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How Endurance Running Helps Dementia Caregivers

Caregiving is one of the hardest things a person can take on. When the person you Love has Alzheimer’s, the emotional weight is relentless. The Grief is layered, the exhaustion is real, and the moments of joy can feel fragile. Many caregivers describe a slow erosion of their own identity as the role consumes more and more of daily life.

For some, running becomes a place to put all of that. Not to escape it, but to carry it differently.

Anthony Copeland-Parker, the author behind Running With Cat, lived this firsthand. When his partner Catherine was diagnosed with Early-Onset Alzheimer’s, Anthony and Catherine made a choice that surprised most people around them. They sold their home, retired, and became nomads, running marathons and half-marathons across the world for years. The running was not denial. It was a way of staying present, staying connected, and staying sane.

Why Caregivers Burn Out So Fast

Alzheimer’s caregiving is a long-haul commitment. The disease progresses slowly and unpredictably, which means caregivers can spend years in high-alert mode, managing medications, appointments, emotional crises, and the grief of watching someone change. That sustained Stress takes a measurable toll on the body and mind.

Caregivers often report:

  • Chronic Sleep deprivation from nighttime wandering or Anxiety
  • Social isolation as the caregiving role narrows their world
  • Physical Health decline from neglecting their own needs
  • Depression and a loss of personal identity
  • Guilt for wanting any time to themselves

That last one is important. Many caregivers feel that taking care of themselves is somehow selfish. It is not. In fact, it may be the most practical thing a caregiver can do for the person they love.

What Running Actually Does for the Mind

Physical Exercise, and running in particular, has a well-documented relationship with Mental Health. Sustained aerobic movement triggers the release of endorphins and other neurochemicals that reduce stress, lift mood, and improve sleep quality. But for caregivers, the benefits go deeper than basic biology.

Running creates a window of time that belongs entirely to you. It is not a doctor’s appointment. It is not a caregiver task. It is your body doing something it knows how to do, and that familiarity is grounding when everything else feels unstable.

For endurance athletes especially, there is something meaningful about finishing a race. The training builds structure. Race day provides a goal. Crossing a finish line, even a small local 5K, is a reminder that you are still capable, still moving forward, still yourself.

Anthony and Catherine finished every race they ran hand in hand. That detail says a great deal about what running can mean when it becomes shared, not just a solo coping tool, but a bond.

Running as a Caregiving Philosophy

What Anthony’s story makes clear is that running is not just exercise. It is a framework for approaching an impossible situation with intentionality.

Endurance athletes understand a few things that translate directly to caregiving:

  • You cannot sprint a marathon. Pacing yourself matters. Burning every reserve in the first miles means you will not finish.
  • Bad miles happen. A hard stretch does not mean failure. It means you keep putting one foot in front of the other.
  • The finish line shifts. In caregiving as in long-distance running, the goal changes. What matters is staying in motion.
  • Community carries you. No serious runner trains entirely alone. Caregivers need support structures too.

The second book Anthony wrote through Running With Cat, ‘One Footstep at a Time,’ takes its name from this exact idea. As Catherine’s abilities changed, the pace of their life slowed. Foreign marathons gave way to shorter distances and slower rhythms. But the commitment to keep moving, to make every day meaningful, never changed.

Practical Ways to Build Running Into Caregiver Life

Getting out for a run when you are a full-time caregiver requires planning. It is not impossible, but it does take intention. Here are some ways caregivers have made it work:

  1. Use respite care windows. If you have a Family member, friend, or professional aide who can sit with your loved one, protect that time for physical activity.
  2. Start small. You do not need to train for a marathon. A 20-minute walk that turns into a jog counts. Consistency matters more than distance.
  3. Join a local running group. The social contact alone can reduce isolation. Many groups welcome beginners and have flexible schedules.
  4. Set one race goal per year. Having something to train for creates forward momentum in a life that can feel stuck in an endless present.
  5. Let the run be a mental reset, not a guilt trip. You are not abandoning anyone by taking 30 minutes to move your body.

None of this requires Travel to Antarctica or a race in Bhutan, though Anthony’s story proves that extraordinary things are possible even under the weight of a serious diagnosis.

The Emotional Honesty That Makes This Matter

What separates genuinely useful caregiving narratives from feel-good platitudes is honesty. Anthony does not pretend the journey was easy or that running fixed anything. The disease progressed. The cure did not come. Life got harder.

But the running gave structure to grief. It gave two people a way to be athletes together, and then companions together, as the dynamic shifted. That is not a small thing. For caregivers who are looking for something real to hold onto, that kind of honesty is worth more than any optimized wellness routine.

Readers who pick up ‘Running All Over the World’ or ‘One Footstep at a Time’ will find a voice that does not flinch, a love story told without sentiment overriding truth, and a perspective on caregiving that endurance athletes and Alzheimer’s families alike will recognize as the real thing.

If you are a caregiver who has been neglecting your own need to move, consider this your reminder. Lace up. Go slow if you need to. The road does not care how fast you are. It just asks you to show up.

The post How Endurance Running Helps Dementia Caregivers first appeared on Running With Cat.

Anthony L. Copeland-Parker was a professional Pilot/Manager for thirty-seven years, the last twenty-seven with United Parcel Service. His last job had him managing pilots and flying B757/767-type aircraft all over the world. When he retired, he began writing his blog, RunningwithCat.com. Since then, he and his partner Catherine have traveled to eighty-two different countries. They have run at least a half-marathon in thirty-five countries and on all seven continents. This is his third book, the first being Running All Over the World, Our Race Against Early Onset Alzheimer’s, published by Newman Springs Publishing. The second is an abridged version published by Morgan James Publishing.

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