Outrunning the Demons: Lives Transformed through Running
By Phil Hewitt
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About this ebook
'an inspiring collection of stories about runners who have run through unimaginable adversity to find perspective, resolution and ultimately peace, within themselves and with the universe.' - Dean Karnazes
'a really good book ... with fascinating stories' – BBC Radio Four, Today Programme
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Hope through running...
Written by bestselling author Phil Hewitt, Outrunning the Demons is an exploration of the transformative power of running – and how it can be the key to unlocking resilience we never knew we had.
Running can take us to fantastic places. Just as importantly, it can also bring us back from terrible ones. For people in times of crisis, trauma and physical or mental illness – when normality collapses – running can put things back together again.
After bestselling author Phil Hewitt was viciously mugged, stabbed and left for dead in 2016, he found himself suffering the acute symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder. Unable to make sense of the horrific experience that had happened to him, Phil found that dedicating himself to running was slowly but surely helping him heal. Outrunning the Demons is an enriching and celebratory exploration of the transformative power of running – and how it can be the key to unlocking resilience we never knew we had.
Told through 34 deeply affecting real-life stories and covering such diverse themes as trauma, bereavement, addiction, depression and anxiety, this compelling book is an exposition of just why running can so often be the answer to everything when we find ourselves in extremis.
Phil Hewitt
Phil Hewitt is, regrettably, well qualified to write this book, as he was viciously mugged in 2016 and effectively left for dead. Suffering the acute symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder, Phil found that dedicating himself to running was the only route ahead. Phil is the author of ten books including Keep On Running: The Highs and Lows of a Marathon Addict, and In The Running: Tales of Extraordinary Runners from Around the World.
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Outrunning the Demons - Phil Hewitt
The Start Line
‘And then I did what I have always done. I ran.’
I run my finger along the ugly, jagged scar on my leg. It tingles unpleasantly. It always does. The runner next to me smiles and nudges me. ‘You’ll be alright, mate,’ he says. And I know I will. What he actually means is: ‘Welcome back.’
Three minutes to go to the gun now.
I look along the line of runners. Some are jumping up and down. Some have already slipped into their start position, fingers poised on their GPS watches. Others are just chatting, seemingly without a care in the world – despite the 26.2 miles (42.2 kilometres) that lie ahead of us all.
I catch the eye of the runner on the other side of me. There is nervousness in his smile, but there is also determination. I smile back, and despite the chill, I feel warmer. I am home. I can’t think of anywhere else I want to be. Or anyone else I want to be with.
For the next few hours, these runners – hundreds of them, complete strangers to me, one and all – will be my sole companions. And that, to me, is the joy of running – and also the beauty of running. I know that as we run, something remarkable is going to happen.
The next few hours will be healing. Sweaty, knackering, bloody-minded and a slog. But also healing, so very deeply healing. And I suspect, as we stand at the start line, that many other runners are thinking exactly the same thing. For the record, it’s the Worcester Marathon. But it could be any marathon anywhere. The real drama isn’t going to be in the pounding we are about to give our bodies. The real drama is going to be in our minds.
There are plenty of runners who will run untroubled for the sheer love of running. But far more than we’d ever dare suspect are running for much, much darker reasons – just as I am.
This is my first marathon since being viciously mugged, stabbed, punched, kicked and, to all intents and purposes, left for dead. And as I return again and again to the bigger of the two scars on my leg, I know this will be the way I will resolve what happened to me.
I have set the Worcester Marathon a very specific task, a massive task, and I know the event will be equal to it: the marathon is going to move me on from the pavement in Cape Town where I have been stuck now for 15 months, convinced I am just about to breathe my last.
Looking back, I was an idiot. And I do a lot of looking back. Except it doesn’t feel as if I am looking back. The past hasn’t become past yet, and that’s the trouble. It is an endlessly replaying present, and I am condemned to be its sole and reluctant viewer, a spectator at what seems, with every fresh viewing, ever more likely to be my own demise.
It took a year for me to realise that my attacker probably didn’t have the slightest intention of killing me. He was a professional. A long slashing cut to the calf and a deep puncturing stab to the thigh; he knew what he was doing. I wasn’t going to get up in a hurry, but then he made doubly sure. He followed up the stabbing with a mini frenzy of kicking to stomach and ribs, back and neck as I lay there in my what-the-hell confusion.
