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When David Goggins crossed the finish line of the Moab 240, a 240-mile (386 km) ultramarathon through Utah’s deserts and mountains, he didn’t celebrate — he peeled off his shoes.
Underneath were blisters, blackened nails, and skin peeled raw from days of running on shattered terrain. He shared the photo online, writing: “My feet aren’t ugly — they’re proof of a war I survived.”
Goggins calls every scar a receipt — for pain, persistence, and the part of him that refused to quit. For most runners, that distance breaks the body. For him, it exposed what endurance really means: discipline stronger than flesh.
Source: Some Amazing Facts
