Speed, Distance, Pain-free Running – Pick 2

Here is an equation that dawned on me today while running. It is quite simple.

a) Speed at which you can run.
b) Distance that you can cover.
c) Running without any pain or injuries.

You can only have two of the above.

Obviously c) has to be selected – cannot imagine a life with pain – unless you are Zahir Khan or one of the sissy Indian cricketers who always feign pain in order to skip playing and go act in more Ads.

That leaves us to pick either a) or b). So if you have only 30 minutes to run – run as fast as possible for a short distance. If you have lot of time on hand – run as far as possible – but slowly with enough breaks.

At times these constraints are a real PITA – but that’s life – we should just try to make the most of it.

CyanogenMod on Samsung Galaxy S and 3 Button fix

I did not brick my phone this time. And now I am on CyanogenMod 7 – with Gingerbread. It looks beautiful and is very responsive ( thanks to the Hardcore’s Speedmod kernel ) – Samsung Galaxy S feels like a new phone once again.

Some of the SGS had the 3 button method ( Volume button  + Home + Power key ) to reboot into Recovery or Download mode disabled –  which is essential to install any kernels or ROMS. 
The trick was to enable the 3 Button Fix and it becomes easy to install ROMS. In my previous failed attempt I tried to accomplish the same using adb and bricked my phone. ( http://venkat2.blogspot.com/2011/09/android-adventures-how-i-bricked-my.html
1. Root SGS
This is quite simple. Download SuperOneClick from shortfuse ( http://shortfuse.org/?page_id=2 ) and root the phone.
2. Enable the 3 button fix
If you can go to download / recovery mode with the 3 buttons you can skip this step. Use the below link and it worked without any hiccups : http://www.addictivetips.com/mobile/fix-3-button-combo-download-recovery-mode-in-samsung-galaxy-s-gt-i9000/. Has links to Odin and a PDA file which will enable the 3 buttons.
There is a similar article in androidadvices.com – you can give it a pass.

One word of caution : ALWAYS read the comments before you get your hands dirty. I read horror stories of some Samsung Galaxy S 4G ( newer models ) that got completely bricked as this is not supported.

3. Now I can install ROMs using Clockworkmod. The instructions in cyanogenMod wiki were so straightforward it was as simple as installing Ubuntu ( from Version 6 I guess ) and the whole process was done under 2 minutes.

http://wiki.cyanogenmod.com/wiki/Samsung_Galaxy_S

Here are some screenshots – I could not take the lock screen though – it came out blank. There are 5 “pages”. The one in the middle is the landing zone.

To the left I put my “fun” stuff

Further left is google+, twitter and facebook.

To the right of my home is “work”

Yet to organize better. And guess what – the bottom tray – even that is configurable. The = sign is the calculator – yet another reason why android can never beat iOS. I can drag any app to this dock – something I could not do in Froyo ( don’t know if this is a Gingerbread thingy or Cyanogenmod’s gift )

And so far the phone responds really fast and had no app crashes. I doubt if there is any improvement on battery life – it is already visibly down ( had a 1.2 hour run today morning with GPS and music player on ), and was playing music at home through an amplifier after that. I saw a setting where I can switch the CPU for performance or battery.. right now it is in optimal setting.

And btw – these things void your warranty – but totally worth doing it. If you have a SGS and want it rooted just ping me – I can help you.

Finally – great work Cyanogenmod team – simply amazing.

Steve Jobs is Howard Roark

Claimer : This is not a post to mourn but to Celebrate Steve Jobs. 

I read Ayn Rand’s FountainHead in 2008. A life changing novel.

If you haven’t read here is a gist.

The hero of the book is Howard Roark. 
He hates the old school architecture – where you have the professors expecting one to design buildings with 18th Century architecture – the pillars and ornate designs. Howard Roark could not stand this “apeing” and refuses to follow the college’s dictum and drops out and moves to New York to start his own design firm.
At the same time – Peter Keating, his fellow student, graduates with top honors and moves to New York.  The first half of the story is all about how Peter Keating’s career rises while Howard Roark is rejected by the System and he goes to work as a day laborer in a mine quarry and as a construction worker. 
The second half is all about how Howard Roark’s style of architecture is accepted and creates a new School of Thought. He creates a design secretly for Peter Keating which wins an architectural award by the same people who rejected Howard Roark. 


In the end, Howard Roark Wins. 

Towards the end of the book I almost believed that a Howard Roark existed. I was so fascinated by the idea of a single “man” revolutionizing an entire industry.