Looking back, looking sideways, looking whichever way I want, I was an idiot – and an idiot intent on compounding his own idiocy. It was 14 February, 2016. I had just watched England lose a one-day international at the breathtakingly beautiful Newlands Cricket Ground, a magnificent setting overlooked by Table Mountain and Devil’s Peak. Alex Hales scored a century and then so too did AB de Villiers in a relatively straightforward run chase. England lost, but so what? It was a fantastic day in a fantastic place. I’d recommend it to anyone.
But please, make proper arrangements for getting back. I didn’t, and that was mistake number one. I thought I’d easily find a taxi or a bus. When I didn’t, I started walking. Mistake number two. Before long, I was walking alone. Did I turn round? Mistake number three. Soon, I was walking on the hard shoulder of a busy motorway. Did I turn back? Mistake number four. And so the mistakes piled up until I found myself walking through Cape Town’s District Six. The irony is that I suddenly knew where I was and could see central Cape Town on the horizon. The danger was that I was in a notoriously dodgy place: flat, deserted, open, urban wasteland. And I paid the price.
Is there a formula dictating that when we make a mistake, our next decision is likely to be an even worse one? I suspect so. That day was the perfect illustration.
In my floppy cricket hat, my rather fetching long colonial-style shorts and an expensive camera around my neck, I might as well have been wearing a T-shirt emblazoned with the words: ‘Mug me!’ I heard the footsteps behind me, I heard the angry demand for my camera and I was felled by what seemed to be two punches to my leg. I pulled my attacker over and we wrestled. He was behind me at first and then in front of me on the ground as we shuffled round in a rather macabre embrace. And that was when I looked down and realised that his punches hadn’t been punches at all. My leg was awash with blood. I let go of him. He stood up and let loose a volley of kicks and then legged it.
What remains is a series of impressions. My hand was on a stone. I raised it to throw at his retreating figure and then thought better of it. Thank goodness. I crawled back onto the pavement and watched the blood pool around me. I tried to stand, but all I really wanted to do was lie back and shut my eyes.
But I was lucky. So incredibly lucky.
My saviour Steven arrived. Steven the pizza delivery guy who pulled up his car and bundled me in.
More than Steven, though, I remember the young girl who was his assistant. She couldn’t speak. She stared at me, open-mouthed. I’d never seen horror on anyone’s face before, and now I was the cause of it. The impact was huge.
And then the traffic lights. Lots of them at red. Steven stopped the car, pulled his pizza sign off the roof, handed it to me in the back and then shot through every subsequent red light he came across. At the hospital, he dashed in and emerged with a wheelchair.
What a hero. How astonishingly brave to stop when it would have been so easy to drive on. Except, of course, it wasn’t in his nature to drive on. I will be forever in his debt.
And then the accident and emergency department.
Chatting about his desire to move to Surrey, the doctor stitched up my leg, but it continued to bleed, swelling agonisingly. He unstitched it, put some deep stitches in, stitched up the surface and then leaned against it with all his weight. My leg turned black, but the bleeding stopped. Fifteen stitches in all, including three in my hand. Three broken ribs. A bruised liver. And one very messed-up brain.
But there is a delay in the way these things affect us.
It hit me three weeks later, back home. My lovely wife Fiona was encouraging me to get out. A Sunday afternoon trip to Fareham shopping precinct in Hampshire, the county where we live. What could be gentler, less threatening than that? And yet, within minutes I was so nearly the oddball who blubbed in Boots. I was standing there, fleetingly alone, knowing that if I spoke, if I breathed, if I moved, I would burst into tears. My eyes filled, but thank goodness for surface tension. The tears didn’t tumble. I retreated, dignity more or less intact.
I knew what was wrong. Of course I did. I am a man. Men know these things. I booked an appointment with our practice nurse the next morning and told him my wounds were clearly infected and obviously weren’t healing properly. He inspected them thoroughly, told me they were fine and asked if I would consider ‘talking to someone’. It took a year for me to realise that I should. I am ‘talking to someone’ now, and it is helping.
But back then, less than a month after the attack, I fell back on a stubborn self-reliance that I have since learned to depend on less. I resolved to adopt my own two-point recovery plan. And I put it into practice the very next day. I started to write down everything that had happened to me, every last detail, every last thought, every last horror, every last indignity.
And then I did what I have always done. I ran.
The broken ribs hurt like hell. The stab wounds throbbed appallingly as I pulled on barely healed flesh. I was wincing, I was hobbling, I was cursing, but I was mobile. It was a warm, early-spring morning. The sky was blue – and so was the air around me as each step seemed to rip through me. But I started to smile.
