Tuesday, September 23, 2025

BASS PRO MIDWEEK MOTIVATION - Train Like a Centenarian


Hello runner friends!
Welcome back to the Bass Pro Fitness Series
MIDWEEK M😊TIVATI😊N blog!


Now let’s get started by talking about the “long run.” I'm not talking about your weekly Bass Pro training run that includes a lot of miles which means it lasts for a long time though. I’m talking about making smart choices now so you can continue crossing finish lines for decades to come, so you can train with longevity in mind. This is certainly my goal and I hope it’s yours too.
 
That being said, I will tell you that I’ve learned a lot about running over the three decades that I’ve been doing it. And let’s just say that if I’d have known then (when I first started) what I know now, I would have trained a whole lot differently—which would have saved me from experiencing a litany of injuries and made me a better runner. But you know what they say about hindsight right? 

And while I have more than 30 years of hindsight to look back on and learn from, 103-year-old Mike Fremont from Cincinnati has more than double that! Which is the very reason I wanted to share the 5 morning habits (that actually don’t involve any supplements) Mike shared with VegOut Magazine that he says “keep him healthier than most 40-year-olds.” So healthy, in fact that he even took part in the Flying Pig weekend festivities, becoming the oldest participant in the event's 27-year history. 
 
So without further ado, check out parts of the article that will help you in the “long run” to run long and to run for a long time:

"Strip away the headlines and what’s left is a spreadsheet of tiny inputs done on loop. That’s the part many of us drop when life gets loud. Below are five morning habits threaded through the latest reports and earlier profiles of Fremont—habits that travel well, scale with age, and don’t require perfect genetics or a wide-open calendar.

Where relevant, I’ve included a simple “borrow it by Monday” nudge so this doesn’t just stay inspiring—it becomes useful.

1) Step outside within 30 minutes of waking


Fremont’s mornings start outdoors. Some days it’s an easy jog at conversational pace — other days it’s a brisk walk or stair loops before breakfast. The common denominator is light and light movement: a few minutes of natural morning sun and a gentle rise in heart rate to cue the day’s rhythm.

That one-two combo lifts mood, anchors circadian timing, and builds momentum before screens start negotiating for attention. The recent Cincinnati pieces emphasize his bias for parks and fresh air over gadgets — when “outside first” becomes the default, the rest of the day has to work around a non-negotiable.

Borrow it by Monday: stage shoes and a light layer by the door the night before; collect 10–15 minutes of daylight before checking your phone. If running isn’t on the menu, walk loops, climb a few flights, or sweep your block.

The aim is rhythm, not records.

2) Lead with a fiber-first, plant-forward breakfast


Across profiles, Fremont’s eating pattern is simple and minimally processed—especially in the morning. Think whole grains, fruit, greens, and legumes. Trim the sugary, ultra-processed items that make energy seesaw by 10 a.m. It isn’t flashy, but it’s potent. People love to debate “best” breakfasts; what outlives trends is a small set of ingredients you can prep half-asleep and repeat for years.

Recent lifestyle coverage about him underscores the plant-forward core of his routine, built long before it was fashionable.

Borrow it by Monday: build around one whole grain (oats or whole-grain toast), one legume or nut/seed (tofu scramble, leftover lentils, or nut butter), and one green (a quick handful of sautéed spinach). If you crave variety, rotate toppings; don’t reinvent the base.

3) Hydrate plainly and early

It’s tempting to reach for neon sports drinks or complicated “morning tonics.” Fremont’s routine tilts the other way: plain water, sipped early, often paired with that first movement block outdoors.

The logic is deliberately boring—overnight dehydration impersonates fatigue, crankiness, and brain fog, and the fix is to refill before you caffeinate.

Reporters who’ve followed him keep coming back to his preference for simple inputs and clean environments—gardens, parks, river time—over complicated biohacks.

Borrow it by Monday:
put a glass by the sink at night and drink 300–500 ml on waking, then coffee.

If you’re out longer than ~45 minutes, carry a small bottle; otherwise, another glass post-session covers most people.

4) Move like you plan to do this for decades

What jumps off the page in both the fresh pieces and older local segments isn’t heroism—it’s repeatability.

At 99, Fremont was still logging park miles three mornings a week, often with a small crew — in 2025 at age 103, he continued to appear at community running events.

The point isn’t mileage — it’s cadence.

Frequent, modest strain lets connective tissue adapt; predictable sessions remove decision fatigue; training with friends adds social glue. Daily activity is the constant; intensity and modality flex with the season.

Borrow it by Monday: choose three fixed morning slots (say, Mon/Wed/Fri 7:00–7:40). Commit to easy miles or a brisk walk, conversation pace only.

On off-days, spend 10 minutes on hips-ankles-thoracic mobility while the kettle heats.

5) Guard last night’s sleep to protect this morning’s run

A thread that runs through the coverage is the discipline many people half his age neglect: consistent, generous sleep.

Fremont treats bedtime like part of training—same window most nights—so the morning session isn’t bargaining with exhaustion. That doesn’t require perfection; it requires structure.

When sleep becomes routine instead of a nightly negotiation, your morning effort stops feeling like a fight and starts feeling like the natural next step.

The “boring backbone” of longevity looks exactly like this.

Borrow it by Monday: set a lights-out alarm 30–45 minutes earlier, keep the bedroom cool and dark, and pair wake-up with your step-outside ritual so your brain relearns the loop: night ends, light begins, body moves.

The wider impact? The payoff is compounding: fewer injuries, stabler mood, and better decision quality in the hours when work actually matters."


And there you have it friends. Each of these tips in themselves may not seem like big or important things. But when you combine them together over the “long run” you can see how they add up. So, take these tips to heart and add them to your training so you can keep running for years and even decades. Age will catch us all, it will even slow us down, but it doesn’t have to stop us completely. Mike is proof of that. 

Speaking of age and running... you're never too old to run or walk one of the events the Bass Pro Fitness Series has to offer. Believe it or not, William Cooksey completed a half marathon at the age of 102! And Mathea Allensmith completed a half marathon at the age of 94! Pretty inspiring right? So get out there and get training. Marathon Weekend will be here soon and you won't want to miss it! Happy Running!



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