Running

10 Things Running and Marathon Training Taught Me Over the Last 10 Years

Ten years ago, I stood on the Verrazzano Bridge in New York City, about to run my first marathon.

I had NO idea how much that experience would change how I think about the human body.

A decade later, running has become more than training or therapy.

It’s been my teacher.

It’s taught me about physiology, resilience, patience, and trust — lessons I could never fully grasped in textbooks or clinic rooms.

Here are ten things I’ve learnt from marathon training that go far beyond pace, finish times, or medals.

🏃 1. Endurance Is the Foundation for Strength

I used to think strength was the key to everything.

If I could just get stronger, everything else would fall into place.

But running taught me the opposite — endurance builds strength.

When your aerobic base is weak, even small loads feel heavy. When it’s strong, recovery speeds up, tissues stay oxygenated, and your whole system adapts better.

Endurance is the foundation of every adaptive system.

⚖️ 2. The Power of Adaptation

For years, I viewed pain through a “wear and tear” lens — that something was breaking down.

Tim Gabbett’s research changed that for me.

It’s not load itself that causes injury — it’s spikes in load beyond what the body’s ready for.
Pain is often feedback from a system not yet adapted, not a sign of fragility.

Through marathon training, I learned to see pain as part of the process.

The body’s constantly negotiating with stress — and it always adapts when the dose is right sand recovery is good.

💊 3. NSAIDs and the Body’s Hidden Intelligence

I haven’t taken an anti-inflammatory in over 10 years.

I learned that inflammation isn’t the enemy; it’s the signal that healing and adaptation are happening.

NSAIDs can mask that process, dulling both pain and progress.

By learning to listen instead of silence my body, I discovered how much healing power it already holds.

Running taught me to work with pain, not mute it.

🧠 4. The Power of Interoception

Running isn’t just physical — it’s deeply physiological.

It’s one of the best forms of interoception training there is.

Pain isn’t just tissue damage….it’s chemistry (pH, inflammation, fatigue metabolites) mixed with context (beliefs, emotions, environment).

Neuroscientist Bud Craig’s research helped me see pain as a homeostatic signal — the body’s way of saying, “Something’s out of balance.”

When I stopped fearing pain and started feeling, everything changed.

Running tuned me into the subtleties — how fatigue feels different from threat, how effort transforms with breath, how awareness itself is therapeutic.

🦵 5. The Paradox of Knee Pain

Almost every new runner feels some form of knee pain…I did too.

It’s frustrating — especially when everyone warns that running “wrecks your knees.”

But as I adapted, something flipped.

The stronger and more consistent I became, the less my knees hurt.

Over time, running didn’t cause pain — it protected me from it.

Research now supports this: experienced runners actually have a lower risk of knee osteoarthritis than non-runners.
It’s one of the great paradoxes — movement that seems to hurt at first often becomes the very thing that heals.

🦶 6. The Calf: The Real Shock Absorber, Not the Cartilage

The knee cartilage is often thought to be the shock absorber of force — but now I know it’s the calf that is the real unsung hero.

The calf muscle and Achilles tendon act as dynamic springs, absorbing and reusing force with every step.

When they’re weak or fatigued, that energy shifts upward — straight into the knee.

Once I learned to build calf endurance (especially hilly easy paced long runs), everything changed.

It’s elegant biology — not engineering.

⏱ 7. Pacing: Staying Relaxed Under Stress

Pacing is the ultimate lesson in self-awareness.

When I force effort, my body fights back — heart rate spikes, form collapses, fatigue sets in early.

But when I relax, breathe, and find rhythm, everything flows.

Good pacing isn’t about running slow or fast — it’s about learning to stay calm inside effort.

That’s not just physical endurance; that’s movement mastery.

🧍‍♂️ 8. Don’t Get Stuck in Perfect Movement

For years, I chased perfect posture and activation.

I lived by the rule: “Move well, THEN move often.”

But somewhere along the way, that became a trap.

I spent so much time correcting that I forgot to adapt.

Marathon training reminded me that progress beats perfection.

You don’t need perfect movement — you need a body that can tolerate imperfection and still function.

That’s what resilience really means.

⚡️ 9. The Power of Dry Needling

Dry needling changed how I understood pain.

When a deep, stubborn ache suddenly released, I realised — this wasn’t structural damage.
It was physiology.

Circulation, pH, muscle tone, and local chemistry can all shift pain in seconds.

Seeing pain change that fast taught me something vital:

If pain can change quickly, it’s not fixed — and neither are we.

✅ 10. Acceptance and Control

I used to believe that if I just worked harder, I could fix everything — old injuries, genetics, structural degeneration.

Now I know that some things we simply can’t change.

But that’s not defeat…it’s direction.

What matters is where we place our effort on the things we CAN control — into functional capacity, load management, recovery, mindset, nutrition, and the stress–recovery rhythm.

Acceptance isn’t giving up…it’s turning your energy toward what can adapt.

💬 Closing Thoughts

Running taught me more about physiology, psychology, and healing than any textbook ever could.

It’s taught me patience, rhythm, and respect for the body’s complexity — and its capacity for change.