There was something so reassuring about running, however badly, however lopsidedly. There was something so familiar, so welcoming and so absolutely me. Left-legged stabs and right-sided broken ribs aren’t a match made in heaven, and I was roughing them up as they met in the middle. But suddenly there seemed a purpose in the pain. Or maybe a message. It felt like my body was telling me: ‘I’m still here! You and I are still alive!’ The spring weather did the rest on a morning that was suddenly glorious.
Everything hurt, but I felt an immense lifting of my spirits. I know now that it was not, to borrow from Churchill, the end. Nor was it even the beginning of the end. But it was, perhaps, the end of the beginning. For the first time in three weeks, I was no longer 100 per cent Phil who has been stabbed. I was 1 per cent Phil who has run 30 marathons, from New York City to Tokyo, London to Paris, Amsterdam to Dublin, via Berlin, Rome, Mallorca and others. I was no longer the victim. I was, fleetingly, the survivor.
I returned from that run more battered than I had been at the start, but I returned from it more me again. Partially, at least. Running defines me positively – and I had started to allow my real self back in. I had started to put space between me and the mugging.
I had turned a corner. And around that corner was the starting point for this book.
I realised in that moment that running is the most astonishing tool at the disposal of those of us with the good fortune to be fit and healthy enough to make use of it. The months since the attack have been difficult, dismal and distressing in so many ways, but the weirdest thing is that I wouldn’t change a thing. Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) brings a huge degree of detachment, and in a perverse way, I have actually enjoyed watching Phil the runner reclaim himself from the horror of what happened to him. At times, he’s done pretty badly. At times, he’s done alright.
Running gives us space. It gives us strength. It gives us connection and it gives us peace. It will never give us all the answers, but it can so often be a large part of the solution. And if my attacker gave me anything that day, he certainly gave me a reason to run. I used to run because I loved to run, but suddenly I was running because I sensed all that running could do for me.
I even began to feel an odd sense of gratitude to my attacker.
It is so easy to sleepwalk through life as we hunker down in our patterns and our routines. He shook me out of mine – and invested my 31st marathon with massive personal significance.
And so as I stand at the start line in Worcester – May 2017, 15 months on from my attack – I am conscious that running has never mattered more to me. I am desperate to plonk a mountain of marathon-ness between myself and my trauma.
But just as importantly, my attacker has woken me up to a wider perspective: a greater awareness of my fellow runners. I am a journalist. I have always loved the company of fellow journalists. But suddenly, I find myself waking up to the beauty of other runners. I have always been a self-contained, solipsistic kind of runner. Now I want to share with my fellow runners just what it is that has brought us all here.
At the start of the Worcester Marathon, my first marathon since the stabbing, I start to feel a new present creep in. I am starting to feel safe again. Safe in the company of these runners – hundreds of people, all from different walks of life, from different parts of the country, each running for different reasons, but hundreds of people who for the next few hours will be united by a common purpose. We are going to run a marathon together.
We will barely talk. In fact, we probably won’t talk at all. But we will be looking out for each other in our never-to-happen-again convergence, our once-in-a-lifetime random cross section of humanity. We will be bound together in an intoxicating unity of intent. And that’s where running gets spiritual for me.
I know instinctively I am not alone. Some of the runners look serene. Some of them look anxious. The rest are chatting still. I wonder what running means to each and every one of them, and I know in that moment what it means to me. This race today will be my way of consigning that day in Cape Town to the past and getting on with the rest of my life.
There are countless happy runners, I am sure, but I suspect far more than we imagine are running through their own dark hinterlands. I have shared mine here in these words. In this book, it is my immense privilege to celebrate the tales of other runners who have been to hell – and found that the surest, quickest way back is to run. This book isn’t my story. It is theirs.
I have had the honour to speak to runners who have shown uncommon courage and utter decency in the face of appalling horrors and tragedies. My own ordeal has made them my cherished companions. Their tales matter to me hugely, and I hope they will matter to you. Scratch a runner, and you will often find an extraordinary story. Run with us now through the pages that follow.
The gun goes . . . and we are off!
Charlie Engle
‘When I run, I become the absolute epitome of who I am.’
Charlie Engle is one of the world’s finest extreme-distance runners, an athlete with a catalogue of achievements to his name. A modern-day adventurer, he fuels himself by testing himself, taking his body to limits most of us couldn’t even begin to imagine.
Over the years, Charlie has summited ice-covered volcanoes and swum with crocodiles. He has also, and perhaps most famously, run across deserts. Charlie’s Running the Sahara expedition from November 2006 to February 2007 was an odyssey stretching across more than 4500 miles (7240 kilometres) of hostile terrain – a journey that seems ever more astonishing every time you think about it.
