Russ Cook (Hardest Geezer): I Haven't Told The Whole Truth About Africa!, They Took Me Into The Jungle To Kill Me! - podcast episode cover

Russ Cook (Hardest Geezer): I Haven't Told The Whole Truth About Africa!, They Took Me Into The Jungle To Kill Me!

May 02, 20242 hr 5 min
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Episode description

What does it take to become the Hardest Geezer and run 9,940-miles in 352 days? Russ Cook, also known as the ‘Hardest Geezer’, is an ultra-endurance athlete and the first person to run the entire length of Africa, raising over £1 million for charity. He is also the first person to run from Asia to London. In this conversation Russ and Steven discuss topics such as, his childhood and difficult teenage years, hitting rock bottom, wanting more from life, being robbed at gun point, and the struggles of being the first man to run across the length Africa. 00:00 Intro 02:00 Russ' Childhood & Being Rebellious 05:50 Relationship With My Parents 12:00 Trying To Get People’s Attention 16:42 Distancing Himself from Family 16:22 The Impact of Russ' Girlfriend 19:11 Moving Out as a Teenager 21:02 Going Down the Wrong Path 25:10 Russ' Mental Health 26:18 What Would Russ Say to His Younger Self 30:52 Russ' Epiphany 32:09 The Feeling of Progressing in Life 35:07 Travelling the World Running 35:53 First Challenges 36:51 Doing Things That Aren’t Considered Normal 39:03 Returning from the First Trip 42:26 Relationship with His Dad 44:09 Burying Himself Alive 44:33 Russ DM’d Steven Before Going To Africa 46:40 Why Africa? 48:40 Meeting His Girlfriend Before Leaving to Africa 52:41 How Have You Changed 54:52 Preparations to Run the Entire Length of Africa 01:03:25 Getting Robbed 01:03:26 Being Kidnapped 01:10:05 Facing Death 01:24:14 Team Struggles 01:31:52 Was Quitting an Option? 01:36:18 Visa Issues 01:37:59 Nearing the End 01:45:12 Crossing the Line 01:45:44 What’s Next? 01:50:41 What Was the Goal? 01:55:36 Russ Inspiring Others 01:59:20 The Last Guest Question  You can donate to Russ’s charity fundraiser here: https://bit.ly/3Wr2WJR Follow Russ: Instagram - https://bit.ly/4djAL5I Twitter - https://bit.ly/3UFqZmV YouTube - https://bit.ly/3Up8YYH Watch the episodes on Youtube - https://g2ul0.app.link/3kxINCANKsb My new book! 'The 33 Laws Of Business & Life' is out now - https://smarturl.it/DOACbook Follow me: https://beacons.ai/diaryofaceo Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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When I say day 102, does it bring back any memories? Yeah, it's the only YouTube video that I didn't release. My name is Russ Cook and I'm attempting to become the first person ever to run the entire length of Africa. It was probably the highest part of my whole life. What happened? So, I'm going down this dirt path and two blokes on a motorbike puller. I knew that I'm on the bike for longer than half an hour. It's bad news.

I ended up spending seven hours on my mobile, like, going into the jungle. I was getting kidnapped. Your partner told us that she thought you had died. I mean, I thought I was going to die as well. What are you thinking about people back home? Ross, I don't think many people know that you did all this stuff before Africa. At 22 years old, you become the first person to run from Asia to London. You buried yourself alive for seven days. You pulled the car as well, which is pretty crazy.

What were you looking for? God, that's one hell of a question, man. Things have got pretty bad. I wasn't speaking to my family. I was drinking and gambling. I would wake up throughout the week and just burst into tears, crying. You had dark thoughts? Yeah. But ultimately... You know, no one was going to come and save him. He just had to be me. And I thought Africa would be the best adventure ever.

You start pissing blood. I knew it was bad. It'd probably end. You get robbed at gunpoint. They got passports, money. And then a falling out amongst the team. You've not talked about this in detail either. I just blew up, shouting at everyone, throwing chairs. What happened? Well, congratulations, Diary Vaseo gang. We've made some progress. 63% of you that listen to this podcast regularly don't subscribe, which is down from 69%. Our goal...

is 50%. So if you've ever liked any of the videos we've posted, if you like this channel, can you do me a quick favour and hit the subscribe button? It helps this channel more than you know, and the bigger the channel gets, as you've seen, the bigger the guests get. Thank you and enjoy this episode. Ross. You know, you're someone that has achieved and has pursued really anomalous feats in their life. Feats that most of us as muggles would never have the insanity.

to take on so i was i was so curious to understand from your perspective what are the dominoes that fell in your life that led you to be The guy that sits here that everyone around the country and around the world is perplexed and astonished and inspired by. Where does it start? That's one hell of a question, man. I think really... I had quite a normal upbringing and maybe that's like the basis for why I ended up doing all this kind of stuff. Yeah, like dad.

My early memories of my dad were he was a very hard-working man. He cut metal for a living and I didn't really see that much of him when I was young. He would be out working 13, 14 hours a day. coming home, metal dust all over him. Mum would look after me and my brothers. And I think he kind of instilled that hardworking mentality in me.

And, you know, a lot of the dominoes fell from that, really. And what was your mum like when you were growing up? My mum was very... what i always remember about her mom is she really enforced it in us to be like polite that was like a big thing for her so always like yes yes please thank yous uh whenever we'd go around to people's houses she was like

make sure that we behaved well and all of this kind of stuff and uh you know her her dad is like military man so 18 to 65 always RAF like very well respected um so I think she got that from him that's what she passed down to us. But she was like very caring. She, her, her whole life was her kids really. So yeah, like a lot of respect for my mom. The absence of your father. You said a second ago that.

because he was quite absent your mother kind of carried the responsibility of raising the kids herself do you reflect on that and as you look back in your life understand how his absence had an impact on you because before before this conversation did i got to speak to my team and i got to speak to lots of people around you yeah as you know because i'm sure they're all yeah little snitches so we spoke to your girlfriend we spoke to your dad yeah

um spoke to your team spoke to everyone around you privately um and got all of their take sort of perspectives and stuff and it appeared from those conversations that the early sort of absence of your father had a pretty big impact on shaping you as an individual? Yeah, I mean, I guess I think my... Now I'm older, I just look at it like my dad was doing everything that he could to provide for his family. I think he took that responsibility really seriously.

And yeah, I mean, it's hard to really contemplate how that affected me. But the few things I did see of my daddy was just always, he ran a marathon when I was a kid. And I remember that being like a big...

You know, he would always talk about willpower and he didn't say much, but like he was more of a man of he did things rather than spoke about them. So he'd go out and work really hard or he'd go and run a marathon. And I'd see these things happening. You know, he'd come home from work and he'd be knackered and he'd be on the sofa.

Like he kind of just, that was the way he led, you know? It's a generational thing in many respects, isn't it? Because my dad, I feel like is very much the same. I don't think we had many deep conversations at all. Nah. He led by example in the sense that he worked hard, loved his family. That marathon your dad ran, did he do things like that a lot? Not really. He was working pretty much all the time.

he ran two marathons one when he was 31 when he was 40 but he used to take me out on runs when i was quite young and you know he wouldn't really say anything but it was more just me seeing it that i think was important for me that's how he operated you know what about affection uh yeah no my dad's my dad or my mom aren't very affectionate people i don't think i've

i don't think i've ever seen them like even kiss maybe maybe once or twice when i was young but like you know that i loves using i love using stuff like this wasn't words that got thrown around in our family Not that they didn't mean it, I just think that like, our family's a bit stiff like that. Not all families have the tools.

yeah do you know what i mean yeah they just maybe they didn't get them from their parents no that's i think that's exactly it you know and i think when as i've got older i've understood like where they've come from and their parents and their upbringings and it's like it makes sense

but it didn't make sense didn't make sense at the time it's hard like when you're young i found it really hard to make sense of a lot of things i was one of them like had a lot of questions hard to find the answers but i kept digging what kind of questions did you have

I guess it was more stuff like I was finding it hard to find my way in the world, especially when I got to teenage years, and I'd be like, how do I do this? How do I... build a career how do i make money how do i do all of these things how do i navigate friendships and relationships and all these kind of complex how do i find meaning in my life not that i was directly asking those questions but those are the kind of things i'm prodding out at that age and

I think, you know, from my parents, it was quite hard to find those answers just because I think we all struggled with communicating like that, you know. When you were 13, 14 years old.

do you think you're different from your peers do you feel like you're different in any way or isolated in any way from other people i looked at people and i was like like teachers for example or any kind of authority figures in my life And if I sensed that they weren't very happy in their life, so they were a bit miserable, I would kind of discard.

a lot of what they were trying to tell me that i found a lot at that age had a lot of people trying to tell me what to do or you know do this do that behave like this and i was like if i do what you say then i'm going to end up like you and i don't i don't want that so I'm doing my own thing and I think that kind of started a journey of trying to find my own answers and stumbling across a lot of different things to try and find that. Do you think your mum and dad were happy? No.

I kind of feel bad for saying I want to do them a service when I'm talking about them because I do respect them a lot now, especially now I'm older and I understand things more, but I don't think at the time. I think they've had their struggles like a lot of us have our struggles, you know.

yeah i asked the question because i even look at my own life and i think whatever the source of my parents and happiness was i think as kids we sometimes um our relationship whatever with whatever's making our parents unhappy often has a big impact on us and I you know I sit here a lot with comedians and stuff and I remember Jimmy Carr I think it was Jimmy Carr said to me he goes listen when you sit down with a comedian Steve you don't need to

ask the comedian if they're depressed you need to ask them which one of their parents were depressed because the reason for their behavior will be at some level a desire to please or make one of their parents smile for a change you know i mean and and i wondered that with

with your early upbringing because because you know i got to speak to your family and i got to speak to people around you and the picture that was emerging was that home wasn't the happiest place and it wasn't the most loving connected cuddly perfect rosy smiley yeah you know idyllic environment to say the least no yeah i'd agree i'd agree with that and yeah

Yeah, I mean, I think it wasn't for the lack of trying. But it's like you said, they didn't have the tools. And, you know, ultimately that was what kind of pushed me to go and try and find my own things, which has worked out for the best.

And when you say pushed you to go find your own things, 16, 17 years old, you move out. Why? Well, things have got quite bad with... with family stuff i was i was a piece of shit to be honest with you um very rebellious very disrespectful didn't listen to anything that they were saying and very intent on doing my own thing. And I think that kind of took a big toll on everyone in the family because I was, you know, I was stressing everyone out. Why? What were you looking for?

