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The Rich Roll Podcast

Ultra-Athlete Samantha Gash On Suffering For Your Passion, Running Across India & Why Service Is Paramount

The Rich Roll Podcast

Rich Roll

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

4.812.9K Ratings

🗓️ 28 August 2017

⏱️ 126 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

“We are defined more by our response to something than what happens to us.” Samantha Gash Imagine running a 250 kilometer ultramarathon across the Atacama desert — one of the driest places on Earth — when your only legit running experience is a single ill-fated marathon attempt that left you humbly walking the last eight miles. That same calendar year, you race three more 250km ultramarathons to become the first female and youngest person to ever run and complete the 4 Desert Race Series Grand Slam, one of the world’s toughest and most prestigious endurance achievements imaginable. This is inspiring story of Samantha Gash – ultra-athlete extraordinaire, roll model, humanitarian, and just a really cool person. Discovering a previously unbeknownst acumen for endurance and a disposition for suffering unlocked a certain joy in Samantha, as well as a thirst for more. So the year following her 4 Deserts achievement, she conquered a 222km non-stop foot race across the Himalayas at 6,000 meters above sea level — an event that had only been completed previously by one man. That experience triggered a deep desire to leverage her running for humanitarian causes. So she got to work, running and raising money for causes she believed in. Among her accomplishments: * A 379km non-stop run across Australia’s Simpson Desert on behalf of Save the Children Australia; * A community run & fundraising event on behalf of podcast fave Turia Pitt and Kate Sanderson, victims of the Kimberley ultramarathon bushfire – a race in which Samantha also competed; * A 32-day, 1968km run across South Africa's Freedom Trail, also on behalf of Save The Children Australia; and * A 76-day, 3253 run across India from from Jaislamer, Rajasthan to Shillong, Meghalaya on behalf of World Vision Amidst the insanity of it all, she somehow managed to raise over $203,000 and counting for the aforementioned causes. Today we unpack Samantha's extraordinary, inspiring journey, blisters and all. This is a phenomenal conversation about Samantha’s transformation from someone with no athletic background into the inspiring ultra-athlete humanitarian she is today. From all the hardships and seemingly insurmountable setbacks and obstacles to the rare air she occupies today, it's a story about self-belief, purpose, perseverance and the call to service. But the core theme of today's conversation is the close kinship that exists between passion and suffering. And the magic that transpires when you have the willingness to entertain the impossible, step outside your comfort zone and courageously leap through fear into the abyss. Sam is an absolute delight. It was a privilege to spend a few hours with her and boyfriend Mark Wales, a badass Australian Special Ops Commander she met when they were both contestants on Australian Survivor. You're gonna love this one. Promise. Peace + Plants, Rich Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Do you know the Latin root of passion is to suffer?

0:05.6

And so often people go, I'm so passionate, I'm so passionate and I'm like, oh, you willing

0:09.7

to suffer the most in your life for that thing that you're talking that you're passionate

0:12.9

about?

0:13.9

I mean, it doesn't need to be the thing that you do for your full-time job.

0:16.2

What we're passionate about can be fulfilled the most through the thing that we do outside

0:19.9

of work because we have the time and space and maybe financial freedom from our full-time

0:24.0

job.

0:25.0

But I think when you are willing to suffer for something and you connect it for something

0:29.3

that's for me outside of myself to a bid, that suffering doesn't seem so great anymore.

0:34.7

I really do gain great perspective of it.

0:37.5

I also choose when to suffer.

0:39.6

Like, I don't suffer.

0:40.8

Like, it's why I don't always race anymore because I know what it's like and how hard

0:45.8

it is and I want to make my footsteps count.

0:48.8

And on the idea that maybe we don't have that many footsteps, what is the best use of

0:53.8

my footsteps?

0:54.8

That's Samantha Gash.

0:57.1

This week on The Retroll Podcast.

1:04.1

The Rich Roll Podcast.

1:13.0

Hey everybody, how you guys doing?

1:14.0

What's happening?

...

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