I'm 41 years old and I run 4 miles every day and average about 7 minute miles.
Nothing spectacular, but I make a habit of running and then doing weights immediately after.
Nice. How long have you been doing it? I think I could do a 7:30 mile but mile 2 would probably take 12:00.
Weights are another thing I would like to get started. It's more difficult for me than running because it takes so long to see visible results. With running I can do literally the same run a week apart, go look in my Garmin app and see measurable improvement.
I joined the track team in middle school but wasn't built for sprinting and completely inexperienced at distance, so I didn't get any coaching attention and never really learned pacing. Lost interest and didn't come back for high school. It wasn't until my 30s that I got a job that funded my HSA for meeting activity goals like number of 30 minute exercise sessions per month and getting so many steps a day so I bought a Garmin watch and did a beginner 5k training plan based on heart rate zones, and then I learned what different paces feel like. I did it every year when I lived in CO to warm up for high elevation hiking season where I'd usually do as many day hikes to 14,000' peaks that I could get away for in August and September. Then 2019 is when I thought hey...I'm doing all this training, I should try an actual race. I did it a couple months before changing jobs to working from home, my work/life balance went out the window and I didn't run again until this year.
After yesterday I went home and immediately signed up for another one in September, and Monday I'm starting the Intermediate 5k plan on my Garmin.
I'd like to do a 5k under 26 minutes. In the two events I've done that would have been good for at least 2nd place in my age group. I got 4th this time, but it was only out of 11

and I was 4 minutes behind 3rd and 3 minutes slower than my own time in 2019. It was disappointing but I'm also 5 years older, 25 pounds heavier, and until 12 weeks ago a lot less active, and finding the balance between excuses and realism.
I had to force myself to start running but now it's addictive. I put my AirPods in and turn on worship music and it gets me in the zone.
My running music this year has been Theocracy. If you're not familiar, they're a Christian prog/thrash/power metal band. They've got some good 20 minute-ish songs that really make the run go by fast and work well with my step cadence, not to mention have some really cool lyrics. They'd be a good fit if a combination of Megadeth, Kansas, and DragonForce sounds like something you'd want to listen to.