I think like deep down, I was just like looking for something more in my life. I was looking at what, you know, the life that the adults around me were living. And I was like, I don't want that. I want more than that. I want to go and see, I want to go and live, you know, and you know, that's kind of when, you know, you've got a kid that's 16.

hasn't done anything with his life and he's just kind of disrespecting you ignoring everything you're saying and doing his own thing coming home whenever kids don't kids aren't born like that though yeah do you know what i mean

they're not born acting out and disrespecting people so that's why i'm asking about the cause of it because you know sometimes when you hear kids doing that kind of thing you kind of think they're trying to they're acting out to try and get some attention and then they're kind of like rebelling from

you know, authority because they feel, I don't know, disconnected in some way or whatever. I think that's maybe it, you know, like it's probably part of it. I'm not, I'm not exactly sure why, but that's, that's kind of what happened. I think I had a lot of energy, a lot of motivation, viciously ambitious, but didn't really know how to apply it, where to apply it to get what I wanted.

And I was looking around me for, I think I was looking around searching for the guidance that would help me, but I wasn't really finding it. So I was just trying to make, I was just basically discarding things I thought weren't. important or opinions that weren't important that weren't going to get me where i wanted and i was just looking for looking for it and yeah that's kind of how things started unraveling and ended up moving out

And that induced quite a tasty few years in itself. When you say moved out, do you mean like organized the removal van and had an apartment you were moving into? What was the day like when you moved out? It was quite a messy, it was quite messy for a couple of years in there. Like I remember my parents sent me up to my granddad in Scotland.

one summer when i was like 15 and this was kind of the start of when things were going quite bad um your parents were doing okay my parents were doing okay yeah yeah but then so then and then i remember one night They moved all my stuff to my other granddad's house and changed the lock on the door. They were like, you're not coming back. And I kicked the door in and bowled in. So...

It was kind of happening for a while and then it got to the point where I remember my mum being like, you need to go. And I was like, cool. It wasn't like out the door with tail between my legs or anything. It was like, I don't need you anyway. Sit down. at what age 15 that was about 17 okay yeah and then um i organized a flat it's the cheapest flat i could rent in worthing and i was still i was at college

So I was working about four or five part-time jobs just like cleaning. I was up on my bike going to Waitrose cleaning toilets in the morning before college and then finished that and I went into sales at first. You know when they change the locks on the door and tell you that you can't come back home? Yeah. If I asked them at the time why they had done that, what do you think they would have said? They would have said like, this guy needs humbling.

He doesn't know anything about the world. He's very arrogant, very disrespectful. And then in hindsight, as you said- They're totally right. Yeah, totally right. But you must have empathy for that kid. because you know you look back as an adult you can understand a complex range of emotions yeah yeah yeah yeah because there's no kids aren't like they're not born to be like terrors like that yeah

I get it from, I think now I'm older, I just get it from both sides. It's really difficult. It was really difficult for them to manage that complex kind of personality. And it was also really hard for me to... express or communicate in a way that was I was going to get myself listened to I wasn't doing that I was just like totally trying to run everyone over you know you wanted to be heard yeah I think so. What does that mean? I guess I just wanted someone to like understand and...

I think I just wanted the guidance. I wanted guidance, but from someone that I looked at and was like, I want what they've got, you know? Or like they've done life in a way that I want to do life and they could teach me the lessons, but I didn't, I was struggling to kind of find that at that age. It reminds me of my conversation with Ashley Walters and from Top Boy.

yeah said pretty much the exact same thing his father wasn't around and so he was looking for a role model or guidance answers and he couldn't find it so he ends up joining these gangs and that spirals somewhere else and it's so interesting that you know a young man at your age, that age sort of, you know, 14, 15, 16, 17, if they don't have someone there to model themselves on, they can descend into different forms of chaos. Yeah, like so much energy.

which is in a lot of ways I think a positive thing but just without those guidelines to actually get you somewhere it just kind of becomes chaos. When you moved out then, so you moved out sort of 16, 17 years old, how was your relationship with your parents from there? Terrible. Really? Yeah, I didn't speak to them for a long time. Even up until, I would say, up until probably the last year.

It's a couple of years. It's been pretty sure. You're 27 now. Yeah. You're talking about when you were 17. Yeah, yeah. Well, there's moments in there where it's got better and then got worse and got better. But for a while, yeah, it was tough. When you, you know, at 17 years old, they change the locks, you move out.

I'm sure your response was hardest geezer because it always is, right? Like you said, it's just fuck it. I don't care. I'll figure it out. But at some deeper level, I think we're all bullshitting ourselves if we say that.

doesn't have an impact. Because I can relate. I remember the call to my mum at 18 and telling her how I was leaving university. And I remember what she said to me. I can't repeat what she said because it's so vicious. Really? Yeah. It's so vicious, one of the things she said to me. But it was hardest geezer exterior. Yeah, yeah, yeah.

And then at some deeper level, on certain days. Oh, yeah. You know, it'll catch me in the odd day. Oh, 100%, man. Like, and I think the... hardest geezer kind of approach like that aggressive approach to it is just like a way of coping with it every now and again you know like the emotions would roll out and

yeah I'm not denying that for a second I remember seeing I moved out and then I think I saw my dad maybe I can't remember how long after it was a good few months maybe a year or so and it just made me cry just seeing him so like The emotions were always there, but to kind of get through it, it was like, right, you know, fuck everyone. Why did you cry when you saw him? Just because I think like...

there's always a part of me that understands that my parent, there's no one else in the world that loves me like my parents do. And no matter what they do or how badly I felt I'd been wronged, which I wasn't really, they were just trying their best. I always knew that.

you know whatever happens these these are two people actually care about me the most and i think that just makes like when things aren't going well that makes you emotional because it's like these are the people i'm supposed to be closer with things real bad right now You're so right. I think so many people are probably in that situation right now where they love that person, but they don't know how to build the bridge. Both people. Yeah.

And it takes two to build the bridge. It really does. They can't build it. I can't build it. So we love each other, but we're fucking at war. Yeah. I think like a big part of that for me in building that bridge was actually my girlfriend when I was away. because she went over and she went around the house and spoke to him loads. And she's, because even before I left, like I went around to see both my parents before I left, but it was the first time I see them in like.

maybe like a year and a half, two years. Really hadn't seen your parents in two years? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Before I left for Africa. We'd spoken, me and my girlfriend had spoken a lot about these kind of things and how important we want family to be. And she... I felt like at a loss making that step. I just didn't really know how to do it, what to say, blah, blah, blah. But she kind of over this year has really like done a lot in that sense.

people might think this is sexist but i do think women have more tools 100 100 my girlfriend's the same if my girlfriend me and my mum sometimes don't speak for prolonged periods of time. And my girlfriend like insists upon it. Yeah. Yeah. Like dragged me down to Plymouth and was like, we're going to see her. Yeah. Oh mate. I couldn't agree more. Especially with me and my girlfriend's dynamic anyway. Like that's really.

I look at her like a wizard in that sense. I'm like, I don't know what I'm doing, but she's got that under control, which is amazing. So you're 17 years old, you've moved out, you're on your own. What's the plan? Yeah. Wow. Yeah. So I remember I had this flat in Worthing. It was the cheapest flat available on Rightmove. 450 quid a month, which is more than I could afford. But I was like, right, let's do it.

was working a bunch of different jobs, trying to finish college, kind of scrape through. And then I actually was watching... This is so cringy. It's funny. I was like, one of them lads that watched Wolf of Wall Street and was like, this is it for me. Do you know what I mean? This is the game. I'm going to become a millionaire doing sales stuff. So I went and got a few sales jobs, made some actually not bad money for my age, but really didn't enjoy it.

you know ended up with that kind of lack of guidance I ended up just doing the things that felt to me like the most fun or the most like they would bring in my naivety they would bring me the most meaningful experiences at the time which ended up being going out a lot with the boys and drinking and gambling and that's kind of what my life was for the next kind of two three years after that

Were you addicted to gambling? Because I was reading through your story and speaking to some of your friends and they told me that there was some instances where you... You basically lost everything you had and had to borrow money off your missus at the time. Yeah, it's embarrassing to even talk about. Like, I remember, you know, I didn't have much money.

But I'd done one night on roulette, I'd done about two, I think it was over two grand on online roulette, just sitting there on my phone late at night, just tapping away. And that was kind of everything I had at the time, plus the overdraft, plus all the rest of it. And I had to, I was too embarrassed to say anything. So I told my missus, like, I think I just made up some bullshit lies about what this XYZ and said, like, I need to borrow money for rent and stuff this month.

There was a moment there where I was like, okay, this really needs to stop. And I just went on every single gambling website I could find and did the self-ban thing. Never gambled since. And the alcohol? Yeah, I mean...

i think the alcohol stuff was just like binge drinking culture i wouldn't say like i was an alcoholic or anything like this that was just the only way i could really the only thing i look forward to i'd hate my job so i'd hate work all throughout the week but i'd be like all right saturday with the boys or saturday drinking this whatever going out here was like the thing that i look forward to that was the only thing i was really living for

Was there part of you throughout that period of your life when you're working in sales, you're gambling too much, you're drinking too much? I heard you were overweight at the time as well. Was there a part of you that sort of a voice inside your head that was saying like, come on, Russ, like this isn't it? Definitely. I was so miserable, man. So, so miserable at that time. I really struggled. I remember I would wake up throughout the week just crying.

just so miserable. Yeah. You'd wake up through the week, Ryan? Just like, I'd wake up, like, supposed to go to work. I'd just be, I'd just be like, so upset. Just be like. the worst so miserable i couldn't just fathom i was like why is why is life this why does it suck this much you know like i really had no Felt like I was kind of trapped. Lack of connection I think was a big part of that.

You had people around you though, but you just weren't connected. I mean, I had a few of my boys, but I wasn't speaking to my family at all at this time.

Well, I guess I was just doing a lot of things that would make you miserable. I had no control over my finances because I was pissing away everything I earned on roulette. The only things I looked forward to was going out and... getting pissed which i could which would make me feel like as well and then i'd go to work and hate it working every day so like it doesn't take a genius to work out that's going to be a pretty miserable existence you know

And you didn't have family around you. Didn't have, yeah, didn't have like many deep connections. So. How old were you at that point in your life? So that would be like 18, 19, 17, 18, 19, 20 maybe, just about. So if you had to give me a word to summarize your sort of mental health throughout that period, how would you describe your mental health? Toilet. Yeah, bad. Pretty bad. Was there a worse day? that you can recall? Yeah, I mean, I do remember just...

If you don't want to talk about it, you go at your own pace and tell me what you're comfortable talking about. I mean, I remember days, like I said, I'd wake up crying, speak to my boss. I remember even one day with my boss speaking to him on the phone, just bursting into tears, crying. And I think what was hard is that I didn't understand anything. I didn't understand why.

