“When you’re too tired you’re not on you’re ‘A game,’” the 65-year-old Georgia businessman told a throng of reporters who greeted the arrival of his bus on the Samford campus.
I actually give safety training on Fatigue. I think this is a very wise move on his part, and it’s something that I would expect a wise person to do.
I work in Emergency Response. You can only run on adrenaline for so long before your body tells you it’s time to rest. You can either hit that wall, or you can get the necessary rest every day and be in it for the long haul.
The run to the White House is a marathon, not a sprint. He has been on a whirlwind for at least a month. He does need to dial it back, so that he can be in it for the long run.
Also, this man is a cancer survivor. There’s no reason to run himself into the ground.
He can campaign very well and effectively without going 24/7 and constantly traveling.
I wonder about a man of his age with his cancer history attempting such a grueling effort as running for president.
I hope he stays well.