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New York man runs shirtless half-marathon in northern Greenland

This story will give you chills

Vladimir Aslan Photo by: provided by Vladimir Aslan

In winter 2021, when Ukrainian-American Vladimir Aslan reached the melting point of his day-trading job in New York City, he found running in cold weather made a good distraction from life’s stresses. A year and a half later, he became the first person to run a shirtless half-marathon across northern Greenland, at 0 F (-18 C).

Vladimir Aslan
Photo: provided by Vladimir Aslan

You may be wondering why anyone would do that, but his idea to subject himself to sub-zero temperatures came from winter running in New York’s Central Park. “It always felt better, whenever I dressed lighter on the coldest days: no jacket, no long-sleeve shirt, no T-shirt and only shorts and running shoes,” Aslan says. “I understood that it has a straight impact on my mind. I felt rejuvenated. I felt alive. I felt clear.”

Most of the people around him considered his approach to training abnormal, but he knew it worked for what he was trying to accomplish. “I started being interested in human psychology/abilities behind the line of fear and strength,” he says. “The cold emancipated me from fears and sorrows.”

The half-marathon was run in Qaanaaq, Greenland, which is one of the most northern settled towns in the world. It has a population of 646, and the average temperature during his February 2023 expedition was -23 C . Qaanaaq was settled by Inuit and Thule inhabitants, who hunt, harpoon and dogsled to feed their families.

Vladimir Aslan
Photo provided by Vladimir Aslan

He was born and raised in Ukraine, and lived in Siberia, but has been in the U.S. for almost 15 years. He trained for the half-marathon by doing 30-minute and one-hour cold plunges and running outdoors in the middle of a New York City winter wearing only running shoes and shorts.

After accomplishing a sub-zero, half-clothed half-marathon, the 39-year-old extreme athlete plans to head back to northern Greenland to swim an ice mile in the Atlantic Ocean. Aslan says the most difficult part of his half-marathon was the rugged and icy terrain. “The ice run in Qaanaaq was the hardest challenge I faced in my life,” he says.

In 2024, he will head to the South Pole to tackle another race expedition, attempting to run the longest ice run in history.

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