Finding Gobi

How two outsiders found their way into each other’s hearts

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How two outsiders found their way into each other’s hearts

JUST like the start line of any race, everyone was doing their own thing to cope with the nerves. I tried to distract myself by looking at the other100 or so competitors. It was June 2016 and I was in northwestern China to run a race: 250 kms over the course of a week across freezing peaks and then the scorching Gobi Desert. I’d be attempting about one marathon a day for four days, and two on day five.

Only three days earlier I’d kissed my wife, Lucja, goodbye in Edinburgh—she was an ultramarathoner too but couldn’t get the time off for this race—and after the long trip, I was exhausted, which isn’t how I wanted to feel this close to my biggest race.

It's hard to think of a more brutal test of mental and physical toughness; ultra-marathon runners go through agony, shedding sometimes even 10 per cent of our body weight during these races. But finishing is one of life’s most rewarding experiences. I was 41, and had started doing ultramarathons only three years ago. I’d run the fabled Marathon des Sables in Morocco twice, running with1,300 others; the route is through the Sahara in 51-degree Celsius temperatures. The first time, I placed 108th;the next, I was 32nd. But at my most recent race, in Cambodia, I’d finished with my hamstrings in agony. I felt I may never compete again. But I’d recovered enough for the Gobi race.

The thought of never competing again made me feel queasy—and this time, I wanted to reach the podium. Because I didn’t like being an outsider. Not since I was a kid in Australia and life changed forever.

It was a sunny day in 1984 in my rural hometown in Queensland, just one day after my ninth birthday. That morning, I’d finally perfected somersault on our outdoor trampoline, and after lunch Dad and I went out with our cricket bats. He taught me how to hold the bat and hit a ball so hard it sailed beyond our propert...

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