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#marathon — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #marathon, aggregated by home.social.

  1. Has #marathon #cpu usage seem to be improved on #pc or is that just me? #steam

  2. Has #marathon #cpu usage seem to be improved on #pc or is that just me? #steam

  3. Has #marathon #cpu usage seem to be improved on #pc or is that just me? #steam

  4. Has #marathon #cpu usage seem to be improved on #pc or is that just me? #steam

  5. Has #marathon #cpu usage seem to be improved on #pc or is that just me? #steam

  6. Distance running and finishing books

    I’ve spent the last year fixated on how similar writing books is to distance running. If you treat the task as a singular thing, it can be overwhelming, whereas if you chunk it up into manageable units it becomes entirely doable. If you go by chapter-by-chapter there comes a point at which you suddenly realise you’re almost done. If you break up a race into particular phases (which increasingly for me are defined by when I take the energy gels) something huge starts to feel entirely manageable. The sense of what you can do expands through this dynamic as you get more practiced at doing it. If you just keep showing up consistently, it’s almost magical how something happens which you once wouldn’t have been able to imagine.

    Now that I’m finishing my latest book while also getting close to marathon distance, I realise there’s a difference as well. There’s often a feeling of elation I get towards the end of a long run, particularly for a race. A sense of being entirely in flow, lost in a rhythm that entirely decenters the continual stream of stuff that litters my internal conversation. There’s a joy to getting lost in the process, surrendering to it. I’m reliably forcing myself to stop because I need my dodgy ankle to get used to the distance, rather than because I want to stop. I’ve only once come close to the point where I had to stop and that was a competitive half marathon in torrential rain, when I’d fucked up by going too quickly in the first few miles on a course that was far too hilly for my tastes. Otherwise I don’t want to stop.

    Whereas with the end of a book I want so much to stop. I want it to be over. The pleasure of the process has long since passed. I’m being forced to do it. I know that if I don’t do it the thing I’ve spent so long on will never be read by the people I want to read it. But it’s a slog. Not in the life affirming sense of the half marathon in the rain (I’ve rarely felt more physically uncomfortable nor more viscerally alive than I did when the picture below was taken) but in the “CAN I NOT JUST STOP NOW PLEASE?” sense. This post is a desperate plea to myself to keep going because I’m actually about 4 hours of work away from finishing this ✊

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7fXWH9ToFwk

    #books #distanceRunning #fitness #halfMarathon #marathon #running #Training #writing
  7. Distance running and finishing books

    I’ve spent the last year fixated on how similar writing books is to distance running. If you treat the task as a singular thing, it can be overwhelming, whereas if you chunk it up into manageable units it becomes entirely doable. If you go by chapter-by-chapter there comes a point at which you suddenly realise you’re almost done. If you break up a race into particular phases (which increasingly for me are defined by when I take the energy gels) something huge starts to feel entirely manageable. The sense of what you can do expands through this dynamic as you get more practiced at doing it. If you just keep showing up consistently, it’s almost magical how something happens which you once wouldn’t have been able to imagine.

    Now that I’m finishing my latest book while also getting close to marathon distance, I realise there’s a difference as well. There’s often a feeling of elation I get towards the end of a long run, particularly for a race. A sense of being entirely in flow, lost in a rhythm that entirely decenters the continual stream of stuff that litters my internal conversation. There’s a joy to getting lost in the process, surrendering to it. I’m reliably forcing myself to stop because I need my dodgy ankle to get used to the distance, rather than because I want to stop. I’ve only once come close to the point where I had to stop and that was a competitive half marathon in torrential rain, when I’d fucked up by going too quickly in the first few miles on a course that was far too hilly for my tastes. Otherwise I don’t want to stop.

