Comment by mistrial9
11 days ago
reading some popular media from around 1900 in the USA, it seemed to be a common perception that people who trained for track and field events generally expect a short life somehow.
11 days ago
reading some popular media from around 1900 in the USA, it seemed to be a common perception that people who trained for track and field events generally expect a short life somehow.
If you read about their wellness and performance enhancing drugs, there's good reason they died young.
For example, the 1904 Olympic marathon, the organizer believed drinking water was a bad idea while exercising and the winner took a mix of brandy, strychnine and egg whites during the race.
The Wikipedia article on that race is a must-read: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Athletics_at_the_1904_Summer_O...
I don't understand this, didn't they feel like crap all the time with such diet?
The 1900s saw doctors prescribing smoking, because it caused coughing. People will do some effed up things believing it is good for them, despite all evidence.
Most racers didn't finish, so the water idea was just dumb. I'm not sure how serious anyone that actually trained ever took it.
The strychnine taker did feel like crap. From https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Athletics_at_the_1904_Summer_O...
>Hicks led the race by 1.5 miles (2.4 km), but he had to be restrained from stopping and lying down by his trainers....He continued to battle onwards, hallucinating, and was barely able to walk for most of the course. When he reached the stadium, his support team carried him over the line, holding him in the air while he shuffled his feet as if still running.
But… winning!