There are moments in a runner's life when the sport stops being just a sport. When the early mornings, the aching legs, and the quiet miles add up to something you can't quite put into words — but you feel it completely. For me, running didn't just change my routine. It changed who I am.
The discipline running demands is relentless and honest. It doesn't care about your excuses or your calendar. It asks the same thing of you every single day: show up, do the work, move forward. That contract — simple, unbreakable — spilled over into every other corner of my life. And somewhere along the way, I started believing something that once seemed absurd: that ordinary people can do extraordinary things.
The Community That Changed Everything
Running gave me something I hadn't expected: other people. The community of runners is unlike anything I'd encountered before — generous with their knowledge, honest about their struggles, and genuinely invested in each other's progress. Whether it's a training partner on a long weekend run or a stranger cheering at kilometre 38 of a marathon, this sport has a way of connecting people around a shared understanding of effort and perseverance.
That community has been part of my foundation. It reminded me, again and again, that the pursuit of something hard is always better when it's done alongside others.
Testing Belief at the Absolute Edge
The World Marathon Challenge — seven marathons, seven continents, seven days — is where I intend to take that belief and push it as far as it will go. This is the edge. Not a metaphor for it. Every race happens in a different corner of the planet, with minimal recovery, maximum logistical chaos, and the kind of physical and mental accumulation that doesn't show up in any training plan.
Running is my proof that ordinary people can do extraordinary things. The 777 is where I find out just how far that proof holds.
— Mikesego
I won't pretend I know exactly what those seven days will feel like by the time I reach the final finish line. But I know why I'm going. The discipline, the community, the belief — all of it has been building toward a moment like this.
Beyond the Finish Line: Running for the Next Generation
The 777 is my challenge, but it isn't only about me. There are kids out there who haven't yet discovered what their own legs can do. Kids who haven't had the chance to stand at a start line and feel the particular courage it takes to commit to something hard.
I want this journey to reach them. If seeing an ordinary person run seven marathons across seven continents plants even a small seed — a sense that movement can be empowering, that sport can be transformative, that their own bodies are capable of more than they've been told — then every hard kilometre will have been worth it.
- Discipline: the daily practice of showing up, regardless of conditions or mood.
- Community: the people who make hard things feel possible and shared.
- Proof: the lived evidence that ordinary effort, sustained over time, produces extraordinary outcomes.
- Purpose: carrying the mission beyond personal achievement and into the lives of young people.
Running is my chance to put belief to work — for myself, and for kids who haven't yet discovered what their own legs can do.
— Mikesego
The Journey Starts Here
Seven continents. Seven marathons. Seven days. The numbers are clean and almost deceptively simple. What they represent is anything but. This is a test I've been preparing for across every mile I've ever run — every early morning, every hard finish, every moment I chose to keep going when stopping would have been easier.
I'm ready to find out what belief looks like at the absolute edge. And I'm running for every kid who deserves the chance to find out the same thing about themselves.