Pain isn’t failure; it’s feedback.

The body isn’t fragile; it’s antifragile — waiting for rhythm, recovery, and respect.

Ten years on, I still run to remind myself of that truth.

How to Deal with Endurance Injuries

Matt Fitzgerald —a guy who’s been training for 43 years and written 36 books —reminds us that endurance problems are messy, unclear, and rarely have a single solution.

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Which is why the first—and perhaps most surprising—thing you actually need when you’re dealing with a running-related injury isn’t a magic stretch or new shoe… it’s Self-Compassion.

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That’s not what the internet will tell you. Scroll through social media and you’ll be served up endless simplistic fixes: “Just strengthen your glutes ,” “Buy this shoe ,” “Do this magic stretch.” It’s neat, it’s catchy, and it’s… mostly nonsense.

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Training problems are rarely that clean. They’re messy, complicated, and don’t come with a user manual. And honestly? That’s refreshing to hear in a world obsessed with oversimplification.

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Your body is not broken. It’s full of wisdom, built over hundreds of thousands of years of evolution. Every signal—every ache, every niggle, every flat day—is feedback. Not something to fight, but something to listen to.

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Instead of forcing a fix, sometimes the most therapeutic thing you can do is simply sit with and fully embrace all of the uncertainty and complexity.

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Endurance training is not about finding the fix. It’s about being open, curious, and creative enough to keep figuring it out. That’s true whether you’ve been running for 40 years or you’re just starting out.

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Maybe that’s the real lesson: we’re not following a perfect plan. We’re always in the process of learning how to train—one imperfect, human step at a time.

One Good Run

I’d just moved to New York City — fresh start, big dreams, busted knee.

For years I’d been telling myself the same story:

“My left knee is wrecked.
Meniscus surgery after a footy injury.
Physios couldn’t fix it.
I’ll never run again.”

Then one morning I’m out with my physio mentor, Luke Bongiorno.

We’re jogging through the city and I’m moving like a man pushing a shopping trolley with a wonky wheel.

Mid-run, Luke pulls out a metronome.
“Try 180 steps per minute,” he says.

I’m thinking: Seriously? A beeping watch is going to fix my knee?
It still felt uncomfortable, and I was sure I’d wake up with the usual swelling and pain.

But the next morning?
Nothing.
No swelling.
No flare.
My knee was… quiet.

It wasn’t perfect. But it was better than I expected — and that cracked the door open.

Over the next two years in NYC, I rebuilt:

  • Foam rolling

  • Yoga & Pilates

  • DNS breathing & core work

  • Pain education

  • Strength training

  • Stair racing (yes, even the Empire State Building)

Step by step, I wasn’t just rehabbing my knee.
I was rewriting my story.

In 2015, the bloke who was “done” lined up in Staten Island with 50,000 others and ran the New York City Marathon.
Not fast. Not pretty. But once “impossible” — until it wasn’t.

That’s where The Resilient Knee Project™ began.

It’s not a “quick fix” or endless rest.
It’s a jailbreak from:
❌ Doom-talk (“bone-on-bone,” “never again”)
❌ Over-reliance on treatments that keep you stuck
✅ Building capacity so your knee isn’t fragile anymore

We use The New York Protocol — the same blend of top-down mindset shifts and bottom-up capacity building that took me from a hopeless knee to marathon finish line:

  • Mindset & flare-up reframing

  • Cadence drills & spring training (Achilles and calf)

  • Load progressions that make you better, not broken

  • Recovery strategies that actually work in real life

Here’s the truth:
Your knee doesn’t need permission from an MRI.
It just needs one small, safe, better-than-expected run to crack the story you’ve been living in.

One run → One win → One new story.

Shoot at email to dan@kinfolkwellness.com.au with “ZERO” in the subject line and I’ll reply with my “Zero → One Running” mini-module — the exact process I used to get my knee back, so you can skip the rehab hamster wheel and get moving again.

Happy Running

Daniel O’Grady

Could Your Plantar Fasciitis Pain Actually Be Coming from Your Soleus Muscle?

Here’s a surprising twist: That sharp heel pain you’ve been blaming on plantar fasciitis might not just be about your foot. According to Travell and Simons’ Trigger Point Model, the soleus muscle—a key calf muscle—could be playing a major role by referring pain to your heel or arch.

Let’s break it down:

🔍 How the Soleus Muscle Can Mimic Plantar Fasciitis

  • Referred Pain Areas: Trigger points in the soleus can send pain signals to the heel, arch, and sometimes the back of the ankle. This pain often feels like classic plantar fasciitis but originates higher up in the calf.

  • Aggravating Factors: Activities that load the soleus muscle, like running, walking uphill, or prolonged standing, can worsen the pain. Tight footwear and poor ankle mobility can also contribute.

  • Contributing Factors:

    • Poor circulation or metabolic health in the muscle.

    • Overuse or repetitive strain without proper recovery.

    • Weakness or lack of flexibility in the calves, leading to muscle tension.

