Intentar ORO - Gratis
Twenty-One Years Ago, He Incarcerated Was for Life. Last Year, He Ran the NYC Marathon a Radically Changed Man.
Runner's World US
|Summer 2024
Rahsaan Thomas rounded a corner.
Gravel underfoot gave way to pavement, then dirt. Another left turn, and then another. In the distance, beyond the 30-foot wall and barbed wire separating him from the world outside, he could see the 2,500-foot peak of Mount Tamalpais. He completed the 400-meter loop another 11 times for an easy three miles.
Rahsaan wasn't the only runner circling the Yard that evening in the fall of 2017. Some 30 people had joined San Quentin State Prison's 1,000 Mile Club by the time Rahsaan arrived at the prison four years prior, and the group had only grown since. Starting in January each year, the club held weekly workouts and monthly races in the Yard, culminating with the San Quentin Marathon-105 laps-in November. The 2017 running would be Rahsaan's first go at the 26.2 distance.
For Rahsaan and the other San Quentin runners, Mount Tam, as it's known, had become a beacon of hope. It's the site of the legendary Dipsea, a 7.4-mile technical trail from Mill Valley to Stinson Beach. After the 1,000 Mile Club was founded in 2005, it became tradition for club members who got released to run that trail; their stories soon became lore among the runners still inside. "I've been hearing about the Dipsea for the longest," Rahsaan says.
Given his sentence, he never expected to run it. Rahsaan was serving 55 years to life for second-degree murder. Life outside, let alone running over Mount Tam all the way to the Pacific, felt like a million miles away. But Rahsaan loved to run-it gave him a sense of freedom within the prison walls, and more than that, it connected him to the community of the 1,000 Mile Club. So if the volunteer coaches and other runners wanted to talk about the Dipsea, he was happy to listen.
Esta historia es de la edición Summer 2024 de Runner's World US.
Suscríbete a Magzter GOLD para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9000 revistas y periódicos.
¿Ya eres suscriptor? Iniciar sesión
MÁS HISTORIAS DE Runner's World US
Runner's World US
THE RUNNER'S WORLD GUIDE TO STRENGTH TRAINING
At 17, Winnie Yu was a high school track-and-field runner with a bright future.
6 mins
Winter 2025
Runner's World US
THE MARATHON THAT NEARLY WRECKED ME: A LOVE LETTER
DEAR NEW YORK CITY
4 mins
Winter 2025
Runner's World US
THE SHOES THAT SILENCED MY INNER CRITIC
AROUND THIS TIME last year, I arrived at the Runner’s World office and was greeted by a bright orange shoebox sitting on my desk. I had signed up the day before to become a shoe tester, and the box heralded my first assignment. Excited, I rushed to open it, finding a pair of Nike Zoom Fly 6s inside—in bright pink.
4 mins
Winter 2025
Runner's World US
7 LESSONS I LEARNED FROM RUNNING 35 MARATHONS
IN THE 20-PLUS years I’ve been running marathons, I’ve made just about every mistake possible.
3 mins
Winter 2025
Runner's World US
INTO THE VOID
Wildly fluctuating temperatures, punishing grades, brushes with mountain lions—the Grand Canyon’s Rim to Rim to Rim endurance run is not for the faint of heart.
13 mins
Winter 2025
Runner's World US
THE BEST NEW SHOES
The first wave of super shoes ushered in a lightweight and bouncy new foam. Since then, new advances in tech and compounds have made shoes even lighter, softer, and faster— and not just racers. Super shoe tech is trickling down to daily training shoes.
13 mins
Winter 2025
Runner's World US
Jeannie Rice Knows Something the Rest of Us Don't
It's not about talent. It's not about training. The 77-year-old, record-smashing marathoner has tapped into an ineffable force that defies her age— and she'll never stop chasing it.
17 mins
Winter 2025
Runner's World US
STARTING OVERTHIS TIME SOBER
I'VE RUN ALL over New York City, but lacing up my Hokas in the community room of a rehab center in Midtown Manhattan was definitely a first.
5 mins
Winter 2025
Runner's World US
AM I WEIRD OR WAS THIS FUN?
AS I SAT in the passenger seat of my friend Tom’s blue Mazda—with a teal bandana tied tightly around my face—I thought: I hope no one calls the police. After all, I could have been mistaken for an abductee.
4 mins
Winter 2025
Runner's World US
BEHIND BARS, RUNNING WAS FREEDOM
Alsu Kurmasheva was jailed in a Russian prison on false charges. Separated from her family with no end in sight, she turned to the one thing that kept her hope alive.
27 mins
Summer 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