    Whereas with the end of a book I want so much to stop. I want it to be over. The pleasure of the process has long since passed. I’m being forced to do it. I know that if I don’t do it the thing I’ve spent so long on will never be read by the people I want to read it. But it’s a slog. Not in the life affirming sense of the half marathon in the rain (I’ve rarely felt more physically uncomfortable nor more viscerally alive than I did when the picture below was taken) but in the “CAN I NOT JUST STOP NOW PLEASE?” sense. This post is a desperate plea to myself to keep going because I’m actually about 4 hours of work away from finishing this ✊

    #books #distanceRunning #fitness #halfMarathon #marathon #running #Training #writing
  8. Distance running and finishing books

    I’ve spent the last year fixated on how similar writing books is to distance running. If you treat the task as a singular thing, it can be overwhelming, whereas if you chunk it up into manageable units it becomes entirely doable. If you go by chapter-by-chapter there comes a point at which you suddenly realise you’re almost done. If you break up a race into particular phases (which increasingly for me are defined by when I take the energy gels) something huge starts to feel entirely manageable. The sense of what you can do expands through this dynamic as you get more practiced at doing it. If you just keep showing up consistently, it’s almost magical how something happens which you once wouldn’t have been able to imagine.

    Now that I’m finishing my latest book while also getting close to marathon distance, I realise there’s a difference as well. There’s often a feeling of elation I get towards the end of a long run, particularly for a race. A sense of being entirely in flow, lost in a rhythm that entirely decenters the continual stream of stuff that litters my internal conversation. There’s a joy to getting lost in the process, surrendering to it. I’m reliably forcing myself to stop because I need my dodgy ankle to get used to the distance, rather than because I want to stop. I’ve only once come close to the point where I had to stop and that was a competitive half marathon in torrential rain, when I’d fucked up by going too quickly in the first few miles on a course that was far too hilly for my tastes. Otherwise I don’t want to stop.

    Whereas with the end of a book I want so much to stop. I want it to be over. The pleasure of the process has long since passed. I’m being forced to do it. I know that if I don’t do it the thing I’ve spent so long on will never be read by the people I want to read it. But it’s a slog. Not in the life affirming sense of the half marathon in the rain (I’ve rarely felt more physically uncomfortable nor more viscerally alive than I did when the picture below was taken) but in the “CAN I NOT JUST STOP NOW PLEASE?” sense. This post is a desperate plea to myself to keep going because I’m actually about 4 hours of work away from finishing this ✊

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7fXWH9ToFwk

    #books #distanceRunning #fitness #halfMarathon #marathon #running #Training #writing
  9. Distance running and finishing books

    I’ve spent the last year fixated on how similar writing books is to distance running. If you treat the task as a singular thing, it can be overwhelming, whereas if you chunk it up into manageable units it becomes entirely doable. If you go by chapter-by-chapter there comes a point at which you suddenly realise you’re almost done. If you break up a race into particular phases (which increasingly for me are defined by when I take the energy gels) something huge starts to feel entirely manageable. The sense of what you can do expands through this dynamic as you get more practiced at doing it. If you just keep showing up consistently, it’s almost magical how something happens which you once wouldn’t have been able to imagine.

    Now that I’m finishing my latest book while also getting close to marathon distance, I realise there’s a difference as well. There’s often a feeling of elation I get towards the end of a long run, particularly for a race. A sense of being entirely in flow, lost in a rhythm that entirely decenters the continual stream of stuff that litters my internal conversation. There’s a joy to getting lost in the process, surrendering to it. I’m reliably forcing myself to stop because I need my dodgy ankle to get used to the distance, rather than because I want to stop. I’ve only once come close to the point where I had to stop and that was a competitive half marathon in torrential rain, when I’d fucked up by going too quickly in the first few miles on a course that was far too hilly for my tastes. Otherwise I don’t want to stop.

