Northerner
Admin (Retired)
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 1
“Well, what is an athlete? It’s somebody that gets up, and does what they need to do. Just because they don’t look or act like an athlete doesn’t mean they should get singled out.”
Elizabeth Ayres has been fielding lots of questions since her Facebook post about her experience at the London Marathon went viral. An official pacer for the event two weeks ago, Ayres was running with the slower “blue start” wave at the back when she saw exactly how people can be treated when they don’t fit the stereotype of a marathon runner.
Ayres saw water stations packed up early, official sweepers pushing the runners forward and even contractors yelling insults. “Run, fat boy, run,” is one that Ayres remembers – and the judgment hasn’t stopped since, she says. “Some of the comments that are coming out online are the same ones we heard out there on the course that day. No wonder people go out and run at night, when there are fewer people to see them. Why knock somebody down who’s actually trying?”
https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2019/may/12/insults-projectiles-well-intentioned-fat-shaming-the-perils-of-being-a-plus-size-runner
I've been running since 1983 and have taken part in many marathons and half marathons. My experience has been that, unless you are elite, size does not reflect ability (nor does age, come to that). Most (if not all) of those responsible for the abuse could not do what the runner is doing, because if they were runners themselves they would not feel any need to judge others.
Elizabeth Ayres has been fielding lots of questions since her Facebook post about her experience at the London Marathon went viral. An official pacer for the event two weeks ago, Ayres was running with the slower “blue start” wave at the back when she saw exactly how people can be treated when they don’t fit the stereotype of a marathon runner.
Ayres saw water stations packed up early, official sweepers pushing the runners forward and even contractors yelling insults. “Run, fat boy, run,” is one that Ayres remembers – and the judgment hasn’t stopped since, she says. “Some of the comments that are coming out online are the same ones we heard out there on the course that day. No wonder people go out and run at night, when there are fewer people to see them. Why knock somebody down who’s actually trying?”
https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2019/may/12/insults-projectiles-well-intentioned-fat-shaming-the-perils-of-being-a-plus-size-runner
I've been running since 1983 and have taken part in many marathons and half marathons. My experience has been that, unless you are elite, size does not reflect ability (nor does age, come to that). Most (if not all) of those responsible for the abuse could not do what the runner is doing, because if they were runners themselves they would not feel any need to judge others.