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Congrats to the 2024 BSWD scholarship recipients!

May 30, 2024/in Latest News, News, Newsletters /by Mira Brody

Each year, Big Sky Wind Drinkers present 3-4 scholarships to promising young athletes in the Gallatin Valley. Big congrats to this year’s winners: Emma Konen (Twin Bridges High), Nomi Friedman (Bozeman High), Hannah Giese (Belgrade High) and Kimball Smith (Park High). Big thanks to our scholarship committee, Kristin Harbuck, Patrick Hatfield, Mark Genito and Ethan Brown.

Each student has given us permission to publish their personal essay below – enjoy!

Nomi Friedman – Bozeman High

As my alarm goes off and I shift my eyes from side to side I can feel a deep, throbbing pain inside my head. It’s four in the morning and I’m huddled inside my sleeping bag, the only thing below me is a damp tarp and the only thing above is the stars still in the sky. I take a deep breath in hopes of halting the welling tears from pouring out. ‘Nomi. Do not be such a baby,’ I chide myself. I kick out my legs, feeling my muscles twinge as they make contact with the cold part of my sleeping bag that’s been denied any body heat. I slowly sit up, gulping in frigid air. Today is day 3 of the Headwaters Relay, a 220 mile running relay through the Gravelly Mountains. In the days prior I had logged 18 miles all at paces faster than I’d run so far that summer. My legs hurt to touch, my arches are home to two incredibly tender blisters, and my mental fortitude is being tested like never before.

I pull myself from my sleeping bag and put on my shoes so I can walk a couple hundred feet to go to the bathroom. I squat down in time to hear a crack in the branch I had placed my foot on. My foot falls to the ground and my entire body follows suit. Tears well, my head pounds, and it takes absolutely everything in me to keep my eyes open. ‘Nomi, you’re okay. You got this. Get up,’ the internal voice instructs me. I place my palms on the cold dirt and push myself back up, go to the bathroom, and head back to camp.

We fold up the tarp, shovel cinnamon apple oatmeal into our mouths, and pile into the truck, heading to the start of my leg. As we rumble down the road I can just barely see the sun poking up from behind the hillside. I watch the light trace its way through the clouds and a smile creeps across my face. I try to put into perspective what I’m doing. I get to wake up next to my best friends, run all day through the mountains, and be lulled to sleep by the hush of a quiet wind. I have a body that is strong and a mind that’s even stronger and here I am doing what I love.

That day I ran ten and a half miles and finished the relay with my team. That weekend showed me how strong I could be in the face of both an extreme mental and physical challenge. It pushed me deep into the pain cave, secluded me to just my thoughts, and allowed me to see how truly capable I am.

To me, that’s what running is all about. No other activity pushes you to your absolute limit while still allowing you to do what you love the most. Running has given me my favorite sport, my best friends, and an unbridled appreciation for being alive. I know when I show up to practice I will be greeted by the smiles of my teammates, a witty joke from Coach Casey, and just a couple anxious butterflies as I start to warm up for hard intervals.

So, when asked what running means to me, I believe it’s not the times, the races, or the splits, but rather the community, the grit, and the smiles that are direct results of the time we spend pushing ourselves to be stronger. I will forever cherish the memories I’ve made during my career as a Hawk, and I will never stop pursuing the joy I get from going out on a run.

Kimball Smith – Park High

Running holds a special place in my heart, far beyond just putting one foot in front of the other. To me, running is a way of life, a journey filled with challenges, pushing yourlimits, triumphs, self-discovery, and connecting with a community. It all began as a littlechild; in my family we have a tradition called the Smith Family Marathon. Every year since I was two years old my dad has run an independent self-supported marathon from out thefront door of our house. Our job as kids was to cheer for him as loud as we could along theway. We always had a finish line across our driveway and made him a finishers metal. AsI’ve grown older and began to run alongside him, I’ve noticed how much commitment thistradition has required for my dad. Over the years the family marathon has evolved toinclude most of the family for some distance of the run. One memory I have was when mydad and I drove 26.2 miles up a dusty dirt road in the farm hills above our ranch and ranback to the cabin. At the end of the run, I asked him why he does it. He said, “the reasoncontinue to do this tradition is to show you kids that you can do hard things.” This struckme as he is nearing 50 years old. My dad has always led by his example and has inspiredme to do hard things.