Whenever I heard about Steve Jobs or read about him – the picture of Howard Roark kept coming to my mind and I secretly believe Steve Jobs is Howard Roark!

Here is one man – who was instrumental in creating not one – but many industries.

1. The PC Industry

You and I would still be stuck with the ‘dumb’ terminals with green fonts had not the visionary Steve Job spotted the whizkid Steve Woznaik tinkering on a project.

2. CGI Animated Movies


Animation was just another special effect in a movie – until Pixar came along created those magical CGI animated movies.

3. Glamorous OS

It was love at first sight when I first saw Puma in 2001 – borrowed from NeXT OS. If you enter a wrong password the login dialog box would shake like a head refusing to accept the answer – an OS can be fun and elegant while still doing the OSy stuff. Was a convert from that day onwards.

4. Portable Music Device


iPod. What a simple elegant device ( except the fat nano ). Apple did not invent the hard drive based mp3 player, nor the clickwheel – but took them to the next level.

5. Online Media

People wrongly attribute the success of Apple’s Digital Media Offerings to iPod – but the secret is iTunes – it made the process of media consumption easy.

6. Podcasts


What will I do without them? Twit, Car Talk, Macworld podcast, TED Talks – all at my finger tips waiting to soak my brain whenever I run or for a long journey to kill time.

7. Smart Phones and Tablets


My Brother in law bought a Nokia smartphone in 2007 – it had a touch screen, a gyroscope etc. It was jerky and will freeze now and then. I liked the touch concept but did not excite me. Then came iPhone and elevated the SmartPhones to an entirely new level. And alongside the “App Industry”.

This man had Taste and Instinct like no other. He created multiple industries. He turned around Apple from the brink of death. He brought smile to millions of kids and adults. He inspired so many entrepreneurs to go against the current.

The world is a better place because of him.

In the end, Steve Jobs won.

Three Running Myths Busted

I love running.

I was never an athletic person – whenever there was a race, I was the last, play any competitive physical sport with me and I assure you I would have made you triumphant. As a kid I never cared much about sports and hated PT classes. However I discovered running the last couple of years and it was just what the Doctor ordered. I set my own pace, listen to a podcast and I am content and happy.

I touched 10km a few months back and I celebrated. Then I pushed to 12km and a nagging pain started – “shin splints”. Read all about it and in the process came to know the names of other minor pains I was having. So I tweeted

venkat2 venkat kandaswamy 

dear runner friends – did any of you have shin splints.. I am touching 12 km and having this pain.. any help/pointers appreciated


got a few replies

knowsnotmuch knowsnotmuch 

@ 
@venkat2 yeah it does creep slowly. Back off a bit, increase gradually when you get back and examine how you land on your feet when you run

knowsnotmuch knowsnotmuch 

@ 
@venkat2 got it when i touched 6-7km because I pushed too quickly. It put me out of action and it took me ages to recover. Ease up a little.

khushnood khushnood 

@ 
@venkat2 have you read ‘born to run’ by Chris Mcdougall ? It could help.

A book suggestion – wow! – immediately I grabbed Born to Run and started crunching it.

The author who writes in a sports journal is also a runner and is always in pain because of his runs. He meets various podiatrists, physiotherapists and the answer is always the same – slow down on running, human body is not supposed to take so much of shock while running. 
Then on a trip to Mexico he reads an article about a runner tribe – Tarahumara – who run for days in one of their parties (tesguinado) and the winners usually are the veterans at the age of 60s, they just wear a handmade sandal and run on hostile terrain. They contradict everything we have come to know of running.

This leads him to Kabayo Blanco, an american who has is now living with the Tarahumarians and follow their simple life style. They arrange for a run where the best of ultra runners in America ( an ultra is > than a marathon – 160 KMs and even more, while a marathon is only 42Kms ) – come to the Copper Canyons and they run with the Tarahumara.

While the story progresses Chris Mcdougall keeps uncovering interesting facts about running.

Myth 1 : You need sophisticated shoes.


I love conspiracies and this one is about a $20 Billion industry started by Nike. Prior to 1970s – there were no shin splints, plantar fascilitis, over pronation, plica syndrome or the running ailments that are so common today. Then Nike was born and it made a good shoe ( Nike Pegasus ) – which had a thin sole and was great for running. Then the Capitalist greed kicked in and Nike started retiring their successful models every 10 months.

