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Episode 645: Emily Venters’ Chicago Marathon Debut: Grit, Grace, and Finishing With Heart



I hope you had a wonderful Chicago Marathon weekend — if you raced, congrats! It was such a joy to be in Chicago again.

Today I’m recapping the Chicago Marathon with the one and only Emily Venters. I spoke with Emily at the pre-race press conference — she was so excited to debut the marathon. If you had her on your tracker, you saw that things went sideways on race day. In this conversation, Emily shares the full story of what unfolded on the course and how she handled it — with so much grace, grit, and determination. She crossed that finish line about an hour off her goal time, finishing with the masses — something you almost never see a pro do — and there are so many powerful lessons in how she did it.

If you’re new to Emily, she was on the show back in May after breaking 15 in the 5K (episode 609). She debuted the half in Houston, placed 5th at the US Half Marathon Championships, and owns a 68:48 PR in the half. She runs for Nike, lives in Utah, and is coached by Ed Eyestone. Emily is also a leukemia survivor (diagnosed at age 3), and she was raising money for that cause in Chicago — another reason finishing meant so much to her. I was at the finish looking for her with my friend (and relay co-host) Erika Kemp, and watching Emily come down that stretch was emotional and inspiring.

Go give Emily a follow and a big virtual hug: @VentersEmily on Instagram. We are so proud of you, Emily — can’t wait to see what you do next.

Topics Discussed

  1. The decision to finish anyway after a prolonged stop in the med tent.

  2. Overheating & low sodium symptoms starting as early as miles 6–8.

  3. Rejoining with the masses — dodging cups, weaving through runners, lost bottle tables.

  4. Improvising fueling — grabbing Gatorade cups, a spectator’s Coke, and a body-armor drink.

  5. The Biofreeze-in-the-eye moment — chaos of the mass field.

  6. Letting go of ego — finishing with a much slower time vs. DNF.

  7. Ties to her leukemia story and fundraising as motivation to finish.

  8. Learning the marathon’s science (sweat rate, sodium, carbs) vs. half/10K.

  9. Support system — Ed Eyestone, teammates, and the pro road community.

  10. Mindset work — journaling, daily “how do I feel?” check-ins, and redefining success.

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