot at the Ironman world title

The Independent

time4 days ago

  • The Independent

Lucy Charles-Barclay's career was dogged by injuries until she discovered why. Now she's back for another shot at the Ironman world title

Lucy Charles-Barclay is not a household name, and yet she might be the most complete female athlete on the planet. There is no purer sporting test than a triathlon, which makes demands on every muscle in the body, and the Ironman distance takes those demands to ludicrous extremes: running a full marathon after a refreshing 2.4-mile swim and an invigorating 112-mile bike ride, covering the distance from London to Sheffield in eight-and-a-half hours. Charles-Barclay won the Ironman World Championship in 2023 and broke the record for the iconic Kona course in Hawaii, in which the best long-distance triathletes compete through crystal blue waters and black lava fields. She will be back at Kona in a few weeks' time to try to regain the title, and the 31-year-old is in the form of her life after an emotional win at her home race in the London T100 last weekend. Yet the road to this point has been a brutal one, after three years spent battling a series of mysterious injuries from rib fractures to muscle tears to a rip in her hip cartilage, after which she was told she might never race again. She embarked on an investigation into her own anatomy, travelling to Red Bull's high performance centre near Salzburg to undergo testing. 'We really couldn't find a reason,' she says. Finally, last year, she received an answer: a diagnosis for Celiac disease, the serious autoimmune condition triggered by gluten. 'It was a lightbulb moment. Before a race I would carb load, so I would just eat pizza, pasta, all these things. I was basically poisoning myself before going into a big event.' Charles-Barclay had often competed through the pain. She won the Ironman world title after tearing her calf muscle at the start of the marathon, which crept open like a zip so that by the time she finished 26 miles later, it was 14cm long. So when she came to a halt on London's Victoria Dock during last year's T100 race – part of triathlon's new F1-style championship at glamorous locations all over the world – it had to be bad. Her achilles had blown and she was wheeled away on a golf buggy, past the fans who had come out to see her compete in the flesh. 'It was devastating,' she says. It took nearly a year after her diagnosis to feel fully healthy, but a change in diet – swapping out gluten for rice, chicken and eggs – transformed her body's resilience. Last weekend, in almost exactly the same spot where she had broken down the year before, Charles-Barclay overtook her rival Kate Waugh to lead the London race. She reached the finish straight alone, with just enough time to hype a giddy crowd inside the ExCel Centre before lifting the finish tape over her head in triumph. Then she collapsed into the arms of her coach and husband Reece, and the tears flowed. 'It doesn't quite feel real,' Charles-Barclay says, watching back the footage of her winning moment. She is talking to The Independent after a hard morning's training at the London Aquatics Centre in Olympic Park, four days after that T100 victory. 'There's so much emotion in that video. It feels a little bit weird, like it was like a real 'moment', a turning point, proving to myself that I'm back to my old ways and feeling strong again.' There was a poignancy, too, after Charles-Barclay's grandfather died in December. 'He watched all my races, most of them online because I don't race in the UK, so London last year was the final race that he actually came to watch me, and obviously I had to pull out. So it was really, really sad. We had all the family there this year apart from him, but it definitely felt like he was there with me.' Triathlon remains a fringe sport outside of its place in the Olympic Games, but T100 is bidding to change that. Its world tour operates like a Formula One season, with 20 contracted triathletes competing for points and prize money at nine destinations around the world. Races are staged in Miami, San Francisco, Ibiza and Dubai, and the champion at the end of the season scoops £150,000. The 100km competition – somewhere between a regular triathlon and an Ironman – was launched last year as a ploy to build a more consistent narrative, with the best athletes regularly going head to head. The event has lured plenty of big names including Olympic champions Flora Duffy and Alistair Brownlee, while Alex Yee is considering joining the championship next year, which would be a major coup. Triathlon is increasingly attracting the executive class, usurping golf as the go-to hobby of the CEO, but it also has a growing grassroots following. Charles-Barclay has amassed a small army of fans with half a million followers on Instagram, and a line of mostly young girls queued up after her London win to get selfies with their hero. Quietly, she is blazing a trail. 'It makes it all feel so worth it,' she says. 'Sport at this level is incredibly tough, you make a lot of sacrifices, you often feel like it's quite a selfish pursuit training all the time and not seeing family and friends very often. So to feel like you're doing it more than just for yourself, you're inspiring others – hopefully those young kids will grow up and try triathlon or get into sport, so it feels a lot bigger than just swim, bike, run.' Many of her fans were sporting the familiar 'battle braids' hairstyle that has become an essential part of the Charles-Barclay image. 'In my first ever triathlon I just decided to braid my hair to keep it out of the way, and then it became a good luck charm and I would braid my hair before every race,' she says. 'It's like I'm going into battle every time that I'm going to line up for a competition, so it's almost like a confidence thing. It's inspired young girls to braid their hair, whether it's sports day at school, or I've had young women who sit exams and they'll braid their hair just to feel a bit more confident doing it. It's become a real movement that I didn't expect and every time someone shares it online, it's just so amazing to see that.' The Olympics remains triathlon's biggest stage, and there is talk of the 100km format making its debut at the 2032 Olympics in Brisbane. That may come too late for Charles-Barclay, who has never competed at the Games, and she admits it is frustrating not to get the same recognition as those who race over the shorter Olympic distance. 'We deserve it, we work so hard,' she says. 'I definitely don't do it for [recognition] but I feel like if we were given the platform, with more mainstream media sharing that journey, we've got the capacity to inspire so many new people to get involved in this fantastic sport. That's one of the main reasons why I do it.' And, of course, to win. Charles-Barclay is heading to Lanzarote for a five-week training camp before returning to Kona in October, the scene of her greatest triumph. She is, technically, the defending champion on that particular course after the World Championship made an unpopular detour to France last year, when she was out injured. It will be back in Hawaii, and so will Charles-Barclay – somehow, after everything, feeling stronger than ever. Her course record – 8hr 24min 31sec – could even be under threat. 'Hawaii's all about the conditions, so if it's super windy it will be slow on the bike,' she says. 'But I managed to win there with a torn calf, so I do believe I can go faster. I just really want to go there and get the win again.'

