Author Archives: Amy Owsley

NRC Runner of the Month – Melissa Sears

Five years ago, Melissa Sears was a total newbie to running.  Known by friends for her dedication and positive attitude, Melissa wanted to get more active.  She had been researching running apps when she and her husband, Rick, decided to step up and commit to the NRC Couch to 5K Program. 

What she learned and the people she met through that program have spurred Melissa on to complete not only multiple 5Ks, but more half marathons than you can count on two hands and a marathon, to boot!  And while she would never brag on her incredible achievements herself, we have absolutely no problem doing it! 

A southern middle Tennessee native, Melissa hails from the charming city of Fayetteville.  Growing up, she was active in her church youth group.  She sang and played piano, both in services and on their annual summer trips out of state to sing and sight-see.  She also played softball, basketball and loved riding her horse, Babydoll.

In college, she met her soul mate and eventual running partner, Rick, at the KA house by Middle TN State University.  Funny story – Rick took Melissa to Zanies Comedy Club in Nashville for their first date.  They had seats right next to the stage, so of course they ended up being the center of a lot of the comedian’s act, whether they wanted to or not.  Their love for each other, however, turned out to be NO JOKE.  In fact, the happy couple will be celebrating 33 years of wedded bliss in June!

Melissa and Rick moved to Nolensville as newlyweds and knew NRC’s President Scott Alexander before there was an NRC!  They lived in an apartment in Franklin, TN for a year before finding a lot in the Stonebrook subdivision in 1987.  They built their first house and lived there for 18 years raising their family.  Fun Fact:  NRC runs by this house on Track & Back Wednesday nights (400 Ramblewood Lane)

Melissa and Rick’s son Drew, daughter-in-law Brittany and daughter Morgan didn’t know what to say at first about Mom and Dad running, but have turned into their biggest encouragers.  

“They were all shocked and surprised,” said Melissa.  “But, Drew and Morgan along with [our grandson] Sawyer were at mile 20 when we ran the Nashville Marathon!  That support meant so much, and they were also at the finish line when we crossed!”

It was 2014 when Melissa and Rick participated in the NRC C25K.  “We thought we would run a few 5Ks and maybe a few miles each week,” she recalls.  “We look back and laugh how one Saturday morning we met a group at MJ’s to run and they said they were running 5 miles.  We were like… 5 miles?! What?….. but, we tried and were surprised how much easier and fun it was when you had a group to run with.”

Through the NRC C25K experience, Melissa learned a lot about running, including the benefits of alternating running and walking, or doing intervals.  Now a firm believer in the interval (3 min. run/1 min. walk) method, she and Rick regularly post on the NRC Facebook page to help organize 3:1 runs!

Melissa has many favorite NRC memories, but one that stands out is her second half marathon in Carmel, Indiana.  “Crossing the finish line where NRC was lined up and the high-fives will always be remembered,” says Melissa.  “And, the great support and encouragement of everyone.”  

Her first and only full (so far), the Nashville Rock ‘n’ Roll Marathon, and the challenging Ragnar Trail Relay also hold fond memories.  “I can’t leave out the traning runs with Anja Izban and Rick.  Not to mention, Karen Miles and Dena Lloyd near the finish line cheering us on!  Oh, and the amazing Ragnar Trail runs.  Talk about doing something outside my comfort zone running at night in the woods!”

Melissa’s running journey hasn’t been pain-free.  On the contrary, she had a lot of trouble at first with sore shins.  At one point, she was even told that, perhaps she shouldn’t run, but rather bike or swim.  

She took a 2-month break.  Then, she got back on the perverbial horse to train and run her first half marathon, 2015 Rock n’ Roll New Orleans.  Compression socks, stretching and a cream from “Real Time Pain Relief” made the difference and fortunately, she hasn’t had any more issues.

For someone who just started running 5 years ago, Melissa has compiled an impressive list of been there, done that!  Her favorite race is the Rock ‘n’ Roll New Orleans.  She loves the music, and it doesn’t hurt that typically they cruise after this race.  Oh, and to prove that intervals do not equal slow, Melissa snagged a PR of 2:28 at the 2016 Murfreesboro Middle Half!

Melissa and Rick just ran the St. Jude Nashville Half for the fifth time, and will be taking on the Kentucky Ragnar and Downhill at Dawn in NC.  “My goal is to try and be more consistent with weekly running,” she says.  “It is very easy to let other things slip into this time.”

On top of time spent with family and running, Melissa is the office manager and a shareholder at Design and Engineering, Inc., an architectural, structural, civil engineering firm.  In her 26 years, she has supported projects in 48 states with major clients including Cracker Barrel and Buffalo Wild Wings.  Hearing her talk, it’s easy to see why she loves her job. 

“[We] work hard and play hard,” she explains.  “We have a great culture… with emphasis on supporting our employees – whether it is a lunch out, employee’s birthday, marriage or new baby celebration, chili cookoff, halloween costume competitions, tailgate parties or rafting trips.”   

That sounds a lot like NRC!  

Now in it’s 7th year, the NRC C25K is underway, and this time Melissa and Rick are back as volunteers, supporting this year’s participants.  This is just one of the many ways that Melissa and Rick help make NRC the most supportive and welcoming running clubs in Tennessee.  

So, if you see someone out on Nolensville Road in a pair of hot pink compression socks, it might just be Melissa out for a run!  So, be sure to say congrats and let her know we’re grateful she’s a part of NRC!

SPEED ROUND – MELISSA SEARS:

Mid-race fuel must-have:  Sports beans or honey stingers

Life List Destination Race:   Running a Half in another country

Hobbies: Reading, when I have those few free moments

Dream car: Years ago I recall thinking the Aston Martin was a pretty cool car; but not very practical financially or for someone who needs car seats! LOL

Favorite thing about summer: Really enjoy and look forward to boating

NRC Runners of the Month – Matt and Ruth Wilkins

Ruth and Matt Wilkins,
our adventurous Runners of the Month!

For our next Runners of the Month, we have the privilege of featuring yet another amazing NRC couple – Matt and Ruth Wilkins!   If you know them, you can already see their permanently smiling faces in your mind.  Just as they are the perfect complement to each other, they bring a great mix of experience, fun, and good-spirited competiveness to NRC. 

Ruth was born and raised in Atlanta, GA. Matt also lived in Atlanta, but got there by way of Texas and Alabama.  Growing up, Ruth got tons of miles in playing travel soccer and tennis.  In the off season, she ran cross country and after a couple of tough soccer injuries, she decided to make running her sport.  Matt got his kicks in underwater on swim teams and was even Captain of his high school team.  Back then he dreaded running, but it seems he just needed the right motivation – Ruth.

If Hollywood made a romantic comedy about them, it could be called, “The 3 Day Rule.”  It was November 2012.  Jacksonville, FL.  Matt and Ruth had each moved there for work.  It was instant chemistry when their matchmaker friend introduced them at a party. They talked for hours and really hit it off. The party ended and Matt said he’d call.  

Now, listen up single guys!  You know the 3 day rule?  When a guy plays it cool and waits 3 days before calling a girl after a date?  Matt, believing it was “a thing,” decided to give it a try, but it was almost a deal breaker.

One day went by.  Then another.  Ruth was about to give up on him when she finally got Matt’s call asking if she wanted to go out again.  Unsure and a little irked, she reluctantly took him up on his invite.

