11/11/17: Anthem Richmond Marathon: Americaâs Friendliest Marathon
On Veteranâs Day, I ran my very first half-marathon. I was never much of a runner, but I was an athlete. In 8th grade, I started playing volleyball. By my senior year of high school, I was the captain of my varsity team and the co-captain of my national travel club team. I knew I wouldnât go on to play in college as I had accepted my offer to attend a division 1 sports school. As my club season was nearing a close, I knew I would need to find something else.
After all the graduation parties and summer BBQâs came to a close, I started to feel the inevitable identity crisis that came with losing oneâs sport. My old teammates were heading off to preseason and there I was still at home with nothing to train for. I felt like I lost a huge part of myself. I wondered, could I still be an athlete if I wasnât playing volleyball anymore? If I wasnât an athlete, who was I?
Just one year earlier, my mother was diagnosed with Breast Cancer. She says she was lucky because with a few months of chemotherapy and radiation, sheâd be just fine.
A few months before the diagnosis, she had signed up to run the Anthem Half-Marathon for the fall of 2014. She asked her doctor, âcan I still run?â
âIf you can still run, you should.â
She trained all summer using a modified version of Hal Hidgonâs Half-Marathon Training schedule. It was tough. There were tears, there were nauseous days, there were skipped days, there were days where her legs felt like lead. In the end, there was only one day that mattered: race day.
On November 8th, 2014 - bald as can be - my mother completed her first Half-Marathon. Three years later, Iâm a junior in college, no longer fully crushed by the weight of my identity crisis. Having the accountability of a race deadline kept me training all summer and all semester-long. I was able to take control of my health and my happiness. As silly as it sounds, I felt validated again in owning and wearing athletic apparel.
Running this race gave me the tools I needed to reestablish my identity. The brisk cold and roller coaster-esque hills reminded me of what it was like to endure a challenge. Now I more deeply understand the value of pushing through discomfort and pain with a greater goal in mind.