‘I wish that I had discovered this side of me earlier': Spencer Matthews on resilience, addiction and his new Project 7 endurance challenge
‘I wish that I had discovered this side of me earlier': Spencer Matthews on resilience, addiction and his new Project 7 endurance challenge

The Independent

time6 days ago

  • The Independent

‘I wish that I had discovered this side of me earlier': Spencer Matthews on resilience, addiction and his new Project 7 endurance challenge

Having smashed through the intimidating feat of 30 marathons across the Jordanian desert in 30 days, broadcaster and CleanCo founder Spencer Matthews is now preparing for his 'Project 7' challenge – a beast of his own invention, which will see him complete seven full-distance Ironman-style triathlons on seven continents back to back. 'I've got an addictive personality,' Matthews tells me. 'Only a few years ago now, running 5k would have been a serious problem for me. I wish that I had discovered this side of me earlier because I used to live with lots of boundaries. I can't start a business – I don't know how. I can't run a marathon – it's too far. I can't lift heavy weights – I'm not strong. All these things I have found to be untrue when you lift the lid on what's possible. Ultimately, if other people can do it, then there's a strong chance that you can also do it.' Each leg of the 23-day Project 7 challenge consists of a 3.8km swim followed by a 180km bike ride and topped off with a full marathon – 42.2 km. Matthews will begin in South America then move through North America, Europe, Asia, Australia and Africa, finishing up in Antarctica. Where, he tells me, icy sub-zero waters populated by hulking leopard seals on the hunt for penguins will provide an intimidating setting for the final push. 'I had this nightmare – I actually woke up in a cold fit. This leopard seal basically took me and then dragged me underwater, and we were just going deeper and deeper. So hopefully that's not some premonition,' he says, surprisingly calmly. But little is being left to chance in this challenge. Matthews is confident of that. he says: 'There won't be a single stone left unturned with how we approach this style of challenge. Good preparation is the antithesis of jeopardy – our job is to try to limit the amount of jeopardy that we come up against. It changes the nature of the challenge, though, being as prepared as we will be, because there's something really interesting about your personal journey when you're underprepared. 'For example, my marathon saga was essentially a punishment for my drinking. At the time, I decided that I was going to stop drinking, and I hit what some might call rock bottom, and I signed up for the marathons and flew out to the middle of the desert to essentially punish myself and teach myself a lesson. It was a cathartic experience and there were moments of extreme pain followed by moments of elation and joy, because it was an unknown. We're not going to run that risk for this and I think we owe it to James' Place to be prepared and turn up ready.' This challenge is part of Matthews' mission to show himself, and others that human performance might well be limitless, but it also seeks to raise funds for James' Place, a UK charity focused on male suicide prevention and mental health support. Matthews says: 'They do critical work in male suicide prevention, which is a very serious problem in the UK. A person takes their own life roughly every hour in the UK, with about three quarters of them being men. I think men at the moment are facing all kinds of complications, really. But this suicide number, this suicide rate is alarmingly high and James' Place do incredible work to save men who are in crisis.' Becoming an iron man I ask Matthews how he plans to prepare his body for such a gruelling challenge, particularly given that he's never done one triathlon challenge, let alone seven triathlons in succession. He tells me, 'It's honestly not as wild as you might assume.' 'I ran over 100 kilometres last week, which obviously is quite a long week, but not often more than an hour at a time. If you run for an hour every day, even slowly, if you do that repeatedly over time, you're going to be an incredibly fit person. I think getting out there and just putting in the steps and the time is really important.' 'And I don't have an extraordinary amount of spare time,' he says. 