“You can't connect the dots looking forward. You can only connect them looking backward”, said Steve Jobs in his famous Stanford Commencement Speech.
Remember: Every great story starts with a character who moves.
Until March 2023, I was a proud member of the "I'll start exercising tomorrow" club.
I was that person who'd look at runners and think, "That's not for me." The kind who'd promise to start exercising... tomorrow. Always tomorrow.
I barely walked a kilometer a day. The only running I did was running late to meetings.
I had mastered the art of finding excuses. Too busy. Too tired. Too hot. Chennai's weather isn't meant for running. You know the drill.
Then life handed me a simple invitation: "Couch to 5K (Cto5k) with Chennai Runners." The name was honest - it really was for people who went straight from their couch to running 5K.
Every morning at 5 AM I will wake up and gather at 5.30 AM with a bunch of amateur runners in Chennai's infamous humidity. Let that sink in. I used to think 8 AM meetings were torture.
The first few weeks were... interesting. I'd set three alarms. Wake up to all of them. Have an intense negotiation with myself. Sometimes I'd win and show up. Sometimes my bed would win.
But here's the thing about showing up - it's addictive.
Day after day, kilometer after kilometer, something started changing. Not just in my running, but in my head.
Every Revolution Starts with a Single Step
Let me take you back to a Wednesday morning in March. I'm standing in my bedroom, attempting to button a shirt that used to fit perfectly. My breath is shallow. My energy levels are at rock bottom. And my mind, usually sharp and ready for intellectual combat, feels foggy.
This was my turning point. Not because of the shirt (though that helped), but because I finally understood something fundamental about human nature: we are not designed for the lives we've built.
Consider this: For roughly 300,000 years, Homo sapiens were persistent hunters. Our ancestors didn't have specialized running gear or Strava accounts. They had something more powerful – bodies evolved for sustained movement. The ability to run for long distances wasn't a hobby; it was survival.
Yet here we are, in the 21st century, spending most of our days sitting in chairs, staring at screens, moving less in a week than our ancestors moved in a day. The irony? We've optimized ourselves out of our natural state.
Commitment, Friendship & Growth - unlikely bedfellows
Now, if someone had told me then that Cto5K would fundamentally change how I view commitment, friendship, and personal growth, I would have laughed.
But that's the thing about life-changing moments – they rarely announce themselves.
Picture this: It's 4:45 AM. The city is sleeping. Seventy amateur runners have gathered, preparing to run 5 kilometers. The elite runners are finishing their warm-ups – poetry in motion.
And there I am, nervous, wondering what I've gotten myself into.
I finished that run at 8.21 minutes per kilometer while the experienced ones knocked off each kilometer at about 4 minutes.
The difference between 4 minutes and 8.21 minutes per kilometer is staggering. It's the difference between excellence and... well, just showing up.
But here's the beautiful paradox – just showing up was its own kind of excellence.
You see, we often think transformation requires massive, dramatic changes. But what I learned from running is that transformation happens in the quiet moments of choosing to show up.
It happens when you choose the 5 AM alarm over the midnight web series. It happens in the internal bargaining at dawn. It happens in the "just one more kilometer" conversations with yourself.
Then, 100 days after the time trial, something remarkable happened. I found myself at the Dream Runners Half Marathon start line. 10,000 runners. 4 AM. Chennai.
Think about that number. Ten thousand people choosing discomfort over sleep. Ten thousand people believing in something bigger than their individual comfort.
I finished 10 kilometers in 1 hour, 27 minutes, and 30 seconds. But the time isn't the story. The story is what happened in between those 100 days.
Here’s the real revelation - the thing that makes me think about this journey differently:
It wasn't the running that changed me. It was everything else.
It was the elite runners who volunteered to run alongside beginners, cheering them on.
It was the WhatsApp group that buzzed with "Anyone for tomorrow's run?" messages every night.
It was showing up on days when I really, really didn't want to.
