About

I’m a runner, and running has been part of my life for years. I’ve trained for marathons, built routines around movement, and learned what it means to stay consistent over time.

I’ve also had seasons shaped by illness, injury, and the need to slow down. Those experiences changed how I approach running and taught me that progress doesn’t always look like pushing harder. Sometimes it looks like listening more closely.

Running on Realism grew from that understanding.

This space is about showing what running can look like when performance and perfection aren’t the goal. I believe movement can be meaningful without being extreme, and that consistency comes from learning how to work with your life, not against it.

Why “Running on Realism”:

Because running can be part of who you are without defining your worth. And because showing up consistently, in a way that respects your body and your life, is enough.

If you’re here…

You might be someone who loves running but doesn’t want it to consume everything.

You might care about progress and performance, but feel a little intimidated by what running is often made to look like online.

You might be rebuilding after time off, injury, or burnout, or questioning what running should look like in this season of your life.

Or you might simply be looking for a quieter, more grounded approach to movement.

If that’s you, you’re in the right place.