The sport of running is very individual and has taught me valuable lessons about discipline, perseverance, and goal setting. Throughout my running career, I’ve learned to embrace discomfort, to push through pain, and to never give up, no matter how challenging the path may seem. As a dedicated runner there is a feeling of pain that isunexplainable. Pushing through the unbearable pain, legs are on fire, mind is screaming“stop!” is where the lessons are learned. The best way I can explain it is as an out of body experience as if you’re looking at yourself from above. Although it may be miserable in themoment, as I look back upon all the times this pain has overwhelmed me, I am proud ofmyself for doing something hard, it makes me feel as though I can do anything I put mymind too. This mentality has encouraged me to apply these valuable lessons to manyaspects of my life. I must attribute this attitude of never giving up to my dad, coaches, and teammates that went to great lengths to help me and the team achieve the goals that we set. Running has helped me recognize that with patience, resilience, and support fromthose I surround myself with, I can overcome any hurdle that stands in my way. As I soon begin a new chapter in my life attending Utah State University pursuing a business degree, I can use these lessons to be successful. Business is never easy and takes a lot of grit,getting knocked down is bound to happen, but getting back up is guaranteed because of the lessons I’ve learned through running.
Running is more than just a physical exercise or pushing myself; it is a mental and emotional endeavor as well. When I lace up my shoes I leave behind the worries anddoubts that weigh me down. Running for me can be therapeutic, in the solitude of a longrun I find clarity and peace of mind. Thoughts flow freely, without being distracted by thenoise of the outside world. I can confront my fears, problems, failures, and doubts head-on, making myself stronger and more determined than before. Equally as important, running has connected me with a community of like-minded individuals who share my passion for the sport. Whether it’s cheering each other or pickingeach other up at the finish line, I have found camaraderie and support among fellowrunners that extends far beyond the finish line. Together, we celebrate our victories, lift each other up in times of struggle, and inspire one another to keep chasing our dreams. Belonging to a team and community has nurtured social skills such as leadership abilities, which I foresee extending well beyond the realm of running. These skills encompass pushing others around me to be the best version of themselves, taking accountability, humility, and making selfless choices.
Throughout middle school and high school athletics, I’ve experienced both triumphs and setbacks while pushing myself to excel. From sixth grade to junior year, I’ve been dedicated to Cross Country, achieving notable successes such as an undefeatedseason and winning the Mountain West Classic in seventh grade. In 2018, some teammates and I qualified for the Junior Olympics in Reno, NV. High school brought even more accomplishments, including winning the state championship as a junior. I competed in Track and Field from seventh grade through senior year, earning placements at the state level in pole-vault and the 4×400 relay. Running required a significant commitment throughout my schooling.
In essence, running is not just a hobby or a form of exercise—it is a way of life with valuable principles that I plan to continue applying throughout my adult life. It is a journeyof self-discovery, knowing the power of perseverance and mental fortitude, a source ofstrength and inspiration, and a community of belonging. Running will always be a reminder that no matter how far the road may stretch before me, if I have the courage and determination to keep moving forward, one step at a time, anything is possible.
Hannah Giese – Belgrade High

What Running Means to Me
It was the day of the time trial. I warmed up with the rest of the girls’ team, and found that I wasn’t as nervous as I thought I might be. After all, I was just a freshman. No one expected anything from me, there was no pressure to perform well. I lined up, closer to the back of the pack, at the makeshift start line. Our coach gave us the “Go!” command, and we took off. Instantly I felt like I could go faster, so I squeezed through the group in front of me and found myself directly behind a couple of seniors who were in the front. I knew I could run faster than this, but I wasn’t sure if I was allowed to pass the upperclassmen. After a few seconds, I decided to pass them and ended up finishing the time trial in first place. I was shocked! At most, I had been hoping to run in the sixth or seventh varsity position at the first meet, but here I was leading the team!

