Endurance Athlete to Attempt Longest 7-Day Foot Run Carrying 10kg
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Imagine seven days to run from Edinburgh to Brighton. Over 700 kilometres on foot with a 10 kilogram backpack worn every step of the way. No assistance. No shortcuts. Just legs, lungs, and the will to keep moving.
Newcastle, UK. August 6th 2025 – On 20 September, British endurance athlete Adam Mahdoul will begin one of the most punishing physical challenges ever submitted to Guinness World Records: the farthest distance travelled on foot in seven consecutive days while continuously carrying a minimum 10-kilogram pack.
The weight must be verified daily and worn at all times during movement. Rest is allowed, but the clock never stops.
To break the record, Mahdoul must average over 100 kilometres per day while carrying a 10-kilogram backpack at all times during movement.
The weight might feel manageable at first, but compounded over hours and days, it grinds into the body.
Straps tear into the shoulders, joints begin to swell, and every step becomes a test of will. What starts as discomfort quickly mutates into pain, then into something deeper. This isn’t just about distance. It’s about carrying the weight long after the body begs to drop it.
At his lowest, Mahdoul was overweight, broke, addicted, and alone. Not rock bottom, just stuck in a life he didn’t respect. No drama, no headlines. Just slow self-destruction, day after day. One decision changed that. No big moment just discipline, movement, and a quiet refusal to keep living small. He never looked back.
What followed was a radical transformation. He began to train his mind and body with relentless focus. He travelled across nearly 100 countries, immersing himself in study and self-mastery.
In India and northern China, he trained in monasteries and ashrams, learning from monks and deepening his understanding of meditation, attention, and discipline. He later settled in Bali, where he spent years building community, teaching, and living at the intersection of simplicity and service.
Along the way, his study of Stoic philosophy helped sharpen a mindset built on endurance, clarity, and emotional control — principles that now anchor his approach to both life and athleticism.
That foundation eventually pushed him into ultra-endurance competition. He is now a multiple-time ultramarathon finisher, including a top-three finish at the UK’s Equinox 24-hour race and several 100+ kilometre efforts across the world.
“Few understand what the process truly demands,” says Mahdoul. “To become unbreakable, you must first become uninteresting. No stories. No drama. Just repetition so consistent it dissolves every excuse you once used to worship.”
The attempt will be fully documented with live GPS tracking, daily weigh-ins, raw video footage, and behind-the-scenes logs. A short-form documentary is set for release following the run.
Rooted in lived experience and deep mental discipline, Mahdoul’s approach has helped thousands reclaim control — shaping the rise of several influential men’s brands and communities, many of which continue to be driven by his vision and methodology.
“I don’t want peace. I want clarity. The kind that only shows up after you’ve gone too far, broken too much, and kept moving anyway. That’s where the real voice starts speaking — not the one people hear, the one that answers only to you.”