Clock Change Goggins Challenge, October 2025

We did it!
Thirteen runs, four miles, every four hours for 48 hours: one extra run this time because of the clock change. It was my second Goggins Challenge, and Neil’s first full one (but he’d already ran 8 out of 12 runs with me back in May so he knew what he was getting in).

Compared to the one in May, this one was colder, darker, muddier, and mentally harder. Nine of the thirteen runs were in the dark, and the temperature dropped to around 2 to 3°C overnight. The first two runs were in pouring rain.
But it was also one of the most memorable weekends, thanks to the people who joined, the community that cheered us on, and the cause we ran for.

💜 Running for Hope

Neil and I organised and completed this challenge as a self-supported fundraiser in aid of The Lily Foundation, which supports families affected by mitochondrial disease, who are facing challenges most of us will never fully understand. We ran it for #TeamHope. In honour of Hope, our friend Caroline’s daughter, and for all the children like her living with this rare condition.

Together, so far we’ve raised £957, double our combined targets. The generosity and encouragement from friends, family, and fellow runners was overwhelming (in a good way).

We even got a mention in the Swindon Link Magazine and the Seven Fields parkrun report, which felt like a lovely nod to everyone involved.

The runs

Friday
6:00pm – Run 1
10:00pm – Run 2
Saturday
2:00am – Run 3
6:00am – Run 4
The exception: 9:00am – Run 5 (@ Seven Fields parkrun + 1 mile)
2:00pm – Run 6
6:00pm – Run 7
10:00pm – Run 8
Sunday
2:00am – Run 9
2:00am – Run 10
6:00am – Run 11
10:00am – Run 12
2:00pm – Run 13

The route

Apart from the 09:00 Saturday run which was Seven Fields parkrun, we started from the Orbital shopping park and did the same 4 mile route all weekend.

🏃‍♀️ The Stats

Here’s what 48 hours of running looked like for me:

  • 13 runs completed
  • Total distance (each): 85.73 km / 53.27 miles
  • Average run duration: 50 minutes (all run lasted between 44 and 54 minutes)
  • Average heart rate: 134 bpm
  • Total calories burned: 6,082 kcal
  • Sleep: about 8h50 in total, spread across nine naps
  • Recovery: six yoga or stretch sessions between runs

💬 Most asked questions

🗓 How do you prepare for it?

I planned all the elements I could control.
Knowing the start times, I planned when to eat, when to stretch and when to rest. Then adapt.
I had to adapt for example after the 18:00 run on Saturday as my eldest child needed a lift to a friend’s house 14 miles away. I didn’t stretch nor sleep after that run, but I made a protein smoothie to have on the way to get my recovery fuel in.

My tip? Make it a routine: each run followed the same rhythm: run, stretch, refuel, wash, nap, repeat.
The only exception was the 02:00 runs (BST + GMT) where we ran back to back so no time to stretch or go home to refuel. For nutrition, a gel did the job in between runs.

🧺 Laundry

One of the most recurring questions I get is how do you cope with your running kit? Do you have to have a lot ready?
I had 4 main running outfits. I used a simple “wear one, wash and dry two” kit rotation that worked perfectly for keeping me fresh(ish) through the weekend.
The hard part is when it rains or overnight with humidity, having to dry gloves and hat. Thankfully I also have a shoe drier for my running shoes which I’d only tried twice before. That worked well and helped between the first couple of runs. I used my trail running shoes on one of the runs and again at the SevenFields parkrun.

🧘 Recovery and movement

I added short yoga/mobility/foam rolling sessions between runs. I did 6 of them as sometimes I ended up prioritising sleep instead, usually lasting 7–16 minutes. Those little moments of stretching, breathing, and resetting helped enormously.
My legs stayed tight but functional, and it made the whole challenge feel more sustainable.
I only took painkiller (paracetamol) once, on Sunday morning before the 10am run and that was mostly because of the chaffing pain.
On Sunday evening after the challenge I went for a sauna session where I alternated cold baths and sauna for just over 1h. That really helps my recovery.
I was able to move without too much tightness on Monday morning, even up and down stairs.
I also had booked a sports massage with Cheryl from EH Sports Therapy and Massage for Monday lunchtime as Kev  was on holiday. Cheryl was great! Highly recommended if you ever attempt this sort of madness!