More astonishing still, though, is the fact that Charlie’s life could so easily have ended in a hail of bullets 14 years earlier, the grim finale to a six-day drink and drugs binge in Wichita, Kansas. Charlie was driving in a neighbourhood he should never have been in. Someone, somewhere, thought he had money, and the shots rang out, three of them hitting his car. Charlie remembers them 100 per cent. One of the bullets lodged in the driver’s door without passing through.
But it was what happened next that proved the turning point in Charlie’s life – an incident which underlines both the cruelty of addiction and the absurdity of addiction. An incident which is actually a definition of addiction itself. Charlie laughs now as he tells it. But the truth behind it is grim.
I remember sitting on the ground watching the police looking through my car. I will always remember one officer reaching under the driver’s seat and pulling out a glass pipe. Any moderately sane person would have thought: ‘Man, I am in trouble now.’ But all I could think was: ‘So that’s where it is. I wonder if there is anything still in there.’ That’s the kind of thinking that’s difficult to explain. That’s what addiction is. You can explain it physiologically, but you really can only explain it emotionally. But really it was the craziness of the moment that did it. In that moment I decided I was done with drugs.
Charlie’s life has since been about channelling his addictive personality into purpose-driven pursuits. He has done it through running – something he simply couldn’t do without. Certainly, there is a physical element to it, but far more important is the psychological.
Charlie, who lives in North Carolina, was born an addict. Not born to be an addict, but born an addict, he says, thanks to a mix of genetic predisposition and the environment he grew up in. If he had been uprooted to a different family, then maybe things would have turned out differently – and then again, maybe not. The sad reality is that he was a fourth-generation addict.
Science has proved the predisposition. People have a tendency not to believe it when you are talking about an addict, but they will believe it about Alzheimer’s or cancer. Addiction is often still perceived as a weakness or a choice, something that afflicts people who are weak in character, and that’s a narrative that speaks very loudly to addicts themselves. It is what we believe about ourselves. The insecurity, the need for a substance . . . no one would choose to live that way. Why would you choose that kind of hell for yourself? But I did choose it because I thought it would help me somehow, to mask some emotion or to eliminate some feeling.
There was a short time when the drink and the drugs were fun, but more significantly, Charlie was socially awkward. Going to college at the age of 17, he quickly discovered that he didn’t feel quite so awkward if he had a few beers inside him. Most of his classmates knew when enough was enough. Charlie didn’t. Enough was a concept that baffled him. Some classmates suggested he cut back, but Charlie didn’t think there was a problem. He didn’t consider himself an addict. He considered himself a partier – and inevitably he surrounded himself with people who saw themselves the same way.
Hindsight tells him that it was a question of denial. Charlie knew that alcohol caused his problems, but he didn’t see alcohol itself as the problem. If there was a problem, it was just bad luck or simply that he was overdoing it. In his early to mid-20s, he wasn’t yet at the point where he could see what was happening. He didn’t have the insight. Charlie was an only child. His parents were 19 when they had him, and he didn’t have the guidance.
I grew up surrounded by drugs and alcohol, but not by bad people. My mum was awesome. She was a free-spirited artist. She drank hard and she wrote for 35 years. She was incredible, but she planted this seed that creativity could come from drugs and alcohol.
Whenever Charlie tried to quit, he didn’t follow through. As he progressed through his 20s, Charlie epitomised the old addicts’ joke: ‘Quitting is easy. I have done it 100 times’. Charlie had been there – repeatedly. As he says, it wasn’t like he was lacking in self-awareness. He was a binger. He would disappear for days on end. He would empty out the bank account. But always he would come back, determined to quit. And every time he did, he would put on his running shoes. A keen runner as a child, he saw running as his penance, his solace and his punishment all rolled into one. He also ran because he knew running always made him feel better.
Running was certainly always there for me during those 12 years of addiction. Running absolutely saved my life time and again. I was the binger. I would go two months without drinking or drugs, determined to change, and then I would fall off and spend the next two months in a deep, deep hole I couldn’t get out of.
Time and again, Charlie would offer what he calls the foxhole promises of addiction: ‘If you get me out of this, I will quit.’ Promises he was never going to keep. Charlie’s wife was becoming increasingly tired of his behaviour, and he knew it, but still he managed to balance it all out in his own mind. Charlie became the top salesman. He bought a house. He bought cars. He lived an above-average life – and allowed himself to reason that those were precisely the things that addicts didn’t do. Therefore he wasn’t an addict. If he overachieved in some areas of his life, he believed he could carry on with the drink and the drugs.