By the middle of winter freshman year, I was putting in more mileage than I thought possible, and I was loving it. Then I lost it all. I suffered a severe partial tear in my right calf due to overuse. For weeks I could barely walk, let alone run, and by the time track season rolled around (almost 3 months later) I still was unable to run. Running was something that I had always taken for granted, until it was suddenly stripped away. My mental health began to suffer severely, and I realized that running had been a form of therapy as much as it was a sport. Running was an escape, it gave me freedom. It also allowed me to push the limits of my determination and perseverance as I strove to recover in time to race at the last few meets of the season. I held a new appreciation for every run and every step in my recovery.

Over the next two years, I lost sight of running as a form of freedom. I became blinded by my goals and the pressure that I felt from everyone around me. It came from my parents, my coaches, my teammates, my teachers. But most of all, it came from myself. I was expected to continue leading the team and PRing in races, and so I did, until at the end of my junior year I earned All-State Honors at the AA State Cross Country Meet. Of course, I was thrilled. But at the same time I knew I couldn’t race another season the same way I had the last three years. I was mentally exhausted, and each race caused an immense amount of anxiety that I would let people down. For a while, I stopped running entirely. I didn’t attend winter training or participate in the next track season. I was scared to run again. Running had changed from something that lessened my anxiety and had become the main source of my anxiety. I missed the freedom that running had once brought, but I was afraid that if I started running again it would no longer bring the same freedom that it once had.

Finally, during the summer before my senior year, I decided that I didn’t want to give up on running. It had been one of the biggest parts of my life for seven years, and I didn’t want to lose it forever. I started running again, with the sole goal of developing a lifelong love for it. I went on countless trail runs, and decided to return for a final cross country season. Although I didn’t race much due to injury, I will never regret that I came back to running. I am learning to appreciate running without any pressure to PR or to set ambitious goals. To me, running is a way to escape, to find new adventures, and to discover more about myself. To me, running is freedom.

Emma Konen – Twin Bridges High

Growing up on a small ranch as the youngest of five siblings, I was constantly running. I loved the feeling of the wind against my face as I chased my brothers through the fields or as I played with the cow dogs and pigs. As I got older this love continued as sports engulfed my life, every day I was running down the basketball court or around the track, it was something that I found a passion for and put all of my efforts into until everything changed. Junior year at the State Track meet, I charged down the final stretch as the anchor of the 4x400m relay, pushing my body to its limits. As I was fighting to get a breath of air into my lungs, darkness encroached on my vision, but I willed my legs to carry me forward until I collapsed across the finish line. This episode wasn’t an isolated incident; it was just the climax of a struggle that began months earlier.

It all started in November, during basketball practice, when I noticed a disturbing feeling when doing basic conditioning, a feeling as if I breathing through a straw. Hoping for a quick fix of an inhaler, I sought help from a local doctor, only to leave with a note banning me from exercise and no answers. As a three-sport All-State athlete with hopes of competing at the college level, this was dream-crushing news. I sought help from many other doctors around the state who were also unable to give me a diagnosis and waved it off as long-term COVID-19. After returning to sports, the mental toll of being unable to compete at my full potential weighed heavily on me, but I refused to surrender to these negative thoughts that wanted me to give up on my dreams. Determined to find answers, I embarked on a journey that led me to The National Jewish Hospital in Denver, Colorado.

