Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

This Indian Mother Started Running Marathon In Her 40s

Darpan News Desk IANS, 17 Jul, 2017 12:15 PM
    Anjali Saraogi is the first Indian woman to have run the complete 89 km stretch of the Comrades Marathon -- the world's oldest annual ultra-marathon between the cities of Durban and Pietermaritzburg in South Africa -- and won the Bill Rowden Medal for the effort.
     
     
    This mother of a teenaged daughter is 43 -- an age when many athletes hang up their boots -- and has proven yet again that age is just a number.
     
     
    Saraogi took to the road when her 18-year-old daughter Mamta encouraged her to participate in a city marathon two years back. She finished first, much to the joy of Mamta and the other family members.
     
     
    Saraogi then realised how much she enjoys running -- and vowed to continue till as long as she could.
     
     
    She is now firm in her belief that no dream is too big if women can overcome the impediment of fear.
     
     
    "Women usually undermine themselves. In my opinion, our fears are our greatest limitations. And we should spend more time living with our dreams than our fears," Saraogi said.
     
     
    "I thought of starting an international career after I came second the same year at the Mumbai Half Marathon, the first international running event I participated in," she explained.
     
     
    However, her life on the road has not always been that smooth. Her career as an athlete received a major blow when she was injured while preparing for the Chicago Marathon earlier this year.
     
     
    "Early this year when I was preparing for my dream Chicago Marathon, I got injured and the doctor said I won't be able to ever run," said the Saraogi, who runs a medical diagnostic centre with her husband.
     
     
    Talking about her fight to get back on track, she said: "While recovering, when one day I was feeling downcast, one of my friends gifted me Amit Seth's book 'Dare to Run'. He was the first Indian to have completed the Comrades Marathon in 2009 and received the Spirit of Comrades Award last year. His book inspired me to fight on despite my injury."
     
     
     
     
    Asked about the challenges she had to overcome, Saraogi said: "My father and my husband were very concerned about my health when I took this challenge because I was very new to this. But looking at my consistency, they started supporting me in the end."
     
     
    She also started taking very good care of her health, unlike most women in India who neglect themselves after a certain age.
     
     
    "Since my childhood days, I was plump. That made me feel insecure. Nobody ever thought I could run. But I chose to overcome my insecurity, and proved everybody wrong."
     
     
    "Nowadays, girls think being lean is being healthy. I choose to differ. I think what is most important is that you should be fit, irrespective of your body shape".
     
     
    What is her advice to every woman in the country? "We should always keep health as our priority at any point of their life," she replied.
     
     
    Now, Saraogi has set a target with her family's support to beat her own time record and finish the downhill race in next year's Comrades Marathon. And, may be some day, "I will run the Comrades Marathon with my daughter".

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    You Need to Fail a Breathalizer Test to Enter the World's First Hangover Bar In Amsterdam

    You Need to Fail a Breathalizer Test to Enter the World's First Hangover Bar In Amsterdam
    Provided you can find your way to it after a wild night of alcohol-fueled partying, the world's first hangover bar, in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, promises to make that nasty next-day hangover a lot easier to deal with.

    You Need to Fail a Breathalizer Test to Enter the World's First Hangover Bar In Amsterdam

    Fart Sparks Fire During Laser Surgery; Patient Seriously Burnt In Tokyo

    Fart Sparks Fire During Laser Surgery; Patient Seriously Burnt In Tokyo
    A report recently released by the Tokyo Medical University Hospital in Shinjuku Ward revealed that a patient suffered burns on most of her body after passing gas during laser surgery.

    Fart Sparks Fire During Laser Surgery; Patient Seriously Burnt In Tokyo

    Napflix, A Video Streaming Service That'll Literally Bore You to sleep

    Napflix, A Video Streaming Service That'll Literally Bore You to sleep
    The Napflix website describes the service as a "video platform where you can find the most silent and sleepy content selection to relax your brain and easily fall asleep."

    Napflix, A Video Streaming Service That'll Literally Bore You to sleep

    Full-Beam Drivers In China Forced To Stare Into The Light By Police

    Full-Beam Drivers In China Forced To Stare Into The Light By Police
    Recognizing this problem, the police department recently started punishing offenders by making them stare at their own headlights for a full minute. Hopefully, this will make them see the error of their ways.

    Full-Beam Drivers In China Forced To Stare Into The Light By Police

    Chinese Mall Opens 'Husband Nursery' Where Men Can Relax While Wives Shop

    Chinese Mall Opens 'Husband Nursery' Where Men Can Relax While Wives Shop
    There are few things that men hate more than going on long shopping sprees with their wives or girlfriends, so one Chinese mall has come up with the "husband nursery", a special place where guys can kick back and relax while their better halves shop till they drop.

    Chinese Mall Opens 'Husband Nursery' Where Men Can Relax While Wives Shop

    4 Ways Non Residential Indians Can Change Their 500 And 1000 Rupee Notes

    4 Ways Non Residential Indians Can Change Their 500 And 1000 Rupee Notes
    Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi in a surprise move on Tuesday night announced high-denomination notes of 500 and 1000 rupees will no longer be legal tender from midnight local time.

    4 Ways Non Residential Indians Can Change Their 500 And 1000 Rupee Notes