She quickly saw that Matt was no “player”. They ended up talking until 2am! There was a party going on around them, but they didn’t notice.  They were in their own little bubble.  Matt found out later that Ruth got up the next day at 5:30am and ran a 20-miler!  In all their talking, she didn’t even mention it! 

Once he knew Ruth ran, Matt’s aversion magically faded and he started running to hang out with her more.  Ruth kept telling him he should join this great running club.  The group, known as PRS, actually reminds them a lot of NRC!  With about 300 runners, they represent just about every pace and level, and offer scheduled runs for people to meet and train.  

After joining PRS, Matt went from not running at all to completing his first full marathon, The Flying Pig (Cincinnati), in 18 months.  Determined to see it through, even with an injured knee, he hobbled across the finish line.  He says that memory has never gone away.  For a long time, he was intimidated by the marathon distance.  But, he plans to create a new, epic memory to put in its place at the Carmel Marathon this spring.

Ruth loves running and has done a lot of different races over the years, from road to trail and 5K to ultra.  Just a few weeks after they started dating, Ruth completed her first 50K comprised of five 10K loops.  Matt went along to support and laughs that he was winded just keeping up with her for the 100ft it took to hand her water or fuel!  She crushed that race taking 1st place female by 35 minutes!  She since has completed another.

Ruth may be fast, but she loves the whole chill, ultra racer mentality.  She jokes about how at 5Ks people do sprint warm ups, butt kicks and rush around, but that at ultras it’s the total opposite.  Runners just stroll up with a cup of coffee, hang out, talk, and then look at each other and say, “Alright, you want to start this thing?” 

Chill is also a word that describes Matt, who flies single-engine planes for fun.  He currently works in avionics (electronic cockpit component sales and installation).  Friends, and Ruth, agree he is one of the most likeable, happy people on the planet! He’s always ready for an adventure, spontaneous (in a good way) and pretty much the life the party.

Ruth says she’s typically the “Mom” of the group socially.  She doesn’t mind.  She finds it natural to clean up, organize and plan things.  She’s also a happy and willing designated driver.  She uses her math degree doing highly-detailed work for Hershey, and has already put in a good word to get a trail runner campaign going for their peanutty, PayDay bars!  She loves her job which allows her to work from home and catch lunchtime runs with fellow NRCer Eric Waterman.

Matt’s “dying goat” finish line stride!

Before they moved to Nolensville in 2016, Ruth had already found NRC on facebook.  It was right after the NRC Holiday Party and the photos on the Facebook page looked like a fun crew!  So, one cold, nasty Wednesday in January 2017 they left their unpacked boxes and headed to NRC.  Scott came up and introduced himself, and it was sealed!  They’ve been regulars ever since.

Matt enjoys any race where he gets to see Ruth run and hear people’s reactions to her accomplishments.  He jokes that, “she glistens, she doesn’t sweat.” For Matt, on the other hand, it is pretty obvious when he has been working out (i.e. his dying goat stride to the finish of the Nolensville 5K which Ruth helped him PR).

Matt, who was originally a 10 min/mile or more pace, was encouraged by NRCers Amy Klotz, Michael Teague, Fast Andy, Kyle Prince and Preston Johnson to pick it up.  Now, he keeps up easily with some runs in the 8:30s.  

Ruth with Eric Waterman, at the Boston Marathon

Many of Ruth’s favorite NRC memories center around her Boston qualifying journey.  From training with NRC, which she says gave her the push to BQ, to traveling with the crew to Boston in 2018 and running the race, and even touring the Harpoon Brewery after and everything in between, she says it all was an incredible experience.  “You might not realize, but there is a lot of gear dropped on the road at Boston.  It’s everywhere and so it’s hard to look up, but it has the best spectators,” says Ruth,  “The whole time you’re there the city celebrates you!”

Matt has great memories of living in a van for 24+ hours running the 2017 TN Ragnar with the NRC Sole Crushers!  He made some great friendships that weekend with teammates, Joe Relyea, Jay Adamson, Katherine Cain, and others.  Oh and he definitely recommends doing the race with Ragnar Ambassadors, Stephanie Spann and Terrie Peterson, who are AWESOME at showing first-timers the ropes of this non-stop rollercoaster of a race!


Of course, all the planning in the world can’t help you if you register for the wrong race!  After hearing everyone talk about Downhill at Dawn, Ruth Googled races in June near Asheville.  She didn’t expect there could be two races on exactly the same day.  Turns out, there was and the other one was not “downhill”!  Of course, their friends still joke about it and if Ruth mentions any race they have to ask – “the real one?!”

That’s the thing about NRC!  Like a family, we may raz you when the opportunity presents itself, but we also raise you up for your achievements – big and small – along the way!  For all the good things they bring to NRC, we are so excited to celebrate Ruth and Matt Wilkins and look for lots more good things to come!    

ROTM Speed Round – Ruth Wilkins

I run, therefore I: eat and drink, what I want.

What is your favorite race fuel?  Stinger waffles (gluten free)

Top Must-Run Race?  New York Marathon (my birthday weekend)

Most scenic run?  Salt Lake City – Revel Big Cottonwood (BQ)

If I didn’t run, I would: still workout and be active

ROTM Speed Round – Matt Wilkins

I run, therefore I: hang out with my wife.

Favorite race fuel:  Sport beans

Top Must-Run Race:  Any race I can travel and see the sights

Most scenic run: Rome running tour – no tourist traps! Cool way to see a city.

If I didn’t run, I would: weigh 400 lbs

NRC Runners of the Month – Jay and Suzanne Wolff

NRCers of the Month Jay and Suzanne Wolff make life more fun! Whenever they’re around, you can count on them for some well-played wise cracks to get the conversation off and running. During their time in NRC, they have achieved many PRs and made lots of close friendships throughout the years. Whether they are keeping it real talking about the “joys” of running, encouraging you to keep at your goals, or offering you some of Jay’s homegrown tomatoes or homemade yogurt, you’ll instantly feel like you’re part of the family!

Native New Yorkers turned Nolensvillians, they were glad to leave the blizzards behind, although they’re still hanging on to a hint of a northern accent. Jay was born in Port Jervis, NY near the Tri-State area (where New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania’s state lines meet) and grew up close by, just off the Delaware River. Suzanne was born in Brooklyn, NY. She moved with her family at the age of three to a town just 20 minutes up river from Jay, but amazingly their paths ne’er did cross, until after college.

Growing up, Jay had “no interest in being clobbered on the football field” and opted to earn his letter jacket on the track team competing in triple jump, long jump, and sometimes (to his chagrin) the ½ mile race. Back then he always came in dead last, unlike his trophy snagging races of late.

Suzanne did her running around trying to fend for herself as one of 9 kids! Surprisingly, one of her favorite family traditions was how her Dad handed out Christmas presents – one at a time – and how that person got to open their gift while everyone watched. As a child, the waiting wasn’t easy and, she laughs, that her Mom would always say, “It took me months to buy all of these presents, so it is NOT going to be over in just a few minutes!” But, it’s a tradition that lives on in their family ‘til this day.

In college, Jay majored in Electron Microscopy (I dare you to say that 7 times fast), which led him to experience Nashville for the first time, earning a position with the VA hospital from 1979-1981. Later, he and Suzanne would take a month-long “sabbatical” in Nashville, sewing the seeds for their eventual move. But, I’m getting ahead of myself.

