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I run. Since middle school, that has been my answer to the infinite number of questions I’ve been asked, or asked myself, throughout my life. When I was young, the questions were easier, though they seemed monumental at the time. As I grew older, the questions changed, but my answer didn’t. How to survive my first broken heart? I run. How to work through any decisionmaking process, from what’s for dinner to how to repair a relationship after an argument? I run. How to clear my head when the demands of school, work or parenthood become too much? I run. But this has also been my answer to a question of identity, one specifically that has always been difficult for me to answer directly: Are you a runner?
Uh, I run?
Claiming the identity of a runner gives me the most intense case of impostor syndrome; it has always felt just out of reach. Runners are fast. They aren’t asthmatics who struggle through a nine-minute mile. Runners strength train. Runners compete at the collegiate level. Runners run every day. I am not a runner, but I do run. And this weekend I take another step, or rather 40,000-some steps, toward claiming the identity of a runner. So, happy marathon weekend to all the runners out there, and to those of us who run.
Erin Timmers, Le Sueur, Minn.
MINNEAPOLIS MAYORAL RACE
Hampton takes a win-win approach
I appreciated Eric Roper’s profile of Jazz Hampton, my first choice for Minneapolis mayor (“Jazz Hampton wants to be a City Hall bridge builder,” StarTribune.com, Oct. 1). One comment: It should not be newsworthy that Hampton believes “he can find some amicable path between warring factions at City Hall.” The reality is, each faction has a big enough constituency that none of us can expect the side we disagree with to just go away. Under circumstances like these, forging compromises is what a good mayor does.
I co-hosted a meet-and-greet for Hampton last month. There were guests whose beliefs fall on either side of that factional divide. It was nonetheless friendly, with the candidate speaking credibly to everyone in the room. It gave me hope that a Mayor Hampton could build the consensus we’ve been lacking.