People who know me well are amazed at how disciplined I can be about not rambling on about my passion for long-distance running. Well, all good things must come to an end.
Yes I am a running freak ... placing me far in excess of enthusiast, and well past fanatic. What entitles me to occupy this pigeonhole? Well: this year I am planning to run 30 half-marathons (13.1 miles) and two marathons, which means I am likely to accumulate more running mileage for the year (1,900 miles) than my car has on its odometer. I force myself to have a self-imposed limit of only owning 10 pairs of running shoes at a time, have secured the coaching/mentoring services of a local elite runner and coach who won the Disney Marathon eight times, and most tellingly, was selected in 2014, by Runner鈥檚 World magazine as having one of the world鈥檚 42 most awesome running-inspired tattoos.
Running challenges me on many levels. I compete hard, and race with the specific goal of placing in my age group. It鈥檚 not just sheer love of the great outdoors and the camaraderie of sweaty grunting strangers that gets me up at 4 am on a Sunday morning to race.
Here is my top 10 list of the ways in which running has made me a better actuary 鈥 and vice versa:
Time consciousness and meticulousness about planning
Running competitively makes you very time-conscious. Turning up late for a race is not an option when competing to place. Even being late by two minutes makes a huge difference in one鈥檚 race time. While I am never going to add Olympic gold to my medal collection, I can certainly arrive on time, whether for a race or for internal or client meetings.
Running can also heighten awareness of the need for meticulous advance planning. This year I will run three marathons: Disney (January), Sao Paulo (July) and Chicago (September). To be sure I was ready for these races, I started working on my training schedule in 2017.
If you can develop an effective marathon training plan, you can also develop an effective plan for a long-term work project. A long-term plan lets you know needs to be done every day to achieve the goal. When you deliver a long-term project on time and in full, it may not be immediately obvious to your managers and colleagues how you achieved the goal. However, the quality of the plan鈥檚 result 鈥 whether a work product or a respectable marathon finish 鈥 will reflect the quality of a meticulous, well-thought-out and well-executed plan.
Reading and researching about what you love
Even when I am not running, I am thinking about it. For me, Runner鈥檚 World is required reading, as well as the book 鈥淏orn to Run鈥 by Christopher McDougall, which deserves its accolades as one of the best running books in print today. As elite long-distance runner Bill Rogers says, 鈥滻 always say that if the marathon is a part-time interest, you will only get part-time results.鈥
Similarly, even when I鈥檓 not engaged in actuarial work, I鈥檓 still thinking about it. To pass exams requires plenty of study and preparation, and even after qualifying, actuaries still need to read and study in order to stay up to date with the industry trends and shifts. Staying up to date means you stay actuarially relevant, which is key to the continuing success of our profession.
Volunteering
As many of you know, I am an active volunteer for the SOA 鈥 it鈥檚 work I truly enjoy, for it enhances me professionally while allowing me to pursue collateral interests (writing, editing 鈥 running). In running, volunteer roles are extremely diverse, ranging from helping to organize, administer, or support races to coaching and mentoring beginner runners which is my personal favorite; I will happily accompany a first time marathoner in Sao Paulo in July even knowing that I`ll finish far from my personal record.
Volunteering makes life so much more rewarding: it promotes personal growth and self-esteem, increases your network, lets you learn to work with a range of diverse individuals and teams, and allows you to assume roles and responsibilities outside of your day-to-day work. To me, volunteering is one of the few things in life with little downside and near-limitless upside. I would heartily encourage each of you to volunteer 鈥 whether for the SOA, for an interest of yours, or even to mentor a children鈥檚 sports team. You won鈥檛 regret it.
Visualizing the result
For my inaugural Chicago marathon, I am already visualizing the entire course 鈥 the start on the magnificent mile, gliding along the Lakeshore and then the grand finale in Grand Park. . Visualizing can also be valuable for actuaries: I always recommend to actuarial students that they try to visualize the result they are trying to calculate before they finish a numerical task. This helps them think about the driving factors that determine an end result and develop a gut feel for errors. For both runners and actuaries, visualization can improve preparedness, reduce mistakes and anxiety, heighten focus, and increase the probability of achieving the goal.
Cultivating a 鈥済rowth mindset鈥
No one is born a competitive long-distance runner. Endurance and mental toughness can be developed with proper training, determination and being open to being coached, mentored and receiving critical feedback. All of this is part of what is known as the 鈥済rowth mindset鈥, which is eloquently described by Dr. Carol Dweck, in her book 鈥淢indset: The New Psychology of Success鈥 (Penguin Random House LLC, 2006). Dr. Dweck distinguishes the growth mindset from what she calls the 鈥渇ixed mindset鈥 as follows: 鈥淚n a fixed mindset, students believe their basic abilities, their intelligence, their talents, are just fixed traits. They have a certain amount and that鈥檚 that, and then their goal becomes to look smart all the time and never look dumb. In a growth mindset, students understand that their talents and abilities can be developed through effort, good teaching and persistence. They don鈥檛 necessarily think everyone鈥檚 the same or anyone can be Einstein, but they believe everyone can get smarter if they work at it.鈥 For actuaries, a growth mindset might be the most important trait to develop for success.
