{"id":2456676,"date":"2014-10-14T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2014-10-14T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.outsideonline.com\/uncategorized\/punishing-weird-messy-world-ocr\/"},"modified":"2022-05-12T10:55:14","modified_gmt":"2022-05-12T16:55:14","slug":"punishing-weird-messy-world-ocr","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.outsideonline.com\/culture\/books-media\/punishing-weird-messy-world-ocr\/","title":{"rendered":"The Punishing, Weird, Messy World of OCR"},"content":{"rendered":"
In 2010, after half a decade of racing triathlons, Erin Beresini\u2019s body gave out. The collapse was devastating for Beresini, who had made writing about endurance sports her career (she’s published articles in the New York Times<\/em><\/a>, Competitor<\/em><\/a>, and ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø<\/em><\/a>, which she will join later this month as an online editor). \u201cWorst of all,\u201d she writes in her debut book, Off Course: Inside the Mad, Muddy World of Obstacle Course Racing<\/a><\/em>, \u201cI couldn\u2019t do what I always did when I broke down: go for a run, a bike ride, or a swim.\u201d<\/p>\n Beresini thrashed around for a year, shredded her Achilles tendons during a 30-mile cross-country ski race in Wisconsin, and eventually stumbled into obstacle course racing in 2011, just as the sport was taking off. Unable to run, she struck up a friendship with a next-door neighbor in Los Angeles who happened to be a CrossFit trainer. In the fall of 2012, she competed in the Ultra Beast<\/a>, a punishing 26-mile event at a ski mountain in Vermont organized by Spartan, one of the two leading obstacle-racing brands. (The other is Tough Mudder.)<\/p>\n Off Course<\/em> loosely traces her rehabilitation as an athlete\u2014mentally, if not necessarily physically\u2014and examines the sport\u2019s rapid transformation from bizarre sideshow to the most popular endurance activity in the country. Anybody wondering how that happened will enjoy Off Course<\/em>.<\/p>\n As was the case with many traditionalists, the obstacle racing movement initially caught Beresini off guard. But in the book, her skepticism doesn\u2019t last long, and she\u2019s hooked after her first race. Obstacle course races are punishing, weird, and messy\u2014and, therefore, she realizes, lots of fun. They also offer something most marathons and triathlons don\u2019t: an ethos of teamwork and comradeship, which she finds a little hokey but mostly affirming, especially at the end of the Ultra Beast when she finds herself near hypothermic and doing burpees at night in the rain.<\/p>\n In fact, the focus on teamwork is one of two elements that obstacle course races have borrowed directly from the military, the other being the courses themselves, which were developed by a French naval officer to train recruits more than 100 years ago. More recently, Tough Mudder founder Will Dean lifted major pieces of his series<\/a> from a long-running OCR event in Great Britain called Tough Guy, which resulted in a lawsuit and censure from Harvard Business School, Dean\u2019s alma mater.<\/p>\n