Nike gave more and more support and cushion to the feet – and the feet forgot how to run how the way the human body was supposed to run. All the nerves in our human body that starts in the brain – ends in the feet ( Some 70,000 or so ). Whenever the feet touches the ground it is taking a snapshot of the temperature, the hardness of the surface etc. – and this feedback is used to plan the next step.

a) When the feet is put in a nice comfortable soft shoe – the brain thinks that it has to put more force on the next step for stability as it feels its on soft ground and has to plant the leg firmly.

b) Also the way the shoe is designed ( thicker heel ) – the body lands on the heel – and the shock wave gets multiplied. Our foot is designed to land on the toes to dissipate the shock.

so a) makes your foot to land harder and b) makes you land the whole body on the wrong place – a) x b) has a multiplicative effect on the “wrong” way of running – and it leads to pain.

This brings us to the “barefoot movement” – people are kicking their shoes off and running barefoot – as the best shoe is “nothing”.

This was an ahaa moment for me – it made complete sense. My running shoe ( which I got free for a Reebok sandals that I got 5 years back ) has a thin sole but still has a nice cushion at the heel. I started noticing that I was landing on my heel. I contemplated running bare foot – but before that I want to get the cheapest Bata canvas shoe and give it a shot. The road has got lots of dirt and sharp objects – do not want to take chances.

This book just saved me a few thousands of rupees. One of the things I was going to do was get a more fancy, cushiony Nike or Reebok shoe – thinking it will ease my pain. Myth busted.

Myth 2 : Woman cannot run.


This one is for the Wife who I am encouraging her to run with me. There are stories of 2 lady ultra marathoners – one a school teacher who has won so many ultra marathons and one a young upcoming ultra marathoner – both have no special training – but they beat the best American runners and even beat the Tarahumara tribe’s best runners. As the distance increases – women seem to beat men – as their endurance levels are much higher.

Men are wimps when it comes to pain. I keep crying all the time that my feet hurt, my shin hurts.

However a woman can experience an incredible amount of pain during child birth and can laugh about it later.

Also the human body was designed to run – as the title of this book “Born to run”. We are not supposed to walk or pump irons or pull fancy weights in gym – but run. This is the best way to exercise and can ward off diabetes, hypertension, back pain and whole lot of ailments brought to us thanks to the progressive and lazy lifestyle. The whole body reacts beautifully to running – I am no longer a coffee addict – I drink coffee when I am bored – thats all.

So ladies rethink again if you have any doubts on running – the “Men” have spread lot of mis information and taken away your right to run. Second Myth – Woman cannot run – is also busted.

Myth 3 : You need to be a carnivore if you have to run.


Another eye-opener. The best ultra marathoner ever – Scott Jurek – who has won 7 titles in his career and has won in all hostile environments – turned a vegetarian. The tarahumara are vegetarians. There are these monks in Japan who run 70 miles every day for 7 years.. ( as they reach Nirvana daily by running ) – eat just Tofu and veggies.

Animal protein is bad for the human body. It brings cancer and also gets stored as fat. Like all the studies – we were not supposed to process animal flesh. It is bad for running. There are issues with water retention and fat build up. Also when you are a vegan – your body is more supple, leaner and can run better, faster and longer – I am sold.

Other than the humanitarian and ecological aspects of turning Vegan – the running angle appeals to me a lot. Already I am cutting down on my carnivorishness – and I am now following the Veggie on auspicious days strictly ( Monday,Thursday,Friday,Saturday) – and planning to expand it to all 7 days so I can joke like my good friend Sathya [ he is a Vegetarian and will joke – oh I do not eat meat today – because its  ____day ]

Myth 3 busted – you need to be a carnivore to run.

So thats all folks – all the pre conceived notions I have about running are all over turned. Thank you Christopher McDougall, Barefoot Ted, Scott Jurek, Kabayo Blanco ( search these names on You Tube and you can see videos, TED Talks, interviews ) and Harruki Murrakami. You guys have changed me for the better.

An Identity Crisis!

Whoosh… that is how the time went the last 3 years. Sep 18th, 2008 – the day the Lehman Brothers collapsed and the sub prime crisis erupted – I started my entrepreneurial journey.