🍲 Food and fuel

Another recurring question is “what do you eat”? and “do you have time to cook?”

Meal prep made everything easier. I kept things simple:

  • Rice and veg pots, overnight oats, or toast with peanut butter and banana for pre-run meals
  • Protein smoothies with banana, pesto pasta with chicken, or scrambled eggs on toast for recovery
  • Hydration with a lot of water and plenty of herbal tea
  • I didn’t have any coffee

It wasn’t gourmet cuisine, but it worked. 

🧠 The Hard bits

The 02:00 runs were the worst. When you’re exhausted, it’s cold and dark, and your brain is trying to convince you to stop, you really find out what mental toughness means. Having company and distraction for those early hours made all the difference.

There was a near-miss when I nodded off on the sofa before a run, without an alarm…thankfully I woke up in time!

Not a “hard bit” but a little-known fact: you can’t set alarms between 01:00 and 02:00 during the clock change from BST to GMT. They automatically shift forward by an hour…

On Saturday afternoon, Gem asked me to look after her car key…and I forgot and took it home! Her phone battery had run out so I couldn’t get in touch. Thankfully Neil drove the key back to Gem and all was fine! Phew.
That’s what happen when your brain is not working – don’t trust me 24h into a challenge!

The only real mishap was mine of the challenge… promising my work colleagues I’d wear a Wonder Woman outfit if I reached £500 in donations. I did… and soon regretted it when the shorts caused painful chafing from the 14:00 Saturday run onwards.
Every run after that hurt( a lot). Lesson learned!

📣  Special mentions

First of all I want to thank all who kindly donated to the Lily foundation on our fundraising pages. Such kindness and support was incredible!

Special-special mentions:

I wouldn’t have done this if it wasn’t for Neil! This one was his idea, at a parkrun while chatting a few months ago…then I got onto planning mode.
Neil had just run a marathon the previous weekend and absolutely smashed this challenge – I seriously don’t know how he does it. After the challenge, as I went off to relax in a sauna and do nothing, Neil went off for a driving lesson with his girlfriend.
No rest – just grit. And he has a Half Marathon to run on Sunday!

Across the weekend, 29 people joined different runs. Seeing familiar faces appear at all hours gave every run its own spark of energy.
Gabriel ran 9 runs with us, but he also ran extra and his own runs when he couldn’t join so he’s completed the challenge too. Very impressed by his stamina and doing this with a young family and newborn makes it especially hard: Well done Gabriel!

A huge shoutout to Dennis, who we didn’t know before the weekend but who joined the challenge via Strava, and completed nine runs, completely solo, in horrible weather in Swansea. Absolute superstar 🌟

Next shoutout is for Caroline, who joined 9 of our runs. She’s incredible and I have learned a lot from Caroline – she kept us going with jeffing on the last runs too. I think she deserves an Allstars Allstar award!

Now I hope I haven’t forgotten anyone (if so, message me – my brain wasn’t always functioning and I relied on photos to remember some of this)…

James did 4 laps with us before going on holidays – fab support! Then Claire J, Iain, Julie and Thoko each did 3 runs with us. That’s 12 miles!

Andy, Davina, Jade, Jess, Sean, Vicky joined us for two runs each, and Claire H, Dionne, Gem, Gill, Hannah, Lorraine, Mark, Michelle, Nish, Rachel D, Tim, Vi and Yvette all joined us for a run. Thanks so much all!

And of course, a nod to our four-legged supporters: Mabel and Milo who joined a run each, and Percy at the start of at least 5 runs, bringing smiles on our faces every single time 🐾

Special prizes

The “reporter prize” goes to Gem and Jade for their brilliant photos and updates : they made our weekend look far more glamorous than it felt! Special thanks also to Andy and Claire J, who captured great moments along the way. My own photos were pretty dreadful, so I’m very grateful for theirs.

