New Guinness record holder walks 54km with 100lb weights after health scare

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New Guinness record holder walks 54km with 100lb weights after health scare
New Guinness record holder walks 54km with 100lb weights after health scare

Just a few months after undergoing surgery, a personal trainer has become a Guinness World Records holder.

Ben Haldon became the GWR holder for ‘the furthest distance in 24 hours farmer’s carry 100lb (male)’ after he travelled 54km in an effort to help “carry the weight” for those battling testicular cancer. A farmer's carry involves participants holding heavy weights whilst walking for a certain amount of time or distance, and the record previously stood at a little over 50km. The 31-year-old decided to take on the challenge after he noticed a lump on his testicle in December 2022, which prompted him to get a check-up after experiencing some discomfort and pain.

New Guinness record holder walks 54km with 100lb weights after health scare eiqkiqtridreinvBen Haldon from Wirral broke the Guinness World Record on July, 22 at the Bebington Oval (Cal Hibbard)
New Guinness record holder walks 54km with 100lb weights after health scareThe personal trainer became a Guinness World Records holder after undergoing surgery to remove a lump from his testicle (PA)

During January 2023, Mr Haldon underwent surgery for the non-malignant lump. During his time in hospital, he explained that he started “toying” with the GWR idea. The Cheshire based personal trainer told the PA news agency: "I felt that I wanted to do something for other people because I felt very lucky that my lump was not cancerous. I put my thinking cap on and wanted to do something to carry the weight for other men who are going through testicular cancer and find it hard to speak about, or struggle mentally, and that’s where the idea behind carrying 100lb for 24 hours came from.”

Mr Haldon took part in the challenge on Saturday, July 22 at The Oval Leisure Centre in Bebington, Wirral, which was overseen by 14 witnesses. He experienced emotional and mental fatigue, with the sixth to seventh-hour mark being the “toughest." He explained: "I had this niggling injury near my bicep and it was just playing up all the time. And it got to that six/seven hour marker and I thought, I’m not going to be able to do this – the pain was around a nine out of 10.

“I remember my wife (Lucy) came over to me and and knew just by the look on my face that I was in a bad place, but I said I’m going to carry on going until my bicep pings off the arm.” The pain subsided and Mr Haldon said the experience has taught him a valuable lesson about mental health. “With mental health, in a tough moment, it won’t always be that hard… if you can push through that, it will get better,” he said.

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Money raised from the challenge is to go to mental health charity Movember, with Mr Haldon also becoming the UK’s biggest fundraiser for Movember 2023. He said that being recognised with titles and accolades has been “brilliant”, but he hopes that raising awareness for men’s mental health is something that the campaign achieves as well.

New Guinness record holder walks 54km with 100lb weights after health scareBen Haldon travelled 54km, beating the previous record which stood at a little over 50km (PA)
New Guinness record holder walks 54km with 100lb weights after health scareThe personal trainer wanted to help "carry the weight" for those battling testicular cancer (PA)

"Obviously that’s difficult to measure," he said. “But I got to meet some great people and have amazing conversations along the way. I did a walk with someone who works with Movember who does crazy challenges, and two of the world’s strongest men, who struggled with mental health. “Having all these conversations and meeting all these people along this journey was just such a great thing that I didn’t expect to happen as part of the fundraising.”

His training involved lots of walks with weights, often three to four times a week, and lots of strength work including pull-ups and barbell rows, as well as having a focus on protein when it came to nutrition. He added that the team at Myprotein has also been a “great” support and connected him with other men in the industry who have struggled with their mental health and want to raise awareness about it. He said training was mainly “intuitive” because there’s “no real blueprint” for how to prepare your body for a feat like this and a big chunk was also mental.

He explained: "You’re going out and spending hours and hours with two handles, on my own, in my own head, with my own thoughts, no screen time, no conversation and in a world that is very fast paced, it is very rare that we spend a lot of time with ourselves. The training was actually harder than the actual day because on the day I had loads of people cheering for me, whereas when I was training I had no support, no claps, no instant gratification.”

For those who have testicular cancer or think they may have it, Mr Haldon said: “Just never ever be embarrassed. I think that’s the biggest thing – the embarrassment of it – because I think the only time guys really speak about their private parts is as a bit of banter and there’s never really serious conversations to be had about it, which probably creates a bit of a stigma. When I put a post up on Instagram about the day I was going into surgery, I spoke to over 100 guys who messaged me about checking or having gone through testicular cancer and I think it’s powerful how much a conversation can remove a weight from you.”

Mr Haldon’s fundraising link can be found here.

Danielle Desouza

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