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Clean Break Chats

Clean Break Chats

By: Andy Delderfield and Richard Casement
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🎙️ Clean Break Chats – Mindful Miles and AF Lifestyles. Hosted by Andy and Rich – two ordinary guys who’ve discovered something extraordinary through living alcohol-free. Andy lives by the sea in sunny Spain, and Rich’s home base is in Leeds, UK. What they share is a passion for running, a commitment to alcohol-free living, and a desire to help others unlock the same freedom and joy. Formerly known as The Running Dryy podcast, this re-branded podcast is part of their new venture Clean Break – a growing community dedicated to helping runners break free from booze and tap into their full potential. Between them, Andy and Rich have run multiple marathons and ultra events, and they credit going alcohol-free as their superpower. Each episode features raw, honest conversations between the two – full of laughs, insights, and the kind of chat you'd have on a long run with your best mate. They also invite brilliant guests to share their own stories of transformation, triumph, and what it means to live, run, and thrive without alcohol. Whether you’re sober-curious, in recovery, or just want to hear real stories about finding meaning through movement and mindset, Clean Break Chats is your new go-to listen. 👟 Come for the running. 💬 Stay for the community. ✨ Leave feeling inspired.© 2026 Andy Delderfield and Richard Casement Hygiene & Healthy Living Running & Jogging
Episodes
  • EP60: Guest Episode – Sam Sadighi (Easy Sleep Solutions) | Sedation Isn't Sleep, Your Garmin Is Wrong & Why It All Changes When You Stop Drinking
    Jun 27 2026

    Most people who drink to help them sleep think it's working. It isn't. What alcohol does is sedate you - and there's a significant difference between sedation and actual sleep. This week, Rich and Andy sit down with Sam Sidiji, one of the UK's leading sleep practitioners, who works with everyone from babies to city traders to motorsport professionals, to talk about what's really going on when your head hits the pillow.

    Sam breaks down the science without the scaremongering - what poor sleep actually does to your body over time, why your Garmin's sleep score is probably not telling you the truth, and why the anxiety about not sleeping is often doing more damage than the sleeplessness itself.

    They get into alcohol and sleep in real depth. What alcohol does to your REM sleep, why people who stop drinking often find their sleep gets worse before it gets better, what REM rebound actually is and why the vivid dreams aren't a bad sign - and how understanding all of this can be the difference between staying the course or reaching for a drink to take the edge off at 2am.

    They also cover the cortisol and melatonin dance that wakes most middle-aged people up at 3am, whether you can train yourself to become an early bird if you're a night owl, what a genuinely useful sleep routine actually looks like for a busy runner, and why sleep might be the single most underrated performance tool that nobody talks about.

    Plus Sam's verdict on napping, the 10-minute rule, and why sleep is like a cat.

    Find Sam at easysleepsolutions.co.uk or on Instagram @EasySleepSolutionsUK.

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    1 hr and 15 mins
  • EP59: If You Say You Can't, Maybe You Should | The Naked Running Experiment & the Data Debate
    Jun 20 2026

    Rich has ditched his watch. Not just for one run - for the entire Yorkshire Marathon training block. No Garmin, no heart rate monitor, no Strava, no data of any kind. Just running to feel, a whiteboard on the wall, and 20 years of experience to go on. He's calling it the naked running experiment, and it's already producing results he didn't expect.

    Two weeks in, he ran Leeds 10K without a watch and took 90 seconds off his PB. His average pace was 4:02 per kilometre - faster than he believes he would have allowed himself to run if the watch had been telling him otherwise. No data, no limiting belief, no ceiling.

    This week, Rich and Andy dig into what that actually means. Why does removing the data feel so uncomfortable to so many people? Why do we use our watches to confirm what we already know, but also to cap what we think we're capable of? Andy's Garmin has been telling him he can run a 4-hour marathon for years. His PB is 3:30-something. At what point does the data stop being useful and start being a ceiling?

    And then Andy makes the connection that stops the conversation in its tracks. When Rich says people keep telling him "I couldn't do that" about running without a watch, Andy says: that's exactly what people say about going alcohol-free. And if you genuinely believe you can't go without it - whether it's the watch or the drink - maybe that's the most important reason to try.

    Also in this episode: Rich's chaotic Manchester Half Marathon, Andy navigating the post-big-event lull, and what happens when your friends and family are done hearing about the race you just ran.

    Yorkshire Marathon training block officially starts June 29th. One Valencia place still available - details in the show notes.

    One Valencia spot still available. DM clean.break.coaching on Instagram if that's you.

    FRIDAY CONNECTION CALL 1PM EVERY FRIDAY Register here - https://portal.take-a-cleanbreak.com/friday-connection-call-page

    Are you interested in training with us towards you Autumn/Winter Goals - On-boarding until the end of July ONLY - Come and join the Clean Break Collective.

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    1 hr and 7 mins
  • EP58: Joy in the Hard Bits | Andy's Amazon Ultra Debrief
    Jun 13 2026

    He's back. Andy returned from Peru having completed 230 kilometres through the Amazon rainforest over five days, finishing 17th out of 67 starters, and winning the Simon Small Award for his presence and leadership in camp. This week, he and Rich go through the whole thing.

    It starts at Cloud Forest - 3,000 metres above sea level, clouds rising up from the jungle below, temperatures at 3 degrees - and the moment Andy stepped off the bus and all the fear just disappeared. He'd arrived. He was back in his happy place.

    Then it's day by day. Day 1 down through five different ecosystems, insoles shifting in his shoes at 20K, running the rest of the day without them.

    Day 2 into proper jungle for the first time - little rivers, bogs, mud, trees to go under and over, and ants. Ants everywhere, in every size and colour, for the entire five days.

    Day 3 - the hardest 25K he's ever done in his life. Three enormous hills in thick humid jungle at 500 metres above sea level, a final 3.7K section that took him two hours to climb in semi-dry conditions, and then it rained for everyone still out there behind him.

    Day 4 brutal but manageable.

    And then Day 5 - up an on it at 4.30am, 70K, a river section with 60-odd crossings, a 7K climb in the afternoon heat, blisters forming in the dark, a torch he couldn't find in his own bag, and local kids grabbing his hands and running him through the town square to a finish line with a live band playing.

    He talks about the moment the jungle became a computer game in his head, and what it felt like to find joy not just in the finish, but in the hardest moments of the race itself. And then, quietly and powerfully, he connects it all back to where it started - the decision to go alcohol-free, and the belief system that grew from that one act of courage into everything he's become since.

    Rich is week two into his naked marathon training block for York in October - no watch, no data, no Strava. That's a conversation too.


    One Valencia spot still available. DM clean.break.coaching if that's you.

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    1 hr and 42 mins
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