There, amidst rigorous physically and mentally demanding testing, I received a diagnosis that explained my problem: Exercise-Induced Laryngeal Obstruction (EILO), a rare condition that makes breathing nine to sixteen times more challenging during exertion, taking precious energy and oxygen from my lungs, muscles, and brain. After my diagnosis, while still at National Jewish, I began the meticulous process of relearning how to breathe efficiently while maintaining high levels of activity.

As I approach my Senior year of track, I am filled with gratitude for EILO. Despite the setbacks caused by EILO, I’ve embraced the challenge and signed to run collegiate track and play basketball at Montana Tech. My perspective on running has undergone a profound transformation. What was once perceived as punishment or a dreaded chore has become a source of profound appreciation. EILO has taught me not to take anything for granted, especially the simple act of breathing. Through adversity, I’ve discovered resilience and a deeper connection to my faith.

Running, to me, embodies freedom—a liberation from the burdens that weigh me down. With each stride, I feel the weight of my worries lift, leaving me empowered and invigorated. I am reminded of the verse from Isaiah 40:31: “But those who hope in the Lord will renew their strength. They will soar on wings like eagles; they will run and not grow weary, they will walk and not be faint.” My journey with EILO has strengthened my faith and reaffirmed my belief that I run not just by my own strength, but by the grace and faithfulness of God. I know that every time I step into my blocks, with the power of God in me, nothing can stop me, not even EILO.

Meet Our 2023 BSWD Scholars!

May 27, 2023/in Uncategorized /by Mira Brody

Each year, BSWD awards $1,000 awards to help the pursuits of young athletes and scholars in our community. This year, we were able to award three scholarships and we’d like to share their essays with you all – congrats Charlie, Carson and Grace, and best of luck on your next journey!


Prompt: What Running Means to Me

#1 I remember walking into my first day of cross country practice entirely alone and without confidence. The easy run I went on only seemed to prove that I was not going to be good enough. But, at some point along the way, something clicked and I decided that this was going to be something I would work at until I got better. From that point on, I pushed myself and dedicated myself to getting better, and it paid off. One of the proudest moments of my highschool career was crossing the finish line at state with a personal record. In this moment, I was finally able to see the value I brought to my team.

Not only was I seeing improvement in my times, I was also seeing a change in my attitude. I have become mentally tough and persistent because of running, and I have seen these traits pay off in my academic and professional life as well. I have met my best friends in cross country; people that I will talk to and run with even after I am no longer on a team with them. It is amazing the bond you form with someone on a run. Having a ‘running buddy’ means that they will see you at your best when you are fast and motivated, and it also means they will be there for you at your worst when your feet are dragging and you feel sick. I am so thankful for the running buddies I have, and I will carry my memories from cross country with them for the rest of my life.

Looking more towards the future, I am excited to say that I will be running cross country and track at Carroll College next year. Attending Carroll College has been my dream since middle school, but if someone told me that I could be an athlete in college, I would have said they were crazy. Earlier this school year, I decided that I would not try to run in college. I was worried about the dedication that would be required and wondered if I was even good enough to make it on a team. For the few months that I was not planning on running, I was nervous and uncertain about my future. I just remember feeling like something was off and I was panicking.

I started to change my mind when people started to ask me, “are you going to run next year?” Everytime, I just wanted to answer confidently, “yes I am.” So I thought, I might as well give it a shot. I started reaching out to coaches and researching schools. That is when I decided that I could not give up running, because I wasn’t done yet. I have improved so much since the time I started running. I love the competitive aspects, but also the loving community you put yourself into. It still amazes me that you can sprint past someone at the finish line and be all out of breath, and they would still pull you in for a hug and tell you good job. These are honestly some of the nicest people I have ever met. I feel so much better now that I know I will be running next year. I was not ready to quit running, because I still have so much left to give. I want to keep working on the mental portion of competing where you feel like you want to quit, but instead you run a little faster. Overall, I realize that I have found something I will do for the rest of my life. I will keep texting my best friend and ask her to run with me every once in a while. I will still listen to country music while I run down a dirt road with my aunt, and I cannot wait to run a marathon with my sister. Running is a very special sport that a lot of people are afraid of. I cannot count the number of times that I have been told that I am crazy because I enjoy running. But they’re wrong; finding out I love running was like finding gold. It was unexpected, and it changed my life. So what does running mean to me? Running has given me something to be proud of, something to work hard at, and something to look forward to. Being healthy enough and dedicated enough to run has changed my life, and I would not give it up for anything in the world.

