Taylor Perkins wanted to run with her mother when she was in fifth grade. Her mother, Michele, objected at first.
She had visions of a young child not being able to keep pace with the former All-Big Eight Conference selection from the University on Nebraska. Taylor remained persistent until her mother gave in later that school year.
Taylor, a senior at Lakeville North, has since developed into one of the state's top cross-country runners in Class 2A. It wasn't achieved, though, without a little bit of heartache.
During her early years as a member of the varsity team, Taylor would be in a pack with the lead runners only to fade at the end of a race. She made the school's varsity team as a seventh-grader, and has qualified for the state meet every season since those middle school years.
"It was like I had heavy legs," Taylor said. "I couldn't finish a race. It was miserable; something had to be wrong."
She was right. The three-sport athlete (she also ran track and played basketball) was diagnosed with iron deficiency at the end of her freshman year. Her ferritin level would drop to as low as 12. The lower the ferritin level, even within the normal range of 12 to 150, the more likely it is a person doesn't have enough iron.
"My track coach joked that it was like I was running on one leg," Taylor said.
It still took time to find the right dosage to aid her in running. She currently takes four doses of iron (pill or liquid) a day.