She will fit right in with Nike!
She will fit right in with Nike!
might as well be a softball player with all the questions she's choosing to answer. snore.
xenonscreams failed with that Reddit.
Link?
What would be the point of asking these "tough" questions you are alluding too?
I doubt she's even answering the questions herself.
She got like 190 questions so I believe it is her prerogative to answer whichever she felt like. Your question about thyroid hormone has nothing to do with her at this time. Ask Salazar not Mary.
She's 17. The important questions
- What does she think of Justin Bieber?
- If she died her hair what color would she use?
- Will she ever get a tattoo?
- Who was the cutest Bachelor?
- Does she believe in sex before marriage?
Eric the Rod wrote:
She's 17. The important questions
- What does she think of Justin Bieber?
- If she died her hair what color would she use?
- Will she ever get a tattoo?
- Who was the cutest Bachelor?
- Does she believe in sex before marriage?
Unfortunately, this is pretty spot-on.
She must of been prepped by Obama.
I think her answers are great, and especially like this one.
Devils_lettuce_
If you have one advice to runners, what would it be?
runmarycain
Always love the sport. Make sure you're always having fun with it. That's one thing that's been key to my running career. The moment you start to feel like it's not fun and you stop enjoying it (that's a problem). That's what life's about. Always just make sure you have fun with it. At the end of the day that's what life is about, having fun.
Yeah, I would like to have life advice from a 17 year old who chose to affiliate with the NOPers of evildom.
Not that one should be expecting anything otherwise from a teenage runner, but the questions selected and the answers are about as boring, uninspiring and unimaginative as can be. I could make up those answers for her. Anyways, that partially has to do with my misgivings about a lot of runners in general, who, in spite of devoting so much heart, soul and life effort to distance running, seem to conceive of running and all its engagements in utterly unimaginative, uncinematic, unartful and unepic terms. *tears*
Kipketer_Pumpkin_Eater wrote:
Not that one should be expecting anything otherwise from a teenage runner, but the questions selected and the answers are about as boring, uninspiring and unimaginative as can be. I could make up those answers for her. Anyways, that partially has to do with my misgivings about a lot of runners in general, who, in spite of devoting so much heart, soul and life effort to distance running, seem to conceive of running and all its engagements in utterly unimaginative, uncinematic, unartful and unepic terms. *tears*
Maybe if she borrowed your thesaurus when writing her answers, it would have been more inspiring and imaginative?
I hope you're just learning English if words like "imaginative" and "artful" require a thesaurus.
The questions she chose to answer were very uninspiring. The most interesting thing I learned is she prefers pancakes to waffles. She's basically a girl with a freak load of talent and nothing else remarkable, assuming she's even clean.
She's 17 you guys need to calm down...
I seriously don't blame the girl for dodging half the questions after the LR a$$hats got involved and crashed the party. No wonder athletes never do these types of things if they are going to be trolled by slow losers on some half a$$ed forum.
Mary Cain is the perfect example of a young, succesful and talented person. 95% of people who post on this very forum are the exact opposite of this type of person and ruin it for everyone else. Losers.
HardLoper wrote:
Maybe if she borrowed your thesaurus when writing her answers, it would have been more inspiring and imaginative?
How dismal. Pretty disappointed in you HardLoper, illustrating exactly what I'm complaining about. Rather than responding to me honestly, you just are being snarky. But as a matter of fact, the issue I am raising is my central concern with the entire distance running community. American distance running is great, scientifically sound, on the resurgence, with great and wonderful times. But world records mean nothing without Art, morals, culture, expression, etc. to capture the infinite power, promise and energy of distance running. If you don't agree with me and believe distance running is exalted, then I'm baffled as to all the hours and discussion you and others spend--it cannot be just another esoteric nerdy hobby, it is so much grander than that.