#2 I am a runner. I was a soccer player. I began playing soccer at the age of four, taking part in fall soccer, spring soccer, and summer soccer camps. When I was getting ready to start seventh grade, I had been playing soccer with the same kids for nearly nine years. These were my friends. These were the kids that came to my birthday parties. They were the kids I used to see in school every day. As that year’s soccer season started, I knew something had changed. Suddenly, there was a target on my back, and the coach’s son was aiming for it. He started to bully me. He was physically aggressive and verbally abusive. The coach turned a blind eye. My teammates looked the other way. Even the parents, who saw it happen at practices and even at games, looked the other way. Soccer stopped being enjoyable.

At the end of that miserable soccer season, some of my classmates, just acquaintances, suggested I try cross-country and track. I did, and I loved it. I was good, not great, but excited about getting better. I noticed the target that had been on my back throughout the soccer season had somehow disappeared. These kids were kind, supportive, and had a profound influence. Now, after five years of running, I have had the privilege to have three all-state finishes, and a team state championship finish. From my experience, I have learned that there is always a way out of an unpleasant situation. Sometimes you can find this solution by yourself, and sometimes you need help. I found that help and now I know, I have found my sport and my people.

In addition to cross country and track, I participate in an average of ten community runs each year. I have also volunteered at several races as a support runner to a friend with special needs, and have volunteered as a lead runner at youth races that I am now too old to run in. I plan to continue to run in college. Thank you for considering me for your scholarship.

#3 The first time I ran around a track way back in elementary school, I instantly fell in love with running. When I started elementary track I was a thrower. I always said I didn’t like running. I’d never given it a chance. The first time I ran a mile on a track, I was the slowest in my class. I was probably the slowest in the whole school. I envied turtles for their speed. My parents thought that maybe sports weren’t for me. I wasn’t good, but I loved it, the power in my legs, full lungs, even my arms were sore.

In 6th grade I started sprinting, after all, running far didn’t seem to be my talent. I ran the 4×100, the 200, and the 400. My mom was in the stands, ready to cheer for me when I crossed the finish line last, but instead she was cheering as her son crossed the finish line first and set a middle school record. This was a huge turning point in my athletic career. I began to have confidence in myself and started to push my limits. The following year I moved back into distance by adding the 800 to my favorite track races. Before my first 800 I realized I had no strategy for the race. None of my friends like to run it, so I was on my own. Google taught me there are 4 phases in an 800 but I decided to focus on phase 4: run as hard as possible for the last 200 meters. This was the greatest decision I have ever made. I sat at the back of the pack and at the end out kicked everyone, winning the race. Maybe competitive distance running wasn’t just a dream.. The next year I joined the middle school cross country team and I never looked back. I have been running for years now but as a senior in high school, I truly have found that running isn’t just about competing. The view from the front of the pack may be crystal clear, but I still love running as much as I did that day in elementary school when I ran through everyone else’s dust and decided throwing things wasn’t what interested me in the track any more.

That year’s BSWD scholarship winners!

May 29, 2022/in Latest News, News, Newsletters /by Mira Brody

A huge part of being a Wind Drinkers is the efforts we put back into the local running community, including each year we hand out scholarships to young runners to help them on the next stretch of their journey. We wanted to take a moment and celebrate the four scholarship recipients. One requirement is to submit an essay about how running has shaped your life, which each has shared with you all below.