I mean, I didn't have the tools to really make any sense of the situation because now I'm seven, eight, nine years older, I can look back and go, yeah, well. It's what happens when you gamble loads and you piss all your money away and you drink loads and you don't have anything in your life that's going to bring you any meaning or fulfillment. It's obvious. At the time, I didn't know that. So that kind of sense of helplessness.

was a really big weight on me. And it just felt like I was never going to be able to shift it. I think that was the most difficult thing. I was like, I don't know how I'm going to get out of this. You had dark thoughts? Yeah. The most dark thoughts. Pretty, yeah. Pretty much. That... season of your life i've heard you kind of describe it as a rock bottom moment and it's interesting because there's so many people that are somewhere along that journey

where they're struggling, they've got that sense of helplessness that you've described. And they're searching for answers. And I think in some respects, thinking about some people I've spoken to recently, they've kind of given up. believing that they can solve this because it's gone on for too long yeah and

as you said, they don't even know what's causing it. They just feel it. They feel it intensely. I've got a couple of friends that are really going through that at the moment. And I wonder, I always wonder to myself like, How does someone get from that moment their personal rock bottom? What does it take to get them starting the climb? Because that's why I'm asking these questions. I see it in your story. I see you going further and further and further and further and further and further down.

reaching this rock bottom moment and then in that rock bottom moment you have some of the I think the darkest thoughts that anyone can have and then something causes you to make a decision yeah I think There's a few different things that went into that melting pot. I think actually a massive thing was things like listening to podcasts. I remember listening to Joe Rogan a lot back in the day.

I remember the Jordan Peterson. There was a Jordan Peterson episode ages ago. It was a classic thing. But that really kind of hit me. And that's what I like. I love listening to him now. And I know he's a bit controversial these days and people have X, Y, Z to say about him. But... For me, like just having, that was like my guidance in a lot of ways. And I think so blessed to have been born in this generation where the guidance can come through.

all of these online resources whereas before you know like 20 30 years ago maybe that would never have come for me and maybe 20 years later I'd still be in the same spot so like incredibly grateful for that but then Can I ask a question? Yeah, go on. In that moment when you're 19 years old, do your parents know what you're going through? No, I don't think so. Do you think today they know what you were going through? Probably not. No, probably not.

I reckon, like, I don't know. I reckon my mum's probably thought about it, to be fair. But I don't know. They don't know the ins and outs. What are the ins and outs that they don't know? Well, just, like, the day-to-day, you know. And... I'm quite like, I keep a lot of things to myself a lot of the time anyway. So like, no one would really know. There's a real cost to that, isn't there?

There is, yeah, I guess. There is, you know, these things, I always think with these things, keeping them to yourself doesn't mean that they stay inside. It means they express themselves in other ways. Yeah, smart. I sit with a lot of people. So I've come to learn about myself, but I've come to one of the things I've definitely come to learn is that keeping it in doesn't actually keep it in. It just comes out.

in other ways it makes it like a pressure chamber yeah and you get your little escapes yeah someone will say something you can fuck up yeah or some people expresses themselves in pornography addictions or gambling addictions they're trying to find other ways to ease yeah the burden of having to hold on to that all that stuff or running the length africa yeah

So they had no idea. No. If you could go back and have a word with him when he's woke up on that morning, when you're at your rock bottom and he's crying and he doesn't want to go to work and he's thinking. about dark, you know, dark thoughts. If you could go back and just have a telephone conversation with him now, what would you, what would you say to him? I guess I do.

I do have empathy for that guy. I think the thing that I needed to hear, which was the most, which actually got me to force me into action was like, I need to take responsibility for my situation here. So like that version of me at 19, 18, 19 was very much one that looked at my outside world. blamed everyone else for my problems like i was because my parents did this or my boss did this and all of these other things and i didn't need anyone else to come in and say

oh, it's not your fault, blah, blah, blah, blah. I needed someone to go. That's the fucking world, mate. Get used to it. Do something about it or don't. It's up to you. So that's probably the message that I would... Maybe I'd deliver it in a nice little empathetic way. But ultimately, you know, no one was going to come and save me. It just had to be me.

And you talk about this, I was reading different sort of seasons of your life and there's this one moment where you're in a nightclub and it seems like you have a bit of, I don't know whether you were on something or you were doing something, but it seems like you had a little bit of a... dance floor epiphany moment yeah at 2 3am in the morning yeah so i think it had been leading up to this because i would i've been i've been finding life really difficult for a while and

I was doing all these different things, trying to find something that I could put my energy into that would give me something positive in return. And yeah, I remember being in the Arch in Brighton and... just being like i need i i need to sort my life out here like what am i doing that proper one of them like mirror bit pissed look in the mirror moments going and then ran home about 11 12 miles took me ages i was so unfit Sorry, you ran home from the nightclub? Ran home from the nightclub. Why?

I don't know, really. It was a bit Forrest Gump-y in the way it was just like, I just felt like running kind of vibes. At what time, sorry? Like 3am, 2, 3am, something like this. You ran 12 miles at 3 a.m.? Yeah, it took me ages. Drunk? Yeah, I was totally off it, yeah. Sleeping on the side of the road? Yeah, took a little power nap in Shoreham, on the pavement.

But yeah, I mean, so I ran that little bit and then a mate of mine that I'd been mates with for a long time had just started getting into running properly and he'd signed up for a half-marrying and he said to me, like... come and run it like let's do it I'll train with you blah blah blah and I think that was the moment where I was like oh this might be something that I can do like I'm out of ideas here you know I need something so I literally just on a whim was like fine

Let's do it. Signed up. Then he took me out training. We did the half marathon. Then a few weeks later, we signed up, did the full marathon. And that process... was like a huge relief for me. It made me really like, it hammered in the sense that if I do something positive, it will.

pay itself back to me you know like that accountability of like go and do something good here we go and you can see the improvements coming week by week by week and in i think that's why i love running so much like because that's it in its simplest form it's like you go out run it's really and but then you keep going you keep going and now a month later you can run a half marathon or two months later you can now run a marathon and it was that process of

going from someone that i like i couldn't even run around the block and then i could run a marathon and i was like this is this i've got something here like this is how we progress that's really the word in it progress that feeling of progress like you'd learn because that becomes a metaphor for life like i set out to do something and i got better at it i progressed yeah and i accomplished something yeah that's a that's a pretty strong

transferable idea for the rest of your like for everyone's life to learn that exactly that's kind of what happened for me i i managed to like save up some money off the back of run run these marathons and then It's like I stopped drinking as much. I wasn't gambling anymore and saved up a bit of money for the first time. And then a few months later, I decided, right, just bin off all these cleaning jobs.

I'm going to go and travel the world with my few grand that I'd managed to save up. And where did you go around the world traveling? Did a bit in Europe, then went over to Africa, got to Kenya, did some... I was really into my run at this point, so I was training really hard. Every day I was living and breathing it. Went to the training camp, this village called I-10, which is like home to some of the best long-distance runners ever.

uh kipchoge's from there all this kind of stuff just trained with them got my ass whipped up pretty good and that just i met an italian guy who'd been cycling around the world for six years super inspired by his story, how he was living, what he was doing, and decided, like, I want to try and do something like that. And I was pretty good at running by now. So then I first kind of conceived the idea of running from Istanbul to London.

That was the next, I was like, all right, that's what we're going for. I don't think many people know that you did all this stuff. before africa no i don't think so yeah i don't think they do i don't think people i was speaking to my mates i was like do you know he he like ran he was the first person to run from asia to london and people like no

You just know that you ran Africa. And then all these other things you did beforehand. But 22 years old, you become the first person to run from Asia to London because you ran from Istanbul to London. You completed 71 marathons in 66 days through 11 countries. And you had no team with you. You basically just did it by yourself and your phone was dying and all that stuff. When you told your family and other people that you were going to run from Asia to London.

at 22 years old what was their response because that would be the first big most of them were like yeah you're like are you gonna you're gonna die or like that's not gonna happen I remember pretty much everyone being like that. I could probably count on one hand the amount of people that actually thought I was going to do that. What did your parents think? I can't actually remember. I don't know if I was speaking to them very much at this time. Oh, really? Yeah. I remember my little brother.

was the only one that's like, yeah, he's the only one I remember being like, yeah, he's definitely, he's going to do it. What was that like? You know, because you're on your own. It's different to the Africa run, but this time you're on your own for that whole... that whole journey across asia to europe yeah what's that like it was an amazing adventure man it really was it was it was tough though like really tough being by myself the whole time

I would literally run a marathon. I'd have a little bag with a hammock and toothbrush, toothpaste, phone. I'd just find a couple of trees at the end of the day, sling the hammock up and go again the next day. So, yeah. Did you not need, like, friends or something? Why? Like, why? I think that a lot of people said this to me at the start. They're like, well, you're going to need this, you're going to need that. I was like, why?

Actually, why? Why can't you just sleep in a hammock every day and then go and run a marathon? Were you speaking to anybody back home around that time? No, not really. You must look at that objectively and go... That is not normal behavior. And then from that I ask, I go, so what is it that's abnormal about you? Because you're performing a normal behavior. It's super inspiring, but it's not normal.

It's not typical. That's a good question man, I'm not really sure. Yeah, it wasn't normal. Yeah, I guess it definitely wasn't normal.

I love that you're just figuring that out now. I think, you know, I met this Italian guy and he'd been cycling around the world for six years and he showed me his setup. He had nothing on him really. He had like... he had basically nothing but he just had a coffee kettle that was the only thing he really cared about so meeting these kind of people just made me realize like what is normal who even cares about normal i don't care i just like

This is normal. This guy's cycling around. Six years. Why not? But he seems like he's had a pretty good adventure. I want a bit of that. In Africa.

specifically kenya i've been there certain parts of kenya can really teach you that you don't need much that's a primal exactly i think it was just a different way of looking that's what the i mean it is the classic traveling like i'll go travel and find yourself blah blah blah but it does you know sometimes meeting these people from doing the craziest stuff and from different cultures will just make you look at things in a different way you know

even i found that coming back to london now and it's like all of you i'm back into the mode of like oh you need to go and get a flat and you need to go and live somewhere and blah blah blah and i'm like hold on a minute like i don't need why do i need to do any of this you know You must realise upon returning to the UK how much people are kind of programmed. Yeah. Yeah. And I just, I guess the...

The Asian Island one was the first time I was just like, just give it a go. What's the worst going to happen? And at the end of that run, your father joins you. Yeah, so I remember...