The “spy prize”, taking photos and videos when we didn’t expect them to even be there: Francesca & Lucia and then Andy B on Saturday night.

A “hug prize” goes to Rachel and George, who gave us much-needed warmth and energy before our last run of the challenge, having both completed a half marathon earlier that day and both got PBs.
And a heartfelt thank you to Claire H, Nicky S, Andrea, Danny, Umesh, Sam, Caroline, Nigel, Dionne, Davina, Kev and others who kept messaging encouragement through the tough hours; those small check-ins meant more than you can imagine.

💡 Lessons and takeaways

We learned (or confirmed) how important planning is, not just for logistics, but for peace of mind. Having meals prepped, sleep windows mapped out, and kit ready meant one less thing to think about when exhaustion set in.

Another tip is just company – whether is for cheering on, distraction from the discomfort, or someone to be there because our brain isn’t quite working…friends are the best!

The biggest learning this time was Jeffing (run/walk intervals). Caroline used (and then lent me) her Gymboss timer and suggested we try it, and honestly, it saved the day on Sunday. It helped maintain pace while managing fatigue, and I’ll definitely experiment with it more in training.

❤️ Gratitude and recovery

The support throughout the weekend (hugs, messages, surprise visits, running buddies, and donations) meant the world to both of us.

After the final run, five of us headed to the pub for a much-deserved hot chocolate, and I followed that by an outdoor sauna recovery session. It was the perfect way to end a cold, slightly sleep-deprived but deeply satisfying 48 hours.

We’ll probably need a few more days to fully recover, but our hearts (and legs) are full.

Clock Change Goggins Challenge: completed.
For Hope, for The Lily Foundation, and for everyone who helped us through the darker miles. Big love to all💗💜

https://www.justgiving.com/page/aurelie-team-hope

https://www.justgiving.com/page/neil-houghton-4

ARC12 recce on the South West Coast Path: Godrevy to Porthtowan

I registered a while back for the Arc of Attrition running event in January 2026. It’s a running event on the South West Coast Path in Cornwall, with different distances: 100 miles, 50 miles, and 25 miles. For 2026, they’ve created a shorter version, ARC12, which is 12 miles (nearly 20km).

I had a free weekend this weekend, so I decided to get my tent in the car and booked the campsite on Thursday for Saturday and Sunday. The campsite will also be the event finish line in January.

The aim was to recce the route and prepare mentally. I was originally going to hike it, but decided instead to try running it to see if I could complete it within the 4-hour cut-off time. Whether I managed it or not, it would be a valuable recce: a chance to learn what to do, what to expect, and where the challenges are.

I did it in just under 3h40…

After a long drive to Cornwall (accidents on the roads etc) and late Friday arrival at an eco campsite in Porthtowan (called Mount Pleasant Eco Park), I pitched my tent in the dark and sat back to watch the stars. It was a peaceful start to what turned out to be a spectacular impromptu weekend.

Saturday morning, I weighed up whether to make the trek to a parkrun (very tempting – I dislike missing out on a parkrun tourism opportunity) , but public transport options were awkward and slow, so I opted out.

Instead, I caught two buses (the 315 and then the T2) aiming to get to Godrevy. Unfortunately, a lorry blocked the final approach, so the bus driver kindly dropped me… further up the road and I hiked the extra bit to the start of the recce…

As it was nearing noon, I stopped at the Jam Pot café by St Gothian Sands for tea and eggs on toast. Absolutely lovely. Worth noting: no toilets at the café, and the ones near the beach and lifeguard hut had no running water to flush or wash. Not ideal.

I hiked on to the other side of the “Red River” before reaching the start of the run.

From the National Trust car park at Godrevy, I set off on my run (or fast-hike if you think running needs to be a certain pace) along the South West Coast Path just after 12.30pm.

