📖 Read & Listen Free
The day of the regional cross-country meet, everything went wrong. Theo woke up with a sore throat. The family car wouldn't start. His dad's phone died with the race address still on it, and they spent twenty frantic minutes finding a neighbor who knew the park.
They arrived eleven minutes before his heat. Theo had no time to warm up properly, no time to find his teammates, and barely enough time to pin his race number to his shirt before the starter called all runners to the line.
He had trained for this race for eight weeks. He had run the course distances in practice. He knew his pacing strategy and had it memorized like a song. But standing at the starting line with a raw throat and cold legs, every bit of preparation felt far away.
When the gun went off, Theo started too fast — he could feel it immediately but could not stop himself. The first half mile felt good in the wrong way, the kind of good that promises to become pain. By mile one he was breathing too hard.
By mile two, three runners had passed him. His legs were heavy. His throat burned. He thought about stopping, walking, pretending to be injured, all the forms of giving up that the mind offers when the body is struggling.
Then he passed a younger kid who had stopped to tie a shoe. The kid looked up at Theo struggling past and said, You've got it! with complete sincerity. Something about that voice — a stranger cheering for him with zero reason to — pulled Theo back into his body.
He did not win. He finished ninth out of forty-two, which was three places behind his practice goal. His coach shook his hand and said, That was a real race. You learned more today than in any training run this season.
On the ride home, Theo sat in the back seat with his head against the window. His dad asked how he felt. Tired, Theo said. And sort of proud. Of what? his dad asked. Of finishing, Theo said. When finishing was the hardest possible option.