My dad came up to London and saw me. He said that he was proud of me. I remember that hitting because he didn't say it often, but when he says it, I can imagine your dad being similar. The kind of thing where... you know he means it when he says it and i think that's like one of the most powerful things that dad can say to their son like proud of you son even makes me emotional just saying it like thinking about i'm like wow um

So yeah, that was nice. And he ran the last day with you? He ran like the last 5K, I think. Yeah, the last 5K. And I was actually joined for the last couple of days by the mate that got me into... running in the first place which is really cool as well interestingly there was no followers no there was no youtube views there was no headlines there was no bbc articles there was nothing

Yeah. Most people don't even know it happened. Yeah. Frankly, because you went on your own and you didn't do all the social media stuff. You then get back to the UK to much different fanfare than you got back to this time. You go back to your parents' house. A couple of days in. everyone's looking around going yeah what's that like a couple of days in yeah i mean i remember my body being pretty in a pretty bad way after that i couldn't even walk like i was really struggling

My body was really hurting and got back into the country. I was skint because I'd done all my dough on this Age of London run. I remember my dad was like, what are you doing? You're lazy. Get a job or something. So I was like, oh, fuck. All right. And then went and got up. How did you feel when you heard that? It was hard at the time. I was really struggling because I'd just been away for about a year or something, done this big thing, finally finished.

And I was like, oh, that's reality. Slapping me in the face again. But yeah. Were you pissed off? Yeah, I was, yeah. When he told you to get a job? Yeah, I was fuming, yeah. Why? Because I was just mentally just absolutely done in. and physically done in and then he'd like just been like oh i'm so proud of you i remember being like i'm so proud of you you've achieved more in your life already than i ever have blah blah blah like and it really felt like i made a bit of a breakthrough there

What do you mean breakthrough? Just like, I felt like he respected me more. Like he'd actually seen that I was capable of doing something that he thought was good. Yeah, hadn't felt that before. Not in that way. Not in that way. What did you think that he thought of you growing up when you were sort of 19 years old and you're gambling and doing... Like, probably just disappointed. Yeah, disappointed. Bit of a loser.

you eventually end up burying yourself alive which is um yeah it's a ton of events i didn't i didn't see coming in your story so you do this run at 22 years old um there's sort of a two-year gap between then and when you bury yourself alive what are you doing for those two years so i was just working bits and pieces here and there really um back to normality pretty much like i finished the ages london run and in

in my head from then i was like i would really love to make this kind of thing a career somehow don't know how i'm going to do it but i would love to be able to do that and then that kind of started like a three or four year process of working out okay you know if we make content then maybe brands will sponsor that and then i can go and do adventures with that money

but that it took a long time to kind of put those pieces of the puzzle together like that was never the really what I was thinking of when I did Istanbul to London I chucked a few photos up on Instagram just really for my boys to see be like i'm out here in serbia camping or whatever um but yeah then you know did the age line around figured out if we make some content and that's how we're gonna do it buried myself alive pulled a car for a marathon

then the africa planning started happening you buried yourself alive you asked your parents if you could bury yourself in the garden they told you to fuck off yeah yeah you buried yourself alive for seven days in underground you basically just dug a hole in a tin can and jumped in the tin can and then they they buried you there um and then eventually the plans as you say you pulled the car as well

which is crazy. Do you know when I actually found out all this stuff, which was a shock to me, was, I don't know, a week or so into your run in Africa, I saw you pop up on my feed. And then, as you know, I clicked on your profile and then I clicked on the DM box and you sent me a DM. And the DM you sent me was in May the 5th. I think it was 2022. So it was a long time ago. It was more than two years ago now.

and paraphrasing because I know you're speculative I bet you get these kind of DMs all the time yeah I missed it I didn't see it so I didn't I didn't I didn't see it at all but um It's funny. It's funny because I actually replied to you exactly one year to the day when you sent me a message. I replied to you on May the 5th as well. But you emailed me on May the 5th, 2022. And in that message, you said some nice things. And then you said, you'll probably get a lot of these DMs.

But let me explain why this one is special and exciting. This is your sales background. I've removed some parts. No, no, no, no. I'm an endurance athlete in 2000. 19 i was i was the first person to run from asia to london in 2020 i pulled a car for a marathon in record time in 2021 i got buried alive with nothing but water and i live streamed it for an entire week and in 2022

I'm starting a mission to become the first person to ever run the full length of Africa. You sent me that DM two years ago, hoping that I could assist you in some way with the Africa. And when I saw that...

The most shocking part was that you'd done all of these other things and I'd never, ever heard about any of them. Yeah, yeah. And then in that message you explained to me, because it was a very long message and you really, it was a really thorough message. You explained that this time would be different. People would actually know.

Because you'd figured out content. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And you'd got some good people around you. And you'd spent almost two to three years thinking about this Africa run before you even, you set off going. Yeah. Why Africa? Why was that the plan? Well, I knew that Africa hadn't been done before and it's one of the few things left that hadn't been done. So that was probably one of the big reasons. Also like Africa is not very well travelled.

not many people tourists not many tourists go there and i thought it would be like the best adventure ever so that's why i decided to So you were going to run from the bottom of Africa to the top. How long did you think it was going to take? I thought it would take 240 days. That was my goal. I was going to do 360 marathons in 240 days. It didn't quite work out.

How long did it take in total? It took 352 days. Long time. But there's lots of hurdles along the way. Before you set off, I think it was four to five months before you set off, maybe six months, you meet a young lady called Emily Bell. Ah, yeah. Yeah. Wow. What a girl. What a woman. Was it six months before or something? No, I met her. We first met her. one of our mutual friends birthday party yeah and i said to my friend like why have you never introduced me to her she's beautiful and then um

Then that started like a three-month process of me trying to convince her to go on a date. It took a while, but we got there eventually. Got there eventually. Actually, we had a secret Santa going. And I think one of my friends did me a solid and kind of like rigged the Secret Santa. So I got her and then I got her tickets to go to Comedia Comedy Club in Brighton.

got two tickets so i was like well you could like you could take me okay and then um yeah so then that's that's when we first started dating but this africa thing was already in the works so it was quite complicated but then Before I left, we were like, right, let's do it. And we kind of like, we spoke on the phone every day. And...

Mate, I was one of these people, if you'd asked me two years ago, could that have ever worked? Like 14 months away we spent from each other. I'd be like, nah, that's never gonna work. But I think we spoke pretty much every day. for hours whilst I was running if I had signal. And the kind of stuff that we got to speak about and really go through in depth on is the kind of stuff that I think in a lot of relationships...

would just get swept away in the rigmarole of the day-to-day life. So I'm actually super grateful for that time and really proud of her and us for navigating that kind of... weird situation knowing your childhood and knowing the early model of relationships that you experienced this mother and this father didn't seem like they always had the best time a little bit distant

The affection wasn't there. When you go into a relationship, there must be a part of your subconscious that still has that model of relationships front of mind. So you must be in some respects, like I am, to be fair. Or at least like I was until I was about 27, 28. When I had my first relationship. I had my first relationship at your age. An avoidant. Because you hadn't learned. You didn't have the tools to be affectionate and to be open. Totally avoidant. Still am. A bit. But.

But when you met her, you hadn't done, had those deep conversations. Nah, I think it's her, credit to her more than me. She, she kind of brung. that out I didn't have the tools to go to do any of that stuff to be honest you know she's just I think sometimes like I don't know. I just think we fit really well, like together. What I can do well, she can't. What she can do well, I can't. Like it works. It's so interesting because we got to have a conversation with Emily.

Yeah. And the way she described you sounded very, very much like me. It's funny because I've actually... I remember messaging you actually about it, I think. I listened to, you'd had a podcast with some relationship person. Esther Perel, I remember. And yeah, like the way you were talking about it, I was like, oh, this is like, this is hitting over here.

and we both we do that a lot sometimes we listen to podcasts and talk about and i do this i do this i'm gonna play this oh god this is gonna be awkward for you but listen it's It's word for word me. Yeah, I think he's not the easiest to support and hasn't been.

him because he doesn't accept support very like he's got so much better at it but i'm very like nurturing i want to help um i want to make his life easier what can i do how can i support you and my i think we have different um support looks different for me and for him so support for me looks like a hug or like a chat or something um that's you know it's different for everyone but for him support looks like um space that's that's textbook me yeah

Support is leave me alone. It's my love language. It's just acts of service and leave me alone. That's really what it's about here. We're talking about you have different love languages. And she goes on to explain that... This is much because of the way that your early years, you were used to independence. Yeah. God, she's smart. Let me just... Yeah, no, I remember those days. You've changed. You've changed. How have you changed? Wow. How have I changed?

All this sort of intimacy related relationship, love related stuff. Have you changed? I think I've definitely become more willing to accept something. I do still struggle with that, but I've definitely tried to. do that more it's all i think for me it was like i really cared about emily so i really wanted to be the best that i could for her as well and I just think like the level of desire to make that happen was like really high. So I've just, I think before.

I wasn't very willing to compromise on a lot of stuff. I was like, I'm doing my thing. You either fit in or you don't. See you later, whatever. Whereas with Emily, I was like, oh, like she's special. I really want to make this work and I'm going to have to, it's actually a benefit to me if I can compromise because she, that kind of having that connection.

also bring a lot to my life and I need to. I need it. She kind of got over the fence. She got over the wall of the castle and managed to invade and change you from inside. Yeah, yeah, yeah. But you didn't want to let anyone over the fucking... Nah, nah.

is that how it's been for you as well then yeah i met i met a person who i cared about so much yeah it's what exactly what you said that i was finally willing to compromise on things before then it was like as you say my way or the highway like don't get in the way of my dreams you're either on the bus or you're off it but not like I'm willing to go in a different direction in some areas of my life here and it's I think that's good news for a lot of people that are avoidance because

It offers us all hope that we'll meet someone and they'll be worth it. and they'll help to rewire some of the evidence we have from our earliest years about what relationships are and aren't and the freedom they make us compromise and all of those things she sounds like a really wonderful person she is man she's great she's the best i love her to bits

They always say you strengthen a relationship by going through something difficult together. And that's exactly what happened as you ran the length of Africa. The really remarkable thing was I was reading about your preparation for this trip. And to say the least, Russ, you were ill-prepared. You landed in South Africa with 10K.

which is 4% of the money that you would need to make it the whole way. I mean, there's so many other things here. You knew that you couldn't get through, I think it was Angola? Algeria. Algeria. You knew you couldn't get through Algeria because they don't...

issue visas if you're not in the country they denied our visa already yeah and they don't issue visas when you're not in the country we'd already left so so you sort of like i'll figure it out when we get there pretty much what is that mentality because there's so many people that need

everything figured out and all the answers and to feel that psychological feeling of i'm ready you don't seem to give a fuck frankly i don't think i was afforded the luxury of being able to you know wait really we were running out of money It was now and ever, you know, make it work with what you've got or don't do it, basically. And I was like, I think we can do it. Where did this 10K come from? Well...