'I have three children, a wife and two businesses so typically, I get my training done before breakfast. I'll be out the door, running, training, lifting, cycling, swimming. Sometimes I do go for a three or four hour runs on weekends or days that I've got less on. Plenty of distance in the legs and just really believing in yourself – that's the barrier to entry for larger challenges such as these.' Matthews has found support in unlikely places during his journey. A dedicated team will accompany him on the Project 7 challenge, including health and logistics expert Chris Taylor. But on the ground in the UK, his training is spurred on by the communities he's attempted to build around his CleanCo alcohol-free brand, his Untapped podcast and around events like run clubs. 'I personally find the sporting community, the running community, in particular, the best social community I've ever been a part of. I love running with strangers. With run clubs that we've done 400 people will turn up. And we just did it slowly, really inclusive, and just had conversations with a bunch of people who all had their reasons.' 'I think the biggest lessons that I've learned are that consistency is the leading factor in my health journey. If you consistently show up and behave in a way that you admire and you want to be, one day you're going to wake up as that person. At some point you just wake up and realise that you're nothing to do with the person that used to be. I eliminated a lot of doubt and self loathing and turned it into pride, and it kind of opened up a whole world of 'what's next and what's possible?'' Mind over matter Inspired by Russ Cook – the endurance athlete known by his online moniker Hardest Geezer – and his race around Africa, Matthews decided to carve out a similar challenge for himself, which is how his 30 marathons in 30 days adventure came into being. 'I couldn't understand how this guy who wasn't a big runner before, was cranking out marathon after marathon every single day. And I instantly loved it, right? I was watching his content every day, and at the time, I was considering doing another ultra. People who have done ultras will understand that they pull you back in. You get to the finish line, you promise yourself that you'll never do that ever again and it's only a matter of months before you want to do it again.' 'I was looking for another event, and then I saw Cook doing hundreds of miles in a row, and I thought, how many can I do in a row? Guinness World Records said that 30 consecutive [marathons] would, in fact, be a world record, and the idea of becoming a world record holding athlete of any kind became this unthinkable target I was all of a sudden obsessed with.' 'It ended up being easily the most transformative period and the most meaningful time in my life,' says Matthews. He stops briefly and reflects before continuing, 'aside from having beautiful children with the love of my life. But just in terms of my own personal development. It was incredibly useful, the kind of strain of it all, but also the breaking down of the barriers and boundaries. I thought there must be such an exciting and interesting opportunity here for normal people like me to understand that these seemingly impossible things are possible.' The Untapped podcast was born out of this curiosity as Matthews decided to drop his comedy podcasts and focus solely on stories of human potential, adversity and success. 'Basically I interview incredible athletes now who achieve extraordinary things and tap into their daily habits and routines. And I've just become obsessed with performance,' he says. So how can someone who's never run a marathon take on one for the first time? Or take on seven triathlons – including an official Ironman competition in Sacramento – in a row, when few people could manage just one? Matthews explains that there are a few rules worth sticking to that apply to everyone. One of them is cutting out booze – something that he's often asked to discuss after launching CleanCo. He's careful with his words here and tells me he doesn't identify with the binary way alcohol and addiction are often discussed. His view is straightforward though – we all have an idea of who we want to be. 'Eliminating alcohol for periods of time is probably the most helpful thing you can do in my book. I'm not preaching or having a go at anybody that drinks recreationally. But for me, the difference between having a few drinks and not drinking is enormous. I used to see taking periods of abstinence as a sacrifice, so I'd say, 'I'm not going to drink for this month in order to feel better'. And now my whole ethos around it is the complete opposite. I can drink whenever I feel like drinking, but I choose not to, because it will hinder who I am and my performance. I've become interested in health and physicality and wellness as part of my very being. So smoking, drinking, late nights don't really fit into what I want to be.' Reality TV to reality check I ask Matthews about the exact training and recovery protocol as well as the risks involved in taking on seven triathlons over seven continents. Jeopardy is a word that comes up a lot because on seven continents, weather conditions vary, the body is put through its paces running, swimming and cycling over varied terrain and in some cases, wild animals are abundant. 