What a great documentary! Loved every moment of it. I can relate to all three of you guys. I did not suffer any physical ailment but I was battling other demons. 27 years as Police Officer left me with PTSD and the black dog was barking in my head every day. Heavy smoker, heavy drinker, overweight - I decided to do 70.3 at the age of 52 (in 2012)! 12 years later, with 15 Half IronMan completed (including 70.3 World Championships in St George, Utah) and 5 full distance IronMan, I have a new life! Triathlon (and Ironman in particular) saved me! Congratulations to you all, you are a true champions!
LYNN YOU ARE A TRUE CHAMPION. YOU ARE AN INSPIRATION TO THE WORLD. CONGRATULATIONS FOR YOUR DETERMINATION AND COURAGE. A BIG HUG FROM BRAZIL. ❤️🇧🇷❤️🇧🇷❤️
Respect for all the athletes and their impressive stories. I finished an Ironman in 2007. Then life came in the form of illness and divorce. What I used to run easily, I can barely manage on my bike today. But I want that incredible feeling again and I'm just getting back to square one.
Laura, your mom’s courage, strength, and determination are such a massive inspiration to me. I Tri in her footsteps, and in her honor. In the footsteps of all who’ve struggled through this disease as there’ve been so very few treatments. May her memory be a blessing ❤
Relentless forward progress. Ironman is such a great analogy of what life is. When I had crushing moments on the bike, I kept saying "this is hard, but this is nothing compared to how hard it was to get sober". Relentless. Forward. Progress.
I loved it! Thank you, guys, for being awesome! The finish line is not the most important thing. It is the path leading to the race, with the consistency, sweat, and pain you endure the majority of days for months. That's what shows your true self.
Lynn, you’re amazing. What happened to you sucked truly and I’m very sorry. But you’re spared in your drive is remarkable. I so hope you get better and stronger.
I just want to say you guys captured the grit and determination in every one of these characters stories so well. Lynn’s story brought me to tears, her unwavering positivity and absolute no give up attitude is something I will take with me in my future. I’m a documentary film student who also has been doing triathlons, Ironmans 70.3’s for the past year as a way to move forward from a lot of mental health stuff and the way you captured the transformative process that is one of these races is absolutely amazing. I’m going to take pieces of all your characters into my next race/training block. Thanks for making a piece like this and highlighting and backing these athletes. They are all Ironman/women Lynn just as much as everyone else. Absolutely incredible. Great story.
Thank you for the opportunity to help tell this story! It's these types of stories that help each and every one of us find the courage to tackle our own challenges.
This has given me courage to keep pushing and training! Thank you! I have just been diagnosed with chronic leukemia, (CLL) and it has been an anxiety filled year. I have been an athlete since my 20s and now I am in my 80s. I ran marathons and ultramarathons and now cycle long distances. But now what? Will I slowly be unable to cycle or do other exercises? This video shows me to keep living one day at a time and never give up! Thank you again.
My eyes welled up at 48:03 -- Lynn is such an inspiration! It's hard to even put into words how awesome it is to see such grit displayed. EDIT: should've waited until 54:45 to write this wow
This was one of the most heartfelt, emotional and inspiring ironman movies I've EVER watched. By the end I was weeping. Thank you so much for sharing these amazing & deep stories. They shows what Ironman is really about. I can't wait to participate in it. ❤️
One of the most beautiful docs I've seen that truly shows the power of human will. Each athlete gave it everything they had, especially Lynn. I'm heartbroken along with her but I know she'll continue to achieve great things. Thank you for sharing these important stories.
This is for sure one of the best Ironman documentaries I have seen till day! Im a 22 year old endurance athlete and will be doing my first 70.3 next month! I have documented my journey from the past 5 months! The work you put in the training and absolutely everything that makes your routine is phenomenal. The film surely inspires and as we say, learn and just keep moving. Thankyou for the video!❤
Wow, this is truly fantastic! I’m so moved that I’m practically in tears. Anyone involved in the sport of triathlon will undoubtedly watch this and see themselves reflected in it. Congratulations, and thank you for sharing this inspiring content with the world!
