When was the last time you did something you weren't sure you could do? For me, it has been a long time! I mean something that you said, I really don't know if I will be able to physically and mentally complete this challenge.
I have a friend who wanted to complete a T ough Mudder competition before she turned 50, but she didn't want to do it alone. I had never heard of T ough Mudder so I had to look it up online. My first thought after watching footage of these crazy people was, does she really consider me a friend? What friend would ask you to run 12 miles through 22 VERY challenging obstacles – jumping off 15 foot platforms, swimming through a dumpster filled with ice, crawling through water and electrodes (I am sure my parents warned me against such things) and before the finish line you run through a final tunnel of electrodes?
If you know me well enough, you know that I am stubborn and would never say no to a challenge. I soon realized I would need a significant reason to train and complete this course, because I was not the one turning 50 anyway! And one day it dawned on me, you are actually afraid of this challenge. I had to give pause and realize, it has been a long time since I was afraid I couldn't physically do something. Isn't this what you encourage clients to do everyday? Well, there was my motivation!
Experiencing God through our training
One day on a run I was struggling (more than usual) and literally for the last 3 miles of the run, I prayed – “Push me Lord, push me. Push me Lord, push me.” Over and over I said those words in my head. T he training process drew me to God. He was my rock and my strength. I hear people say, “God won’t give you more than you can handle.” I DISAGREE. Sometimes God gives you more than you can handle, so that you have to rely on him.
Deanett and I had chosen scriptures and quotes that spoke to us during training. T he y were short phrases that we had memorized during a couple of workouts. We practiced and recited them on runs and when training got hard. On race day, we wrote those scriptures on our arms, legs, hands and shoes.
Many people were dressed in costumes. Deanett had tank tops made with a cross and Phillipians 4:13 on them – that is what we wore. T o get to the start line you had to climb an 8 foot wall, a rite of passage so to speak. We started in a group of 150 other Mudders. Every 15 minutes, a group takes off and before every start, the Mudder Pledge is recited and the National Anthem is played – T ough Mudder is a fundraiser for the Wounded Warrior project.
When a wounded soldier returns to the US they are often left in situations where they cannot do what they are accustomed to doing – fighting, running, climbing, battling. A challenge is given to them during their recovery – complete a T ough Mudder event. Do something that you don’t think you will be able to do. Are you beginning to see a theme here?
At about mile 8 we decided to try the heat sheets. By this point you can hear sirens on a regular basis and you can’t tell if they are at an obstacle you have already completed or one you are approaching. People are being hauled off of the course. We press on. At mile 9, I had mentally and emotionally decided that in order for me to finish this event on my own accord and not on the back of a 4-wheeler headed for an ambulance, I would not be able to complete any more obstacles that would get me soaking wet and freezing. I told Deanett I would stand and wait for her at any obstacle she wanted to do but I knew I wanted to finish. In total there were 4-5 of the 22 obstacles that I chose not to do, not because I was afraid, but because I knew what my body was capable of and what would happen if I got any colder.
I learned far more about myself when I reached that point of failure than I could have learned by sailing through the whole event easily.
We reached the finish line after over 4 hours and as we ran through that tunnel of electrodes I realized, “I just completed T ough Mudder - the T oughest Event on the Planet but only with the assistance of the One who created the planet.”
Go find an event to train for – your workouts will have purpose.
Choose something you don’t think you can do – you will find out with His help you can do anything.
Complete that event and when you are done, you will know that you are capable of more than you knew.
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