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the morning shakeout podcast

Episode 16 | Brandon Hudgins

the morning shakeout podcast

the morning shakeout podcast

Coaching, Marathons, Sports, Olympics, Running, Ultrarunning

4.81.1K Ratings

🗓️ 29 May 2018

⏱️ 59 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

"I don't wanna just be someone who qualified for the Olympic Trials once and made a semifinal or whatever. I want to be someone who's name is in contention for teams. And that's my goal these last three years and I'm going to be doing everything I can to get there. But I want to be known as someone who basically made running cool again."Stoked to welcome sub-4:00 miler Brandon Hudgins to the podcast! Not only is Brandon fast—he's also an Olympic Trials qualifier in the 1,500m—but he's got one of the most inspiring, and untold, stories in professional running today, and I'm excited to share it with all of you.While competing collegiately at Winthrop in 2008, Hudgins was diagnosed with Vasculitis, specifically granulomatosis with polyangiitis, a rare autoimmune disease that attacks blood vessels in various organs throughout the body, causing debilitating inflammation that requires treatment with chemotherapy and high doses of corticosteroids. Currently in remission—he's had three serious relapses in the past 10 years, the last one in 2016—the now 31-year-old Hudgins, who still receives immunotherapy treatments every six months, is rebuilding momentum with the next Olympic Trials fast approaching two years from now. "I don't know how long my legs are going to last or what my health situation is going to be so I don't want to say I'm making Plan Bs because I hate making Plan Bs," Hudgins told me. "That's just not the type of person I am and it drives people in my family, and my girlfriend, absolutely bonkers—but [I've been] setting things up outside of running, and for my future, getting involved with the [Vasculitis] foundation more and all of that so if this running thing doesn't work out I'm not completely left naked standing in the street with a pair of running shorts on with no real skills."In this episode we dive into Hudgins' story and how he got into running, learn what vasculitis is and how he’s adapted to living with it, speculate on what he thinks he could have run if he weren't dealing with the disease, talk about how he's worked through periods of anxiety and depression related to his illness, discuss who is exciting him in running today (hint: she was a previous guest on this podcast) and what's upsetting him about the sport, and much, much more.This episode of the morning shakeout podcast was edited by John Isaac at BaresRecords.com.Complete show notes here: https://www.themorningshakeout.com/podcast-episode-16-with-brandon-hudgins/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

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0:00.0

Brandon Hudgens, welcome to the Morning Shakeout Podcast.

0:04.0

Thanks for having me.

0:06.0

I'm excited to have you on the show as your story is a really intriguing and somewhat unusual one.

0:12.0

You're a sub-formant at Myler, you've qualified for the Olympic trials, but that's only a very small part of who you are and what makes you so unique.

0:21.2

And we're going to dig pretty deep here over the course of the next hour or so, but in your own words, who is Brendan Hudgens?

0:31.0

Well, that's an interesting question.

0:34.0

For probably the first 27 years of my life, I identified as Brandon Hudgens runner.

0:45.6

And even though I had lost that identity at times,

0:51.4

I have always identified kind of as that. Now I kind of

0:58.6

of identify as a life liver and a dream chaser and somebody that's looking to

1:06.6

inspire people with what he's doing.

1:09.3

So it's a much bigger thing than just running.

1:15.6

I obviously do a lot of running,

1:18.6

and it's something that is the tool that I use,

1:21.3

but as I get older now especially at 31 years old I identify

1:27.6

less and less by just the runner the runner part of me and that's honestly been to the benefit of my help so mentally so because I I haven't I haven't had that at times so always fall back and identify with it over the last couple of years.

1:44.9

So I'm really honored to just be able to inspire people with what I'm doing.

1:53.0

And running is really a vehicle for doing that, but you just touched on your health a second ago and a big part of your story is that you suffer from vasculitis which I honestly

2:06.8

don't know a lot about and I'm sure many of my listeners don't know a lot about so let's dig into that just a little bit and first of all just

2:16.8

try to understand what is vasolitis for those of us who don't really know.

2:21.6

Well, hey, consider yourself lucky if you don't if you don't know about it and a lot of people don't know about it.

2:26.5

I sure as heck didn't know about it or had never heard of it until I was diagnosed with it just over 10 years ago.

...

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