One run, my feet stopped listening to my brain. CIDP progressed from there, paralyzed vocal cords, lost the use of my thumbs, atrophy all over. What took 29 years to build, was dismantled just like that. The mental battle is tough, not recognizing yourself or your abilities. Thank you for sharing your story
I’m so sorry that happened to you. “My feet stopped listening to my brain” is such a perfect description. Sending hope and love that you’ve found an effective maintenance treatment plan and are finding your way forward. ❤️❤️
2 месяца назад+2
Thank you Lynn for sharing your story. I’m recovering from spine surgery and trying to to get back in to the game. My last triathlon was three days before my surgery.four months ago. I’m hoping to continue next year. My goal is to do a 70.3 Ironman I’m already swimming and bike riding. Can’t run yet but that’s in my short distance goal. So I can fully start training.
Currently watching while I’m biking here in Indianapolis for my first full ironman. Timmy, Lynn, and Channon, your stories are an overwhelming inspiration. Congrats to the 3 of you 🙌
Such a wonderfully crafted presentation of a tremendously inspirational story. Congratulations to all these athletes and to the people who worked on this film.
I stumbled upon this documentary after watching an Ironman documentary that was released yesterday, that I feature in. I take my hat off to the 3 athletes involved and all their families and loved ones. Loved the Churchill quote from Lynn. Keep going.
Hearing your story about family abuse and it being targeted at you resonates so strongly with me. The drug part is my brother who is a lifelong crystal meth addict and our mother being his enabler, the one who has allowed him to never take responsibility, is the part I've been in denial for so long about. It is the worst feeling to process and I wouldn't wish it on anyone, even my worst enemies. I am only just coming to terms with accepting the fact that the people I trusted and thought cared for me are the ones responsible for the lifelong abuse I have suffered. Running has saved me, and after running an Ultra Marathon, I am watching this as motivation to possibly take on the challenge of an ironman...I could not have wished for a better story and I say this fully aware of the fact that I am so sorry you have to experience what you do, both personally and from family. Respect and humble appreciation to you and everyone in this incredible documentary 🙌🔥🙌
Thank you so much for the kind words. I’m sorry for what you had to endure but know it’s made you stronger! Wishing you all the best in your future goals and hopefully an Ironman finish line!
@Timmy_hotdog_howard Thank you so much. What you have said is humbly appreciated and beyond motivational. When I reach that goal, I'll come back here and thank you again. Massive respect. 🙌
@@Timmy_hotdog_howard awesome documentary im in the process of preparing for my first 100miler. Still have a lot of training ahead of me. Unfortunately i dont have the support from my wife like you do but i feel its something i have to do even if it is on my own. Thanks for sharing your story.
@@cornekoekemoer157Really hope she will come around to support you! Wishing you all the best in your journey. That’s a lot of time on the trails. Hopefully you can find some ways to get her involved. Best of luck to you!
This was an incredible watch. I am running my first marathon in 3 months and I have had some important people in my life tell me that I can't do it, and I've been set back in my training from injury but I am so so SO determined to do this thing and prove to myself that you can do anything you set your mind to, and this documentary has given me that extra push of courage. Incredible efforts from all the athletes -- thank you for being vulnerable and honest
Thanks so much for watching and taking the time to be interested. It’s extremely hard to know the exact trigger for CIDP. What’s known is that it essentially results from an immune system response gone wrong. It would be exceedingly rare for the immune response to the bite itself to be the trigger, but not impossible. Because I wasn’t able to get the shot history of the dog, in the aftermath of the bite I received 3 weeks of rabies shots, as well as a tetanus booster. And then came down with a nasty respiratory virus. Any one of those things, or potentially the perfect storm of them all, could have triggered CIDP. But I blame cujo 😘
It really depends on how committed you are to training. For the bike, you need to average 13.8 mph I believe. If you have a particular sport you are stronger in, that can help your overall average but you would want to work your weakest sport to give you the best chance.