It was at The Villa Roma, an Italian-themed resort where Jay and Suzanne finally met. When Suzanne spied Jay crossing the lobby in the sales office it was love at first sight. The already-engaged Suzanne remembers stopping in her tracks, and saying to herself, “I’m going to marry that man.” So, with a broken heart in her wake, Suzanne and her friends began sitting with Jay’s crew at lunch and they bonded over laughs and lasagna. They have been married for 34 years and have two incredible kids, Josh (31) and Chelsea (26), and a Morkie (Maltese and Yorkie mix) named Lacey.

Jay admits he’s not the romantic type, but what he lacks in flowers and candy, he makes up for in the kitchen! Suzanne tells tales of Jay waking up early every day to cook her a warm breakfast AND make her lunch for work when the kids were young. He even has an apron that jokingly declares him “Suzanne’s Kitchen B***h”. Hilarious! He still enjoys cooking for the love of his life today.

Having suffered back-to-back Nor’easters in 2004, Suzanne had hit her winter limit and drew a line in the snow. She was moving south, whether Jay and the kids came or not! One year later, they moved to Nolensville where Piggly Wiggly, Fred’s Pharmacy and Sonic were the only things obscuring the scenic views.

Their running story begins in 2008, when Suzanne was diagnosed with breast cancer and suffered a complication with the mastectomy surgery. As a result, she couldn’t move her right arm, which made it impossibly awkward to walk for exercise anymore. She focused on physical therapy and the long recovery from chemo and surgery. It took two years before she could move her arm enough to feel comfortable going out to walk or run. By then, Suzanne was itching to get back in shape.

It just so happens that NRC President and First Lady, Scott and Kelli Alexander, live a few houses down from them. Suzanne saw Scott running around their cul de sac and was inspired. Soon after, she saw the Nolensville Dispatch article on the first NRC C25K Program and convinced Jay to sign-up, too!

From that time on, they have been a big part of NRC! Both of them look back on NRC’s C25K as a great experience.  Suzanne remembers the encouragement from her coach, Joe Singer, who led the 1:1 interval group and she still walks with friends she met there including, Donna Ellis and Melanie Staudt. Jay had fun training in the 4:1 group, and discovered he had developed a knack for running that had eluded him in his school days. Motivated to keep at it, they continued coming to NRC after the program, and completed the Carmel Half Marathon in 2015!

Suzanne picks her races by who’s running them, and enjoys the social time most. A race that is near and dear to her heart is the Purity Dairy Dash. It was the first race she did after the C25K program and she was surrounded by close friends; Melanie Staudt, Elizabeth Redmon, Donna Ellis and Vicki Travis. There was no high five line, but they got ice cream, and when they mistook a runner for Scott Alexander – they got him to pose with them for “a Scott-sighting” photo (see photo – he’s the guy in the red shirt)!

Now Suzanne doesn’t run much because of plantar fasciitis issues; rather, she walks with the NRC walking crew. She loves the friends she’s made in this group and points out that they do not take it slow. In fact, she even admits it took awhile for her to catch up to fellow-NRC walker Mary Beth Moore!

Jay might have stopped at the 13.1-mile mark, but as it has been known to happen in NRC, he got caught up with a training group and just didn’t stop. After running long miles on Saturdays with NRCer Kim Abdullah who was training for a full, he figured he might as well keep going and signed up for the Little Rock Marathon.

Jay’s epically entertaining race report, entitled “Snippets and songs in my head from the 2018 Little Rock Marathon”, pairs up his takes on all the best and worst parts of the insanity of running a marathon with classic songs and lyrics like “Let it Be” by the Beatles, “Iron Man” by Black Sabbath, “Who’ll Stop the Rain” by CCR, “Running on Empty” by Jackson Browne, and of course, “Eye of the Tiger”! He ends his report with kind words to NRC, “I respect and appreciate all the support and friendship you provided me and everyone else in the club. Don’t ever stop doing what you’re doing. You are all amazing and together have created something truly special.”

What’s next on their list?  While Suzanne says she’s not a goal-setter, she has signed up for the Carmel Half in 2019. Jay has signed up for the full and is working to get a time under 5 hours.

So, if you’re looking to smile your way through training, definitely catch Suzanne or Jay on their next walk or run and let them know we’re glad they share their miles with NRC!

 

SUZANNE – Speed Round:

     Hobbies: Reading (all genres), jigsaw puzzles and adult coloring books

     Favorite Holiday Song: Ave Maria – when sung correctly

     Splurge: Trip to explore Europe, especially Italy and the city of her maiden name, Annunziata

     Must-Have Gear: Injeni socks that have toes to block blisters

JAY – Speed Round:

Hobbies: Gardening, Yogurt-making

Favorite Holiday Movie: A Christmas Story

Splurge: Land to have a big farm and be a gentleman farmer

Must-Have Gear: I like running because you don’t need much. Glide, maybe.

NRC Runner of the Month – Ann Freeman

I swear my jaw literally dropped at least five times listening to Ann Freeman, our NRC Runner of the Month.  With each moment of sincere surprise and disbelief, I wondered how in her five years of running with NRC I had never heard about these amazing, sometimes gut-wrenching and truly unique things that make Ann, Ann.

We’d just completed a sweaty, 1pm run that August afternoon intensified by the broken A/C at the coffee shop where we sat, when I asked what Ann’s favorite thing was about fall. Smiling she answered, “The cooler weather, races, changing colors…It’s just refreshing!”  Then, laughing she added, “Should we mention its 100 degrees in here?  New York City and Central Park in fall.  Oh, I like winter, too!”

Ann is an adventurer at heart.  She loves to travel, run (of course) and loves the great outdoors.  She grew up in the picturesque terrain of Butte, Montana where the summers are mild and the winters give a whole new definition to “cold”, but she has no problem hopping on a plane to explore someplace new whenever she gets the chance.

Her earliest running role models were her father and siblings.  People in their small town could set their clock to her Dad’s lunchtime 5 mile run, circling the same path every workday.  After he passed, Ann had lots of people tell her how they missed seeing him blazing by.  He even had a special loop mapped out that he and his kiddos would run on the weekends and, from what I hear, they all got the running gene.  Ann says she is the slower runner in the family, but having qualified for Boston nine times that’s clearly a relative term!

On top of her nine ascents of Heartbreak Hill, she has done at least 20 or 30 more marathons, but she isn’t counting.  I mean it. She actually isn’t exactly sure of the total, but the list includes Seattle (her first), Portland, Vegas, Miami and Orlando, Chicago, Marine Corp. (one of her all-time favorites), and Grandma’s in Duluth. (Don’t even ask her how many halves she’s done!)  Now, she says she’s retired from marathons, but I have the feeling if the right destination race came her way she’d be in.  Dublin, Paris and London may have been mentioned.

She ran the New York City Marathon three times during her 12 years living there, a city that holds a special place in her heart.  After college, Ann wanted to experience big city life.  She sent out job applications to her top three cities and got an offer in NYC where her brother was living at the time.  Ann moved to NYC on September 7, 2001, but could never have known what would come in those days ahead.

On 9/11, she was working in a high-rise in Midtown when the first attackers flew into one of the twin towers. The panic, the shock, the fear – so many memories remain with her from that experience, some still vividly to this day.  With no cell phone, she asked her new employer if she could make a long-distance call to her mother to let her know she was okay before leaving to walk to her brother’s apartment closer to the Twin Towers, praying he would be there when she arrived.