How Heel Raises Can Help

The Rathleff 2014 Protocol, which focuses on slow, controlled heel raises, doesn’t just target the plantar fascia—it also helps resolve soleus-related pain by:

  1. Boosting Circulation: Improved blood flow helps flush out metabolic waste, which can contribute to trigger points.

  2. Releasing Trigger Points: Repeated contraction and relaxation of the soleus during heel raises reduces muscle tension and referred pain.

  3. Building Strength: Strengthening the soleus enhances its endurance, reducing the likelihood of overloading and developing new trigger points.

🔑 What to Look For and Avoid

  • If you have tight calves or experience heel pain after calf-loading activities, the soleus might be the hidden culprit.

  • Avoid aggravating factors like poorly fitted shoes, sudden spikes in activity, or skipping recovery after workouts.

🎯 Ready to Tackle the Real Source of Your Pain?

Addressing soleus health is just one part of the puzzle in my multi-dimensional Foundation FirstPlantar Fasciitis Recovery Protocol.

Whether it’s improving your gait, boosting circulation, or resolving trigger points, we focus on treating the root cause—not just the symptoms.

Drop a comment or email me if you want to learn more (dan@kinfolkwellness.com.au)

Let’s get to the sole(us) of the problem and put you on the path to pain-free steps! 💪✨

#PlantarFasciitis #SoleusTriggerPoints #ReferredPainRelief #TravellAndSimons #PainFreeFeet

Plantar Fasciitis - Take The Right Step Towards Recovery

Plantar Fasciitis: Take The Right Step Towards Recovery

Plantar fasciitis can feel like a constant battle—sharp heel pain, stiffness, and discomfort that make even walking a challenge.

Many turn to cortisone injections or hard orthotics for relief, but these treatments often do more harm than good in the long run.

Cortisone can weaken tissues, and rigid orthotics may increase compression loads, making the pain worse.

Instead, let’s talk about a smarter, evidence-based way to manage plantar fasciitis—one that focuses on strengthening, load management, and a multi-dimensional approach to recovery.

This method not only helps reduce pain but empowers you to build long-term resilience.

What Does the Research Say?

A 2014 study by Rathleff et al. provides compelling evidence for a strength-based approach to plantar fasciitis. In this study:

  • Patients who performed high-load strength training (heel raises with a towel under the toes to engage the plantar fascia) experienced faster pain relief and better foot function compared to those who did plantar-specific stretching.

  • At 3 months, the strength-training group reported significantly better outcomes, with reduced pain and improved foot function.

  • This approach taps into the body’s ability to adapt and heal by gradually increasing the load on the plantar fascia, promoting tissue remodeling and increased strength.

While the study focused on strength training, recovery isn’t just about doing one exercise. It’s about addressing the whole system—your foot, your body, and how you move. That’s why I take a multi-dimensional approach to plantar fasciitis management.

My Multi-Dimensional Approach

1. Education

  • Understanding plantar fasciitis reduces fear and empowers you to make informed decisions.

  • I’ll explain why treatments like cortisone injections and hard orthotics may worsen the condition by increasing compression loads on the foot.

2. Strengthening (Based on the Rathleff Study and Beyond)

  • Foot-Specific Strength: Exercises like heel raises with a towel target the plantar fascia and Achilles tendon, promoting tissue health and function.

  • Kinetic Chain Strength: Strengthening the calves, hamstrings, glutes, and core helps distribute loads evenly, reducing strain on the plantar fascia.

3. Load Management

  • Gradually reintroduce activities that challenge your foot, like barefoot walking or walking on soft surfaces (e.g., sand).

  • Monitor 24-hour pain levels to adjust activity and avoid overloading your tissues.

4. Mobility Work

  • Foam rolling and self-massage for the calves and hamstrings can relieve tightness and improve tissue health.

  • Gentle stretching and mobility exercises to improve range of motion in the ankle and foot.

5. Physio Dry Needling

  • Targeting trigger points can relieve pain, improve blood flow, and enhance recovery.

6. What to Avoid

  • Hard Orthotics: These restrict movement and may increase harmful compression loads on foot tendons.

  • Sudden spikes in activity, such as intense running or long walks without preparation.

7. Pain Education

  • Learning to interpret pain as a sign of load tolerance—not damage—helps reduce fear and builds confidence in your recovery.

8. Personalized Footwear Recommendations

  • I’ll guide you toward shoes that allow natural foot movement and reduce strain on the plantar fascia.

9. Lifestyle Integration

  • Incorporating barefoot walking, time on soft surfaces like the beach, and a gradual return to activities you love.

Why This Works

The Rathleff study showed the power of a strength-based approach to reducing pain and improving function.

When combined with education, mobility work, and personalized strategies, the effects are amplified.

This multi-dimensional approach doesn’t just treat the symptoms—it builds resilience and prevents recurrence.

Take the First Step Toward Recovery

You don’t need to rely on cortisone shots, rigid orthotics, or endless visits to specialists. By focusing on strengthening, managing load, and understanding your body, you can take control of plantar fasciitis and recover on your terms.

If you’re ready to explore a smarter way to heal, I’m here to guide you with personalized support, evidence-based strategies, and a commitment to your long-term health.

Let’s take that first step—stronger, healthier, and pain-free.

BOOK NOW