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The Rich Roll Podcast

The Spiritual Road to Athletic Supremacy

The Rich Roll Podcast

Rich Roll

Education, Society & Culture, Self-improvement, Health & Fitness

4.713.3K Ratings

🗓️ 31 March 2014

⏱️ 123 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

I had to put my dog down the other day. I want to tell you about it. It might seem unrelated to introducing today's podcast guest, but it's not. So bear with me. Bodhi was a great dog. Indeed, a prince. But over the last several months, cancer took the upper hand. Tumors filled his left lung until it shut down, diseased cells metastasizing at a horrible pace until the poor guy could barely lift his head, let alone stand up. Stalwart, Bodhi hid his pain well. But it was there; unmistakable and unrelenting. I felt helpless.  It’s the humane thing to do. You did the right thing. The words of the kind veterinarian who handled the Kevorkian end of this pyrrhic victory to cease my dog's suffering. I gently cradled his head and locked my eyes with his as the needle sank deep beneath his fur. What followed were my tears as the fragile life force dwindled from his limp body until his beautiful soul had vanished altogether. All the while, my only thought: this doesn't feel like the right thing. In fact, it all feels terribly, horribly wrong. Bodhi is gone. It happens. The heartache that accompanies the short lifespan of man's best friend is the very nature of this relationship. I signed up for it and I accept it. In truth, our golden retriever had a great 12 years with our family – a time we will always cherish and for which I am forever grateful. But that doesn’t mean it doesn't hurt. In truth, it sucks. Bodhi is short for Bodhisattva – the ancient Sanskrit word for enlightened being. One who is motivated by great compassion. A more apt name for this dog does not, could not, exist. I guess the point is, as incredibly trite as this may sound – and it is nothing if not trite – life is short. Life is precious. Life is fleeting. And if one lives life motivated by fear and locked into habits that lead to regression, safety and misery, the precipitous end to that life will be nothing if not a lament to regret and remorse –for the authentic life of the higher self left unlived. We live in our flawed memories of the past. And are experts at projecting outcomes and fantasies onto a future that simply does not (and unlikely will ever) exist. What we rarely do is live in the now. Present in the moment. Experiencing gratitude for the immediacy of what is happening right in front of our very eyes on a second-to-second basis. Why is this so hard for us humans? The answer to this question brings me to today's guest. Timothy Olson. A man who understands and appreciates what it means to fully embrace the present. To live his life in the throes of gratitude. Yes, he runs. Faster, further and wider than most anyone else on Earth. But it's this aforementioned spiritual perspective and journey that defines what this guy — at his core — is truly all about. For the uninitiated, Timothy is an insanely accomplished world reknown ultrarunner. Aside from Kílian Jornet (who we can almost write off as otherworldly), you could make the argument that Timothy is one of the greatest — if not the greatest — ultrarunners on the planet right now. After pulling himself out of a drug-fueled descent into the dark abyss — a journey that left him lost in life, depressed, desperate, incarcerated and on probation — Timothy found not just solace but an entirely new life through running. A path that unfolded a fundamental personal spirituality emanating from hours alone exploring nature on two feet. A journey that led to discovering the transformative power of gratitude. To touching and unlocking a deeper, more meaningful part of himself. And to eclipsing the void beyond the limits of his preconceived physical, mental and emotional capabilities. Enjoy! Rich

Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome to the Rich Roll Podcast episode 78 with Timothy Olson.

0:17.7

The Rich Roll Podcast.

0:20.8

Hey everybody, welcome to the show.

0:22.6

Before I get into it, if you hear like beeping in the background or trucks driving around,

0:28.6

we're doing construction across the street from my little office where I'm recording

0:34.4

this introduction and it would appear that they're building a mall, right?

0:41.1

Like as if we need another mall in Southern California.

0:46.2

So we're just going to have to accept it.

0:48.1

There's nothing I can do about it.

0:49.5

Hopefully it doesn't bug you too much, but it's about surrendering to what is being in

0:55.9

acceptance.

0:57.9

And it's relevant to today's guest to today's show, which we're going to get into in a minute.

1:04.8

But before we do, just a quick thanks for all the great comments and feedback on the good

1:09.7

Dr. Clapper episode last week.

1:12.5

That guy is like a national treasure.

1:16.4

It was such a pleasure to sit down with him and I'm really glad you guys enjoyed our

1:21.0

conversation.

1:22.0

I'm stoked about that.

1:23.0

So all right.

1:24.0

What to say?

1:25.0

What to do?

1:26.3

What do we do here?

...

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