Two Hours. Four Hours. Six Hours. Your call.
Every last weekend of the month, Sober Endurance™ hosts a timed endurance event. You pick your start level. You work your way up. The goal isn't to suffer — it's to prove to yourself, month after month, that you can keep going.
Where most people begin. Enough to hurt, enough to feel it. Enough to know you showed up when it would have been easier not to.
The middle distance. You've built a base. Your body is adapting. Four hours is where your mind starts negotiating — and you learn to say no.
When someone finishes their first six-hour event, it's a ceremony. Not just a finish. Six hours changes who you think you are.
You don't jump to 6 hours. You earn it. The ladder keeps you anchored to where you are while always showing you what's next — which is exactly how recovery works.
Most members start at two hours. It doesn't matter if you walk the whole thing. Your bib number is assigned. Your name is on the results board. You finished. That's not nothing — that's everything.
Moving from 2 to 4 hours is the identity shift. You stop being someone who shows up and start being someone who pushes. The training plan that month is built specifically to prepare you for this distance.
When you cross the six-hour mark for the first time, we make it a moment. Not just a stat on a results board. A celebration. A milestone in your recovery story. We've never seen anyone finish a six-hour event and leave the same person.
A regular 5K costs $40 and you run it once. Here you get a race experience, a training plan, a community, a celebration, and a coach in your corner — every single month.
Same number every month. It builds legacy. Month 1, month 6, month 24 — your number follows you. Other runners start to recognize it.
A rotating monthly coin that members collect like sobriety chips. Because that's exactly what it is. One more month. One more coin. One more proof that you didn't quit.
Your name, your distance, your time — on the board the same day. Not tucked in a spreadsheet. Posted publicly in the community where your people can see it.
"Here's how to approach your 4 hours this month." A video or live call the week before the event so you show up with a plan, not just hope.
Delivered the first week of every month. Built specifically to prepare you for that month's distance. Not generic running advice — a plan designed for this event and your current level.
Grouped by pace and experience. Your pod checks in weekly. The pod with 100% event attendance gets a shoutout and group discount the following month.
The structure is the product. You always know what's coming and you always know what it means. This is the opposite of white-knuckling — this is infrastructure.
Community challenge begins. You know your target distance.
Pod accountability. How's training going? We check.
Strategy video. Race day logistics. You go in with a plan.
Your bib. Your number. Your name on the board.
Iron Mind Award. Results posted. Next month opens.
Missing a month resets your streak. That single fact is one of the most powerful psychological motivators we've ever built into a program. People who would have quit show up anyway — because the streak means something.
Your first proof you can commit. Iron in your word.
Half a year of showing up. Different person than you started.
Legacy jacket. Your name on the wall. You are the proof.
Different colorway. Different weight. People will ask about it.
After every event, we gather. Not a debrief. A ceremony. Two or three runners get spotlighted — their why, their transformation, what this month meant. One runner receives the Iron Mind Award for showing up when life tried to stop them.
"The same obsessive, all-or-nothing wiring that almost destroyed your life is the exact trait that makes someone unstoppable at endurance sport."
Members also commit publicly — live on the call — to their next month's distance. Their pod hears it. The community hears it. It's no longer just a goal. It's a promise.
Private community access (Discord or Facebook group) exclusive to 2·4·6 members. Training tips, weekly check-ins, challenges between events. Being in the group is part of the identity — not a perk.
Members fill out a form. We feature their story, their race results, and their photos on the website. Not as marketing content. As proof. As a reminder to everyone who comes after them — people like you are doing this.
"You ran 2.1 more miles than last month."
Your personal records board tracks your distance every month. Month over month improvement is charted and shared. A dopamine hit that belongs to you — not to a leaderboard of strangers.
A regular 5K race costs $40 and you run it once. Here's what $50 a month actually buys you.
Regular rate: $50/month
"A regular 5K race costs $40 and you run it once. Here you get a race experience, a shirt, a training plan, a community, a celebration, and a coach in your corner — every single month."
Claim Your Founding Rate → Cancel anytime · First 50 founding members lock this price foreverIt's a monthly ritual for people who are building something real — out of everything that tried to break them.
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