She remembers walking down the middle of 5thAvenue.  How it seemed like a ghost town, no traffic or crowds of people, just quiet except for the random emergency siren.  She remembers feeling as if she’d moved through an invisible wall into a zombie movie when she first started seeing survivors coming out of the ashes and debris.

She saw women’s feet bleeding and in that moment, she realized that in her numbness she hadn’t noticed her own painfully inadequate heels. She stopped into the first shoe store she saw and she’ll never forget how surreal it felt, in that store packed with women all needing something so simple, in the midst of the horror was going on around them.  She bought a pair of dark red Keds that she wears only on the anniversary of that day.

Ann got back to the apartment and thankfully, her brother and his roommate were both okay.  She was fine physically, but struggled with survivor’s guilt as friends, family and others kept asking about her and how she was doing.  For some, experiencing something of that magnitude their first week in a new city, may have sent them back home, but not Ann.  The way the city came together and the strength, generosity and compassion she saw in New Yorkers in the wake of 9/11 made her want to stay even more.

It took a few years, but Ann settled into her New York life.  (Ask her about the NYC Seafood Platter!)  She met her hubby, Jason Freeman who is a pilot, waiting to take off on a flight back to LaGuardia from Nashville.  She was supposed to be on a plane to London, but fate had other plans.

The flight attendant announced they were waiting on a pilot.  “You can fly this plane, can’t you,” Ann jokingly asked. A few quips later, Ann and Jason were steeped in conversation.  She offered to show him around Manhattan, and the rest is history!

Ann and Jason are NRC’s resident Vibram FiveFingers wearers!  She has worn the minimalist running shoes for years and Jason wore them before he met her. However, in another jaw-dropping moment, I learned that she used to run in double-soled moccasins (see them in the photo with the  flowers on them)!!!

“Soled” on them by her sister who discovered them at a Farmer’s Market in Montana, she kicked off her Brooks and made those her running shoes, until her brother convinced her of the benefits of Vibrams.

When Ann isn’t running, she’s helping people with their estate plans and taking care of her cat, Clara, who sometimes goes with her on her travels!  Next time you get the chance to run with Ann Freeman, I hope you do. You’ll hear more about her adventures and watch out for bugs… your jaw just may drop.

by Amy Owsley

NRC Runner of the Month – Anthony Shelly

It was the summer of 2014. Everything was awesome (according to The Lego Movie at least), Pharrell Williams had everyone clapping along to “Happy” and Cheetos launched a fragrance called Cheeteau (no joke).  It was also when NRC gained the awesome, happy (and unscented) Anthony Shelly.  And while the fads of 2014 have come and gone; thankfully, Anthony has remained a solid member of our crew and we’re honored to recognize him as our Runner of the Month!

Anthony’s running story is connected by the friendships that have motivated him through the years.  It was a friend at work, in 2010, who asked Anthony to participate in a 5K.  That first friendly invite and his first race was all it took to get him hooked on running.

You see, growing up Anthony didn’t have many opportunities to play sports in his small town of Middleton, TN.  Middleton’s population was (and is) not much more than 500.  His high school class was 79 kids.  To have enough boys for little league, 8 year olds played on the same team as 12 year olds.

“My coach wouldn’t let me swing at a pitch until I was 10,” jokes Anthony.  “I had a much better chance of walking than hitting.”  I hear that he’s a good whiffle ball player, though!

After high school, he attended Harding University in Searcy, AR.  He has lived in the Middle TN area ever since college including Antioch, Columbia and now Smyrna, where he runs the streets and greenways often.

Soon after his successful 5K in 2010, Anthony met a runner at the Smyrna YMCA named Rosie Arellano.  She was faster and farther along than he was at the time, but it didn’t matter because they trained and talked “running” side-by-side on the treadmill.  Rosie encouraged and coached Anthony to improve as a runner and eventually run 3 marathons, which they completed together!

Just after the 2014 Country Music Marathon, Rosie moved away and Anthony was devastated in losing such a close friend.  Then three weeks later, he met NRCer Elizabeth Story and they started running together.  She brought him to NRC that summer and he quickly became a regular!

“Anthony has a great heart!” says Elizabeth.  “He likes to give to charities with his races and encourages me to be a better runner.  He goes to Japan and Brasil for work and likes to travel, so we joke that if one of us wins the lottery we’ll share the money to do a destination race!”

Anthony and crew ready to eat and run at Hoggin ‘n’ Joggin!

As the North American CFO for his company, Anthony gets to use his years of experience in the automotive industry.  He also appreciates his company’s commitment to promoting a healthy lifestyle and community involvement.  Each year they sponsor employees who want to run the Special Kids Race in the spring, sponsor the Stacy Windrow 5k in the fall and adopt Special Kids’ families at Christmas.

In his four years with NRC, Anthony has settled into a core group of friends who not only have trained for a slew of races together, but who support each other off the race course!

One of the first NRCers Anthony remembers meeting is Katherine Cain who was very welcoming and a fast friend.  She’s a prime example of the caliber of friends in NRC – coming out to cheer on Anthony and Elizabeth in the sparsely spectated Greenway Marathon and extending a thoughtful invite to her family’s Thanksgiving dinner.

Scan the NRC panoramic photo of the weekly Wednesday run and you’ll likely spot Anthony among the brood.  He may seem quiet and almost shy, but tag along with him for a run and you’ll quickly find that he has a great sense of humor and lots of cool stories to pass the miles.

“I always leave feeling so much better after that run,” says Anthony.  “It’s the highlight of my week!  I especially enjoy the nights when weather is a challenge.”

In his 8 years of running, training, and racing, Anthony has made a lot of memories, but one that stands out is his first half marathon, the Middle Half.

“I pulled into the parking lot and the song ‘It’s a Beautiful Day’ was blasting across the parking lot and I had to really fight back the tears,” he recalls.

While some races can be more emotional than others, some are just downright tough; but those can often be our favorites, like the 2013 Country Music Marathon is for Anthony.

“It rained the entire race and we ran through some deep puddles going through Shelby Bottoms,” said Anthony.  “That was my PR, and my friend Rosie only beat me by 1 minute.  I should mention she was fighting an injury, but still.”

Anthony has trained with and paced lots of other runners to help them successfully run their first race and hit their PR goals.  I asked him if he thought he might have a bit of a coaching gene?

“I think so,” he admitted.  “I always coached my kids’ sports teams, baseball mostly.  And I have benefited so much from others coaching and encouraging me, I just want to pass along what I can.”

Among his family and friends, he’s famous for having no sense of direction, but that’s not all he’s known for.  Friend and NRCer Mattie Goostree, shared a few thoughts from her years training with Anthony.

“He is selfless as a running buddy!  Whether it’s taking a walk break with you when he could keep going, lending you a headlamp when you forgot one or picking up your race packet – he’s always willing to help out a friend.  He’s friendly to all and will remember your name even if he meets you just once!  But don’t follow him on a NRC route, he still gets lost.”

He is currently signed up to run the Carmel Marathon with the NRC destination crew next year, and he’s actually looking forward to the training.  As far as a top spot on his race bucket list he jokes, “Well, maybe Boston when I am 100.  I need to check the qualifying time for centenarians!”

____________________________________

ROTM Speed Round

Favorite long-run fuel:  Gu

Do this at least once in your life:  Stop and think how wonderful our lives are.