Kyra Giese – Belgrade

When I joined the high school cross country team freshman year, I was the second-fastest girl on the team, beaten only by my older sister, who was a senior at the time. The next year, after my sister’s graduation, I was the fastest girl on the team, a surprising feat considering that I am only 5’2’’. While I am not a person who typically brags, this made me feel confident in myself and my abilities. I was used to doing well consistently and not having to worry about making the varsity team. Sophomore year, I fell just short of my goal of breaking 21 minutes in the 5k. I was not worried about falling short of my goal, I figured that I had two years left of running cross-country and expected that I was only going to get faster. But then, during the winter and spring of sophomore year, I had some trouble with my mental health. I started to stress eat and exercise less. I gained weight and lost fitness. The next year, while I was able to stay on the varsity team, I consistently ran fifth or sixth on the team instead of first. This year, I have run some varsity races and some JV ones. The shift from being the fastest on the team to having to fight for my spot on varsity was difficult. In addition to the pressure of being from a family of runners, I put a lot of pressure on myself to be fast and my ability as a runner was a big part of my identity. At the beginning of my senior year, I was very frustrated with my running, but I learned how to be content with my body and my new placement on the team. This was not the first time I had felt this way. I have struggled with my body image since middle school. My struggles on the cross-country team actually helped me to work though some of my self-esteem issues and body dysmorphia because it led me to begin to accept my worth as inherent and not a product of my fitness or body shape. I have also been able to apply this lesson to other areas of my life, including school, which has helped me reduce stress by focusing on who I am as a unique human being, not a sum of my achievements and failures. There is no magic switch that I can flip to see myself in this new light. Reforming how I think about myself is a long and ongoing process. While it can still be difficult at times, I have developed a better relationship with my body and with running. Before I had this challenge, I never took a run easy, even when I was supposed to, and often left my teammates behind if they were running slightly slower than me. I placed so much of my worth on my performance that I could not afford to give anything less than all the effort I had. Now, I am able to slow down, enjoy the run, and let my body recover from harder workouts. Also, I find myself enjoying running with my teammates much more than I used to, without feeling pressured to do better than them. I still hope to regain some of the fitness I lost and become a better runner, I plan to do so while maintaining the much healthier relationship I have developed with the sport. This experience taught me that even when I fail, I hold my head high and find my own way to be proud of myself.

 

Samuel Nash – Belgrade

I began running in the seventh grade when I joined my school’s cross country team. I had no intention of making it a large part of my life, no one I knew ran, I didnt even think it was a sport. Unbeknownst to me, it would change the way I lived my life forever. It gave me the first time I could admit to myself that I had cared about something, and failed at it, and I found new ambition and a deepened understanding of what it would take to achieve this ambition.

I started the day like any other, woke up, ate breakfast, and then went to school. I was missing six classes for my race, but I wasn’t worried, that was a stroll through the park for me, so familiar, so easy I could do it with my eyes closed, and I did. I never had to try hard in school, I would slack off in and out of class and still put up straight A’s, there was no reason to put in extra effort if I didn’t have to, and that was fine by me.

A friend recommended I do cross country one day after we finished soccer practice, and I figured I’d try it. I ran the minimum miles at practice for a week or two, and then it was time for a meet. I could run faster than everyone in the few practice miles I did; and I began to wonder if this would be like that pleasant afternoon stroll that I enjoyed through school. rather than the grueling trek traditionally represented by athletics. My answer was approaching rapidly.

When we finally arrived at the course I was mystified, there was no field, no referee, only a start line, and a line of cones that marked the course, there was no one here to monitor what I did or didn’t do during the race, all I had to do was stay on course. It was utter freedom over my own actions, freedom to succeed or fail as I pleased. So different from the usual structured games with their rules and coaches always deciding what we did on the field. In light of this freedom, I saw no reason why this should not be my race to win.