Well fuelled and hydrated, I set a good pace early on. The first 4km felt really great, though I had a niggle at the back of my right ankle that I had pre-taped. My cap wasn’t surviving the breeze either, but the sea air was so refreshing it made up for it. I was having fun!

The terrain was kind and the views absolutely stunning. I took frequent photo and video breaks because it was just too beautiful not to capture. I was ahead of my target pace, knowing the back half had more hills, so I pushed a little early on. I passed the 9km mark around Portreath about 25 minutes ahead of my splits.

Then came kilometre 9 to 10… an utter joke. I possibly took the wrong path down into the Carvannel Downs area, but even the correct trail would have been steep, rutted, and not remotely runnable. It’ll be very tricky in winter. Noted for ARC12: this will be a walking section.

Energy dipped badly just before Portreath when I realised I’d forgotten to eat. Took a gel at that point (10k in) & another at 15k to carry me through.

By 15km I was flagging. The temperature was still in the high 20s, and the steps were brutal – far too tall for comfortable climbing. I’m short ….My legs just don’t stretch that far! The pace dropped and I basically crawled, but I saw the payoff of all those gym sessions: split squats, step-ups, posterior chain work. I kept moving.

Now I’m back at the campsite with my birthday book (finally cracking it open!) and tomorrow I’m off to Newquay to meet a friend for a swim and brunch.

At 17km I passed Sally’s Bottom (always a snigger! ) and pushed towards Porthtowan. The steps were still challenging but I got through them.

Took a break, turned my phone data on (checking social media), and then carried on. The path beyond was full of loose stones – hard on the feet, no flow. I walked, jogged, walked again. No rhythm. I wasn’t having as much fun at that point. But I knew I wasn’t far.

Still, I was about 20 minutes ahead of my estimate finish time on the Garmin. With 2.5km left, I allowed myself to walk the last hills and still aimed to come in under four hours.

Total distance: 19.79km, with 516m of elevation gain. Not a fast run, but a solid effort in the heat, and brilliant ARC12 recce.

Happy 12 miles 😊

Fuelling breakdown: Before the run I had tea (~500 ml) and eggs on toast, totalling around 336 kcal and 31 g of carbs. During the run, I drank about 1.5 litres of water and 500 ml of Tailwind, which added another 200 kcal and 50 g of carbs. I had three energy gels throughout the effort (288 kcal, 69 g carbs). After the run, I refuelled with a Quaker porridge-to-go bar (139 kcal, 21 g carbs). All in, during the run I consumed approximately 819 kcal and 152 g of carbohydrates, and drank about 2 litres of fluids. I’m happy with that fuelling effort for a 3.5-hour coastal run in summer heat.

A fab spontaneous weekend and a great reminder of how glorious the Cornish coast can be (if I needed one). This route is not just for running: it’s a beautiful walk, too, and I highly recommend it for anyone up for a bit of a challenge and a lot of views.

Goggins’ 4x4x48 challenge summary

23 May 2025, 17:00 – 25 May 2025, 14:00
12 runs. 48 hours. 48 miles. One unforgettable challenge.

Friday after the first run (5pm)

The challenge

Inspired by David Goggins’ 4x4x48 format, I ran 4 miles every 4 hours for 48 hours, starting at 5pm on Friday and finishing at 2pm on Sunday. Each run was 4 miles (approx. 6.5 km), with a total running distance of 78.37 km / 48.7 miles over 12 runs.

This challenge was part of, and the final challenge, of a series of 5 events in May 2025.

📢 Initial announcement

  • 🕒 Total running time: 9h 43m
  • 🐢 Average pace: 7:25 min/km (11:57 min/mile)
  • 🥱 Total naps: 8 naps, totalling 6h 55m
  • 🚶‍♀️ Walked (to/from runs): 11.59 km / 7.2 miles (3h total)

Time breakdown over 48 hours:

  • 🏃‍♀️ Running: 20.2%
  • 🚶 Walking: 6.2%
  • 😴 Sleeping: 14.4%
  • 🧠 Awake (not moving): 59.1%

Runs info

Longest: 55min 34 sec – 5am Sunday (a lot more walking needed due to fatigue, sore knees, and (sorry TMI) stomach not being too strong at that point.