    Whereas with the end of a book I want so much to stop. I want it to be over. The pleasure of the process has long since passed. I’m being forced to do it. I know that if I don’t do it the thing I’ve spent so long on will never be read by the people I want to read it. But it’s a slog. Not in the life affirming sense of the half marathon in the rain (I’ve rarely felt more physically uncomfortable nor more viscerally alive than I did when the picture below was taken) but in the “CAN I NOT JUST STOP NOW PLEASE?” sense. This post is a desperate plea to myself to keep going because I’m actually about 4 hours of work away from finishing this ✊

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7fXWH9ToFwk

    #books #distanceRunning #fitness #halfMarathon #marathon #running #Training #writing
  10. Distance running and finishing books

    I’ve spent the last year fixated on how similar writing books is to distance running. If you treat the task as a singular thing, it can be overwhelming, whereas if you chunk it up into manageable units it becomes entirely doable. If you go by chapter-by-chapter there comes a point at which you suddenly realise you’re almost done. If you break up a race into particular phases (which increasingly for me are defined by when I take the energy gels) something huge starts to feel entirely manageable. The sense of what you can do expands through this dynamic as you get more practiced at doing it. If you just keep showing up consistently, it’s almost magical how something happens which you once wouldn’t have been able to imagine.

    Now that I’m finishing my latest book while also getting close to marathon distance, I realise there’s a difference as well. There’s often a feeling of elation I get towards the end of a long run, particularly for a race. A sense of being entirely in flow, lost in a rhythm that entirely decenters the continual stream of stuff that litters my internal conversation. There’s a joy to getting lost in the process, surrendering to it. I’m reliably forcing myself to stop because I need my dodgy ankle to get used to the distance, rather than because I want to stop. I’ve only once come close to the point where I had to stop and that was a competitive half marathon in torrential rain, when I’d fucked up by going too quickly in the first few miles on a course that was far too hilly for my tastes. Otherwise I don’t want to stop.

    Whereas with the end of a book I want so much to stop. I want it to be over. The pleasure of the process has long since passed. I’m being forced to do it. I know that if I don’t do it the thing I’ve spent so long on will never be read by the people I want to read it. But it’s a slog. Not in the life affirming sense of the half marathon in the rain (I’ve rarely felt more physically uncomfortable nor more viscerally alive than I did when the picture below was taken) but in the “CAN I NOT JUST STOP NOW PLEASE?” sense. This post is a desperate plea to myself to keep going because I’m actually about 4 hours of work away from finishing this ✊

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7fXWH9ToFwk

    #books #distanceRunning #fitness #halfMarathon #marathon #running #Training #writing
  11. Bungie riconsidera le politiche sugli exploit in Marathon dopo che un giocatore ha sfruttato un bug della Cryo Archive per eliminare un'intera squadra. Previsto un risarcimento per i giocatori colpiti dall'abuso. #GiochiPC #Notizievideogiochi #gamingnews #Videogiochi #Marathon

  12. Bungie riconsidera le politiche sugli exploit in Marathon dopo che un giocatore ha sfruttato un bug della Cryo Archive per eliminare un'intera squadra. Previsto un risarcimento per i giocatori colpiti dall'abuso. #GiochiPC #Notizievideogiochi #gamingnews #Videogiochi #Marathon

  13. Bungie riconsidera le politiche sugli exploit in Marathon dopo che un giocatore ha sfruttato un bug della Cryo Archive per eliminare un'intera squadra. Previsto un risarcimento per i giocatori colpiti dall'abuso. #GiochiPC #Notizievideogiochi #gamingnews #Videogiochi #Marathon

  14. Bungie riconsidera le politiche sugli exploit in Marathon dopo che un giocatore ha sfruttato un bug della Cryo Archive per eliminare un'intera squadra. Previsto un risarcimento per i giocatori colpiti dall'abuso. #GiochiPC #Notizievideogiochi #gamingnews #Videogiochi #Marathon

  15. Finalized my pacing strategy for Saturday. It's optimistic, but "PR or ER" as they say.

    Race start is 7:00 AM.

