Let me tell you about the time I (almost) walked a marathon. Yes, you read that right. Walked. On purpose. For fun. And no, I didn’t train for it like a sensible human.
I woke up Sunday morning and decided that 40,000-ish steps sounded like a fantastic way to spend a weekend with a friend. Spoiler alert: by step 32,684, I was having serious words with myself—and my hamstrings. Pain showed up somewhere around kilometre 18. It wasn’t dramatic at first—just a whisper. A subtle, nagging suggestion that perhaps we should have stuck to a Netflix marathon with a bottle of wine instead. However, as the hours ticked by and we kept putting one foot in front of the other, we found something beautiful hiding behind the discomfort: a feeling of deep, bone-level satisfaction. The kind that only comes when you don’t give up on yourself.
Now, before you grab your trainers and go chasing blisters and glory, let’s talk about this thing called pain. Because it’s a slippery little devil. Sometimes it’s trying to teach us something. Sometimes it’s just being dramatic. And sometimes, it really does mean we need to stop and sit down—preferably with a snack.
The Many Faces of Pain (And What They’re Trying to Say)
Pain isn’t always your enemy. In fact, it's often just your body waving a tiny flag saying, “Excuse me? What is happening? Who signed us up for this madness?”
Sometimes, it’s discomfort that signals growth—like that ache you feel when you use muscles that have been on sabbatical since 2019. Sometimes, it’s a sign of weakness finally getting a little attention (hello, glutes, haven’t seen you in a while). And yes, sometimes pain means you’ve pushed too far and you need to rest, recalibrate, or cancel that second spin class.
Have you ever heard the saying, “Pain is just weakness leaving the body”? Well, I’m not entirely convinced that’s a hard science. I mean, if that were entirely true, I’d be a superhero by now. But let’s give the saying some credit—it holds a whisper of truth. When we don’t use our bodies the way they were designed to be used (read: sitting in chairs shaped like medieval torture devices for 10 hours a day), our bodies rebel. Lower back pain, stiff hips, and necks that sound like popcorn in a microwave—they’re all signs we need to get moving. Purposefully.
Pain in Life: Not Just Physical
And let’s zoom out for a second. Pain isn’t exclusive to the body. Emotional, mental, even spiritual pain—we all feel it. It’s part of being gloriously human. But just like with sore feet after 40,000 steps, that pain is often a message, not a stop sign.
Too many times, we see discomfort and think, "Better hide. Better quit. Better shrink." But maybe pain isn’t a sign to retreat. Maybe it’s a nudge to go through it, to feel it fully, and then choose something different. Growth, movement, healing—it all lives on the other side of pain.
The Takeaway (and Maybe an Ice Pack)
So, here's the moral of the story: whether you're trudging your way through 42 kilometres of poorly thought-out ambition, sitting with emotional discomfort, or nursing a broken heart (or ankle), listen to what the pain is saying—but don’t assume it’s telling you to stop. Sometimes, it's just saying: “Hey. You're growing.”
And hey—next time you decide to walk a marathon without training, bring snacks, wear decent shoes, and remember: the pain is temporary, but the bragging rights? Eternal.
Now if you’ll excuse me, I’m off to ice my legs and Google “foam rollers for stubbornly heroic people.”
But before I limped off into the sunset, I created a short sequence to stretch it out. Seriously—those legs deserved some love. Stretching helps soothe tight muscles, improves circulation, and gives your brain a chance to catch up with your body’s wild decisions. I filmed a gentle 12 min video, it’s effective, and it’s got some smooth jazz vibes to make you feel like you're in a fancy spa instead of your living room.
👉 Click here to stretch, breathe, and feel human again.
Your body will thank you. Your future self will definitely thank you, so keep up the stretching.