Sarah looked down at the numbers , now barely visible under a layer of silt. She was exhausted, sore, and would likely be finding mud in her ears for a week, but as she checked the official results, she knew she had conquered the course.
As she crossed the finish line, drenched and caked in grit, a volunteer handed her a water bottle. "Great job, Taylor," they said, glancing at her mud-splattered bib. SARAH TAYLOR [313]
At the halfway point, a particularly steep, slick incline loomed. Sarah dug in. She didn't focus on the finish line; she focused on the rhythm of her breathing and the steady beat of her heart. She wasn't just running against the clock; she was running for the sheer, messy joy of being capable. Sarah looked down at the numbers , now
Sarah grinned, adjusting her ponytail. "As ready as I'll ever be to lose a shoe." "Great job, Taylor," they said, glancing at her
The safety pins were the hardest part. Sarah’s fingers were numb from the damp morning air, but she finally managed to secure the bib to her chest: .
When the whistle blew, Sarah felt the immediate pull of the earth. Every step required twice the effort, the mud acting like a vacuum against her soles. By the second mile, her legs were heavy, and her pristine white socks were a distant memory. She watched other runners slip, their laughs echoing through the trees as they hauled each other up.
The course at the More Than A Run event wasn't just a trail; it was a swamp. Rain from the night before had turned the path into a sludge of thick, chocolate-colored mud that threatened to swallow sneakers whole. "Ready, 313?" a fellow runner asked, nudging her.