
They called me a born loser, or at least that’s what the coach’s side-eye seemed to say when I joined the track team. I was slow—painfully slow—at least in everyone’s eyes. Coach prejudged me, barely glancing my way during tryouts, already writing me off. But I had a secret: I practiced. Not at official practices, because Coach didn’t bother scheduling them for us “nobodies.” No, I made my own schedule. I told my dad and my older sisters, who always seemed to have authority over me, that I had practice every Tuesday and Thursday. It wasn’t true, but it got me out of the house, away from their rules, and onto the track.
I’d run alone, pushing myself, lap after lap, while nobody watched. I wasn’t fast yet, but I was getting faster. Then came the race against Tim Temerson, the kid everyone thought was untouchable. I beat him. Not by a mile, but enough. Tim’s jaw dropped. “I can’t believe Alex beat me,” he said, stunned. Coach was so shocked he made me rerun the race, like he couldn’t trust the timer. I still won.
Nobody noticed the work I put in, but that didn’t matter. I wasn’t a born loser—I was a born fighter, carving my own path one sneaky practice at a time.
What’s a time you proved someone wrong by doing things your own way? Share below!
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