Title of the current chapter of your running story:  How do you get there again?

NRC Runners of the Month – Jenny Phillips and Ray Sadler

Jenny Phillips

A girl on fire – that is our female Runner of the Month!  She has undergone a running transformation that even she didn’t think possible. Case in point, Jenny Phillips answered a recent Truthful Tuesday question, “You are so NRC if…?” with “…you find yourself running a marathon when less than 3 years ago you SWORE you hated running!”

Well, she did run a marathon (and she crushed it, by the way), but that’s no surprise. Her consistency has been evident since she started running, but if her experiences from high school cross-country had prevailed, she may have never laced up her shoes.

Jenny was born and raised in Columbia, TN a.k.a Mule Town! She still has ties to the community which sits on the bank of the Duck River and, thank goodness! Her connection there was the catalyst for the annual NRC Canoe Trip that is a fave summer event!

A rarity in a city of transplants, she’s lived along I-65 in Middle TN her entire life. Jenny went to Lipscomb University in Nashville and has stayed here for 20 years, eventually settling in Nolensville.

Her running was confined mostly to basketball and tennis courts in high school. Then, her basketball coach made her run cross-country. They didn’t give much instruction; just basically told her, “Go run 3 miles.” She hated it, but can you really blame her? After that experience, she had a running aversion.

Fortunately, she’s neighbors with NRCer Elizabeth Schaub who encouraged Jenny and another friend, Stephanie Oberheide, to sign up for the 2015 NRC C25K. Both kept saying no and giving excuses, but they finally gave in, signing up on the very last day before the deadline!

Jenny and Stephanie started making friends within their 4:1 C25K group and learned a lot through the experience. After the program wrapped up, they were content to run their 3-4 miles, until getting a spark of motivation when their C25K friends moved up to 6-8 mile Saturday runs. They’ve been regulars representing the 4:1 interval crew ever since!

“It’s the camaraderie, the friendships, and the involvement in the community that keeps me coming back,” Jenny says.

Jenny and Stephanie are one of NRC’s famous “running couples”. Together, they’ve trained for and run five half marathons over the last 2 years!

“I would never have even signed up for the C25K if I didn’t have a great friend taking that first step with me,” says Jenny. “And even though she didn’t run Little Rock [marathon] with me, she was there to cheer me across the finish line! (Well, I guess she was there for her hubby, Jason, too. J)”

Jenny (who gets my vote for NRC’s Anne Hathaway lookalike) tends to wear her favorite red NRC shirt at races, and she’s worn it a lot lately! Her first half marathon was Tom King 2016, but her favorite race was the Oak Barrel 2017 where she PR’d in spite of a healthy fear of Whiskey Hill. She highly recommends it!

“It was a great time running and with the tour of the Jack Daniels Distillery afterwards,” Jenny explains, “you get to know other NRCers outside of your regular running group.”

Ready to take on her first 26.2 in March of 2018, she traveled to Little Rock, AR, where the medals are bigger than the bibs! Jenny’s goals for the race were simply: a) to finish, b) to beat 5 hours, and 3) to average an 11-minute mile. In spite of the 3-mile long hill at mile 14, and all out monsoon at mile 24, she came in at 4 hours 39 minutes, and averaged a 10:40/mile!!!

She credits many people, including NRC, for the inspiration to push herself and accomplish goals she never even considered.

“Running checks two boxes for me: an exercise and a social activity,” admits Jenny. “The accomplishments would mean so much less if I didn’t have someone (even several someone’s) to share them with… And a race is always a great excuse for a weekend party trip!”

Keeping up with her 3 kiddos is a marathon in itself, but she gets nothing but love from her family when it comes to running.

Her husband, Bryan, is very supportive and proud of her. Although sometimes, Jenny says, he does think we’re all a little bit crazy! Crazy or not, it was Bryan who pushed her over the line to finally commit to running the Little Rock marathon! (WTG, Bryan!)

Jenny’s son, James, is a great runner and an NRC NexGen, for sure. You may see him on a Wednesday night especially if there’s a promise of Campo after. Her oldest daughter, Carson, has zero interest in sweating opting for other hobbies. Megan, her youngest, has taken to running and is really looking forward to the Nolensville Kids Marathon where many NRC volunteers will have the chance to cheer her on.

With her first marathon in the rear view, she’s really looking forward to Downhill at Dawn in May. She’d also like to try a Ragnar Relay and a hit the trails for a race or two, but no 2nd marathon has been booked…yet.

Since becoming a steady runner, Jenny has had some minor strains and pains, so she makes sure to visit her chiropractor and loves dry needling! She knows she’s fortunate that she hasn’t been sidelined by serious injuries up to this point (knock on wood) and tries to not do too much too fast.

It may have been a long time coming, but Jenny has finally found her running groove! From the NRC C25K program to the Little Rock Marathon finish line and on to the next goal ahead, Jenny has found the motivation and accountability she needs through NRC.

“It’s more than that,” says Jenny. “Providing the motivation that someone else might need is what’s the most rewarding.”

Congrats, Jenny and thanks for motivating us and all you do for NRC!

Jenny’s Mom sporting the first Tom King race shirt.

JENNY SPEED ROUND:

Local favorite: Yuno Sushi

Running music: Not usually… but when I do, I always start off with Ain’t It Fun by Paramore

Something surprising: My mom ran the first Tom King half marathon, which was my first half marathon.

Hobbies: Camping in the fall; spending time at the lake in the summer; watching sports.

_______________

Ray Sadler

Our male Runner of the Month, Ray Sadler, has an uncanny gift for finding humor in the mundane. His thoughts on things like the perils of bottom shelf items when grocery shopping post-marathon, snag him lots of laughing emojis on Facebook and he brings this same comic relief to every run. While he owns that it didn’t come easy, it’s clear he’s now found an outlet that keeps him pushing himself to new limits!

A west Nashville native, Ray was raised not far from the streets he now runs. He and his wife, Angela, have both lived in the 615 pretty much their whole lives and made Nolensville home in August of 2013.

Ray makes videos as the Manager of Media Production for Tractor Supply. By traveling to capture stories from many of their roughly 1700 stores across 49 states (can you guess where they AREN’T?), he has had some crazy experiences!

Through the camera lens, Ray has gotten to learn about wild birds, meet country music stars, make Star Wars parodies, see a litter of pigs being born, fly drones, beat the tar out of a 40 inch bass drum, and see a 4 legged chicken. Plus, thanks to Tractor Supply, Ray has been able to add 3 states to his list of places he’s run!

Before NRC, Ray was never a runner try as he might. There were several futile attempts to pick it up after high school, but his health was big motivator to try again. Both sides of his family deal with high blood pressure, so there was no avoiding it for him. Medication alone wasn’t getting it down to where it should be; plus, he was putting on a bit of weight.

He jokes that he first heard about NRC through Facebook posts by angry people cussing runners on Wednesday nights, but in reality it was well-meaning friends and neighbors. Around that time, Angela started encouraging him to try running. It was like the universe was telling Ray to do the C25K, but he was a staunch “0.0-er” and holding the line.

“Then,” Ray laughs, “Angela told me I was getting fat.” LOL! [Cue the “Chariots of Fire” theme.]

The universe won and Ray joined the NRC C25K in 2015. Now, he’s officially addicted to running. His BP with medication and running is down to a reasonable level and he’s lost about 30 pounds since he started!

