The Runner’s Paradox Podcast Podcast Por Mok Ying Rong arte de portada

The Runner’s Paradox Podcast

The Runner’s Paradox Podcast

De: Mok Ying Rong
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This podcast series brings the book “The Runner’s Paradox” to LIFE! Literally. This series dives deep into the book, in an expansive manner - talking about the research covered by the book, and beyond - to the latest evidence, real stories, rehab practical knowledge and more. You just gotta tune in. Listen and run or - listen while you run. Grab your copy of the book at therunnersparadox.comCopyright 2025 All rights reserved. Carrera y Trote Ciencia Ciencias Sociales Higiene y Vida Saludable
Episodios
  • Mile 11: The Pursuit of Excellence
    Oct 4 2025

    Mile 11: The Pursuit of Excellence

    What does excellence mean when your best days are behind you—or just beginning?

    In this episode, we unpack chapter 11 of The Runner’s Paradox, where excellence is less about crossing a finish line, and more about learning how to keep showing up.

    This episode discusses how long-distance running shapes, challenges, and ultimately matures our idea of what it means to pursue something deeply, year after year.

    We explore how excellence evolves with age, injury, and identity. Backed by new research on brain endurance, athlete cognition, and high-performance psychology, we ask: What if excellence isn’t about doing more, but knowing more? What if it’s not about reaching a standard, but learning to redefine it?

    From mental fatigue training to the ethics of “enoughness,” this episode is about ambition that grows up—and still runs.

    Based on The Runner’s Paradox by Ying. Get your copy of the book at therunnersparadox.com. Listen mid-run, especially when you’re questioning why you still care this much. You’re not chasing perfection. You’re practicing presence.

    New references discussed (2023-2025)

    ​ Zentgraf, K., & Raab, M. (2023). Excellence and expert performance in sports: What do we know and where are we going? [Preprint]. Retrieved from https://www.researchgate.net/publication/372039098_Excellence_and_expert_performance_in_sports_what_do_we_know_and_where_are_we_going

    ​ Roelands, B., Hettinga, F., & Meeusen, R. (2024). Optimizing athletic performance through brain endurance training. International Journal of Sports Physiology and Performance, 19(10), 973–981. Retrieved from https://journals.humankinetics.com/view/journals/ijspp/19/10/article-p973.xml

    ​ André, Q., Smith, J., & Dupont, A. (2025). Resistance to mental fatigue in endurance athletes: Cognitive effort and self‑regulation. Frontiers in Psychology, 16, Article 1616171. Retrieved from https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/psychology/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1616171/full

    ​ Wang, T., Zhong, Y., & Wei, X. (2024). Early excellence and future performance advantage in endurance athletes. Frontiers in Sports and Active Living, 6, Article 11198806. Retrieved from https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11198806

    ​ Galily, Y., Bar‑Eli, M., & Wininger, S. (2024). Psychological complexity beneath high performance: Reframing athlete success. Current Opinion in Psychology, 66, 102344. Retrieved from https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2667239124000224

    ​ Schindler, M. (2023, July 7). The pursuit of enoughness in endurance: Reclaiming performance boundaries. Trail Runner Magazine. Retrieved from https://www.trailrunnermag.com/training/mental-training-training/enoughness

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    25 m
  • Mile 10: Running As Empowerment
    Sep 17 2025

    Mile 10: Running As Empowerment

    Not all power is loud. Sometimes, it shows up mid-run—somewhere between fatigue and clarity.

    In this episode, we explore the kind of empowerment that doesn’t come from pace or podiums. Chapter 10 of The Runner’s Paradox looks at how running can quietly rebuild a person—from the inside out.

    We reflect on how long-distance running teaches emotional regulation, sharpens identity, and offers something rare in modern life: the ability to choose discomfort, and grow from it.

    We bring in recent research on self-efficacy, resilience, and neuroplasticity to unpack how effort changes the brain, not just the body.

    Whether it’s returning from injury or navigating life transitions, this is a conversation about agency: the kind you earn when no one’s clapping, and you keep going anyway.

    Based on The Runner’s Paradox by Ying. More at therunnersparadox.com. Listen on your next run. This one is for anyone who’s ever grown stronger in the quiet.

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    25 m
  • Mile 9: The Need to Run
    Sep 3 2025

    Mile 9: The Need to Run

    What if your most disciplined habit was also your quietest dependency?

    In this episode, we unpack Chapter 9 of The Runner’s Paradox: an exploration of addiction not as drama, but as routine. We ask what happens when running becomes your only method of emotional regulation, your only story of success, your only form of control.

    Drawing beyond the book’s research, exploring newer developments from 2023–2025, we examine the neurobiology of compulsive endurance behavior, the psychological scaffolding of identity collapse, and how the digitalization of running (through wearables and Strava) may be accelerating distress.

    Addiction here isn’t a substance. It’s a structure.

    Through the lens of phenomenology, affect theory, and sport psychology, we reflect on the moment when freedom becomes a form of exile and when high performance hides deep fragility. We look at the gendered dimensions of overtraining, the anxiety of rest, and the existential threat of injury when your only self is the runner-self.

    But this isn’t just a critique. It’s an invitation. To recover not only balance, but plurality. To rebuild identity from multiplicity, not metrics.

    Based on The Runner’s Paradox by Mok Ying Rong. Learn more and purchase the book at therunnersparadox.com. Subscribe to this podcast series and listen mid-run. Especially when the silence feels loud.

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    22 m
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