We actually got 50K to start with from an investor. He was a mate of a mate I've managed to persuade to give us some money to get things going. What was in it for him? He's got a percentage of everything we make off the back end. done all right but he was a risky risky one that's a hell of a yeah risky one for sure i think he it was more like a he just wanted to see it happen you know he was a fellow worthy boy a year younger than me he's made a bunch of money in crypto

And yeah, so he fronted the first bit of money to get us going and 50k was more than enough to get us going. But what ended up happening is the mission got delayed more and more. We had some people involved at the start that kind of... long story they kind of said that these things were going to happen blah blah blah brands were going to happen all of this stuff they were trying to make happen none of it ended up coming to fruition did they take money they didn't take any money no they um

but we ended up burning through a lot of the money before we were supposed to be on start line with like 50k and we ended up months rolled by we wasted money on xyz ideas didn't come so we basically got to a point where i kind of

got rid of all these people start line 10 grand i was like if we don't get funding within you know if we don't get any kind of sponsorship within the first month we're this is game over because we've run out of money said to all my team gonna have to delay your wages etc just really tightened up

And then I got a message from some bloke from Dragon's Den like two weeks in. Luke Jones. Yeah. No, so mate, I mean, I don't know. This is another thing that people probably don't know that you're like such a massive part of the story.

you know when when you messaged i remember being in south africa i think it was about 10 days two weeks in or something like this got a message from you that was like oh like just seeing what you're doing something like this love it like if you need any help let me know and i was like mate you should see i rang emily up i was like you're never gonna believe who's just messaged me like it was crazy you know obviously

cure got sorted out perfect head got sorted out two unbelievable sponsors and it's kind of changed the whole mission man like i can't even put into words how grateful i am that you messaged me that like it was that was like you know sometimes where you have like a moment where you're like wow like that's like that you were that moment for me really yeah yeah but you did that You didn't. No, you did. I'll tell you why you did that. Because...

Two things. The first thing is you had messaged me a year earlier and I just had totally missed it. But the second thing is you went and did some, so you planted a seed there. Then you went and did something so awesome that the world brought it to my attention. And when the world brought it to my attention, I looked at what you were doing.

I think you were roughly two weeks in. And I just thought it was awesome. I thought you were a cool guy and I could play out how this mission goes in my head. And I thought, this is really fucking cool. I'm an investor in, I'm a part owner in various companies. And there was two companies that I am very close to, Perfect Ted and Huel, who I felt were just perfect because, no pun intended, because Perfect Ted are like an energy drink company that I met on Dragon's Den.

you need energy and they're all about positive energy and um the founders are very much like you and then obviously Huel on the nutrition side of things I thought they were perfect for you as well and I messaged both of them

And they were both down instantly. I just sent WhatsApp. So I said, there's this guy, he's running the length of Africa. He's so cool. He's really, he's like going to do it. And both brands were like down in one message. I messaged both the founders on WhatsApp and they were like, we're in. So, and you had done that. You had, because you had messaged me. Most people, I say this because...

Sometimes people can see things like pivotal moments in their journey as luck, but I think it's important to highlight that you planted a seed a year earlier when you literally sent me like three pages in a DM. I guess I'll describe it like...

I was knocking on the door, but I needed someone to open it. You opened it. So it's a kind of a dual thing. I think you planted a lot of seeds. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I was knocking on a few doors. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And I'm sure there's lots of messages you sent that were never replied to. Yeah.

So I'm really glad that I saw it. I'm really glad. But I saw it because you were doing something awesome and it just popped up in my feed one day. And I went down a rabbit hole and I was like, this is fucking cool. This guy is cool. It'd be dope to be, you know, to do anything we can to see him see this through. That gives you a little nudge forward, those two incredible brands. You get going on the mission.

You run into a bunch of health issues. I mean, it went around the internet for a while. I think at this time you've got, I don't know, you didn't have many followers at the time. You had 20, 30, 40,000 followers. Yeah, it kind of grew. It grew a lot quite quickly.

early doors but we started started the mission with i think 20k on insta 6k on twitter 10k on youtube and you start pissing blood by like day 30 is there a part of you at day 30 when you're running through africa and you're pissing blood and you go I ain't going to be able to do this. Nah. I knew it was bad. You're running out of money a couple of weeks before. Then you start pissing blood. For most people, either one of those things would be, okay.

Let's get a flight. Well, I just, I knew that, you know, it was a bad situation, but it would, it'd probably end eventually. And then carry on going. You get robbed in South Africa, which is the first sort of minor robbery incident thieves approach you. They try and take your stuff. I think you give them a lift home. Yeah, that was two guys came up.

To me, whilst I was running at night, one came in front of me, one came behind me. And I kind of instantly knew this was a bit shaky. And I just went a bit mad, just like. weighed up situation just started acting a bit crazy started like beating my chest and shouting and stuff to try and like put them off because i could i've got the feeling like okay they're gonna

This is an attempt, but they haven't gone straight in with the robbery. They're kind of feeling it out. So it's like trying to give them enough of a reason to think that I'm crazy enough. It's just not worth it. It kind of worked. Sorry. You started beating your chest? Yeah, yeah, yeah. I started beating my chest. I started shouting. I was mid-run and they joined me running.

like one in front one behind they were running it like they i think they it was a situation where they were trying to fill me out you know like should we rob this guy okay this kind of thing yeah and I just thought if I can put them off enough. So can you describe to me what you... I literally beat in my chest. Yeah. I was just like, we're running, boy. Like, just going totally a bit.

just to make them think like, oh, this guy's a bit, you know, he's a bit off it. Maybe we'll just get the next one. Did you learn that somewhere or was that like a plan you had? No, that was just purely like... you react differently to different situations like we've been robbed at gunpoint where there's a gun in my face and I'm not going to start beating my chest because I don't want a bullet in my head but then there's other times where you think like

You're kind of looking at them going, he's actually a bit nervous to rob me. So if I can put him off enough, then he's just not going to bother, which was that. that situation so what happens when you start beating your chest acting like start beating my chest and like lunatic the one got the run the guy running behind me ended up dropping off so then it was just the guy in front of me he was he was quite a small guy anyway and i was like i don't reckon he's about it and then um

Did you tell him you're the hardest geezer? And then we ended up speaking a little bit and he was like, oh, like my friend was going to rob you, but we're not, but he's gone. We're not going to rob you. And I was like. oh your friend was going to rob me was he yeah like nice um and then you know i actually ended up speaking to him and he was saying like he's just he needs some money to like feed his family and stuff he was living in a township next next to the road which was like

pretty bad conditions. And I was like, look, mate, my boy's going to come pick me up in a couple of minutes. Like, we'll give you some food. And he was like, sweet. You fed the rubber. Yeah. So then the boys came and then we ended up giving him a lift back. what a nice story yeah it's gonna be a movie one day that this whole thing's gonna be a movie you get to Angola and then you get robbed at gunpoint

yeah rob the gunpoint and go that was um day 50. yeah i mean they're a bit more successful that time they got a lot of our stuff what happened so around 30k i was on a lunch break we sat in the van Me, Jarrod, Harry, my support team, and we were just chatting shit like usual. Three guys pull up on a motorbike, two of them get off, come up the side of the van, crack the door open, gun in all of our faces.

started speaking portuguese um then they took a bunch of stuff yeah that was a nightmare to be honest they got passports money cameras drone phones It was long. Have you processed this stuff? I don't know. I don't think so, man. The thing is, is that these things happen, but you're on the road again the next day. So... you know because you say it's such a casual sort of blasé way but if someone had a gun pointed at them most people would would be in therapy trying to resolve

the sort of complex set of psychological implications that causes. And when I asked you the question, I could see your demeanor changes a little bit because it's not as blasé as you sometimes make out, is it? I don't know, man. I guess it just is what it is. I haven't really, I don't know if I've deeped it that much at this point. You know, we're over it. Nothing bad happened in the end. I mean, we got robbed, but no one died.

You lost the cash you had, the equipment and your passports, which is probably the most annoying thing of all those things. Yeah, that cost us like at least two or three weeks in terms of going to get visas and things. Day 50, you get to day 100. And you're Day 102. When I say Day 102, does it bring back any memories? A couple, yeah. A couple. Congo. Congo. DRC. Yeah, that was one hell of an experience, that.

You describe this as probably the hardest part of the whole trip. Probably the hardest part of my whole life. Really? You've not talked about this much in detail either, for some reason. So we made a YouTube series online which kind of followed the whole thing. It's the only YouTube video that I didn't release because it was quite, I mean, it was quite, it's a difficult one at the time as well.

Because it was the hardest time for us as a team. And there was a lot of arguments, a lot of fallouts around that. And I didn't think that... the video that we made was really what told the story how I wanted it to be told. What happened? So, yeah. You're emotional about this. Yeah, I mean, it... Yeah, that whole thing was mad. So we got to DRC.

I think day 100 we got to DRC. It was hostile from the start. We'd been warned loads about it, about the country. It's one of the poorest countries in the world. It's quite known for corruption. And we'd been sent the videos of the craziest things happening there. And I think we were all a bit apprehensive. You've been sent what kind of videos? The craziest, like people getting chopped up. all kinds of stuff um yeah it was it definitely i mean i don't know how much i can really

What I would say about DRC is that we spent a few days there. My experience was very subjective. It's a massive country, loads of people, loads of great people. But my personal experience of the small amount of time I spent there was a bit rough. But yeah, I mean, we landed in the country. crossed the border. It was a very chaotic border town. We had people from the get-go, very not, not very happy to see us at all, shouting at me whilst I was running, trying to like exploit us for money.

officials all this kind of stuff get trying to get money out of us and we'd heard about all of this from people traveling so we kind of half knew what we were rolling into but it was it really created a kind of atmosphere that was difficult challenging um yeah i mean the day before day 102 we had a guy come up to guy came up to me with a rock spikes in the rock

And he was like, I'm going to, like, smash your head in with this. And he was speaking French, so I didn't really get it, but Harry spoke French. So he's basically threatening us with this big spiky rock that he had in his hand, saying, like, give me three quid, the equivalent of three quid. or I'm going to, like, start smashing you all up. And so I gave him a quid in the end because I'm not getting my head smashed in over three quid, but also I didn't want to, like, get word around that.

There was a bunch of people just throwing money around to anyone that would threaten them. So, yeah, I mean, woke up day 102. I was running 100K that day and I felt... very anxious from the get-go really like really finding it difficult already ran Left the boys in the morning like I normally do, ran 20K, then ran another 20K. Start, we took a turn off onto a dirt road, so the boys had planned this route. Went down this dirt road.

then the van basically the support van couldn't get to me so the boys sent a guy on a motorbike and so i'm running around this dirt bike and this guy on a motorbike keeps trying to stop me And I was so, like, scatty already that I didn't want to stop for... He was trying to get me to stop, and I was like, nah. I'd had it the day before, people trying to stop me on motorbikes, and it was all a bit... Didn't feel great, like...