@@Ultraironhicks@Ultraironhicks thank you. I finished an olympic as my first triathlon last week in 3.25. Would that pace speed be ok to be within the cutoffs for the IM?? I know it's different to an ironman but if I kept the same pace for the ironman as I did the Olympic, is that fast enough?? Swim : 45 mins Bike : 90 mins Run: 53 mins. ( I didn't push on the run at all, jogging pace and I took breaks during the swim) Would those times converted to ironman be enough??
What a great documentary! Loved every moment of it. I can relate to all three of you guys. I did not suffer any physical ailment but I was battling other demons. 27 years as Police Officer left me with PTSD and the black dog was barking in my head every day. Heavy smoker, heavy drinker, overweight - I decided to do 70.3 at the age of 52 (in 2012)! 12 years later, with 15 Half IronMan completed (including 70.3 World Championships in St George, Utah) and 5 full distance IronMan, I have a new life! Triathlon (and Ironman in particular) saved me! Congratulations to you all, you are a true champions!
It was such a pleasure to be the Cinematographer on this piece! 🎥
Crushed it!
You are phenomenal!!!
Feeling the love, I feel so lucky I could spend time with you all!
This documentary made me emotional. Thanks for sharing their inspirational story. ❤
absolutely killed it brother!
The story telling, cinematography, editing, and sound design in this is spectacular
LYNN YOU ARE A TRUE CHAMPION. YOU ARE AN INSPIRATION TO THE WORLD. CONGRATULATIONS FOR YOUR DETERMINATION AND COURAGE. A BIG HUG FROM BRAZIL. ❤️🇧🇷❤️🇧🇷❤️
Respect for all the athletes and their impressive stories. I finished an Ironman in 2007. Then life came in the form of illness and divorce. What I used to run easily, I can barely manage on my bike today. But I want that incredible feeling again and I'm just getting back to square one.
As an ironman who lost her mother to complications from CIDP, thank you for sharing Lynn's story.
Laura, your mom’s courage, strength, and determination are such a massive inspiration to me. I Tri in her footsteps, and in her honor. In the footsteps of all who’ve struggled through this disease as there’ve been so very few treatments. May her memory be a blessing ❤
Hey laura do you need a friend?? I can be there for you?? We can exchange contact information
🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼
Huge credit to Lynn for not only taking on the huge challenge of an Ironman, but to do it on a super challenging course. Keep journeying!
Relentless forward progress. Ironman is such a great analogy of what life is. When I had crushing moments on the bike, I kept saying "this is hard, but this is nothing compared to how hard it was to get sober". Relentless. Forward. Progress.
I loved it! Thank you, guys, for being awesome! The finish line is not the most important thing. It is the path leading to the race, with the consistency, sweat, and pain you endure the majority of days for months. That's what shows your true self.
Lynn, you’re amazing. What happened to you sucked truly and I’m very sorry. But you’re spared in your drive is remarkable. I so hope you get better and stronger.
So proud to know Timmy! Such an incredible film. Can’t wait for the world to see it tonight. 🎉
Wow Lynn, you left everything out there. Few get that opportunity in their entire lives. You're an inspiration.
I could watch content with Lynn in it all the time, her personality and enthusiasm is amazing and inspiring!
Lynn is a total legend! totally inspiring what she has overcome! A magnificent documentary!
If I could give Lynne a massive hug I would!
I just want to say you guys captured the grit and determination in every one of these characters stories so well. Lynn’s story brought me to tears, her unwavering positivity and absolute no give up attitude is something I will take with me in my future.
I’m a documentary film student who also has been doing triathlons, Ironmans 70.3’s for the past year as a way to move forward from a lot of mental health stuff and the way you captured the transformative process that is one of these races is absolutely amazing. I’m going to take pieces of all your characters into my next race/training block. Thanks for making a piece like this and highlighting and backing these athletes. They are all Ironman/women Lynn just as much as everyone else. Absolutely incredible. Great story.
