I’m taking a quick break from the miles to share a reflection on becoming an athlete… let’s call it a rest stop 🙂 Mile 16 will be back next week… or whenever I feel that piece of advice is worth sharing!

For a few weeks now I’ve had a blog post floating around in my head from a sideline comment about my running and how I’m approaching it. My husband and I were talking (ok more me obsessing about my running and thinking out loud while he was in the room) about how I was pleasantly surprised to find myself running splits and paces that I’d not been regularly hitting in recent months. Going on and on about how I wasn’t inured this January, and then wondering how that will play out into my spring season, he turns and states “you’re talking like an athlete.”  

An athlete. When did that happen?

I’m a mom, wife, employee, friend, volunteer, book club-er, and sometimes laundry folder. I’ve laced up my sneakers thousands of times to go for a run. But, when did that leap happen and I started to take myself seriously and concentrate on running like an athlete?

To be completely honest, that label of athlete still doesn’t feel comfortable. I’m a middle age-woman running at the middle or back of the pack. I don’t get paid to do this. I’m not the fittest person out there. But, I am an athlete.

Google tells me that an athlete is a “person proficient in sports and other forms of physical exercise.” And I agree. That is what I am. I know what I’m doing when it comes to running. I’ve done my research and have the experience behind me to say I’m proficient at it.

I look at my journey from struggling to run around the block to now the struggle to keep to a training schedule and realize that there is improvement there. I might not be qualifying for the Olympic trials, but in my own exercise journey, I’m a proficient athlete. Athletes set goals, create plans to achieve those goals, and surround themselves with a community of like-minded people to continue to make progress to those goals.

Without thinking about it I’ve become an athlete. And I kind of like that label.