It was the post-run conversations that turned strangers into friends.
Everyone talks about the physical transformation of running. But nobody tells you about the mental flip that happens.
What I learned in this journey – A note to my younger self:
Nobody tells you that the hardest running happens in your head.
Nobody mentions that one day, you'll wake up before your alarm, excited to embrace the very thing you once dreaded.
Nobody reveals that you'll start measuring life in kilometers, friendships in early mornings, and achievements in personal bests.
Your time will come when you'll face a choice between comfort and growth. Between staying in bed and stepping into the unknown. Between accepting limitations and pushing through them.
When that moment comes, remember this: The difference between who you are and who you want to become is often just one decision away. One 5 AM alarm. One step out the door. One foot in front of the other.
Stay hungry. Stay foolish. But most importantly, stay running.
Because sometimes the most profound changes in life begin with something as simple as a morning run.
And if you ever doubt this path, remember: the only way to do great work is to love what you do. If you haven't found it yet, keep running. Don't settle.
As it turns out, your heart rate isn't the only thing that becomes steady with each run. Your purpose does too.
The Productivity Paradox
Here's the counter-intuitive truth I wish I could tell my younger self: the time you think you're "losing" to exercise is actually an investment that pays compound returns in every area of life.
Consider these numbers from popular studies:
Regular exercise increases productivity by 21%
Creative output increases by 81% during and immediately after exercise
Decision-making ability improves by 32% on days with morning exercise
These statistics illustrate the tangible benefits of exercise, but they miss something crucial: the qualitative improvements in life that can't be easily measured. The clarity that comes during a long run. The sense of capability that spreads into every other area of life. The relationships one builds through the community.
A Framework for Starting
If you're where I was a few years ago, here's a simple framework to begin:
Start Small: 10 minutes of running, five times a week
Reduce Friction: Keep your alarm in the next room, lay out your running clothes the night before next to your bed
Find Your Tribe: Join a local running group or start one
Movement is Human. Movement is Story.
In an age of endless optimization and artificial intelligence, perhaps the most revolutionary act is returning to our most basic human capability: sustained movement through space.
To my younger self, and to anyone reading this: your body isn't just legacy hardware for running your mind. It's the platform everything else runs on. Optimize it accordingly. You don't need to become an elite athlete. You just need to start moving. The tribe will find you.
And in the process, you might just find yourself.
It's time to start your movement story.
Being a fellow runner, I love and resonate so much with this essay. So well written!
There are so many beautiful sentences in here that I will keep coming back to. As my favorite author Morgan Housel says: “People don't remember books; they remember sentences. “
My favorites here are “It happens when you choose the 5 AM alarm over the midnight web series” and “Nobody tells you that the hardest running happens in your head.“ and this “As it turns out, your heart rate isn't the only thing that becomes steady with each run. Your purpose does too.“
Your article also reminded me of this quote that has stayed with me “The body benefits from movement, and the mind benefits from stillness.“
Interestingly, while searching for the author of this quote to post it here, I learnt that this quote is from Sakyong Mipham’s book Running with the Mind of Meditation whose shiny dime is Mipham’s discovery that “physical activity is essential for spiritual well-being“. How funny life is - a corporate veteran like you and a monk have arrived at the same conclusion. We are different, yet we are all the same!
As someone with ADHD, the first behavioral modification I was recommended was to exercise every day. It was hard at the start, but now I get how much 30 mins of exercise can change the course of my day for the better. It is life-changing, in every possible way!
As a writer, you share the facts to honour your journey. There is this hope that it may sit out there as a beacon to inspire one other person in a world of 8 billion. This was that kind of essay. It inspired me to lace up.
I had the privilege of reading the first draft of this essay. It had power. And pacing. Krishna has taken it up a notch since its early days - but not much more needed embellishing. Without all the spit and polish, it still inspired me to get away from the rectangle in front of me, and remind myself of the colour of the sky.
There can be no greater applause that an essay receives than that it “moved” people.