I was quite anxious about the whole thing. Anyway, eventually I did stop. He gave me a note that basically said like the boys can't get round to where we were gonna meet, but they're gonna go to this other place and meet there. It was about 20km through the jungle, no roads, like barely even a path. I was just kind of like whacking my way through bushes to get to this meeting point where I was going to try and find the boys. Run out of water.

phone's got no signal and i'm going through these these bushes stumble into this village and because i think because of the experience that i already had in the first couple days of drc i was very much like

I just want to get my head down and get through these places as quickly as possible with less fuss as possible. So I'm running through this village and people are shouting at me and stuff and I'm like, okay, this is happening all the time now. Just carry on going, carry on going. But I think I'm upset.

quite a lot of the village by doing that and then the chief of the village comes over and then you know before you know i'm like surrounded by half the village they're all like very upset they don't get one they don't get who i am what i'm doing why i'm there and they start trying to say that I need to give them money. I didn't have anything on me. So then, like, the chief of the village kind of got some people away, and he got two blokes, took me out into the bush.

with machetes and i was bricking it yeah i was absolutely bricking it um thinking like every oh every my mind's totally racing at this point i'm like what like what is going on here why Why am I going out to the bush? Like, this doesn't make any sense. Like, is this a shakedown? Like, what is the worst happening? Don't know. And then got out into the bush.

i basically emptied all my bags had some biscuits gave them the biscuits and then just started and then i was just like right beeline for this meeting spot and mine's totally frazzled at this point i've got i'm hearing motorbikes coming i'm hearing people i'm jumping in bushes like totally just at kind of off it here um kind of get through this jungle bit, get to this meeting spot. The boys aren't there. Now I'm really like, oh, this is bad because I'm about 50-something K in. I'm dehydrated.

I've got no water. I've got no signal. And I don't know where the boys are. I don't know how to get to them. And I'm in the middle of the jungle. And I know that there's, like, I've... upset a lot of people in the local area and i've just ran away from them all i'm like oh like this is bad this is bad news anyway i figured out that the tarmac the last nine bit of tarmac was

I think about 15 or 20K away. And I was like, I reckon I can just about make it there. And if I make it there, then that makes sense to the boys. That's the last bit they could get to. So had you just sprinted away from the guys with the machetes? Pretty much, yeah. Yeah. Like it was, they walked me out into the bush and I didn't really, I didn't know what was happening, but I was just so like, like this is bad. Gave them biscuits and just died. And then like.

I've ran off and I can just hear loads of commotion going on. And I'm just running through this jungle. It's all quite... I mean, it's all quite mad. I'm adrenaline going through the roof. Were you scared? Yeah, I was petrified, man. I was absolutely petrified. I think what didn't help is that...

I didn't understand any of the languages, like Lingala, the local language. I didn't know any French either, which would have helped. And I didn't understand, I didn't have a very good understanding of the culture or anything. So I think...

if i went for it again a lot of these things would have been rationalized in my mind easier but because i was so unaware of the situation and i'd had all of these horror stories built up in my head and the first couple of days in drc was quite rough and i was just like in this spot where It didn't take much for me to kind of just assume the worst of everything. So it really just got me into a place where I was like quite scatty. But yeah, I mean, I find this...

I go see the bit of tarmac. I'm like, right, let's head there. It's about, you know, two hours away. I could probably make it there. And as I'm going there, I'm going down this dirt path. Another two blokes on a motorbike pull up. And, you know, I'm... I was like, I just don't want any part of this. They're trying to stop me. You know, mine's totally gone. And they...

And they were trying to, I think they were trying to communicate to me like, oh, we're going to take you to your friends, blah, blah, blah. And I'm thinking about, I'm like, are these guys, who are these guys sent from? Are they sent from this village or that village? Is there like a bush telegraph?

of there's a white guy running around here he's upset like don't get him kind of thing so i'm like nah not doing it blah blah blah thinking you know the boys they send a note with the driver if it's from if it's from them And these guys had no note. And I was like, you know, getting later and later, I was like, I've got no water. I've got no signal. I've got no way of knowing where the boys are.

they're probably no further than 10 or 20k away so if i'm if i get on this bike and i'm on the bike for longer than half an hour or an hour then i know this bad news so i just thought fuck it get on the bike How long were those two men on the bike following you and asking you to get on the bike? A while, like probably about 20 minutes. So yeah, got on the bike.

half an hour went by then now went by i start like kicking off i'm getting off the bike i'm having a garden but like the language barrier is just with no one understand the word anyone's saying and then Yeah, ended up spending seven hours on that motorbike going into the jungle, which was, like, terrible. Seven hours? Seven hours, yeah. What goes through your mind in those seven hours? I thought, well...

I assumed after about an hour and a half that I was like, okay, well, I am getting kidnapped. Then like we're, this is it, you know? And then I was thinking rationally, I was like, had such limited knowledge about. DRC or any of this kind of stuff, I was like, they're probably just going to, they'd probably just want money. But then you also start thinking, well, maybe they're just going to kill you.

the stories that i'd heard about drc and that wasn't the craziest thing you know you like people get stabbed for fiver literally like a couple of quid people get stabbed um people get killed for the you know a watch so i was really trying to what like i was really trying to be rational about the situation but just like very quite quite emotional as well

And then, I mean, for the last few hours, I was just like, you know, what God has for me, he has for me. You know, whatever it is, it is. And that's fine. And I was just trying to be like, you know, it's out of my hands. But it was very scary. I was like so nervous, like just shaking. They took me to this village in the jungle late at night, no electricity.

it's like wooden little shacks with tin corrugated roofs and stuff and got me off the bike took me into this little hut then loads of men of the village came into the hut they were arguing about money and this kind of stuff. And then the second chief of the village walks in and says to me, like, you speak to me in English very slowly. And he understood a few words. And I said to him, like, this is a big mistake. You know, like...

call my friend, he speaks French, and then he can come, and we've got money, and we can sort it out. And then they spoke on the phone, and then... Basically, we agreed the boys would come, we got the money, and then it took the boys, I think, about 36, 48 hours to get there because it was so rural. There was no roads going there. It was all dirt paths. They tried to rent some motorbikes, got scammed. Then they ended up trying to borrow a police chief's 4x4 who also scammed us.

So, yeah, so then, I mean, the boys got there eventually. We gave everyone some money and then I was free to go. I was just looking as you were talking about...

how fast seven hours is. And for people in the UK, seven hours is London to Edinburgh. Yeah, it's not in DRC. So if I go from London to Edinburgh in a car... yeah that's seven hours just to give people an idea of like how long that is on the back of a motorbike with strange men going through the middle we're literally going through the jungle so it's like little tiny paths that are going up and down through rivers through over mountains for seven hours

seven hours yeah i was like gripping on this i was absolutely done in by the end of it and you got to that village they wanted they wanted money did they explain anything did they say anything to you about who they were and i think i think they were I think they were actually just, they were more scared about who I was, why I was there and all the rest of it. And the, I mean, after the phone call with the team, things seemed quite settled.

that they they were pretty all right with me and they i think they you know it was i was i was just in a state of like totally totally whacked What do you mean? Just exhausted, but like petrified. And I was just very nervous around everything. Twitchy, you know? Yeah. Have you suffered with anxiety? I don't know. I think, I don't think so, but like I do, obviously I'm human. I do know what anxiety feels like and I do get it sometimes, but I was, I was anxious then for sure.

You're speaking to Emily back home, your partner, throughout the journey on most days, but for this period of time, sounds like you were out of communication with her. She seems like she was... Very, very worried about you. She was, yeah. In fact, she told us on a research call that she thought you had died. Yeah. I mean, I thought I was going to die as well. Did you actually? Yeah.

Genuinely thought you were going to die? Yeah. And how do you sort of rationalize that thought? How do you deal with that thought when you... What comes to mind? What are you thinking? If you really believe, you know, I think I'm going to die here. I mean, I guess it's different. For me, I was just like, you know, if this is the way that God wants it, then I guess it is. That's it.

you know and there's more from elsewhere that's how i was what that's how i was trying to make sense of it in my brain were you thinking about people back home Yeah, I mean, I was thinking about... I was thinking about, like, all the things that I wish I had the chance to... repair that I haven't in a relationship with my parents. I was thinking about all the things that I wanted to do with my life that I wouldn't be able to do. I was thinking about what it would do to...

You know, everyone that got myself killed in the Congo for just trying to run the length of Africa. I felt stupid because I was like... These were mistakes that had been made that should have been quite easily preventable that we didn't do. That's ultimately my responsibility as well. So, it was, yeah, it was a hard few hours. You're thinking about things that you should have repaired with your...

It's interesting in moments like that, people always talk about how they have a retrospective, like clarity on their life and their priorities. that most of us will never understand because we've never been in a situation where we've genuinely believed there was a chance that we weren't going to make it out. When you say you were thinking about how you should have repaired relationships with your parents, what do you mean?

I don't know, I guess it's like you said, it was a moment of clarity where I was like, I've probably wasted a lot of years there holding on to things that weren't necessary, you know.

for bullshit reasons. And, like, life's too short for that. What have you been holding on to? Like, resentment and... pride and you know not not trying to understand all that avoiding things and not trying to connect with people that that love me and these kind of things you think these are your last hours you've obviously got a person there in your life who has loved you and has shown you a different way to connect and to be and to

intimacy and all the all of those things which is emily are you thinking about emily in those moments as well yeah i was Yeah, I mean, I was thinking of all the things that we talked about, like our future together and everything that we wanted to build. like like having kids together and all these things that just felt like they were just and how like just felt like I was letting her down

And, you know, I wasn't, like, delivering the things that I, you know, I was going to run the length. Everything's going to be all right. Like, don't worry. But, you know, all of these dangers, no, it's going to be fine, baby. And, yeah, I knew how much, how hard that was, that time was for her as well.

i guess i mean especially i'm in the thick of it you know i'm in the thick of it she's like at home just thinking about it all the time and there was a few moments like that when we didn't have signal and things your boys eventually find you they pay off the uh the guys in that village and they let you go doesn't really stop there though does it because there's so much now to process and to figure out and to kind of that was

I think the hardest point for us as a team of the mission was the aftermath of that. It's very difficult because I think we were all struggling. Everyone was right at their limit.

probably because that no one had any spare energy to think about anyone else in that situation it was all like well I'm struggling so that's it you know and yeah I mean there was a good few arguments people don't really know about this moment no because people like me that just watch from youtube and from social media we just think oh they're they're all getting on it's all fine oh it's pissing blood again haha funny but when i when i

did those research calls and spoke to members of your team and spoke to, you know, people around you and even members of the team that were out there with you. This was really a falling out amongst the team that no one in the public ever got to see.