3 years down the lane – I still feel young and wide eyed. And this brings us to an identity crisis I am having. How do I introduce myself to strangers? Earlier it was easy – I work for an IT company and the other party just imagines me walking in with a laptop bag, boarding a flight to US of A and bringing back lot of foreign chocolates – and of course living the high life and someone who can afford the high rents and bribes. [ honestly this is not true, and I am always frustrated when the non-ITians think that we are having an easy life ]

Now I honestly do not know how to introduce myself.  Here are the few attempts :

I run a startup. The problem is – it is now my 4th year. How long will i keep starting should I not have started up by now? Also it feels as if I am toying with an idea or a business model – and the other party might not take me seriously. Anyone else other than the entrepreneurial community will not even understand the term “startup” correctly. So I stopped using this.

I run a business. This I tell with the least confidence. Because to me a business man is one who wears a suit / dhoti ( I was b&bup from Coimbatore ) , chews paan, has a waddle of cash, is chauffeured around in a car, tips heavily,speaks loudly to everyone, and is on phone all the time. I am none of them – and I do not sound confident because something inside me is trying to shut my mouth when I use this introduction.

I am an entrepreneur. It took ages for me to get the spelling right. And I attended a french class for 2 weeks – not that it helped but at least I can tell it is a french word. Aside anything that sounds french is cool ( expose, creme-da-la-creme, fiancee ). I love this introduction – however the majority cannot identify this word.

I have my company. Lame.. Doesnt excite me one bit – how will the other party even talk to me after such a dead introduction.

Hopefully by next year I should have a good introduction. Till then I will shake hands and tell the first thing that comes to my mind and keep trying various options.

Android Adventures – How I brick’d my phone

There is one more advantage to Running. It helped me skip a Puja shopping session – citing pain because of my run the previous day – and had a nice 6 hour window for myself.

I have been using Samsung Galaxy S for the last 1 year. It is a fantastic phone and has helped me in my running, exploring unknown places, keeping an eye on the server without booting up a laptop every time.

The PoS called Kies allowed me to upgrade to Froyo ( 2.2 ) from Eclairs ( 2.1 ). However it does not upgrade to Gingerbread (2.3) for whatever reason. While the rest of the Android world is enjoying Gingerbread I am stuck on Froyo. It was a long time dream to understand what this Android ecosystem is all about – and finally I found the time to sit and read about it and perhaps install Gingerbread.

Here are the steps to brick a phone.

1. Root the phone. This is the easy part. It does not brick it – totally harmless.

2. Get ADB. There is a defect in my phone. The hardware way of reaching recovery screen ( Volume Up + Home button + Power button ) does not work. A few SGS phones have this problem. The workaround is to install Android SDK. This gives you Android Debug Bridge ( ADB ) which can reboot your phone into recovery or download mode by running a command from the console ( adb reboot recovery or adb reboot download )

3. ClockworkMod. What an Idea Sirji! – Free download from App Market. It can install any ROM / firmware. You do not need ODIN ( coming up in a minute ) – just install this app, copy the ROM to your SD Card, reboot and install it. Also helps you to do a backup of your existing ROM – so you can revert back to a working copy.

4. Stock 3e. This is the recovery console that Froyo has put – and it is incompatible with ClockworkMod. When you install it will say Unable to verify signature. Lots of googling ( how did people ever live before Google? ) and I had to downgrade it to 2e.

5. ODIN. In order to downgrade to Stock 2e I had to flash a different Kernel. This video has good instructions : http://www.dkszone.net/install-android-2.3-gingerbread-samsung-galaxy-s-i9000-custom-rom-ultibread. Using ODIN is not that hard – and I feel this is the best way to flash ROMs or Kernels.

6. Confidence increases. Still my phone was working after every reboot. For a geek where things keep working one after the other – the confidence builds up. I typically watch for these signs as law of average will kick in soon and something bad will happen.

7. Installing Gingerbread. I was as excited as a child. I downloaded Gingerbread, copied it to sdcard, rebooted into recovery mode ( 2e now ), and started the installation process…and was enjoying reading the messages scrolling.

Removing the crap you installed before….
InStaLin, Hold OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOONNNN!!
Unmounting mount points…
Your phone is now High, ReBo0t .