There was a moment of elation as the gun fired, I erupted from the line, focused on nothing but getting in front, I felt my legs pounding, faster than I could run for the whole race, but I knew we would begin to slow down. I was in front within ten seconds, as I felt my pace slow ever so slightly, no one was approaching me, I was in the clear. I had no idea who was behind me or how far away they were, but it didn’t matter, I was going to stay winning for two and a half miles. Easy. I ate up the turns, flew up hills, and sped down them, relishing my victory, before I even heard my first mile time. It was exactly how I imagined it, a dominant performance, the inevitable win that was becoming more and more solid with every step.

This fantasy collapsed with around a half of a mile to run, my confidence began to waver as a problem emerged: it was getting harder to run, faster than I was approaching the finish line. I was suddenly and startlingly aware of the two runners right behind me. Was Their breath steadier than mine? How were they still going so fast? I tried to force more effort out of myself, fighting my lungs to breathe harder or my heart to beat faster, I wanted to go beyond them, to do more than I could, but there was no response. I was too tired. This was a situation I wasn’t ready for, I couldn’t lose, I wanted to win so bad, this wasn’t the stroll I wanted, and I found myself on the familiar lower slopes of the mountain of difficulty which I had never ventured far up. I didn’t know what to do, and so I did nothing.

I ended up 4th in that race, a position I told myself I was proud of, but one that disappointed me nonetheless. I didn’t know how to feel, I hadn’t made a mistake in the race, I fought through the start to the end, so how did I lose? Easy. I had been outworked. I had messed around in practice and I lost because of it. I hadn’t taken my preparation seriously, and I lost because of it. I had done things the way I always did them when I succeeded, and I lost because of it. It turned out that running was neither as peaceful as school nor as demoralizing as other sports, but something in between. With success not so elusive to be deemed impossible, nor dropped directly into my lap, but rather just barely, tantalizing, out of reach, on

the crest of a molehill, a hike, but certainly not the trek I had come to fear. I understood that true success here was hard, physically and mentally, but for the first time, that did not scare me, rather I relished the challenge.

I began to pour more of myself into the things I did, first running, doing more at practice, and then eventually outside of it. This attitude soon spilled over into my schoolwork as I sought to challenge myself with more rigorous courses. My desire for a success that was just out of reach increased, as did my will to get there.

I talk to the younger runners on the cross country team now sometimes, and I see who I was inside of them, either too headstrong to believe they can lose, too disheartened to believe they can win, or somewhere in the middle. They are always set straight eventually, either humbled or inspired, and I attempt to guide them. I help them cultivate their new talents and can not be more proud to see their success. Especially when I get to watch the climb to the top, and whether it is summiting a great mountain, hiking a molehill, or simply strolling through the park, I am still proud to see their goals realized.

Their journey is my great joy in life. Running saved me from becoming a passive observer in my own life, it taught me how to understand difficulty rather than impossibility. Without my experience in running, I never would have pursued the challenges that I have now, I never would have failed, but I also never would have truly felt the success that can only emerge from feeling oneself lifted beyond previously thought up limitations, as I never would have left the comfort of my own ability.It is due to this great debt I owe the sport, that I take such happiness in helping those around me find it, I feel it allows me to give back to the sport that so radically changed the way I lived.

 

Samuel Konen – Twin Bridges

Running, My Worst Enemy

Since I was a kid the thing I always dreaded most was running. Whether it was laps around the gym at PE, tag at recess, or conditioning during little league football, I absolutely hated running. It wasn’t because I was lazy or thought I was too good for running, it was because I was awful at it. I was always the last in races and the slowest on the team, it was always such an embarrassing feeling for me. One of my worst memories from childhood was my 5th-grade county track meet during which my coach forced me into doing the 800-meter race. It was absolutely brutal, I came in last, but not just last, I managed to get lapped. I got lapped in the 800-meter race, a two-lap race! Everyone watched and laughed at me, it made me feel so insecure and ashamed that I almost quit every sport. So as a kid what running meant to me was a reminder that I wasn’t good enough, that I was too slow, and that I was an embarrassment.