  16. Marathon, pomimo podejrzeń graczy, nie czeka niesławny los Concorda. Choć gra nie spełniła pokładanych w niej oczekiwań, Sony nie zamierza kończyć dla niej wsparcia.

    pograne.eu/sony-nie-przekresla

    #Pograne #Giereczkowo #Marathon

  17. 𝗘𝗺𝗺𝗮𝗻𝘂ë𝗹 𝗯𝗼𝗼𝗱 𝗱𝗶𝗿𝗲𝗰𝘁 𝗵𝘂𝗹𝗽 𝗯𝗶𝗷 𝗱𝗿𝗮𝗺𝗮 𝗺𝗮𝗿𝗮𝘁𝗵𝗼𝗻 𝗟𝗲𝗶𝗱𝗲𝗻: '𝗝𝗲 𝘄𝗶𝗹 𝗿𝗼𝗲𝗽𝗲𝗻, 𝗺𝗲𝗶𝘀𝗷𝗲 𝘀𝘁𝗮 𝗼𝗽'

    "Het is niet te bevatten. Nog steeds niet." Bandleider Emmanuël Snijers van blaaskapel de Maretoeters in Leiden stond gisteren op tientallen meters van de plek waar het meisje van 15 onwel werd, en uiteindelijk overleed. Ze liep de halve marathon van Leiden,...

    rtl.nl/nieuws/binnenland/artik

    #Emmanuël #hulp #marathon

  18. I've got a race on Saturday. With all the training behind me, curiosity gets the best of me and I want to know what the various models think.

    My PR currently is 3:12:09 and to qualify for Boston, I need to run under 3:15:00.

    - Suunto (my watch): 3:15:28
    - V.02 (based on a 10K TT): 3:21:00
    - Yasso 800s (3 weeks ago): 3:22:45
    - Stryd (based on my PDC): 3:27:58

    Suunto has always been remarkably accurate for me while Stryd has always been too conservative.

  19. Unfortunately, a woman has died during the 35th #Leiden #marathon. Attempts to resuscitate the victim were unsuccessful. The 10k and the Kids Run have been cancelled.

  20. Overheard at the #Copenhagen #marathon today: a little girl (7 ish) is wearing a bright red hat and standing at the 16km mark with her grandma.

    She's studying the runners intently, and overall she's not impressed: "I bet you I could run faster than that"

  21. It Seems ‘Destiny 2’ And ‘Marathon’ Cannot Properly Co-Exist At Bungie

    In the wake of the announcement that Sony has now racked up $765 million in impairment losses against…
    #NewsBeep #News #US #USA #UnitedStates #UnitedStatesOfAmerica #Technology #bungie #destiny2marathon #Destiny2'And'Marathon'CannotProperlyCo-Exist #destiny3 #marathon #Sony
    newsbeep.com/us/634506/

  22. It Seems ‘Destiny 2’ And ‘Marathon’ Cannot Properly Co-Exist At Bungie

    In the wake of the announcement that Sony has now racked up $765 million in impairment losses against…
    #NewsBeep #News #US #USA #UnitedStates #UnitedStatesOfAmerica #Technology #bungie #destiny2marathon #Destiny2'And'Marathon'CannotProperlyCo-Exist #destiny3 #marathon #Sony
    newsbeep.com/us/634506/

  23. 𝗚𝗲𝗿𝘁-𝗝𝗮𝗻 (32) 𝗹𝗶𝗲𝗽 𝗱𝗲 𝗺𝗮𝗿𝗮𝘁𝗵𝗼𝗻 𝘇𝗼𝗻𝗱𝗲𝗿 𝗺𝗮𝗮𝗴: '𝗜𝗸 𝗯𝗲𝗻 𝗹𝗲𝘁𝘁𝗲𝗿𝗹𝗶𝗷𝗸 𝗼𝗻𝘁𝗺𝗮𝗮𝗴𝗱'

