Coach Sarah of the Fitness Protection Program talks with Kade and Isaac about the role of running in their respective transitions from female to male, particularly the way it offers them both a non-gendered space to be in their bodies and be truly themselves.
We're never really talking about the running. The people in our community are running THROUGH things, and often their runs are the one part of their day when they get to truly get to be themselves, and be for themselves. Whatever kind of transition you are running through, you are not alone.
This really gets to why we are so grateful to you both for telling us your stories. I, Coach Sarah, carry a lot of privilege as a runner. I sign up for a race, and when I am prompted to select my gender, I just tick a box and move on. I show up to every start line knowing that whatever impostor syndrome I may have about being a runner, no one will ever call into question the validity of my results or argue with me about where in the sport I belong. I will not have to name or defend my identity every time I want to participate in my chosen sport in public. Isaac has worked with athletic clubs to modify that process of gender selection in membership signups to make it less binary and more inclusive, and I imagine that to some people, it may seem like an incredibly small deal (because many people, like me, just tick the box and move on with their day) but we cannot overestimate the importance of ANY action, big or small, that makes ANY runner feel more included in this sport.
While I may not have ever experienced gender dysphoria, I do absolutely know what it feels like to hate my body, to feel ashamed of it, to feel like people look at it and form opinions about me that I am powerless to control. I want our audience to hear Kade's and Isaac's stories, directly from them, because I believe that there is so much empathy out there for some of what you have experienced and lived. And I believe that everything is better when there is a space for everyone to show up and feel at home, welcome, and understood.