'I really wanted to go to India for this one, until I interviewed Forrest Galante and he was telling me that there are wild leopards that occasionally pick people off, so we're going to try and avoid dangerous animals where we can. Chris Taylor is my safety blanket and logistical go-to and I place pretty much all of my trust in him. He said to me, 'if you do everything I tell you to do in the way that I tell you to do it, you'll achieve the goal' and it ended up being true, so I trust him implicitly with this challenge as well. I liked him from the moment we met and I knew we'd have all the fun and build interesting challenges together. He probably didn't initially – he actually placed bets that I would fail!' The challenge itself presents several situations that could be life-threatening. Full immersion in icy open waters for far longer than one might sit in an ice bath, full-body swelling after completing each triathlon followed by hours of air travel and the risk of accidents on the road. The planning requires a meticulous edge and Matthews tells me he'll be in the air for over 100 hours in 22 days. 'There's going to be full immersion in ice water. which I have to say I am concerned about. We'll have the correct kit, of course. But even then, you're going to be very cold – it's minus two degrees in the water,' says Matthews. 'I'm not racing to the point where having a five minute break is going to make a difference on the record test. But having a five minute break in Antarctica could be the difference between life or death. If you were to end up hypothermic from the exhaustion, the inflammation, it's going to be really difficult to recover from that. I saw a video of some bloke pouring a Coca Cola can in Antarctica and it froze before it hit the ground. Recovering well mid challenge is something that I think it's going to be difficult to manage. You have to stay living.' 'We're going to try and board flights as soon as we finish so that I can swell once and not twice. I've never done an Ironman before but apparently the body swells in the recovery process. But if we manage the time that we're in the air, then that will be helpful. There's a lot of flying, like, a lot of flying. Some of the flights are 12 hours but it'll give me time to read and I'll be able to walk through security quickly because I won't have any kids with me. I imagine it'll be fun and challenging and equal measure.' he says, explaining that the airport experience with his family often looks very different, trying to wrangle kids and their luggage. No man is an island As we move onto the topic of family, Matthews explains that feeling drawn to endurance challenges is somewhat in his blood. But it's also a direct result of the environments he's been exposed to. From his time on Made In Chelsea to the present day, he's considered the importance of male role models and how needed they are, particularly in digital spaces. 'I really want my kids to grow up in an environment where they see that kind of anything possible. I had my older brother for that. We've always been an adventurous family and as a kid, I remember being really inspired by him. So I'd love my kids to at least understand that they can tap into themselves, instead of being told that they can't do things.' 'I feel that men, young men particularly, are in a bit of a tricky spot nowadays. I think a lot of really influential voices are wrong and quite toxic. As a father of two boys, I'm terrified of them exploring social media and coming across these toxically masculine voices that tell them that they're worthless if they're not a certain way. And I think that having had a journey myself through masculinity, setting an example and working with a charity like James' Place is really important to me. 'They do extraordinary work preventing men from taking their lives and aim to see suicidal men in crisis within two working days. The NHS are incredible, but that's not a service that they can offer. The money that we raise from Project 7 can be used in real time to save lives in real time.' Matthews shares that fundraising has already begun. After the challenge begins in Rio on 15th October supporters can continue to donate to the charity and follow along on the journey as he runs, swims and cycles in Sacramento, California and then in London, Dubai, Perth and Cape Town before crossing the finish line in Antarctica, setting a world record in the process.

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