One of his favorite NRC memories ever came during the 2015 Middle Half, his first. He hit the wall just after mile 11. It was the farthest he’d ever run and his body was done as he stared down the final 2 soul-crushing miles.

“So, I was slogging along at mile 11.5 in my C25K tech, trying to figure out what I’d gotten myself into, when all of a sudden behind me I hear, ‘Hey NRC! You got this. You’re almost there. Come on!’ I had no idea who it was. Had never laid eyes on them,” Ray recalls. “But I saw their NRC shirts, and heard them tell me I could do it, so I kept going and got it done. I now know it was Jimmy Stitt, with his wife, Jamie, and another runner or two, just out there being Jimmy. And I’ll never forget it.”

Funny story about how things change… His finish time pacer had been called THAT MORNING to run and he remembers thinking, “What?! You just got up and ran 13 miles!?” Well, this past year Ray ran 13 or more miles 28 times!

Some of Ray’s favorite friendships were made through that first C25K and he enjoys giving back in many ways, including sharing his production talents to create a super cool video to promote the C25K program! (Click here to view)

From the start, Ray found himself on the fast track! He joined NRC’s C25K in April 2015, ran his first 5K that June, his first 10K in September, his first half that October, and was training to run his first marathon the next April (a year after starting)! In January 2016, his progress was slowed by a stress fracture in his tibia from pushing himself further and faster so quickly. He learned a lot about building up as a runner from that experience.

He can’t say enough about the St. Jude Memphis Marathon. The 2016 event was his first full, which he finished in 5:00:10. He recalls it being such a well-done race. Relatively flat. Great race support throughout. And running through the hospital campus? Don’t even get him started on that.

His advice, “If you’re from Nashville and looking to run your first full, forget about the two Nashville races, go directly to Memphis.”

One achievement he is especially proud of is his current half PR. He set a goal at the beginning of 2017 to run 1000 miles (he ended up with 1300) and a sub-2:00 half. He proceeded to agonizingly come within minutes, half after half. 2:01 at the Tom King in March. 2:04 at the Flying Pig in May. Finally, on December 16, in an unofficial, solo run on the Murfreesboro Greenway, he did it. 1:59:57. It’s on his Garmin, so he’s counting it!

He completed his second marathon in Little Rock 2018 with a crazy crew of NRCers. His goal time was 4:30 and he finished with a 4:15:45 (that’s a 45 min PR if you’re keeping track)!

After that incredible feat, he’ll likely relegate his runs to the Dairy Dash, the Franklin Classic and other non-5K his work will cover, that is unless he talks himself into going for a new PR on the flattish Huntsville course. New York is top on his bucket list with the Chicago and Marine Corps Marathons close behind.

Ray tries hard to maintain a balance between home life and running. Although Angela loves the fact that it keeps him healthy, Ray recognizes that, especially during marathon training, she can feel like a running widow. Luckily, she’s not typically an early riser, so he can do morning runs and hit the occasional Wednesday NRC night. His boys, Luke, Noah and Eli (17, 15, 14), all think they can outrun him.

“In a sprint? Probably,” admits Ray. “But I could outlast them. They’d leave me in the dust, but I’d catch them before they hit 10K.”

Keepin’ it real with a salt and pepper beard that couldn’t hide his wide sincere smile even if it wanted to, Ray inspires us and keeps us cracking up every step of the way!  We are blessed to have this easy-going, wisecracking, mile-logging guy as such a great representative of NRC!

RAY SPEED ROUND:

Local favorite: Yuno Sushi

Running music: Anything from “The Greatest Showman” soundtrack.

Something surprising: Angela and I lived in South America (Santiago, Chile) for a year.

Hobbies: Sleep and the Food Network.

NRC Runners of the Month – Robert Plunkett and Keiko Tateiwa

Keiko Tateiwa and Robert PlunkettAs I set out to interview Runners of the Month Keiko Tateiwa and Robert Plunkett for this article, I knew they were both strong runners who had moved their family here from Japan. What I didn’t know was… a lot! They have had such interesting experiences, and having learned more about them, it is easy to see why they are such extremely talented athletes!

Robert was born in Dallas, TX and spent part of his youth in Key Largo, Florida where he learned water skiing and sailing. His family eventually moved back to the Lone Star State to Boerne, TX, a town nestled in the Hill Country northwest of San Antonio. He spent his more formative years in this small, close-knit community, which he fondly considers his American hometown.

Born in the historic port city of Nagasaki, Japan, Keiko moved at an early age to Yokohama, the second largest city in Japan outside of Tokyo. She grew up in this vibrant, multi-cultural city where futuristic skyscrapers tower over centuries-old gardens and temples. Keiko started running track in middle school and continued through high school. After that, she didn’t run for a while, except for a race here and there whenever her old school buddies got together. After years off from the sport, it wasn’t until moving to Nolensville that she became truly inspired to run again by joining the Nolensville Running Club.

Unlike Keiko, Robert did not play sports in school. Still, from the time he was seven years old, his parents would send him and his brother to a month-long camp called Camp Champions in Marble Falls, TX. There they were exposed to pretty much every sport there is on both land and water! While it gave him a fundamental skill set in each sport, he remembers he wasn’t particularly gifted with any of them except sailing and waterskiing. He enjoyed it so much he ended up working summers there while in college. (Cool fact: He was a camp counselor to Drew Brees!) Foreshadowing his future, Robert took a running class in college just for the elective. The coach said he had some potential, but he didn’t follow up on it at the time.

Robert spent the last 24 years in Japan, more than half his life, before returning back to the States in 2015. While in Japan, he actively pursued his passion for inline skating, a sport he’d gotten into in 1990. He became a pro, skating for a leading global inline brand, ROCES, and was a member of the Good Skates Japan (GSJ) Team doing half-pipe shows and competitions.

“I used to joke with my skate buds that I would never date anyone unless they skated,” says Robert. “Sure enough, one day on the other side of a 10ft half-pipe was a beautiful skater-girl named Keiko. She said ‘yes’ to dinner and the rest is history.”

They decided to move their family here in May, 2015. Robert’s company, UBS, was expanding an office in Nashville and it seemed like a great opportunity for both his career and for Keiko and the kids to learn English so he took the offer. He works as a Risk Analyst and now heads the team which he feels is a challenging and rewarding role where everyday is different. When looking for a town to raise their family, he admits that one of the reasons he was drawn to Nolensville was because it reminded him of the cozy, community of Boerne.

Now that she’s all settled in to her new life in Nolensville, Keiko is always on the go. She swims and runs everyday, and enjoys baking. Learning a new language has had its confusing moments (see Speed Round section below), but Keiko is a quick study and looks forward to the fun and productive things she can do as her English becomes more fluent.

Robert and Keiko have each qualified for the Boston Marathon, a feat few are able to accomplish. Needless to say, when I asked Robert when he started running, I had to laugh when he answered, “Whenever Keiko made me!”

The story goes, that when they were dating, Keiko had to drag Robert to run the few half-marathons and running relays she would do with her old high school buds. He ran the events, but he was so obsessed with skating he never got the running “bug”.

It was a different result though when she forced him to sign up for the Rock and Roll Half in 2016. For some reason it clicked. He had a blast in that race. Maybe it was the great atmosphere, maybe it was the “fastie” endorphins, but he has really been hooked since then.

