- Simplify flatten_vault API to return usize instead of MigrationResult struct - Add KEEP_FOLDERS: attachments/ and _themes/ alongside type/, config/, theme/ - Use HashSet for collision tracking in unique_filename - Update wikilinks from path-based [[folder/slug]] to title-based [[slug]] - Clean up empty directories after flattening - Flatten demo-vault-v2: move all notes from type-based subfolders to root - Update smoke tests for flat vault structure - Remove migrate_to_flat_vault from repair_vault (one-time migration only) Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
28 lines
2.2 KiB
Markdown
28 lines
2.2 KiB
Markdown
---
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aliases: ["Running"]
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Is A: Topic
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---
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# Running
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Running covers casual road running, trail running, and the role of running as cross-training for cycling. It is not a primary sport but a complementary one — used for variety, mental clarity, and maintaining aerobic fitness when the bike is not an option.
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## Why this matters
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Running is the most accessible form of exercise when traveling, during bad weather, or when a cycling session is not practical. It provides a different kind of physical stimulus that complements cycling well, especially for general aerobic capacity and mental resilience. The meditative quality of a solo run — no power meter, no route planning, just movement — has a restorative effect that is distinct from structured cycling training. The ideas in [[note-born-to-run]] about human endurance capacity are inspiring, and the parallels between running and knowledge work (steady pace, long effort, the importance of not starting too fast) connect to themes in [[the-two-types-of-hard]].
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## Key resources
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- [[note-born-to-run]] — Christopher McDougall's exploration of human endurance and the joy of running
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- [[topic-cycling-training]] — the primary sport that running complements
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- [[recovery-week-in-training]] — the principle of periodic rest that applies across all endurance disciplines
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- [[topic-sleep-recovery]] — the recovery side that makes training adaptations possible
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- Strava and basic GPS watch — the minimal tooling needed for casual running
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## Notes
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- Running is the best cross-training for cycling because it maintains aerobic fitness while using different muscle groups, reducing overuse injury risk
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- Trail running is more engaging than road running and easier on the joints — the varied terrain demands attention that makes the time pass faster
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- The risk of running too much as a cyclist is that it can create fatigue that interferes with key cycling sessions — keeping it to 1-2 easy runs per week avoids this
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- Running is uniquely good for thinking through problems — the rhythm and lack of required attention (unlike cycling in traffic) free up mental processing in a way few other activities do
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- Starting a run is always the hardest part; the mood boost that comes by kilometer two is remarkably reliable
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