Quickest: 44min 46 sec – 9pm Friday (fresh legs, excitement of the start on the second run)

Least enjoyed: 1pm on Saturday when I tried the route in reverse – loathed the experience! The hills felt so much harder and also I was sleep deprived which affected my experience.

The route

I used the same route for 11 of the 12 runs but on one occasion (1pm Saturday) did it in reverse:

The 4 mile loop

On Saturday at 9am, the route was Seven Fields parkrun and an added mile around the field to reach 4 miles.

Seven Fields parkrun

Fuel & hydration

A massive part of getting through the challenge was fuelling well and listening to my body. I didn’t use gels or electrolytes, just real food, water, and gut instinct were my guide.

🥗 Total meals/snacks: 22

  • Protein smoothie made with almond milk, vegan vanilla protein powder and a frozen banana (some had berries in too) – 6x
  • Porridge with berries & honey – 3x
  • Granola (basically a homemade flapjack crumbled) with Greek yogurt & fruit – 2x
  • PB & banana on toast – 2x
  • Pasta & pesto chicken – 2x
  • Flapjack – 2x
  • Chicken & rice – 1x (one leftover because I didn’t fancy it on Sunday morning)
  • Omelette with toast (+ avocado once) – 2x
  • Scrambled eggs on toast – 1x
  • Bag of salted peanuts – 1x

☕ Drinks

  • Water: ~5 litres
  • Coffee: 2
  • Tea: 2

Kit, care & maintenance

  • 👕 6 tops, 2 shorts, 4 leggings
  • 🧦 4 pairs of running socks
  • 👟 1 pair Brooks Ghost Max 2
  • 🧢 1 cap, 1 winter hat
  • 🎽 1 race belt (with QR code!)
  • 🧵 KT tape (braline chafing): ~180 cm

  • 🛁 Showers: 12
  • 🧺 Laundry: 5 loads during, 1 post-challenge

  • 🧘‍♀️ Rigorous stretching and foam rolling after every run
    💥 No DOMS – just minor chafing by the end (sory TMI!)

Community support

It may have been a solo challenge, but I was never alone. 💚
I really didn’t expect this wonderful level of support, people generously giving some of their Bank holiday weekend time to join – you are all legends!

👣 Total of 33 running buddies joined me

  • Most frequent: Neil H (8 runs) is an absolute star for running 8 back-to-back legs with me, Paul A (4 runs)
  • 3 runs: Elliot, Hannah, Neil C, Rachel
  • 2 runs: Adam, Barbara, Iain, Jade, Stacy, Thoko, Tim, Yvette
  • 1 run:Ali, Andrea G, Ben, Dan, Dionne, Gem, Hayley, James, Kim, Lorraine, Lucy, Marichu, Norja, Rod, Sam P, Suzie, Ulen, Umesh, Victoria.
  • Not to forget: Milo 🐾

    I hope I haven’t forgotten anyone but please let me know and I’ll correct it here.
    Also at the start / finish line and en-route: Lucia (on plenty of occasions), Dionne, Sally and Paul H, Leigh, Paul A; shout-out to you!

💰 Donations

  • £1,120 raised (186% of target!) by 79 supporters at the time of writing this report.
  • All for the Prospect Hospice , helping local families with end-of-life care and grief support.
  • It’s not too late to donate: https://www.justgiving.com/page/aurelie4x4x48
  • Top donors: Clothilde, Neil & Michelle, Rob L 🙏🙏🙏

Moments & memories

  • 🦡 Best run: 1am Saturday – spotted a badger in North Swindon!
  • 🌅 Best time to run: 5am runs: bird song, peaceful dawn, completely empty and silent Thamesdown Drive.
  • 😂 Fun moment: Probably teaching French swear words on a 5am run.
  • 📸 Most awkward: Having to thank people for taking pictures of my backside… as people scanned the donation QR code on my bum at parkrun
  • 🌟 Proudest:
    • Someone told me I’d inspired them to train for an ultra
    • Another person ran two runs with me – having never done more than 5k before
    • Seeing the amazing community of people around me rally for such an important cause.

