This week on The Back of the Pack Podcast: Second Wind, we kick off our July series, Why Are We Like This?, by asking why runners insist on turning holiday weekends into race weekends. With the Fourth of July upon us, we look at the wonderfully weird tradition of waking up early, dressing in red, white, and blue, charging the Garmin, checking the weather, and voluntarily sweating through a shirt before breakfast. From the Olde Glory Days 5K on July 3rd to Ward Parkway 4 on the Fourth on July 4th, this episode celebrates the strange little joy of patriotic races and holiday start lines. We talk about why holiday races feel different, why they bring out families, walkers, first-timers, costumes, tourists, longtime locals, and plenty of back-of-the-pack party energy. We also dig into the myth of the “just a fun run,” because a festive 5K can still hurt, a 4-mile race can sneak up on us, and heat and humidity do not care how cute the theme is. There’s plenty of talk about patriotic gear, novelty outfits, chafing, sunscreen, hydration, and why racing before the cookout means we still need to recover like adults with at least partial wisdom. More than anything, this episode reminds us that holiday races become traditions because they connect running to real life. They welcome new runners, grow the community, and turn the start line into something bigger than the clock. Why are we like this? Because somewhere between the costumes, the sweat, the family photos, and the finish-line banana, we found a tradition worth keeping.