Thank you for the opportunity to help tell this story! It's these types of stories that help each and every one of us find the courage to tackle our own challenges.
This has given me courage to keep pushing and training! Thank you! I have just been diagnosed with chronic leukemia, (CLL) and it has been an anxiety filled year. I have been an athlete since my 20s and now I am in my 80s. I ran marathons and ultramarathons and now cycle long distances. But now what? Will I slowly be unable to cycle or do other exercises?
This video shows me to keep living one day at a time and never give up!
Thank you again.
My eyes welled up at 48:03 -- Lynn is such an inspiration! It's hard to even put into words how awesome it is to see such grit displayed. EDIT: should've waited until 54:45 to write this wow
This was one of the most heartfelt, emotional and inspiring ironman movies I've EVER watched. By the end I was weeping. Thank you so much for sharing these amazing & deep stories. They shows what Ironman is really about. I can't wait to participate in it. ❤️
This was the best documentary I’ve seen in years. Beautiful stories and so motivating. Thank you for sharing this. ❤
One of the most beautiful docs I've seen that truly shows the power of human will. Each athlete gave it everything they had, especially Lynn. I'm heartbroken along with her but I know she'll continue to achieve great things. Thank you for sharing these important stories.
What an amazing doco. What a wonderful bunch of humans. Thanks for sharing this.
All three of these stories are wonderful but Lynne got me, what a tough woman 😢
This is for sure one of the best Ironman documentaries I have seen till day! Im a 22 year old endurance athlete and will be doing my first 70.3 next month! I have documented my journey from the past 5 months! The work you put in the training and absolutely everything that makes your routine is phenomenal. The film surely inspires and as we say, learn and just keep moving. Thankyou for the video!❤
Wow, this is truly fantastic! I’m so moved that I’m practically in tears. Anyone involved in the sport of triathlon will undoubtedly watch this and see themselves reflected in it. Congratulations, and thank you for sharing this inspiring content with the world!
One run, my feet stopped listening to my brain. CIDP progressed from there, paralyzed vocal cords, lost the use of my thumbs, atrophy all over. What took 29 years to build, was dismantled just like that. The mental battle is tough, not recognizing yourself or your abilities. Thank you for sharing your story
I’m so sorry that happened to you. “My feet stopped listening to my brain” is such a perfect description. Sending hope and love that you’ve found an effective maintenance treatment plan and are finding your way forward. ❤️❤️
Thank you Lynn for sharing your story. I’m recovering from spine surgery and trying to to get back in to the game. My last triathlon was three days before my surgery.four months ago. I’m hoping to continue next year. My goal is to do a 70.3 Ironman I’m already swimming and bike riding. Can’t run yet but that’s in my short distance goal. So I can fully start training.
Currently watching while I’m biking here in Indianapolis for my first full ironman. Timmy, Lynn, and Channon, your stories are an overwhelming inspiration. Congrats to the 3 of you 🙌
Such a wonderfully crafted presentation of a tremendously inspirational story. Congratulations to all these athletes and to the people who worked on this film.
I stumbled upon this documentary after watching an Ironman documentary that was released yesterday, that I feature in. I take my hat off to the 3 athletes involved and all their families and loved ones. Loved the Churchill quote from Lynn. Keep going.
Hearing your story about family abuse and it being targeted at you resonates so strongly with me. The drug part is my brother who is a lifelong crystal meth addict and our mother being his enabler, the one who has allowed him to never take responsibility, is the part I've been in denial for so long about. It is the worst feeling to process and I wouldn't wish it on anyone, even my worst enemies.
I am only just coming to terms with accepting the fact that the people I trusted and thought cared for me are the ones responsible for the lifelong abuse I have suffered.
Running has saved me, and after running an Ultra Marathon, I am watching this as motivation to possibly take on the challenge of an ironman...I could not have wished for a better story and I say this fully aware of the fact that I am so sorry you have to experience what you do, both personally and from family. Respect and humble appreciation to you and everyone in this incredible documentary 🙌🔥🙌
Thank you so much for the kind words. I’m sorry for what you had to endure but know it’s made you stronger! Wishing you all the best in your future goals and hopefully an Ironman finish line!