    Je bent jong, gezond en verliefd. En dan komt er een telefoontje dat alles verandert. Gert-Jan de Wit (32) krijgt een onmogelijke keuze: zijn maag laten verwijderen of leven met het risico op maagkanker. Hij kiest voor het eerste. Maar dat weerhoudt hem er niet van om zoveel...

    rtl.nl/lifestyle/artikel/55977

    #GertJan #Marathon #Ontmaagd

  24. Dass der #GutenbergMarathon zu einem #GutenbergHalbmarathon eingedampft werden musste, ist ja auch so ein Zeichen für finanziell ausblutende und zunehmend handlungunfähige Kommunen.
    #Mainz #Marathon

  25. It Seems ‘Destiny 2’ And ‘Marathon’ Cannot Properly Co-Exist At Bungie

    In the wake of the announcement that Sony has now racked up $765 million in impairment losses against…
    #NewsBeep #News #Technology #bungie #destiny2marathon #Destiny2'And'Marathon'CannotProperlyCo-Exist #destiny3 #GB #marathon #Sony #UK #UnitedKingdom
    newsbeep.com/uk/575483/

  26. Morgen startet in #Duisburg der 43. #RheinRuhrMarathon. Ich wünsche allen Sportler:innen ein Fest, viel Spaß und natürlich Erfolg.

    Ich werde wieder als Radbegleitung mitfahren; beim führenden Mann der Halbmarathondistanz. Freue mich. #laufen #rennen #marathon

  27. Pacchi gara seri (chianti classico marathon), io "posso accompagnare solo" (cit.). #marathon #trailrunning

  28. It Seems ‘Destiny 2’ And ‘Marathon’ Cannot Properly Co-Exist At Bungie

    In the wake of the announcement that Sony has now racked up $765 million in impairment losses against…
    #NewsBeep #News #Technology #bungie #CA #Canada #destiny2marathon #Destiny2'And'Marathon'CannotProperlyCo-Exist #destiny3 #Marathon #Sony
    newsbeep.com/ca/658501/

  29. I had the best and longest long run ever, just in time for my first marathon in a few weeks.

    It is the first time in 6 months of training that i believe I can run a marathon and not die trying. 😂

    #run #running #runnersofmastodon #marathon

  30. I had the best and longest long run ever, just in time for my first marathon in a few weeks.

    It is the first time in 6 months of training that i believe I can run a marathon and not die trying. 😂

    #run #running #runnersofmastodon #marathon

  31. I had the best and longest long run ever, just in time for my first marathon in a few weeks.

    It is the first time in 6 months of training that i believe I can run a marathon and not die trying. 😂

    #run #running #runnersofmastodon #marathon

  32. I had the best and longest long run ever, just in time for my first marathon in a few weeks.

    It is the first time in 6 months of training that i believe I can run a marathon and not die trying. 😂

    #run #running #runnersofmastodon #marathon

  33. I had the best and longest long run ever, just in time for my first marathon in a few weeks.

    It is the first time in 6 months of training that i believe I can run a marathon and not die trying. 😂

    #run #running #runnersofmastodon #marathon

  34. Tja, kein Helgoland Marathon für mich dieses Jahr. Die Rüsselpest hat im letzten Moment zugeschlagen, und statt Langlaufing gibt's nur kurze Ausflüge an die Wasserkante. Und ein bisschen Schachlektüre in der Ferienwohnung, auch schön, und hier stecke ich wenigstens niemanden an. Frei nach Forrest Gump: "Shit Happens". #helgoland #marathon #schach

  35. RE: mastox.eu/@gbsumudflotilla/116

    🇵🇸 🫶 Aujourd'hui, plus de 2 500 Palestiniens ont couru à #Gaza dans le cadre du 10e #marathon international de #Palestine, parrainé par l' #Égypte et organisé pour la première fois simultanément à #Bethléem et dans la bande de Gaza.