Striving for more
The great thing about long-distance running is that if you鈥檙e in reasonable health, you can progress from couch potato to running a 5K (five-kilometer race) in just three months, a 10K in six months, and then a marathon in 12 months. Once you have achieved your distance goal, you can then work on reducing your time. Running is one of the very few sports (perhaps the only one) that can deliver measurable results so quickly. The constant striving for improvement naturally crosses over to actuarial work. Can you deliver a better professional result? Greater accuracy, a deeper analysis, a strong, high impact accompanying presentation, shorter delivery times, etc.? Yes, you can 鈥 as long as you are willing to strive for more, and do the work.
Communicating more
If two strangers are sitting next to each other dressed for a race 鈥 sneakers, shorts, singlets, wrist wearables 鈥 you can be sure that before long, they are going to start chatting about running. Long-distance running, at least in the U.S., is still a minority sport (just 0.5% of the U.S. population has run a marathon), so expect two runners, even if strangers, to strike up a conversation and share information. We can always learn something from one another鈥檚 trials. By the same token, we actuaries 鈥 an even smaller population than marathon runners 鈥 can benefit from talking more with one another. I find I make the best improvements to my pricing models after discussing them face-to-face with other actuaries. In this day and age, it鈥檚 so easy to sit in your home office with your laptop and smartphone and pretend you are connected with other people. My advice? Go out! Discuss the data you just received from an actuarial colleague, make new actuarial friends, talk about your challenges, and ... alienus non diutius (alone no longer).
Putting money in perspective
One of Jerry Seinfeld鈥檚 classic routines is about dogs and money. To quote: 鈥淒ogs have no money. Isn鈥檛 that amazing? They鈥檙e broke their entire lives. But they get through. You know why dogs have no money? No pockets.鈥 How does this relate to long-distance running and to our work as actuaries? In several ways. Some competitive runners might be wealthy from their running, but most run for personal satisfaction. Similarly, being recognized at work with raises and bonuses is great and can lead to a very comfortable life 鈥 but money isn鈥檛 everything. Happiness, satisfaction, and personal fulfillment can come from many different sources, and it鈥檚 up to each of us to cultivate them.
The diversity of diversity
I believe that part of why running is such a popular spectator sport is its extraordinary diversity. Runners come from every continent and nearly every nation compete in to amateur and professional events, and the crowds at the Olympics, the IAAF World Championships and the major marathons attest to this. Diversity is also important for the SOA: In the 2017鈥2021 Strategic Plan, the SOA has committed to cultivating membership diversity. As part of the SOA Board鈥檚 Insight & Influence objective, it has committed to establishing a standing SOA Inclusion and Diversity Committee, which will determine the investments and programs that will have the greatest positive impact on inclusion and diversity in our profession. I am positive this initiative will help the SOA to attract the best and brightest from a variety of educational backgrounds, cultures and experiences.
Looking the part
Most companies now permit casual dress Monday to Friday, but I think we all could benefit from dressing less casually. Just as one might not expect a world-class runner to show up for a race wearing torn sneakers, a stained t-shirt and ill-fitting shorts, actuaries can improve their self-presentation by dressing more professionally, especially if giving a presentation to a conference or for upper management. First impressions do count, and stellar work can only be enhanced when all presentation aspects are stellar.
In closing, I would like to quote 2002 Nobel prize-winning psychologist Daniel Kahneman, who won for his work defining Behavioral Economics. He once told a journalist that laziness was the dominant characteristic of his friend Richard Thaler, 2017 Nobel Prize winner (also for Behavioral Economics) and meant it as a compliment. His reasoning was that Thaler was only willing to work on things that are important. Thaler amended the observation by stating he was only attracted to projects that were both important and fun.
I can readily identify with this characterization. I too have an innate tendency to be lazy and would probably not be as interested or passionate about running if I only ran in 5Ks or 10Ks. The marathon, for me, is an extremely important and extraordinary challenge 鈥 one that takes me out of my comfort zone and pushes me toward greater achievements.
I think we all entered the very challenging actuarial profession for similar reasons 鈥 that the work is both important and, for us, fun 鈥 and gives us inspiration to push ourselves toward greater achievements.
Based on my top 10 observations of the intersection where actuarial science meets running, there might be an emerging runner within each actuary (and, perhaps, a potential actuary within each runner?). The good news about testing this theory is that taking the first step means only lacing up your sneakers and taking a spin around the block. Enjoy the journey!