Everyday Ultra

From 1 Mile Runs to 300 Miles: Lydia Oldham on Building Courage, Grit, and Meaning Through Running

Dec 15, 2025
Lydia Oldham, a creative ultrarunner and storyteller who began her journey during lockdown, shares her transformative path from short runs to ambitious 300-mile projects. She emphasizes the power of self-created challenges over traditional races, reframing failure as a stepping stone to growth. Lydia dives into her mental strategies for tackling tough moments and the profound meaning behind her adventures. Her advice on embracing enjoyment in running encourages anyone to push their limits and redefine their potential.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Transcript
Episode notes
ANECDOTE

From 2K Sprints To Multi-Day Ultras

  • Lydia began running in lockdown with 2 km runs and sprinted every 5K, often treating each 5K like a PB attempt.
  • She progressed rapidly from 5K to a marathon, then 50K, and within three years attempted multi-day ultra projects.
ADVICE

Ask The Worst-Case Question

  • Ask, “What's the worst that can happen?” to shrink the fear of attempting big challenges.
  • Treat failure as a learning step: you can try again and still gain pride for attempting it.
INSIGHT

Self-Created Routes Change The Mental Game

  • Multi-day self-created projects offer control, crew support, and richer social interaction than standard races.
  • Races demand more solo mental resilience, so they feel mentally harder despite similar distances.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app