“Don’t be a lone wolf, that’s my number one life hack”—Peloton instructor and ultra runner Susie Chan shares her weekly fitness routine and tips to get started

The Brit trainer on how she went from zero to 50 miles of road running per week

Woman stands with her hands on hips wearing a white sports bra with Peloton written across it in gray lettering
(Image credit: Peloton)

In just 16 years, Susie Chan has accumulated more miles and conquered more feats of endurance than most of us achieve in a lifetime.

All seven major marathons? Check. The notoriously punishing 156-mile Marathon des Sables more times than any other British woman? Check. A 12-hour treadmill world record? Check. Check. Check.

Now 51, she’s just added the 81-mile Badwater Salton Sea ultra to her collection, featuring 9,000 feet of total elevation up Palomar Mountain in Southern California.

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All while holding down a physically and emotionally demanding job as a Peloton instructor, and raising her daughter.

What makes it all the more inspiring is that Chan had zero interest in sport or fitness until her brother signed her up to the Farnham Pilgrim Half Marathon in 2010.

“I didn’t even have trainers,” she tells Fit&Well. “I had gym shoes on. I had no clue.

“It really hurt—I’m not going to pretend it didn’t—but it showed me what I could actually do if I really wanted to.

“That’s something I’ve maintained. That one little spark of what I can do if I really want to has propelled me to do all of the other long endurance races since.”

It has also propelled her into a new career as a running coach, to writing a book called Trails and Tribulations about the trials and tribulations she’s encountered along the way, and to inspiring others to lace up their running shoes—or gym shoes—for the first time.

Recently returned from the Salton Sea ultra, I caught up with Chan to discuss what her weekly workout routine typically looks like when not scaling mountains or traversing deserts.

Susie Chan’s weekly workout routine

For the past decade, Chan has been clocking an average of 50 miles a week. When not hitting the road or trails with friends, she's leading treadmill workouts in Peloton's London studio or at fitness festivals around the country.

“If I haven’t got a race, I’ll typically run five times a week—minimum,” Chan says, casually.

“It’s my main source of exercise, but I’m also really enjoying my Peloton bike right now. I love it as an alternative. And I’m trying to dial down my mileage and build more strength.”

Here’s how her week typically breaks down.

Monday
30min run or Peloton Bike class for recovery.

Tuesday
Leading Peloton treadmill classes and full-body strength workout.

Wednesday
Leading Peloton treadmill classes and easy eight-mile run with friends.

Thursday
30-60min interval or speed run, plus leg workout.

Friday
Leading Peloton treadmill classes and easy 60min run or ride with colleagues.

Saturday
45-90min long run.

Sunday
60min slow yoga class focusing on single-leg strength.

Susie Chan’s advice on how to get started with running

Start slow and steady

If you’re completely new to running, or you’re getting back into it, think tortoise, not hare.

“You’ve got to start off slow and steady,” Chan says. “In my very first run I just ran as fast as I could. It was awful. Don’t do that!”

Instead, Chan recommends using run-walk intervals at a 1:1 ratio.

“If you're brand new to running, alternating two minutes of running with two minutes of walking, or whatever it is that you can maintain, is a good place to start."

After a couple weeks, you can increase the running intervals or reduce the recovery period to progress toward a 2:1 ratio.

Make it social

Chan says everything hard becomes easier when you share it with others. That's especially true when trying to build momentum at the start of your running journey.

“I’m very much not a lone wolf,” says Chan, of the way she prefers to keep active.

“If you have other people to work out with it just takes the edge off. They help drive you, encourage you, enable you. For me, that’s the number one life hack for training. It just makes everything feel easier.”

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Sam Rider
Contributor

Sam Rider is an experienced health and fitness journalist, author and REPS Level 3 qualified personal trainer, and has covered—and coached in—the industry since 2011. You can usually find him field-testing gym gear, debunking the latest wellness trends or attempting to juggle parenting while training for an overly-ambitious fitness challenge.

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