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the morning shakeout podcast

Episode 144 | Craig Curley

the morning shakeout podcast

the morning shakeout podcast

Coaching, Marathons, Sports, Olympics, Running, Ultrarunning

4.81.1K Ratings

🗓️ 19 January 2021

⏱️ 94 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

“I’m responsible for my life and what I want to do in this world. And whatever silly thing that I am good at, I’m going to pursue it and not look back. I believe I could be super fast and I don't want to waste those gifts. And that was kind of my moment of, ‘I'm gonna do this running thing.’ Because in the beginning it was really easy to be like, ‘I quit running, I don’t need to run competitively, I don't need to do any of that.’ But when that happened to me, that event, it changed me in the sense that there's lot of people who have different gifts and they don’t use [them]. And I wanted to make sure that I used my gifts because I think if we all use our gifts we could do something really special, not for ourselves, but for our family, and, if we’re really good, we can do something for our community, wherever we live.”This week's episode is one of my favorite conversations that I’ve ever had for the podcast and I am super excited to share it with all of you. Craig Curley was one of most up and coming distance runners in the U.S., from about 2010-2016, clocking a 63-minute half marathon, 2:15 marathon, and some top-10 finishes at national championship races. He hasn’t raced a lot in recent years but two weekends ago he finished third at the Bandera 100K, his first time competing at that distance.Craig, who is 32 years old, is one of the most, humble, hard working, and down to earth people that I’ve ever spoken to and it really comes out in this episode. We caught up a few days before Bandera and hit on a lot of different topics, from the connection Craig feels to the trails and mountains, to his life growing up on a Navajo reservation in Arizona, and how he balances living in the modern world without getting too far away from his Navajo roots. We also discussed his relationship to running and how it’s evolved over the years, not wasting his gifts and talents, serving as a role model for other Native Americans, and a lot more.This episode is brought to you by:— Tracksmith: As we start 2021, Tracksmith continues their tradition of encouraging No Days Off — their annual call for patience, persistence and participation in running. Tracksmith is shipping a free NDO Poster with every order to encourage commitment to consistency, while supplies lasts, so get your order in today at Tracksmith.com. Additionally, they are offering new customers $15 off your first purchase of $75+ when you use the code Mario15 at checkout.— Goodr: Goodr sunglasses are just the best! They don’t slip, they’re polarized to protect your eyes, and they come in a nice range of styles and fun colors. They’re the most affordable performance shades on the planet with most pairs costing only $25 to $35 bucks a piece. If you want to support the podcast and treat yourself to a pair of goodrs, head over to goodr.com/MARIO or enter the code MARIO at checkout to save 13% off your purchase. Look good, run goodr!Complete show notes: https://themorningshakeout.com/podcast-episode-144-with-craig-curley/Sign up here to get the morning shakeout email newsletter delivered to your inbox every Tuesday morning: www.themorningshakeout.com/subscribe/Support the morning shakeout on Patreon: www.patreon.com/themorningshakeout

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

I'm responsible for my life and what I want to do in this world.

0:07.0

I'm responsible for my life and what I want to do in this world.

0:12.0

Whatever silly thing that I'm good at I'm going to pursue it and not look back.

0:17.9

I believe I could be super fast and I don't want to waste those gifts.

0:23.0

That was kind of my moment of I'm going to do this running thing.

0:28.0

Because in their beginning, it was really easy to be like,

0:32.0

I quit running, like I don't need to run competitively. I don't need to do any of that

0:36.8

But when that happened to me that event it changed me in the sense that there's a lot of people that have different gifts and they don't use it.

0:44.7

I wanted to make sure I use my gifts because I think if we all use our gifts we could do something really

0:50.4

special not for ourselves but for our family. If we're really good, we could do something for our family.

0:53.0

If we're really good, we could do something for our community wherever we live. Oh, Hey, what's up morning, shakeout I'm your host Mario Freoli and my

1:25.0

guest this week is Craig Curley. Look, this is one of my favorite conversations

1:30.8

that I have ever had for the podcast and I am super excited to share it here with all of you

1:36.5

From about 2010 through 2016 Craig was one of the most up-and-coming distance runners in the US, clocking a 63-minute-half marathon,

1:45.7

215 for the marathon, and some top 10 finishes at National Championship races.

1:51.4

He hasn't raced a lot in recent years but two weekends ago he finished

1:55.1

third at the Bandera 100k his first time competing at that distance. Craig

2:01.6

who is 32 years old is one of the most humble, hard-working, and down-to-earth people

2:06.4

that I've ever spoken to, and it really comes out in this episode.

2:10.8

We caught up a few days before Bandera and hit on a lot of different topics from the connection that Craig feels to the trails and mountains, to his life growing up on a Navajo reservation in Arizona, and how he balances living in the modern world without getting too far away from his Native American roots.

2:27.0

We also discussed his relationship to running and how it's evolved over the years, not wasting his gifts and talents, serving as a role model for other Native Americans, and a lot more.

2:40.0

A big thank you to Tracksmith for their continued support of the podcast into 2021.

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