My first cross country race was a leap into the unknown. I am a 1500-meter runner. My race lasts about three minutes and forty-five seconds. So when I lined up for an 8K cross-country race — almost five miles — I was completely out of my element. This is the story of what happened when a miler tried to survive the longest race of his life.
Why an 8K?
Cross-country season is a different beast for mid-distance guys like me. The coaching staff wants us to build an aerobic base, and cross-country races are the best way to do that. But going from a 1500 to an 8K is like asking a sprinter to run a mile. The distance is not just longer — it requires a completely different race strategy, pacing approach, and mental framework. I had to rewire everything I know about racing.
The Start
The first mile felt deceptively easy. That is the trap of longer races — your body has not caught up to the effort yet. I settled in behind a group that looked like they knew what they were doing and tried to stay relaxed. In a 1500, I am already in oxygen debt by 400 meters. Here, I was still breathing through my nose at the mile mark. It was a strange feeling.
The Middle Miles
Miles two through four were where I learned what cross-country is really about. The terrain changes — hills, turns, soft ground — take energy that you do not account for on a flat track. My legs started to feel heavy in places I have never felt fatigue before. The sustained effort was different from the sharp, explosive pain of a fast 1500. This was a slow burn that just kept building.
The Final Push
The last mile was where my track speed actually helped. I found another gear that the pure distance guys did not have. I started picking people off one by one, which gave me the motivation to push through the fatigue. Crossing the finish line was a different kind of satisfaction than a track race. It was not about the time — it was about surviving something I was not built for and finding out I could handle more than I thought.
What I Took Away
Racing the 8K gave me a new appreciation for distance runners and a better understanding of my own aerobic fitness. It also showed me that stepping outside your comfort zone — whether in racing, training, or life — is where the real growth happens. As a D1 athlete and content creator, I believe in pushing boundaries, and this race was exactly that. Check out the full race vlog below to see the entire experience from warm-up to finish line.
Watch the Full Video
Related Articles
If you enjoyed this article, check out these related posts:
→ The Race That Reminded Me Who I Am
→ What It Is Like to Race at the Biggest Track Meet in the World
→ I Trained Like Jakob Ingebrigtsen for 24 Hours
Read about my other cross country experience in trying cross country as a track athlete.
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