Keiko’s experiences from her high school track days built a solid foundation, which she maintained as an occasional runner spurred to lace up for fun events with friends. Now, she says, NRC is the driving force for her.

Had Keiko and Robert picked a house on any other street to rent when they arrived in America, they may not have found out about NRC so soon, but they happen to pick a street that is perfect for hill training. They’ll never forget the first time they found out about the club.

“It was day two after arriving in Nolensville from Japan. We had a rental in Ballenger Farms at the top of Achilles Hill,” says Robert. “We were trying to get over our jet lag when we heard a commotion outside early in the morning. We looked out to see Yong Kim and Scott Alexander doing sprint drills with a group of runners. We went outside to meet them and were encouraged to stop by the Wednesday night run.”

Keiko started meeting with the crew that next week! She went regularly for six months, and when the annual Halloween Run came around, she convinced Robert that it would be fun and he should go. The costumed creativity that abounds at the NRC Halloween Run is always epic, so naturally he had a great time. He’s been running with NRC ever since.

Now focused in on running as his sport, Robert has been crushing it! He is very happy with his PR of 3:18:54 at his first Marathon (Indianapolis Monumental) in November 2016 and has found himself on a podium more than a few times; still, he admits he was surprised by his PR (1:29:57) at Oak Barrel last year.

Keiko may not make a big deal about her successes, but she has also been working very hard to reach her goals. She earned a stellar PR (3:46) at the hilly Cincinnati Flying Pig Marathon in 2017, only one week after finishing the Nashville Rock and Roll Marathon where temperatures sailed into the 80s!

It isn’t just Mom and Dad lacing up for races. Their entire family has run the Franklin Classic for the past two years and they are all signed up for the 2018 Hot Chocolate 15k.

Clearly both Robert and Keiko have proven their skills as runners through a number of accomplishments, so I was curious as to whether they felt running came naturally to them.

“I think my skating days gave me the strength and stamina I needed,” Robert says. “When starting to run with NRC, I went through the normal initial pains (knees, shins, feet, toes, etc.), but now I feel broken-in and I can enjoy a long run in bliss.”

Keiko put it this way, “I believe running comes naturally to me, but having to train for a BQ is not! Brutal!”

It helped that she competed in Synchronized Ice Skating through college, which built up good leg strength and endurance. She’s still got it, too! Recently she donned her skates again when Nolensville had its first snow and she and Robert went ice-skating on a frozen Mill Creek!

After learning more about Robert, I asked if he would call himself competitive. He answered, “Not so much competitive but passionate. I believe if one is going to do something they should be all-in. To that extent, I think people would refer to me as ‘focused’. When I pick up a hobby, I like to dive 110% into it and not budge or give up till all is accomplished.”

As for Keiko, she is one tough athlete, yet I don’t think I’ve ever seen her not smiling! She has a soft, friendly demeanor, but she also has an inner strength that gives her the ability to push through goals with an unstoppable momentum.

Robert and Keiko have started on a new goal – to complete the running of a marathon in every state! They have done seven states so far and 2018 looks to be a busy year. They are now training for the Atlanta Marathon in March and the esteemed Boston Marathon in April. They plan to check Illinois off their list too, having signed up for the Chicago Marathon in October.

“We would like another BQ in one of those if the opportunity presents itself and the training pays off,” says Robert.

Well, your NRC family believes in you and you can rest assured no matter what, we’ll be there to train with you, cheer you on, and of course, give a big high five at the finish line!

Keiko– Speed Round:

Favorite winter day meal: Beef Stew

Dream splurge: I’d buy a red Jeep!

Strangest American expression you’ve heard:  “Awesome” as it sounds like the Japanese phrase “ah, samui” meaning “it’s cold”.  This did not make sense when hearing this uttered while running in the heat.

Robert – Speed Round:

Must-have gear: Garmin watch, so I can adjust my training

Dream splurge: Flying lessons to get my pilot’s license

Non-running hobby:  Airsoft (see my youtube vids! https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-hzCRVHyE28GqH7VvxqT1g?view_as=subscriber or online gaming (FPS)

NRC Runners of the Month – Kali Mogul and Lisa Thompson

This month we spotlight two NRCers who have strong connections to Nolensville in their own unique ways.  Lisa Thompson, a native Nolensvillian with family ties to the town founder, and Kali Mogul, a Florida transplant helping to plan for the town’s future, met through the NRC C25K program. Together, they have swiftly attained some amazing goals!

Kali Mogul

Kali is cool, calm and steadily collecting memorable running experiences as a member of NRC. An occasional runner prior to joining, Kali is now training for her first full marathon along with her fellow NRCer of the Month, Lisa Thompson. Kind-hearted and down-to-earth, Kali attributes much of her success to her NRC friends for providing the accountability and the inspiration to do more than she would have ever dreamed possible.

Kali enjoyed an idyllic childhood just outside Ft. Lauderdale in picturesque Plantation, Florida where, I kid you not; their tagline is “the grass is greener”! Growing up in a musical family, she considered herself lucky to go to the same high school where her dad taught music and was choir director. In fact, some of her favorite memories are from the four years she was in choir with her Dad and the two years her older sister was in choir with them. She was in Jazz Choir too. That’s right. Not so long ago, before the NRC high five line, Kali rocked some serious jazz hands and to this day, if she’s listening to the radio and hears Old Time Rock n Roll, Careless Whisper, or the Theme Song from “Fame” it all comes rushing back!

In pursuit of her academic goals, Kali moved to Orlando to attend the Univ. of Central Florida (Go Knights!). Her senior year, she had a chance introduction to her roommate’s childhood friend, Marc, from Long Island. Marc was actually in graduate school in Boston at the time, but he and Kali were so smitten that they stayed in touch and sustained a long distance relationship involving a lot of traveling up and down the east coast. Being apart wasn’t easy and the snowy weather made for some unpredictable flight schedules, but it wasn’t all bad. 

Kali got to see scenic Cape Cod and Nantucket, and go to a Red Sox game while visiting Massachusetts.  Kali and Marc beat the long distance odds and will celebrate their 20th wedding anniversary in July! Before moving to Nolensville, the happy couple lived outside Savannah, GA for four years. They’ve been here since 2007, after following Kali’s parents to middle TN. They have one son, Tanner, who is in middle school at Franklin Road Academy. He is super smart and while he doesn’t like running, he has let Kali talk him onto the soccer field. As a family, they carry on the traveling tradition, enjoying Disney Cruises, the Grand Canyon, and other cool locales.

As far as work goes, Kali said, “Everything about my job is cool to me. I work for the Town of Nolensville Board of Mayor and Aldermen and in the Planning Department. I even get to work with Mayor Jimmy, one of my running partners!”

When she’s not running or working, she admits she’s usually eating. Top local spots for their family are Amico’s and the Cheesecake Factory where they always save room for the Oreo Dream Extreme Supreme.

Kali has been running off and on since college, but not consistently. Compare that to her accomplishments in 2016 – 5 half marathons all without injuring herself – and you might wonder what happened. Was it the NRC Kool-Aid, the incredible encouragement of her close-knit running crew, or her own love of adventure? Probably all of the above!

It all started when she first heard about NRC from Mayor Alexander by working on Town Hall! “He is certainly my inspiration for running and proof that fitness is the key to longevity,” Kali said with a smile.

At the time she got involved with NRC’s 5k training group, she had a simple running goal – getting through the Change for a Chance 5k.