@Timmy_hotdog_howard Thank you so much. What you have said is humbly appreciated and beyond motivational. When I reach that goal, I'll come back here and thank you again. Massive respect. 🙌
I still have chicken skin after watching this master piece
Absolutely incredible. Thank you for doing this.
Great job everywhere on this documentary!!!! I enjoyed it from start to finish. It really captured the monumental task of an Ironman.
I wish i had a whife cheering me on like that. Man that guy is so lucky to find someone like that.
She’s pretty incredible. Thank you!
@@Timmy_hotdog_howard awesome documentary im in the process of preparing for my first 100miler. Still have a lot of training ahead of me. Unfortunately i dont have the support from my wife like you do but i feel its something i have to do even if it is on my own. Thanks for sharing your story.
@@cornekoekemoer157Really hope she will come around to support you! Wishing you all the best in your journey. That’s a lot of time on the trails. Hopefully you can find some ways to get her involved. Best of luck to you!
So inspiring stories, and motivational. One of the best documentaries in a while!
This was an incredible watch. I am running my first marathon in 3 months and I have had some important people in my life tell me that I can't do it, and I've been set back in my training from injury but I am so so SO determined to do this thing and prove to myself that you can do anything you set your mind to, and this documentary has given me that extra push of courage. Incredible efforts from all the athletes -- thank you for being vulnerable and honest
You absolutely CAN do it. I promise you are capable. Do the work, and ignore the haters. You’ve got this. Thank you for taking the time to watch ❤
@@lynnrogers6688 thank you! ❤❤
Excellent!!
Would love to see an update on Lynn! What an inspiration!
Great documentary, these stories are so inspiring!
3 wonderful people, great production. Lynn got me at 53:00 not going to lie 😢
Sign up again Lyn, you were close, I know what DNF feels like.❤
What an incredible documentary 🎉
Thank you!
I was depressed for a long time, and I looked so useless and bad. This music helps me relieve fatigue and stress
Well worth the time to watch.
Wow! Can't. wait to see more of your work, spot on a beautiful production in every aspect. Kudos!
That was amazing, thank you X
Great documentary !
Glad you enjoyed it!
Great documentary! I’m interested to know if the dog bite caused the CIDP or it was a timing coincidence?
Thanks so much for watching and taking the time to be interested. It’s extremely hard to know the exact trigger for CIDP. What’s known is that it essentially results from an immune system response gone wrong. It would be exceedingly rare for the immune response to the bite itself to be the trigger, but not impossible. Because I wasn’t able to get the shot history of the dog, in the aftermath of the bite I received 3 weeks of rabies shots, as well as a tetanus booster. And then came down with a nasty respiratory virus. Any one of those things, or potentially the perfect storm of them all, could have triggered CIDP. But I blame cujo 😘
Best quote "You still to be you and the rest is in the shadows..."
Absolutely loved this!!!
Excellent piece.
wow this was so beautifully done
Lynn is my hero ❤
Great stories. ❤❤
Awesome documentary! On 37:30 What’s the name of the song in the background?
Word!
💙💙💙
On a flat course, how managable is it to hit the cutoff times ??
It really depends on how committed you are to training. For the bike, you need to average 13.8 mph I believe. If you have a particular sport you are stronger in, that can help your overall average but you would want to work your weakest sport to give you the best chance.
@@Ultraironhicks@Ultraironhicks thank you. I finished an olympic as my first triathlon last week in 3.25. Would that pace speed be ok to be within the cutoffs for the IM??
I know it's different to an ironman but if I kept the same pace for the ironman as I did the Olympic, is that fast enough??
Swim : 45 mins
Bike : 90 mins
Run: 53 mins.
( I didn't push on the run at all, jogging pace and I took breaks during the swim)
Would those times converted to ironman be enough??
Product placement ruined this doc for me
Cool! Thanks for watching 🍻
What products?