8. The Brick. The phone didnt ReBo0t after the installation and it went to the 3e console. I should have panicked here but I was ignorant. I happily rebooted the phone and thankfully the SGS splash screen came. But then the screen started going crazy. The phone started making androidish noises. Waited for a while with my BP rising. Powered the phone again and the screen was stuck at the SGS splash screen. 
9. The hardware defect surfaces. The 3 button trick to reboot to recovery console does not work. The phone has to first get picked up by the Laptop so I can run adb reboot recovery. Adb kept saying device not found. After lots of trial and error ( plug the usb cable and power up the phone, plug cable before splash screen comes up, plug cable after splash screen ) some combination worked and was able to reboot the phone. But the recovery mode never came and the phone kept hanging. Here I switched on the fan as I was sweating. 
10. ODIN saves the day. I had left ODIN ON and while I was trying to get adb to recognize the phone – so I can run reboot command – while switching windows I happened to notice that the phone was showing in one of the COM ports of ODIN. This gave me some hope. I downloaded the same Froyo version I had at the beginning of this adventure – it is a 190MB download – while reading more of the How Tos to unbrick a phone. Did a adb reboot download mode – the Android icon with the spade icon showed up, loaded it on ODIN, installed it, phone rebooted and the regular Samsung Galaxy S 1900 showed up and the second animated Samsung Galaxy S icon came up. No I didnt thank God but I thanked the entire Android community for bringing back the phone.
I was too exhausted at the end of this. Now I have the phone in the exact state I started it – ( lost the apps etc. – which is not a big deal anyway ). Since I have everything tied to Google – got all the contacts back. 
You might wonder – why did I download a Froyo ROM and not the Gingerbread ROM – since anyway I was going to flash. Remember the thing I said above about law of averages? I wasn’t prepared to take any more chances. I just wanted my phone in a working condition – I was even prepared to go back to the slow Eclairs with the infamous Lag. 
Quite an adventure! 

I Support Anna Hazare.

There you go – let me come out in the open.

While I might doubt the success of the JanLokpal bill – which no politician in the right mind will ever pass it – I love the revolution Anna Hazare and team is creating.

Dear Egypt, Syria, Lebonon – watch what is happening here. We are a healthy democracy and we are not fighting dictators. In another 50 years you will be going through what we are going through. You might be getting a honest leader now – but slowly without you even knowing – like the proverbial frog on a hot stove – your country will start getting looted. You will get so used to corruption tax that you will not even know that this is a crime you are committing. Then look back at history and see 2011 – what happened in India. You can get some inspiration out of this.

Back to my beloved country people – Go ahead – ask me – have you bribed?

Yes. I have. I am guilty but I am not ashamed. Before you call me a hypocrite read further.

Karnataka – the most corrupt state in India – is the only state in India to have Lokyukta. Santosh Hegde and his brave team keeps unearthing stash of illegally got wealth from officials from every department. We see in newspapers the photos and the grand total – that run into crores. What happens next? The officials get suspended for a few weeks or months – and they are back to their jobs – milking the system.

All we are asking is a Lokyukta with powers to prosecute.

These are the benefits :

1. Of course the whole corruption industry will go into recession.

2. The “tout-layer” will go out of business. There are honest officials and the buyer ( we ) are not aware of them – however the touts charge a fee saying it is for bribe and pocket the money. All these lazy goons will stop loitering around the government buildings and we go meet with these honest officials directly.

3. The rich country that India has become – will see less poverty. The largesses dished out ( no not the TVs and Fridges from TN govt ) – the subsidized rice from ration shops, the compensation from calamities ( gosh how can they even think of stealing from this )  – will all reach the people to the last paise.

4. People will donate to the PM’s relief fund.

5. Probably the goons will start concentrating on other ways to make money and will quit politics – so educated youth like you and me can start thinking of Politics as a career option.

Provided I have the confidence in me – that I will not be beaten up by goons for raising an RTI, or my house transfer is frozen for ever – because I refused to pay a bribe – I will not pay a bribe. I will use that money to go buy something tangible – that will provide more jobs and make everyone richer.

So my friend – you support Anna Hazare or not – let us work towards revolutionizing India.

I am following Anna Hazare’s path – you find a better path take it. Probably I will join you as well – and let us let India rise to its true potential.

Why any product needs “Mac Users”

First the Disclaimer : This is not a mac fanboy post. I am loosely stereotyping the 3 kinds of users based on the 3 OSes – Mac, Windows and Linux. This is mainly to drive home the point of how an “ideal user” will help your product become better and better. The “Mac User”, who I call – can also be a Windows, Linux,BeOs,OS 390…. user.  OS X has been successful mainly because of their Users – look at the amount of podcasts, fan sites, hints sites, magazines for this platform alone. Apple listens to these feedbacks – and incorporates some into every release of their OS.

I am tending to call these “ideal users” as “Mac Users”. Had linux/windows had the same level of success – will be labeling them likewise. Shall we move on? 🙂

Here are some reasons why you need Mac users.