It's a difficult one to talk about because I don't want to throw anyone under the bus or paint anyone in a bad like we were all ultimately just trying our best. I think for me, what I recognize that I... did wrong in that situation was i set us up in a bad way like i'd hired so heavily on content side because i knew that you know we started with no money we had to get content out there to get brands to sponsor us that i basically recruited three people that were

almost entirely there for content reasons being able to make youtube videos take photos for a core documentary this kind of thing i completely blindsided the logistics and element and like having knowledge of Africa and all of this kind of stuff I just thought that's a luxury we can't afford right now because of that I'd ended up asking a support team that were mostly there for content to basically be

like logistics african logistics experts and that's put them in a position it's obviously going to be really difficult so yeah i mean The whole situation could have been avoided with different planning. I recognised that and I thought off the back of that, I was like, right, I'm going to get a 4x4 because the van can't travel up any of these dirt roads.

And I'm going to hire two new people, one of which is going to be like a proper logistics guy that's going to get us through all these tough situations. A team member actually departed around this time as well. Yeah, that was a difficult one. um we actually we had a big argument it me and harry had a big argument on just after this congo thing

We were traveling back through these villages. He'd obviously had a rough time as well. He'd been scammed for motorbikes, had these dealings with the police chief. And as we were coming back, he was buying like fags and...

and alcohol and stuff in all these little tiny remote villages and i had an issue with it because we're going through some of the poorest places in the world there's kids running around with like malnourish bellies can't even feed themselves and you know as europeans if we bowl through these villages

drinking and smoking blah blah blah then it's giving off the sign we've got a lot of money to spare and that's why we're getting scammed so much for extortionate amounts of money so i had an issue with it and i told him and i probably didn't say it in a way that was how good leadership would set you know so we had a big argument about that i've obviously just been in this rural village for a couple days i'm already i'm i'm tightly strong already so is he and then we get back to the other

the other boys these guys had no idea what just happened and they were all struggling themselves so they were very much everyone was just concentrating themselves and they were all kind of like everyone was a bit pissed off with each other and then we had a meeting And I just blew up, just blew up, started shouting at everyone, throwing chairs about, completely lost my cool, which is obviously not the way to act. And...

Yeah, I mean, it was awkward. It was an awkward few days after that. I just went straight back to running, wanting to get out of DRC as quickly as possible. Everyone was in eggshells. We got to... Kabinda, which is an Angolan exclave. And then I said to, I was like, Harry, you're going on holiday. And I said to the other boys, you'll all be going on holiday at some point.

I think at that point, I'd realized that for me, I'm running every day. My body's very stressed. I'm very stressed in general. I'm managing a lot of things and I can't have... the people around me also being at the edge of what they can do because then it just leaves me in a totally spot so i tried to kind of put some reorganize reshuffle things so that wouldn't happen

sending everyone holiday, hired Gus, hired Jamie, another editor to take some workload off Stan because the geezer was working like 18 hours a day trying to get two YouTube videos out a week whilst recording and producing it. I was like, right, I need to change something there. Gus.

ex-para from dutch military he'd cycled up and down africa by himself absolute beast of a bloke it's like he's coming in he's going to do our logistics and one of the best recruits i've ever made so um that's kind of how the aftermath happened i'm gonna let you in on a little secret what is in

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But it's not all smooth sailing. I mean, as you continue on, you have all of these issues. You have a bunch more health issues. Your back starts to give out. I think around day 205 and 206, you completely... stopped because you had back issues but the back was probably the worst injury I don't it's not even healed still but basically my back started seizing up and I would get like shooting nerve pains coming down my leg

And it would just totally, like, totally jar. I wouldn't be able to move. Or, yeah, I mean, God knows what happened there. I mean, there's a chance that you've done permanent damage to your back. Probably, yeah. I mean, I ran the marathon on Sunday and it was still going a bit, so. Did you have to stop? No, but it's basically been on and off. On and off.

Very painful for the last kind of, well, whenever that was, day 205 since then. Emily said around that time, that sort of 200 day mark, you were like, you were pretty done. What does she mean by that? I was in a lot of pain, like every day. So I really just wanted it to be over at that point. No, I still had like five months to go. You still have five months to go. Yeah. Yeah. Was there, I've heard you answer this question before, but what day was the closest to quitting?

the closest where you thought, you know what, maybe the thought. The only time I ever really had the thought was in the Congo. Really? On the, on the motorbike. Yeah. Like that was the only time I actually ever actually thought like, why am I doing this? This is stupid.

Or am I going to get myself killed of this? And it was a fleeting thought, came in. And then I thought, I ain't got a fucking choice. I've got to do it now anyway. December time, which is day two for one. You're in, I think, the Ivory Coast. And...

The Ivory Coast think you're a spy. So they took you to the local police station because they thought you were a spy. Yeah, they were very confused. Did they tell you that they thought you were a spy or did you just kind of piece that together? Yeah, it was more piecing that together. they were very confused about her was why i was there while i was running in the middle of the night um and yeah they they made sure they did all their checks on me so i wasn't

Any suspect individual. January comes around the new year. How do you celebrate Christmas out there and all that stuff? It was a back to basics kind of Christmas. We had chickens on the fire. I got a bit pissed. Missed the family? Christmas would have been a bit of a weird one for my family anyway. But yeah, like, I mean, it was business as usual. I think it was pretty much.

focused on the job and had a couple drinks and that was that one uh a day shortly after that um that really i think things took a bit of a turn in terms of publicity, was when you reached Algeria and you had the issues with your visa. Because Algeria, as we said, as a country that doesn't grant visas unless you're in your home country currently. And so you were advised.

by the FCO not to travel there, I believe. I can't remember. A lot of people advised us not to travel there. And the Algerian authorities were saying absolutely no to you getting a visa. So you decided to start an online campaign to try and like, it's such an interesting thing because very few people would have a country say,

We're not going to give you a visa. You cannot come into our country. And you decide that the way to overcome that is with some tweets. Yeah, it was a bold strategy. We were strategizing for a couple of weeks before that. right, this, you know, we are backs against the wall here. What are we going to do? And we kind of, you know, Gus and Stan were putting together these kind of plans to get residency in Mauritania and then...

potentially, you know, do all of these little things to try and somehow get a visa. And I just got to a point where I said, like, boys, let's just hell marry it. Let's just blast it on socials because it's going to take someone right at the top to say yes. You know, swing for the fences. And that's what happened.

um you launch this kind of online campaign led predominantly by twitter to get someone in algeria someone high up or a politician in the uk to speak to algeria yeah the campaign goes pretty viral everyone's posting it in the uk So much so that even Elon Musk tweeted at one point, which is bad. Basically saying that this is what this platform's for, what he loves about the platform. And then Algeria tweet you basically saying, we'll give you a visa on the spot.

which is mad. Isn't that mad? Actually mad. When you think about where you came from, you've got Elon Musk tweeting and the like Algeria's Twitter account. You're going, come on in. We're going to, we're going to change our laws. Yeah. So that you can come through here and Elon Musk's tweet and that is just mad. It was mad. It was absolutely crazy. And then you get through.

You get your visa, you're able to enter Algeria. The Sahara Desert was another big challenge for you. You get to day 313, the truck breaks down in the Sahara Desert. 250 kilometers away from the nearest road. What I found so interesting about this little chapter in the story was that when we spoke to Stan, who's part of your team on the research call, he says that...

you weren't really concerned because everyone just assumed that everything would be fine. We'd been through much worse. Stan said that the resilience they had built up was accumulative and gradually they became less and less concerned about setbacks. And I read that and it was really inspiring to me.

because it says something about life. We all have these like subjective setbacks that we can like fall into a dark hole thinking of like the end. And it could just be like Jenny at work sat in our seat. Whereas you're in the Sahara Desert. And your truck is broken down 250 kilometers from the nearest road. The repair team can't fix it. And you guys just shrug. It'll be fine. Barely even fall there, mate. I can't lie. Really? Yeah. Yeah. I remember just thinking, ah.

That's a minor. We'll figure that out. Because you had so much evidence that you guys had been able to figure out so many other things. Yeah. And I think like by the end as well, like the team was so, it was slick. the way everyone was operating, everyone knew what they had to do. No one needed, you know, no one needed telling. We all just got on with our jobs and the amount of output for four people.

It was crazy. That really is what resilience is. People always ask, like, how do you become more resilient? But it seems to, your story taught me that it's like, go through some difficult shit together and come out the other end and you'll have evidence. Yeah. And even if you go through some difficult shit and it doesn't work out, then you've got a few lessons in there, right? At least you survived, right? Yeah. That's a lesson. And then you get to the final leg of the trip.

And all of the people around you tell me that there was a noticeable increase in your sort of happiness and demeanor when you could start to see the finish line. In your mind, you get, what, two weeks out and the social media interest goes pretty fucking crazy. Yeah, it did, yeah. Yeah, even like mainstream media kind of picked up, I think, the last few days. Last few days? Yeah. The whole of the UK.

Only had one thing to talk about. I'm sure it was, you know, very much the case in other parts of the world. I saw news reports in America and other parts of the world, but it felt like back here in the UK. The UK was just talking about one thing. Really? It was following you. You know this. Surely your girlfriend and stuff must have told you. It was fucking pandemonium. It's every social, you know, I'd go on social media and anyone.

that I knew was posted about you running that last leg, driving money to those charities that mean a whole lot to you. As you come into that last leg, that last day, Crowds of people, like hundreds of people flew out there. It's nuts. Absolutely nuts.

And they're running with you. A lot of them, I heard from some of your team, I think it was Stan that was saying to me, a lot of people flew out there, but they were keeling over and like collapsing on the side of the road because I don't think they anticipated that this isn't London, mate. It was so funny. Tunisia at that time wasn't even that hot. Coming from the UK, everyone's just absolutely cooked. And you come into that last day and your dad is there as well.

Yeah. Yeah. It was an emotional day, man. My dad came and ran. He could only bang a 2 or 3k out these days, but he came and ran and put his arm around me and that, and it was special. Your relationship with him started to pick up as you got closer to the finish line, it seems. Yeah. I've heard that from a few people. Yeah. Throughout the whole mission, really, I think.

Emily's definitely a big part of helping that. What was it like to see him? And where did you see him? Was it on the last day? On the last day, yeah, we ran a little bit, a couple of tears. Just like... What were the tears for? I don't know. I guess it was like a signal that it was like, this is actually over now. You know, my dad's here. And like, you know, everything.

everything that i've been through but also like everything he'd been through everything his dad's been through felt like it just felt like a moment you know he was proud of you very very proud of you very very proud of you We got to speak to him on the phone and hearing how proud of you he was. was one of the most moving things I actually of this whole experience of speaking to your friends and family hearing just how proud your father is of you is it moved me when I heard it I actually um

I couldn't believe it was my son, you know, crossing the line and it was sort of like not real sort of thing. You know, it's like, you know, but... And he went on to say, Yeah, it's nice. It's powerful when your dad says that, isn't it? Always. Always. You cross the line. How does that feel? Oh, yeah. I mean, that finish line.

