How my journey began

Why Chase Run Club

Running has always been a part of me. I started young—just a kid chasing the wind. By the time I hit middle school and high school, I was running competitively, pouring everything I had into the sport. But somewhere along the way, I lost the joy of it. Running became less about freedom and more about performance. It was driven by pressure, comparison, and the need to prove something. It slowly turned toxic—something I once loved deeply became something that drained me.

But after high school, stepping away from the competitive world gave me space to breathe. To heal. And to remember why I ever laced up my shoes in the first place.

I fell back in love with running.

This time, not because I had to—but because I get to. Running became sacred again. It turned into a space where I could connect with myself, with God, and with the world around me. It reminded me who I am, and who I’m becoming. It taught me discipline and grit. It gave me peace, clarity, and confidence. It became my therapy, my worship, my reset, my strength.

And then, everything changed again.

I was recently diagnosed with intractable epilepsy—a condition that brings uncertainty, fear, and some really hard days. There were moments where it felt like my body was working against me, like I was losing control of the very thing I used to depend on. But in the middle of that diagnosis, I found something stronger than fear: my will to keep running.

Running became my fight song.

It was the one thing that made me feel powerful again. Every mile I ran reminded me that I still had a say in this battle. That I could still push myself. That I wasn’t helpless. That epilepsy didn’t get to steal my dreams. Running made me feel like I could take my body back—and not just survive, but thrive.

That’s where Chase Run Club was born.

This isn’t just a club for women who like to run. It’s a movement. A sisterhood. A safe, empowering space where we get to chase our dreams together—physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually. Whether you’re healing, growing, discovering yourself, or fighting battles no one sees—you belong here.

We run to get stronger.
We run to heal.
We run to chase freedom.
We run because we were made for more.

Running changed my life. It gave me my power back. And now, I want to give that gift to other women—to create a space where we don’t run alone. Where we push each other. Cheer for each other. And remind each other who we are: brave, capable, powerful, and made to chase big dreams.

So lace up.
Join the movement.
Let’s chase it—together.