“When I found out none of the 5:1 leaders or mentors were running the race, I was horrified,” she laughed. “Thankfully, Jay Adamson agreed to run with me, because he had to shove me across the finish line!”

She has lots of running friends now, but there are a few NRCers who really influenced her. One is Liz Staudt (now an NRCer on location in N.C.) who ran with Kali on her very first Wednesday night after C25k and who has given her countless insider tips. Two others who are almost always at her side and who have inspired and motivated her to be her best are Mayor Jimmy and Lisa Thompson.

“We’ve have had so much fun together for the past few years,” said Kali. “I have no idea how many miles we’ve run together, but they’ve all been memorable, and we have managed to solve most of the world’s major problems on our long runs.”

This February, Kali and Lisa will be running their first marathon at the Mercedes Benz Marathon in Birmingham. It took a little convincing for Kali to talk Lisa into it at first, but Lisa (a skilled negotiator) ended up seeing Kali’s marathon and raising her a “Warrior Dash” which they will complete together in April!

“We will finish the marathon if we have to crawl,” exclaimed Kali. “But, the Warrior Dash. That one scares me more than marathon training.”

Looking back, her favorite race is the Oak Barrel Half Marathon in Lynchburg for the scenery and the great running weather. Of course, the Rollin Nolen 10 Miler, a race at which she obtained a PR this year, holds a special place all its own.

What has gotten Kali through the challenges of marathon training? Knowing Lisa is going to be there and that accountability makes her get out of bed and run.

“Lisa is very encouraging,” explains Kali. “We are different in a lot of ways. For example, Lisa’s children are older, but because of her unique parenting experiences she gives really good advice. We always have great conversations.”

Another thing that gets Kali through her long runs on Saturday is looking forward to watching classic 1970’s episodes of Wonder Woman on MeTV! She admits she’s kind of fanatical about the Justice League heroine. She even has a Wonder Woman costume. So, when the alarm goes off at 4am on Saturday, the mere knowing that at 6:30pm she’ll be in her PJs on the couch to catch a Lynda Carter episode helps her get up and power through.

A wonder in her own right, we are so glad that Kali is a part of NRC! We appreciate her work for the Town of Nolensville and look forward to cheering her on in many more races to come!

Speed Round – Kali Mogul

1 thing I wish was never invented: Pink wine

1 thing I wish I had invented: White Wine

Hobbies: Travel, reading, watching This is Us and HGTV

______________________________________________________

Lisa Thompson

At first glance, Lisa appears to be the epitome of a Southern woman – sophisticated, self-assured, and well mannered, complete with lipstick on her long runs and a soothing Tennessee lilt to her words that would tame even the most unruly of scoundrels. But, don’t let that fool you into to thinking she’s a lightweight runner. Lisa is a risk taking, road racing, goal-chasing gal and with her friends supporting her all the way, she is definitely not afraid to get a little dirt under her nails.

Lisa is a true Nolensvillian to the core. In fact, her family heritage goes all the way back 250 years. Branches of her family tree include both Sherwood Green and William Nolen himself, the man who founded the town in 1797. For those not familiar with the tale, the Nolen family came to the area with Sherwood Green and the Colonel William Christmas family. Nolen’s wagon broke a spoke and they decided to stay. Lisa lives right next door to her mother and NRC walker, Janice Green, who is a 6th generation descendent of Sherwood Green, and they have a rich history in this area.

Of course, the town map looked a lot different when Lisa was growing up. She attended school at the old school that is now the Williamson County Rec. Center, but there were no restaurants, stores or subdivisions. Lisa fondly remembers those years when even though it was mostly farmland, everyone knew everyone.

After high school, Lisa graduated from the University of Tennessee at Knoxville. Her work with Castner Knott department store led her to Alabama for a few years; however, she knew that Nolensville was where she wanted her kids to grow up.

For 15 years, Lisa and her husband Dr. John Thompson have served the community as owners of Nolensville Family Medicine. She enjoyed working alongside her husband helping keep the town of Nolensville in good health, but seizing an opportunity that will benefit both the town and their clinic, they have turned over the management to Vanderbilt Health. Now Lisa is embarking on a new adventure, retirement!

While Lisa is a seasoned runner now, she actually got her start through the very first NRC Couch to 5K. She had learned about NRC from her friend and Nolensville Mayor, Jimmy Alexander. Her only goal at that time was to complete the 5K… and to beat the Mayor!

From there she tackled the half marathon distance. She has several “halfs” under her belt, including the Carmel Championship Half Marathon, Murfreesboro Middle Half and the Disney Half Marathon!

“My favorite race is always the Oak Barrel Half,” says Lisa. “I love the atmosphere and the challenge of it.”

Most of those finish lines Lisa crossed with her close friend and training partner, Kali Mogul. They met through the NRC C25K program. A year after Lisa participated as a runner, she went back and helped with the 4:1 interval group, which was Kali’s group. They quickly found their running styles were really similar and more than that, running was more fun together!

Lisa and Kali are pretty inseparable when it comes to logging miles. For example, this summer Lisa’s goal was to increase her overall speed. Naturally, this became Kali’s goal, too.

Kali confessed, “I would have never just decided to do speed training without Lisa’s prompting. Her friendship and support is a big reason I keep running.”

Likewise, when Kali talked Lisa into doing a marathon (something she said she would never do) Lisa agreed but insisted they use a 33-week plan she crafted from combining Hal Higdon’s Full and Half Training Plans together! That may seem like overkill to some, but for them, it’s working great!

Their running trifecta is completed by her long-time friend, Jimmy Alexander. According to Lisa, running with Jimmy is never dull – from trying to keep him from running down the middle of the street (well, he is the Mayor) to chasing him for motivation.

Lisa’s current running goals are to run a 5K under 30 minutes and to run a half marathon under 2:30.  “I know, I know. I’m slow as a turtle,” jokes Lisa!

With her determination though, it’s likely she’ll be checking those off her list soon and laughing all the way. As they say, it’s not about the time it takes to get to the destination; it’s about the journey.

Lisa and Kali are fully immersed in the high-mileage phase of full marathon training. Crossing the finish line in February at the Mercedes Benz Marathon will be the first time for both of them to trek 26.2 miles! It’s been fun seeing their smiles with each milestone, longest-run-ever Facebook post they share and we’re psyched to cheer them on for the big event.

Lisa especially loves it when she gets the chance to get in some miles with her family! She has had the chance to “travel” with her mother, Janice Green, who walks with NRC from time to time and her sister, Kathy McGee, also an NRCer; plus, her son, Matt, and his wife, Becca, who run races with her when they can, and her daughter, Emily, who doesn’t run often but has been persuaded to run a couple of 5K’s.

Something many people may not know about Lisa is that she also loves to ride motorcycles with her husband, especially in the Fall. So, next time you’re in Leipers Fork and you see a purple motorcycle, you may have just seen Lisa blazing down the roads!

From the 1st inaugural NRC C25K to marathon training, Runner of the Month Lisa Thompson has become such a strong part of NRC’s family! Her positivity and no fear attitude have taken her on lots of adventures so far and it’s no doubt that we have yet to see what she can accomplish!

Speed Round – Lisa Thompson

1 thing I wish I had invented: Bluetooth running sunglasses that tell your pace & mileage 

Hobbies: None. I guess I need to get one now that I’m retired!