It Just Makes Me, Me : Why I Run
It Just Makes Me, Me : Why I Run

I was recently asked by a coworker why I run. I was prepping for my afternoon runcommute home in what can only be described as less than desirable temperatures (Fall, I’m ready for you), and as I applied sunscreen, donned gear, and prepped my hydration, she continued, “I mean, do you really enjoy it? It’s the heat of summer and we are surrounded by hills. There are more pleasant ways to exercise. What is it about running?”

Of course this got me thinking: Why do I run?

I started running in college as a way to stay physically active. I’d been a team sport athlete from age 4 all the way through college, and I needed a new way to get out my excess energy as I transitioned into ‘adult’ life. Over the years, I’d never particularly liked running. It was a means to gain fitness for my sports, not a sport I ever considered on its own. Then one fall semester I signed up for a local 5k, ran it, and hated it. It seemed like it would never end and I deeply questioned why anyone would do that on purpose. Maybe it was the fact that I ran it in a cotton t-shirt in Houston, but it’s safe to say, it wasn’t love at first stride.

Lucky for me, I didn’t let my relationship with running end there. Our campus was looped by a flat, 3 mile running trail, the perfect course for a new runner, and it became my goal that semester to complete it comfortably. I started running it a few times a week. It wasn’t always pretty, there was often walking (and swearing), but I stuck with it. I developed playlist chocked full of AC/DC and slowly began recognizing other runners on the route. By the end of the semester, I was able to reach my goal.

I’ve always been a goal driven person and one who likes challenges. After tackling that 3 mile route, I went on to run my first half marathon the following year. The year after that I ran my first full, where I made countless rookie mistakes including running in new sneakers (my dog ate my shoes the week of the race) and not fueling until mile 16. It wasn’t a pretty race as you can imagine, but I finished. It was around this time that running became more to me than just an activity to keep me physically active. Each new distance or route was a way to break out of my comfort zone, an opportunity to have a time to think through my day, and a means to develop confidence in myself.

Now, over 10 years later, I’m proud to be a runner and call running my sport. I still find challenges in each run, I still relish those quiet moments when I get lost in thought while on the run, I still draw self-confidence from the things I’ve accomplished through running, and I still hate 5ks. Sure, running can be a lot of hard work and sweat, but it brings a sense of balance to my life that other activities don’t.  As I mulled over all of these things as I tied my sneakers, not sure I could adequately convey to her all the reasons I run, I smiled and replied, “It makes me happy. It just make me, me.”

 
 
Seen a lot of slim chicks posting their

workouts on here so I thought I'd join 

the fun
Warning : I will bully every one of you

into daily stretches, plyo drills, crazy 

intervals, lifting heavy weights and 

epic long runs
104 °F.....  As my Grandma says, 

"Marathon training ain't for p*ssies."



Crazy old lady is right.

New Featured eBibs

Santa baby, just slip a Garmin under  the tree for me; been an awful good  girl, Santa baby, a pair of running shoes too, light blue; Santa  baby, I want a PR... and  really that's not a lot...  So hurry down the  chimney tonight!
Four stages of a man's life: 1. you believe in Santa 2. you don't believe in Santa 3. you are Santa 4. you look like Santa
Dear treadmill, I hate you.. but I need you. Relationships are complicated.
My eating habits range from a fitness model running enthusiast to hungry unsupervised child in a candy store.
When we're young, we sneak out of our houses to go to parties. When we're old, we sneak out of the parties to go  home.
Running helps me maintain my "never killed anyone" streak.
1% of the population will run a marathon in their lifetime; it's their obligation to talk about it so the  remaining 99% will know what they  are missing.
I hate when I say I wanna lose weight  and people say "you could quit drinking". Like... ok, I could  quit eating too but let's be  realistic about this.
You know you're a runner when... you see 5k and automatically think  3.1 miles, not $5000
Nutritional labels should include a "What if I ate the whole damn thing" section.
1. DENIAL  2. ANGER  3. BARGAINING  4. DEPRESSION  5. ACCEPTANCE  My stages of getting  ready for treadmill.
Joggers bounce up and down at  red lights. Runners just stand there, looking pissed.
I just don't want  to look back and think "I could've eaten that."
Woke up in running clothes. I really  admire drunk me and her ambitions.
Nutritionist: You should eat 1400  calories a day. Me: Ok, and how many at night?
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