1. They demand Perfection

This is from my personal experience. Some of the CxO users, ex-Entrepreneurs who use our product – just cannot stand mediocrity or minor bugs. As developers we gloss over things and we fail to cross the ‘t’s and dot the ‘i’s. But this irritates the hell out of these high achievers. When I look things through their eyes – it does make sense. Any aberrations – big or small – breaks the flow and harmony.

Switch to Linux Desktop. The flow gets broken everywhere. The applications are not consistent – each one I have to remember where I should go to do a certain thing. There are KDE apps, and Gnome Apps – and some apps who do not follow any school of UI philosophy. It kills me.  Linux as a Desktop has a very long way to go.

Windows 7 has come a long way from the Windows ME days. Still there are certain things that does not make sense – like exporting an Excel file as a CSV file – you have to put up with 3 dialog boxes – twice. This is sheer madness.

2. They improve your Product

The best part of working with the “Mac users” is they give great ideas. We built the initial product based on our knowledge / creativity. After that the product has grown from these inputs given by our users. They bring lot of expertise and cross-functional knowledge to the table. The earlier you identify them it is better for the product. Any prototypes you are building, or just want to bounce an idea about a feature – these are the users you should call first. They have a big picture view of your product – on functionality / usability / and even marketability.

Then there are the linux and windows users. Linux users will be bent on functionality without any respect to the marketability of the feature. Stay away. The Windows users might want a feature that is there in an X ( eg. in Tally or SAP ). They will not understand that building it will flush the usability down the drain – or how it does not fit with the overall design philosophy. Give them a hearing, explain why you might not incorporate – leave it at that.

3. The Best Part – They pay you


These demanding users also pay you – ungrudgingly. They do not haggle with you, they respect your business model, they do not ask you to sell Pizza online and give the product free, they do not ask you to do what X is doing and follow their model and hence give the product free. They respect what you have built – and pay because they see value. If they are not paying – then there is no value in the product. Loud and Clear.

Now going back to the 3 OSes – OS X, Linux and Windows – see the kind of users / followers each group has. Apple is lucky to have the kind of crowd following them ( Power users, artists, designers… ). All apple has to do now onwards is to listen – the best ideas come from their users – not from 1, Infinite Loop anymore.

So – have you identified your Mac Users?

What I talk about when I talk about Running

This is the book written by Haruki Murakami (thanks to @kgthegreat for pointing my spelling flaw) Nila mentioned to me about this book on Thursday evening, Friday morning I had to plan for a surprise one day trip to Chennai, Saturday found an audio version of this book and Sunday listened to this book on the afternoon return journey. At times it is really amazing how it looks like as if someone sat and planned the whole situation to the very last detail.

I have read only one book of his before – kafka on the shore. He is an amazing fiction writer and paints such crazy images and situations. ( http://kvrlogs.blogspot.com/2008/07/kafka-on-shore.html ). I was very curious to know what he had to talk about when he talks about running!

Pic from one of his interviews ( http://www.runnersworld.com/article/0,7120,s6-243-410–8908-0,00.html)

The book starts with him training in Kauai, Hawaii 6 days a week, 10kms a day with 1 rest day. He is putting in these miles in preparation for the New York Marathon. The story weaves in and out of of how he started running ( at the age of 33 around the same age I started running and this is where our similarity ends – I am yet to touch even 10kms, yet to write my first novel and I can’t speak Japanese – neither can he speak Tamil ).

I will list down some interesting facts I still remember.

* He does not walk when he runs in the marathon. He will take a break to stretch his legs – but he never walks as a policy. I am still in the run-walk-run routine, will try to emulate this.

* He has run the ultra marathon – 100 Kms in a day. This very thought is crazy. While a marathon with 42 kms is itself a crazy number – I just could not digest this number. He gives a vivid account on what went through his mind and body on that day when he ran this. How his body resisted and finally something inside him gave away and he could run with no pain. He reaches a meditative state. It is so beautiful to just listen to this part – imagine if you could experience it.

* He talks about how running helps his writing. Makes absolute sense – It is all about Focus, Endurance and Rhythm. This passage is brilliant how he relates his writing to running.

* Our man ran the real “Marathon” – between Athens and the small town of Marathon.

* He has run 1 marathon every year for the past 24 years.

* Best quote from the book “Pain is inevitable but suffering is optional”.

This book is like an adrenaline shot to beginner runners like me.

Here is the life story of a speck

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