Let me tell you something about Jaimee: she is a total rockstar.
A few years ago, Jaimee was an amateur athlete who caught the running bug first, and then the triathlon bug. After completing a sprint triathlon, she set a goal to participate in the IRONMAN World Championships, held in Kona, Hawaii. Only the most elect of athletes are accepted: they have to win first place in their age group of another full IRONMAN competition. (Oh, and that entails a 2.4 mile swim, 100 mile bike ride, and a 26.2 mile run.) Jaimee decided this was something she could achieve in four years.
She did it in two.
This involved a tremendous amount of grit, sacrifice, dedication, and . . . self-doubt. When you decide to not only become an IRONMAN, but to win one, you also decide to make small goals to reach for every single day, in every swim, run, and bike ride. And the thing I love the most about Jaimee? She says that the majority of the time, she didn’t reach her target goals. But she didn’t let that stop her. She surrounded herself with people who believed in her, and didn’t listen to the ones who tried to tell her otherwise.
Jaimee says she is not a perfectionist, which is something that most definitely separates her from her fellow Ironman competitors. In fact, she says her flexibility and the positive view she keeps of herself made up the very key to her success. If she had only been satisfied with perfection, then she would have quit a thousand times. Instead, Jaimee let her vision of herself achieving her goal drive her past those days where every workout didn’t pan out as planned. Each step mattered to her, and each step–and misstep–drove her to that envisioned success as she crossed the finish line at the IRONMAN World Championships.
To hear much more from Jaimee, Listen below, on iTunes, Stitcher, Pocketcasts, or search for “About Progress” in your podcast apps.
Additional Show Notes:
Pictures and movie of Jaimee crossing that finish line!