Sunday, September 24, 2006

Kristina Runs?

Having read my first post, you might ask the above question. Most people know that I was a dancer growing up and into college, and some people know I once played on my high school tennis team. But a lot of people don't know that I started running after college and have actually run a marathon before.

To be selected for the DFMC, one has to apply. It's not simply that I signed up, and it's definitely not that I had a qualifying time to run the Boston Marathon (which is something like 3 hrs. and 40 minutes for my age and gender). I had to write an essay and explain why I want to run the Boston Marathon and why, specifically, I want to raise money for cancer research. In addition, applicants were encouraged to submit any supplementary materials to assist in the selection process. I won't post all of my statements and essays at once. Below is what I submitted to explain why I run, as well as the photo of me finishing my first marathon in Richmond in 2002...

Marathon Woman

Why I Run

Convinced as a kid that I lacked the necessary talents for organized team sports, I avoided physical education, dreading Field Day year after year in school. As a grad student, though, I met and became good friends with several women who had been involved in running for years, and their accomplishments convinced me that running isn’t only for elite athletes or those with a natural aptitude for it. I ran my first marathon in 2002, and have consistently found that running is an integral element in my psychological and physical strength. Before my commitment to a running practice, I believed I should only ever run if I was trying to get away from something. Since becoming a runner, however, I’ve come to realize the dividends reaped by running toward a stronger and more efficacious self.

I started running the way most do, amazed at finishing even a single mile without stopping. A former dancer, I had become disenchanted with the competition of the studio and did not have the outlet for an intramural team like soccer or softball. As a recent college graduate living in Pittsburgh, I started to run to release energy and get some straightforward aerobic exercise. I gradually added distance, one city block at a time, and ran my first 5K for the Susan Komen charity. At the time, I didn’t think I could ever run further than 3.1 miles.

In graduate school for psychology, I met several accomplished runners who happened to be women much like me, studying child development and not overly athletic. These women, to my surprise, had run marathons, a distance I had never considered possible for myself prior to meeting them. Inspired by their discipline and accomplishment of 26.2 miles (in a single day!), I trained for and completed my first marathon on a brilliant October day.

As a researcher in the area of girls’ resilience and healthy development, I have a personal conviction that fitness, physical activity, and running especially, can function in girls’ lives as an asset that leaves ideas of dieting, weight, and body obsession in the dust. Not one to ever portray girls as deficient, I do believe that most boys have been raised to experience physical activity as fun and a source of pride, not exclusively as the basis for weight management or self-worth. I am a runner for myself, but I am also a runner for others. I run to live what I believe—that girls and women can accomplish physical achievements they never before conceived.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Kristina,
Good luck to you! I commend you on your dedication and training to help fight the good fight for such an honorable cause.

Like you, I have lost a grandmother to breast cancer. Currently, I have a younger cousin who is in her last days and struggling with the disease.

I gladly support you in both prayer and with financial means.

Best wishes to you in your noble run!

Thanks,
Paul L. Gerhardt, Ph.D.
www.paulgerhardt.com

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