I chose not to run track through high school, for fear that I would embarrass myself again. I continued my other sports of football and basketball throughout high school, but those didn’t go much better. However, unlike in 5th-grade, I didn’t let my shortcomings discourage me. I continued to work hard and it eventually paid off. No matter how bad the game went or how tired I was, I kept working. Countless hours were spent in the gym and weight room so I could improve my skills. I went from benchwarmer to starter, from water boy to all-conference. But, even as I got faster, stronger, and improved in my other sports, there was still a fear of returning to the track.

This year, after some strong convincing from my coach, I decided to go out for track once again. The confidence and encouragement from my coach gave me the courage to go out again no matter what happens on that track. The first track meet was last week. On the bus ride over, all I thought about was how I was going to fail and embarrass myself just like before. The meet came and went, and I was far from a state champion, but I did surprisingly well and showed lots of potential. That anxious feeling of failing was gone.

So what does running mean to me? Running was a symbol, a symbol for all the things I chose not to do because I feared failure. I missed out on countless opportunities because I thought I was going to lose. But the true loss was missing out on countless opportunities to have fun and improve myself. Running, even though I hated it for years, helped me realize that we cannot fear failure. We have to accept that failure is a possibility, in every aspect of life, and it shouldn’t hold us back from doing the things we enjoy.

 

Landon Scott – Manhattan Christian

Throughout my high school years I have been a part of both the cross country and the track team. I have had both great experiences and experiences that have challenged me. These challenges didn’t just occur in these specific sports seasons, instead they all began when I was born. When I was born, I was born with a pretty severe case of clubfoot. Clubfoot is when the tendons within the foot are not formed correctly and the result is an inward turned foot. Throughout my first couple years of life, I had several surgeries, I was in a wheelchair for a couple of months, and I also had several different casts on my left leg from the knee down. As time went on I grew stronger and when I turned 3 I was eventually able to walk without crutches and without a cast on. Between the ages of 3 to about 13, I was able to run without pain and I was able to participate in several sports. The sports that I participated in were tee ball, baseball, soccer, basketball, track, football and I also ran in several big 5k races in that time. As time went on and when I was in 7th grade, I began to notice an unusual tightness in my left foot and a random aching that was just annoying at first. As time went on and when my freshman cross country season came around the pain and the tightness started to become unbearable and whenever I tried to run, there was such an enormous amount of pain that I couldn’t run even if I wanted to. After cross country season ended my parents and I traveled to my foot doctor at Shriners in Portland, OR. This appointment would be one that I would remember for years to come, because I found out that this would be the start to a series of surgeries that would put me out of sports for about three-quarters of a year. This was because I needed to have a reconstructive leg surgery, and they would have to remove a piece of my tibia and fibula and hold the bone together with a plate with eleven screws. However I pulled through and was able to manage for the cross country team the following fall and even participate in basketball.

The next year however I had to have another surgery to remove the plate and screws from the bone in my leg. Between the first surgery and the second one, I had spent several months on crutches, several days in the hospital, and countless hours on the road to recovery through sessions of physical therapy. There were good and bad days within that mix, but throughout that time I realized how much I actually took for granted. It was a miracle in the first place that I could even walk, run, and do things that kids should have every right to do. There are so many people in this world that have been born with disabilities or have become disabled that cannot enjoy the action of running. Over the course of this past year I was finally able to run in a cross country meet again, and that entire season I never took anything for granted and I was excited for the practice, even if it was a hard day. Also since track has started I have run my first 100 meter dash since middle school. Even on days when it hurts, I still try my best to push through the pain and run, because it is a miracle in itself that I can even do this stuff. This is what running means to me, to find joy and gratitude through the good days and the hard days, to use the gift of running to help others in times of need or hardships, and to not take our mobility for granted. Running is a gift, a gift that cannot be replaced. I have learned this through my athletic experiences and it is something that I will remember for the rest of my life.

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