Today’s blog challenge was to write a post based on an interview I’ve taken before — so I’m sharing one that left a huge impression on me. It’s a story about grit, unexpected opportunity, deep friendship, and what it truly means to become part of the 1% who can say the words: I am an Ironman.
What initially motivated you to sign up for the Ironman, and did that motivation evolve during your training?
“Honestly,” he said, “I didn’t sign up by choice — not at first. I spent the summer training a young woman for her first full Ironman. We rode together, trained in the heat together, even swam together. But when she got to the start line, the Ironman swim portion was canceled due to unsafe conditions.
Right away, she texted me asking if I could help get her into Ironman Florida. It was already sold out. I told her Louisville still had slots — but it was only two weeks away. She said she’d do it if I would do it with her. I told her I couldn’t afford it. Her response? ‘You misunderstand. I’ll pay for you to do it if you’ll do it with me.’
So two weeks before the race, I suddenly found myself about to do my first Ironman.”
What motivated him originally wasn’t the dream of becoming an Ironman — it was loyalty, friendship, and the desire to show up for someone who asked. But that motivation evolved into something much deeper: proving to himself that he could rise to an impossible challenge with almost no runway.
Can you describe one of the toughest moments you faced during training, and how you pushed through it?
“My back had been bothering me all summer. I hadn’t run more than 6 miles — and most days it was 3. With only two weeks left, I had to try to get my run mileage up. A few days before the race, I managed 7 miles. That was it.”
He didn’t sugarcoat it. There wasn’t some grand comeback run, no miraculous 20-miler before race day. It was pain, discipline, and the belief that he could suffer through whatever was coming.
“I was certain I would start and I would finish — barring a freak accident. I just kept reminding myself of that.”
What part of the race tested you the most, and what did you learn from it?
“The run. No question.”
Despite almost no run training, he ran nearly 20 miles of the marathon — walking mostly at aid stations.
“That showed me how hard you can push yourself when you decide there’s no quitting. I was amazed at how much I could actually run.”
Crossing the finish line wasn’t the end of the fight.
“When I sat in a chair afterward, I couldn’t move my right leg. Couldn’t even feel it. I was severely dehydrated, needed IV fluids and two brutal chiropractic adjustments. When I got home, I scheduled back surgery. They had to open up two nerve canals and remove part of a disc.”
Still — he finished.
Still — he became an Ironman that day.
How did completing the Ironman change your understanding of your own limits?
“I feel more confident not just in my abilities, but in who I am. There’s a lot more to an Ironman than the race. The people you meet, the friendships you build — it changes you.”
For him, the finish line wasn’t validation of physical toughness. It was proof that the mind often underestimates what the body can survive.
Was there a moment during the race you realized you would finish?
“Yes. When you step onto that finish carpet… it hits you.”
He described it the way most athletes describe sacred things — slowly, reverently.
“The music, the crowd, your friends and family yelling your name. And then you hear it: You are an Ironman. It’s overwhelming. It’s honestly one of the greatest accomplishments of my life.”
What does being part of the ‘1% of the world who are Ironmen’ mean to you?
“Everyone knows the title ‘Ironman.’ Even people who don’t understand the full distance respect it. In the triathlon world, it’s the race — like the Masters in golf or the Kentucky Derby.
Being able to say I am an Ironman means I did something extraordinary. Something not many people on Earth will ever do.”
How has your Ironman experience influenced the rest of your life?
He didn’t hesitate.
“It made me braver. It changed my confidence. And it reminded me that showing up — for yourself and others — is powerful. Training with someone all summer, then crossing that finish line together emotionally, even on different courses and days… that shaped my life.”
What advice would you give someone considering doing an Ironman?
“Train with other people. Seriously. Companionship on the long days, accountability when you want to quit, insights from athletes who’ve already done it — that changes everything.”
Final Thoughts
I chose to share this interview because it captures what I love most about endurance sports:
the way ordinary people rise into extraordinary versions of themselves.
Ironman isn’t just a race. It’s a story — and everyone who attempts one writes a version of it that is uniquely theirs.

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