New Straits Times

WHY MEN QUIT, WOMEN DON’T

In the awful weather at the Boston Marathon, women seemed to hold up better than men, writes LINDSAY CROUSE

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THIS year ’s Boston Marathon, with its horizontal rain and freezing temperatur­es, was not just an ordeal unfolding amid some of the worst weather in decades.

It was also an example of women’s ability to persevere in exceptiona­lly miserable circumstan­ces. In good weather, men typically drop out of this race at lower rates than women do, but this year, women fared better. Why, in these terrible conditions, were women so much better at enduring?

The results for Boston, one of the most competitiv­e marathons in the world, were doleful this year: The winning times for both men and women were the slowest since the 1970s, and the mid-race dropout rate was up 50 per cent overall from last year.

But finishing rates varied significan­tly by gender. For men, the dropout rate was up almost 80 per cent from last year; for women, it was up about 12 per cent. Overall, five per cent of men dropped out, versus just 3.8 per cent of women. The trend was true at the elite level, too.

I have ran the Boston Marathon twice, including in 2013, the year it was bombed. I am often tempted to drop out of races, but I never actually have. Pushing through affords plenty of time to question the wisdom of prolonging what is sometimes extreme pain. I am always relieved when I finish — but I never really consider why I bother.

This marathon made me wonder if gender might play a role. You can find a whole range of theories on why women out-endured men in Boston — body fat compositio­n, decision-making tendencies, pain tolerance, even childbirth — but none offers a perfect answer.

One theory is that women handle cold weather better because their bodies naturally have more fat. In general, it is true that the essential body fat level — one you cannot medically dip beneath — hovers around three per cent for men and 12 per cent for women. And the insulating subcutaneo­us fat layer under the skin is twice as thick in women as in men.

But, at the same race in 2012, on an unusually hot 86-degree day, women also finished at higher rates than men, the only other occasion between 2012 and this year when they did. So, are women somehow better able to withstand extreme conditions?

That answer could involve psychology. Endurance may feel objective, but your ability to keep going — even if it means slowing down — is often ultimately up to you.

“When you reach the point that you cannot go on, it feels physical, like an immutable limit,” Alex Hutchinson, author of Endure, told me.

“But, your physical limits are actually mediated by your brain. In most instances, dropping out is a decision.”

The decision process might connect to the perception, or tolerance, of pain. Here is a potential, if contentiou­s, factor: Childbirth is by most accounts excruciati­ng, and because women’s athletic and fertility peaks are close or overlap, a lot of the female marathoner­s who race Boston have also given birth.

Keira D’Amato, 33, a real estate agent in Richmond, Virginia, ran much of the race with Sarah Sellers, a nurse who went on to take second place, until D’Amato’s vision blurred and her awareness wavered. She slowed to a fraction of her original pace, so focused on reaching the finish line that she did not even know it when she finally got there, in 46th place.

Comparing her experience in the race to the births of her children, D’Amato told me, “I never blacked out during labour.”

She said she had finished every race she started, adding that it “was not going to be the first time”.

Difference­s could also lie in other decision-making traits. For example, women are known to pace themselves better than men, an advantage in any context, but especially helpful in the cold, when a large shift in pace could affect one’s ability to regulate body temperatur­e.

“Men tend to start races more aggressive­ly and take a higher risk approach, so they are more likely to blow up in the second half,” Hutchinson said.

“If you hit the wall at 29km in that terrible rainstorm and you are wearing 3.2kg of sopping wet clothing, there is a heightened risk you are going to drop out.”

Women may also be better able to recalibrat­e their behaviour and expectatio­ns based on circumstan­ces (even if that does not mean making the more selfpreser­vationist decision to quit altogether).

“Among the athletes I have coached, I think I have had more women where, when it is bad, they can blow up, but they will still finish the race, whereas men drop out,” said elite distance coach Steve Magness.

“Women generally seem better able to adjust their goals in the moment, whereas men will see their race as more black or white, succeed or fail, and if it is fail, why keep going?”

Americans in the elite races provided some evidence. The men’s favourite Galen Rupp chased the lead pack until he dropped out around 32km mark with hypothermi­a; in the women’s race, favourites Molly Huddle and Shalane Flanagan dropped to paces much slower than their goal, but still finished. In the early miles, the women worked together; Desiree Linden, another favourite, struggled and told Flanagan she thought she might quit, but hung in to support her teammates a few more miles for the American victory they sought. Then Linden bounced back and won.

“There is a biological and social tendency for women to tend toward caregiving,” said Adam Grant, the psychologi­st and host of the TED podcast WorkLife.

“So, what I would expect to happen is, when the going gets tough, the men either quit or they double down and say, ‘I am just going to push through’, whereas women are more likely to reach out to runners next to them and offer support and seek support. Sharing pain and being part of a group can make it easier to withstand pain.”

Of course, the people who run Boston are a self-selecting group. Women are often discourage­d from being athletic and competitiv­e, so female runners who made it to Boston had already overcome more social obstacles than men. They may simply be tougher, and this was a year when toughness worked.

So the simplest explanatio­n is not based on gender at all. This Boston Marathon was ideal for people who thrive in adversity. Top spots for men and women went to amateur runners who juggle training in non-ideal circumstan­ces around work and family. The men’s winner, Yuki Kawauchi, is a high school administra­tor in Japan; Boston was his fourth marathon, and fourth victory, of this year.

“For me,” Kawauchi explained after he won, “these were the best conditions possible.”

You can find a whole range of theories on why women out-endured men in Boston — body fat compositio­n, decision-making tendencies, pain tolerance, even childbirth — but none offers a perfect answer.

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 ?? REUTERS PIC ?? Desiree Linden, the women’s winner in the Boston Marathon 2018.
REUTERS PIC Desiree Linden, the women’s winner in the Boston Marathon 2018.
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