If anything I do shows others what’s possible, then I’m deeply proud and humbled.


Reflections, questions & advice

📋 Planning tips:

  • Spreadsheet with run times, meals, and pre-prepped labelled food: I didn’t have to “think” between runs as I had a plan!
  • Choosing runs to fit with best daylight hours: for this using UK May bank holiday for daylight hours: around 04:40–21:40
  • Used Seven Fields parkrun for my Saturday 9am run whch was great fun!

✅ Lessons learned:

  • I thought I’d get bored: didn’t happen. The breaks were full of eating, showering, napping. That’s what surprised me the most about this challenge – I completely underestimated this aspect.
  • Fuel flexibly: sometimes I swapped meals because I felt like something else.
  • I didn’t need supplements or gels, just real food was enough for 4-mile runs.
  • Hydration and mobility work (stretching & foam rolling) made recovery smoother.
  • Rest well after. I don’t plan to run until Tuesday evening (over 48h after finish) and that will be a gentle short run, likely around 5km.
  • But keep active afterwards: gentle walks or maybe also swimming if you can/ feel like it: listen to your body!

🧠 Advice for future 4x4x48 runners:

  • Plan everything, then stay flexible
  • Prep food in advance
  • Don’t underestimate how tired you’ll feel
  • You will be sleep deprived!
  • Schedule rest time
  • Embrace the weird moments: they’ll be the best memories
  • Would I do it again? I’ve been asked this a few times. I don’t think so unless it’s to support someone else doing it. I weirdly enjoyed it a lot but it feels to me like a one-of-a-kind challenge. I’ll definitely do other crazy things, though! Watch this space!

If you’re thinking of trying it, consider therapy! but, you absolutely can!
Its one of the hardest thing I’ve done in my life. Definelty not easy, but it’s entirely possible. If I, an overweight middle-aged mum, can do it, so can you.


Physical outcomes

  • Weight gain: +400g (likely glycogen + water)
  • Body fat: ↓ 1.3 percentage points (≈3.8% drop) on home scales though so may not be that accurate
  • No injury or DOMS – planning, recovery, and fuelling worked!

The power of community

One of the biggest factors in being able to take on five challenges this May, including this final 4x4x48, has been the strength of the communities around me. I haven’t done this alone.

The support, motivation, and shared experience I’ve found through Slinn Allstars running club, the 6am Training in Swindon crew, and The Longevity Games have been truly instrumental. Yes, they’ve helped improve my fitness, but more importantly, they’ve provided connection, encouragement, accountability, and advice when it mattered most.

Even four weeks ago, I wasn’t sure I’d be able to complete this challenge. A sudden knee pain/injury had me doubting things but thanks to Kev Tonner at Swindon Injury Clinic, I had the support I needed. His guidance, stretches, and recovery advice made all the difference. I’m incredibly grateful, because without that help, this weekend might not have happened.

Being surrounded by people who move, challenge themselves, cheer each other on, and show up (especially early in the morning!) makes a huge difference. It’s a reminder that staying active isn’t just about physical health. It’s also about being part of something, showing up for each other, and finding strength in the collective. I wouldn’t lie if I said this hasn’t also benefited my mental health massively.

If you’re thinking about starting something, or pushing your limits, find your people. Join a local group, try a parkrun, sign up for a class, or meet a friend for a walk. You don’t need to go it alone; in fact company is twice as fun.

Movement is medicine, and community is what helps you keep going. 💚

I often tell myself, “I can do hard things.” But really, the truth is:
We can do hard things, together.