But the crunch was coming. Something changed when Charlie’s wife was expecting their first son, Brett. Charlie had grown up in a house filled with alcohol. He didn’t want to see history repeating itself with his own children. But his thinking went further still. Charlie, then 29 years old, became convinced that his newborn son would be his saviour, his way out of his addictions.
And so it seemed – for just one week, an amazing week during which Charlie revelled in being a dad. Holding Brett, he felt emotions he never thought he’d feel, emotions he didn’t even know existed. Charlie was convinced he had turned the corner, that this was it.
But after a great week, he dropped his family off, drove into the worst area of Wichita and spent the next six days smoking crack and binge-drinking on a downer that ended with those three bullet holes in his car, put there just for him.
I was in a terrible neighbourhood. I had been up for six days doing drugs, and the assumption was that I was someone who had money, which I didn’t have. I put myself in a conflict zone and I fed off the energy. I loved the craziness of it and the razor’s-edge danger of it. And I still seek that today . . . with my running.
It was 23 July, 1992, and Charlie has been clean ever since: ‘That night in Wichita, I made a decision.’ With those bullets and the police search, Charlie finally broke free from his vicious circle of addiction and failed promises.
Charlie, who tells his tale in his book Running Man, went to an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting that night, and the next morning he went for a run. As he says, he barfed on the sidewalk, he barfed in the bushes and he probably barfed in the bathtub back home. But on that run he knew he had finally had enough. He knew if he didn’t quit, he was going to die. He knew he was an extreme drug user in a way that just wasn’t sustainable.
Meetings followed and so did treatment, but Charlie is convinced that running was what made the difference. Meetings and treatment would never have been enough.
Running saved my life and then actually gave me a life. I went to a meeting every single day for three years without missing a day. There was no in-between for me. I needed to fully commit to the lifestyle, but my first sponsor, an AA old-timer, gently hinted that I spent too much time running and that I needed to focus on the 12 steps (of the AA programme). I told him I understood, but that for reasons I couldn’t put into words just yet, I absolutely had to run.
Charlie has since gone public with the story of his addiction, the tale of his sobriety and the extremes of his running, and finds that he is frequently challenged: hasn’t he simply swapped one addiction for another? In reality, the relationship is far more complex:
When I did drugs, I had one goal and that was to be invisible. I wanted to disappear. I wanted to have no feelings. I didn’t understand the feelings I had. All I wanted to do was to hide. But when I run, there is absolutely no hiding. There is nowhere to go. When I run, I become the absolute epitome of who I am. I am the ultimate Charlie Engle for better or worse. And that’s the difference. There is nothing real about the person who is doing drugs or drinking. They are being manipulated or altered by a substance. All I wanted to do as an addict was to live in the dark. But running shines a bright light. For me, running is bright light and clarity.
The clarity is the key. It is precisely what Charlie seeks when he runs.
I don’t know if it is my addict’s brain, but I am a jumbled mess of thoughts and feelings. My brain feels like it never stops. That’s the way I am built. It feels like a roulette wheel, but a roulette wheel where there is a ball for every single roulette slot. Usually it feels like the balls are just pinging around my head all the time. But when I run, when I reach maybe mile five, it is almost like I can feel all the balls landing in the slots, finding where they belong. When I run, my brain becomes focused, my thoughts become clear, my ideas are amazing. Maybe it’s like writing down your dreams in the middle of the night. In the morning, you look at your notepad and you think: ‘What on earth was that all about?’ But the thoughts feel amazing at the time, and it is the same with running. When I am running, it feels like all my thoughts are brilliant.
Even so, it was still a question of proportion, something he struggled to find in his first few years of sobriety. Charlie ran 30 marathons in the early years – as he says, he was running like an addict, running as hard as possible every time, starting off fast and finishing fast. He realises now his drive was simply to become depleted. His instinct told him that if he did it often enough, he would ‘beat’ the addict out of himself.
It took time to realise just why exactly he was running – and how best to harness it.
I needed to realise that the personality traits associated with addiction are the best traits. The drive, the energy, the obsession, the obsession that becomes passion . . . those are the things that mean we achieve. I realised that I needed to nurture my inner addict, not crush him. I realised I had to make friends with him . . . but never trust him.
The mistrust is vital. Charlie realised that his inner addict’s goal will always be to lull him into a false sense of security and convince