

Holiday 2025 Edition
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The Fresh Legs Runner
It started casually, a dare, a delayed New Year’s goal, or just a Tuesday that needed more cardio. No playlist, no pace, just out the door and around the block. Comfort mattered most. The shoes were stiff, the shins felt weird, but something clicked. He didn’t call himself a runner yet, but deep down he knew it had already started.
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The Fit-Check Runner
He joined a run club. Started to care about the fit, not just the finish. Still learning, but style became part of the ritual. The shoes mattered, but so did the jacket, the route, and how the light hit the sidewalk. Off the run, he was checking drop calendars, stacking pieces that made him feel good, and learning that feeling fast and looking sharp didn’t have to be separate.
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The Dialed-In Runner
The kilometres added up, and so did the knowledge. He wasn't posting his runs, just doing them. The gear mattered now. Better shoes, smarter watch, stronger recovery game. He could feel how small tweaks led to real progress. Off the run, he was stretching more, fitting in RunReady Assessments, even thinking about his first half. Style still mattered, but now it came with strategy.
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The All-In Runner
There’s a plan on the fridge and a bib on the table. Boston is up next. He’s done the races, earned his spot, and knows exactly what he needs, from the splits, the taper, to the gear that works. Long runs have purpose, and so do rest days. Off the run, he’s honed in on the details: his RunReady Plan, nutrition, race strategy. It’s go time.
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The Classic Runner
He stuck around Boston after the race to take it all in. Something about the run culture, and the city itself, stayed with him. Runs got simpler: easy pace, old college crewneck, navy split shorts, worn-in Saucony Triumphs or a faded Tracksmith tee. No app needed, he knew the loops by heart. Off the run, he was reading more, talking gear less, blending in like he’d been local his whole life.

The On-My-Time Runner
After the race in Boston came the reset, and then came Paris. Runs slowed down, mornings stretched, coffee came first, maybe a loop after. The pace chilled out but the taste didn’t. His gear shifted—washed-out blacks, a lived-in feel, mostly Satisfy. He was still running, but also listening, watching, blending in. It wasn’t about medals anymore, just moving how he wanted, wearing what felt right, living like someone with nowhere else to be.
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The Trailhead Runner
Eventually, the mountains called. Back in Vancouver, he traded pavement for mud and city loops for climbs. His gear got tougher, his stride looser. Grouse, Cypress, then deeper in. Weekends chasing new trails, shoes drying by the door, moving at a pace measured more by views than minutes. He wasn’t escaping the city so much as remembering what it felt like to breathe in fresh Pacific Northwest air.










