Honestly felt like a fucking mystical thing that was never coming for the longest amount of time. So the fact that it finally came was just like, wow, it's finally over, you know, like we actually did it. So, yeah, very grateful. It's quite complex emotions. I can see it in your face. Yeah. What are those emotions? I guess it's just grateful that it all worked out, you know.

And all the hard work paid off. And all the hard times paid off. Your girlfriend said that you walked over to the edge of the water when you reached the... northern most point of Africa, and you saluted. And to her, that salute meant more than just a sort of random token gesture. It was a salute in many respects to say... You know, there's certain chapters closed in my life now and there's certain things that I've proven. I think maybe the right word there is proven.

Yeah, I think so. Hopefully. What have you proven? I guess I'm capable, you know. I can do it. Your mum was there as well? The whole gang? The whole team. Was that the best feeling of the whole journey? That end moment with your family was... Because I heard you describe that the start was amazing, the first day.

And in that moment, I imagine it's overwhelming for so many reasons. It's so much the process. So overwhelming, man. People are there and screaming and the cameras and the Sky News are running alongside you. It's like, it looked batshit crazy. I was watching it. It was. It was totally mad. I think the finish line was one of them things that was just so overwhelming. I don't know if you had it. When there's so much going on and it's so overwhelming, it almost feels like an out-of-body experience.

And you're someone that's like lived most of their life in relative isolation. Yeah. You like being alone. Yeah. Emily told me this. She goes, I think he's happiest when no one's there. Yeah, I do like being alone. I do like it.

interesting still is like you get back to the uk and you've been running this crazy you've done this crazy thing for more than a year right it was 300 352 days i was out there for 14 months so 14 months you get back to the uk your land the weather's different obviously society's completely different yeah now everybody knows who you are here

So wherever you go, someone's going, oh, you're the hardest guy ever, fucking picture, lad. How is that? Still think I'm kind of working that out at the moment. Don't really know. It's definitely different. But everyone's so nice. And I think, like, the stories of people that come up to me and they're like, you know, I was running the marathon on Sunday and people were like, you're the reason I'm here and stuff. And I'm like...

That's kind of mad, but that's sick as well, you know? So... Are you feeling overwhelmed? Yeah, definitely. How do you know? Because I'm...

i'm trying to distance myself from everyone and everything at the moment yeah like uh yeah just i think um my social batteries run out quite quick and once that happens i'm just like well i need to be alone immediately done can't speak and you're getting all these emails now yeah yeah yeah and it's just like well i think there's a lot of things happening as well that i'm not

that i don't know how to handle properly like emails and all these other things you don't have management you don't have anyone an agent nothing i kind of need a moment to work out what i actually want to do i think but it's fine like I'm not running ultramarathons in Saradez anymore. I can't, like, it's all right. You know when you were running that marathon, you ran the London Marathon, like, two days ago or something? Yeah. That's...

a very public place to be. Yeah, I didn't quite anticipate that. I had some people that saw you down there and they were a little bit concerned. Really? Yeah, because you looked a little bit overwhelmed. yeah it was a little bit there was just a lot of people grabbing at you and stuff yeah yeah i mean people are nice so like they would they only had nice things to say to me it was just like so much like stimulation you know what i mean

I was like, I'm not used to this. I find it fascinating. So you're at the very top of this mountain in terms of like publicity and attention and everyone's screaming and grabbing at you and wants you for stuff. You've just done this.

incredible adrenaline inducing feet running the length of africa there's all of these chemicals in your body the adrenaline the endorphins all that stuff that comes from endurance sports yeah and then done done zero like stop yeah how's that um my body needed it yeah it's absolutely you know bashed in but it is also

It's been quite difficult to... I had such a solid routine every day for a year. It was like get up, run, break, eat, run, do the same every single day. And now the schedule is wildly different. It's like... Okay, wake up, interview here or go and do this and then this and, you know, meet this person, chat to that person. And I'm kind of missing that routine of exercising all the time.

kind of want to start that back up again pretty soon maybe maybe not 60 or 70k a day but like i need i actually need that you know so how's your mental health i think I think it's fine. I just need to get a few things sorted. I haven't got a place to live yet. I don't know the immediate next steps career-wise, what I'm going to do.

and a lot of things have changed obviously so it's just working out a lot of all of this stuff but I think when there's that many uncertainties in your life it's always going to create a certain level of like

mental challenges. So I just need to figure them out and then I'll be all right. You know, you must get bored of people asking you what's next because this is what everyone asks when everyone... does it when anyone does anything interesting yeah like what's next they want to know yeah yeah the next challenge i have got a lot of ideas i think like one of the big things i would be really what i really love to do is

in some way be part of like documenting other people's journeys when they go on you know they're starting from somewhere and they're they've got this big thing that they want to do and just like either helping them or being like in some way do it So I'd really love to try and do more of that. The last year as well, like one of the things that I struggled with is it like, it was so much.

Everything was geared towards basically helping me run and I've had enough of that. All of my support team were there basically to facilitate me running as far as I can every day. it would be nice to do things for other people more than just everyone doing things for me. That's an interesting thought. You've had enough of that. Enough of it being about you. Yeah.

It's interesting, Russ, because you're someone that quite clearly through your story likes being alone and low-key, under the radar, do their own thing, spend time in my own head. And then exactly that, doing exactly that. in you running the length of Africa, being alone out there in the Sahara Desert alone has built this massive fucking audience. Yeah. And all these people watching you.

that are now very much compromising in some respects. Obviously, there's so much privilege and stuff that comes with it, but they're compromising the very thing that you love the most, which is you running from London to Asia alone, Asia to London alone. on your own with the hammock. It's never quite going to be the same, you know what I'm saying? You can't even walk down the street in London. You were like a really distinctive, recognizable guy as well, because the ginger beard and stuff.

Yeah. Well, I think it will, like, it will die down, like, eventually. So I think it's going to be all right. It's just different. Yeah, it's just different. Just different in this new set of problems, I guess. Yeah. To manage and stuff. Yeah. You did all of this, you know, to have the experience, you inspired all these people along the way. And obviously central to this was the running charity.

they do incredible work for people kind of like yourself that are in that situation where you're looking for guidance yeah you're looking for a sense of purpose and meaning etc etc um how much how much what was the goal

Fundraising goal? Yeah, what's your fundraising goal? A million. A million? Yeah. And what are you on at the moment? When I checked yesterday, I think it was 970. I'm not exactly sure what it is now. You've been down to see the work that this charity do, haven't you? I've worked with the charity for like...

years you know i used to before i left i was the adventure guy so i'd take people take groups of people up climbing mountains or out into nature and we'd do stuff i did stuff with fundraisers who were raising money for the charity I mean, I did the Age of London Run for the Running Charity as well. So I've been involved for four or five years. Well, I have to say, Russ, you inspired millions of people. You don't know this, but like when I'm in the gym. Yeah.

And I start thinking about quitting. The whole time when you're in Africa, I was like, fucking Russ is running three marathons today. What the hell am I doing thinking about quitting? And it was this thought in the back of my head that helped me over and over again when I was in difficult moments, when I'm in the gym, when I'm thinking about quitting, when I'm thinking about not even doing the work.

And I'm like, that guy's going to be up today running another 20K, well, 60K or 100K. So it was even like this motivational force for me in my life. And I'm really, really appreciative of that. But I also know, because I've seen the messages and I've seen the DMs. that for many people out there that are russ at 19 that don't know the path forward that don't have guidance that don't have something to aim at you've given them a blueprint for how to turn your life around

And you've given 19-year-old Russ, all the 19-year-old Russes out there, a blueprint for how to turn your life around. And you've given them evidence that it's possible. And people in that situation, as you were,

they don't always believe it's possible. You described the hopelessness and the helplessness of that situation. That's exactly what you've done. And also, you've raised a shit ton of money. Now, your goal was to raise a million... which is a ridiculous amount of money um so before we sat down i made a few phone calls you know i'm an investor in a few companies and i'm on the board of a few companies so i called julian hern at huel and i said listen

Wouldn't it be great if Huell could get behind this and make sure he hit that target now? There you go. Wow. they've donated um the remainder of the cash to you for your fundraising so you've hit the million pounds and we wanted to say a huge well done and congratulations on behalf of all of us here Thank you. Is Emily here? There she is, coming in. Thank you so much, man. No, man, thank you.

Absolutely incredible. And I know the team at Perfect Ted here, could you chuck me this daiquiri thing on here? This one, yeah. Again, I'm an investor in this company and we have a partnership together. They've also produced the hardest energy, which is a limited edition, strawberry daiquiri flavoured Perfect Ted, which will be on sale. And I think the proceeds, much of the proceeds of this will be donated towards this campaign as well.

It begs the question, why strawberry daiquiri? For some people that don't know, why strawberry daiquiri? I don't even know. It just ended up becoming a thing that I was saying throughout the mission. I'd be like, get me to a Tunisian beach for a strawberry daiquiri. It was in my head and then... We finally got it done, eh?

And they're here as well. So we'll include the link to buy this in the description below. So anyone that wants to celebrate your incredible achievement with us will be able to do so. We do have a last tradition on this podcast. It's not usually how they end, but where the last guest leaves a question for the next guest, not knowing who they're going to be leaving.

Let's hope it's a good one. There's two questions. Interestingly, I'm going to ask you both questions because they're both applicable. Okay. So first question is, if there was a movie about your life, which I'm sure there will be, who would you want to play you? Ron Weasley. Okay. And question number two, what place do you feel the most comfortable in and why? One of the things that I just love doing the most is mid run.

going to tesco getting some snacks and just sitting outside tesco on the pavement eating my snacks it's my favorite place ever love doing that Very relatable as always, Russ. Thank you so much, honestly. Everything I said then about the inspiration you've given me is completely true. And I know that there's so many people out there that feel the same way. And you've made me want to aim higher in some of the things that I do in my life.

bigger challenges and really push myself to the limits because as you've proven in your life all of the good things are on the other side of some form of discomfort the purpose the meaning the connection as you've proven and like so many people at the moment in society are suffering

with their mental health, with a lack of sort of a sense of meaninglessness. And you're this like the shining example for all of us, this North Star of this first step we have to take to go on that incredible journey. So thank you so much, Russ. Mate, thanks for everything you've done, mate. Honestly, I can't thank you enough. You made it happen as well, so amazing.

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