'I was never a boy': Transgender NCAA track champion vows to return to sport and take 'all the records'



A former NCAA track and field champion who believes he is a woman said he planned on returning to the sport to capture subsequent female athletic records.

Cece Telfer won the women's NCAA national championship for 400m hurdles in 2019 and was part of a flurry of male athletes being identified for their dominance of female sports at the time.

Telfer reportedly transitioned from male to female in 2018 before dominating his sport.

In a new interview with an LGBT-focused outlet, Telfer said that he had plans to return to the track and dominate female athletes once again. He made multiple references throughout the interview to his dreams being "taken" from him through the rejection of male athletes in female comeptitions.

"I look forward to indoor track, because 2024 indoors is going to be epic. My dreams were taken away from me once again. So I plan on going back to New England, hitting up all the indoor competitions, and taking all the names, all the records, and everything."

"That doesn't look like first all the time, that doesn’t look like second place, that doesn’t look like podium all the time, but the track meets that count will count," he added.

'Off the track, I am a very, very girly girl. I mean, on the track, too. I like to take care of myself and feel very pretty.'

After being denied a shot at the Olympic trials and a ban by the NAIA of transgender athletes, it appeared that Telfer planned to return to the NCAA.

"That's what's burning this fire in my heart and in my body. So it’s keeping me going to know that I can go to indoor competitions and still be the girl to talk about, period," Telfer told Them.

Telfer explained that he is actually a woman several times in the interview; such as when the athlete was plainly asked about his "mental health."

"Anti-trans rhetoric from past athletes, current athletes, is making it so much harder for women like me to exist in society and even compete in sports," Telfer said. He then claimed that "everything is slowly being taken away" from him.

When asked what kind of person he is, Telfer said that he considers himself a rather feminine woman.

"I consider myself to be a voice for people who don’t have a voice. Off the track, I am a very, very girly girl," he claimed. "I mean, on the track, too. I like to take care of myself and feel very pretty."

The outlet went even farther, however, suggesting that Telfer has faced stereotypes and asking how he deals with the idea that people might see him as an "angry black woman."

"I might be a little angry, but that's just how I feel. And we are allowed to be angry. It’s a normal, healthy human emotion. However, I know that because of the color of my skin, I cannot live that normal human emotion," he theorized.

While claiming that he was "never a boy," Telfer revealed that he had gone through a "war" with his "mental and physical state." He also concluded that because he identified as a woman, his mother would never accept him.

"When it was time for me to break out of that shell and be like, 'No, I have to live for me now,' I came to the realization that [my mother was] never going to love me for who I am."

"I was never a boy, never saw myself as a boy, never identified as a boy, never conformed to anything that was masculine boy unless my parents were forcing it upon me," he added.

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Motivational influencer has terrible bathroom accident during Boston Marathon but manages to finish 'for the people'

Motivational influencer has terrible bathroom accident during Boston Marathon but manages to finish 'for the people'



Davis Clarke, an online influencer known for giving a motivational speech ahead of anything he is set to accomplish, participated in the Boston Marathon and finished with an impressive time, despite having an unfortunate incident.

Clarke has risen in popularity by offering words typically saved for an athletic feat and applying them to common endeavors. He has referred to a finance test as bigger than the Super Bowl and has dedicated a morning run to his entire family.

As part of his pursuit of greatness, Clarke participated in 128th Boston Marathon. The influencer noted that he "barely trained" but was "locked in," which may or may not have contributed to an awful incident. During the 26-mile race, Clarke defecated on himself but managed to finish the race in a reasonably fast time.

Clarke proudly posted the evidence on his social media, panning down to his legs after crossing the finish line. It was unclear at which point during the race the accident happened.

"2:56 Boston Marathon… I gave it everything for the people…even s**t my pants to go as hard as possible…barely trained but locked in," Clarke wrote on Instagram.

With an official time of 2:56:53, Clarke finished 2,063 out of approximately 30,000 participants. The fastest time of the day belonged to winner Sisay Lemma of Ethiopia at 2:06:17.

"I left it all out there, I'm shaking now," Clarke said from inside a New Balance store after the race. The runner and his friends chronicled his day through the race but did not address his bowel incident in subsequent videos.

Fans on the other hand were flabbergasted by Clarke's dedication and the fact that he managed to finish the marathon in such a condition.

"I was out on this guy but now I’m pushing all my chips to center of table on this guy," a Nebraska fan noted on X.

I was out on this guy but now I’m pushing all my chips to center of table on this guy
— nebraska nation (@eggman81339114) April 15, 2024

Another fan said that he would henceforth be "choosing to believe" that Clarke is "committing to the bit at a level previously not thought possible."

"I just love how he’s super positive," a viewer also wrote.

Choosing to believe this guy is committing to the bit at a level previously not thought possible
— Gabaghoul (@cultclassist) April 15, 2024

While it ultimately isn't clear how serious Clarke is about his motivational speaking, he is certainly living up to his promises in the eyes of his viewers.

"No matter who you are. No matter what you do. You can INSPIRE. Who are you INSPIRING?" Clarke's YouTube channel reads. "Inspire is a movement to help people realize they can inspire those around them."

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Rise and run: How tech is revolutionizing the running world



Editor's Note: This piece originally appeared in the print version of Return.

Time for what?

The watch wakes you with a gentle buzz: Two minutes until the alarm goes off in the next room.

The alarm in the next room is a generic contrivance against sleeping in, a data point in a broader network of calendar appointments, reminders, and notifications, all centralized in a smartphone. It calls your attention to the time but without any specific purpose: "Time to get up." Get up for what? There is no response. The smartphone is dumb.

But the watch's gentle buzz is different. It says something specific: "Time to run."

Rising to run in the morning is immediately a social deed, even if it's a solo run. The watchful buzz is a reminder that someone else is already out there, getting up, lacing up, getting after it. With or without coffee, over the elegant brick streets and past the manicured gardens of privilege or across the broken asphalt and wreckage of urban blight, someone else's feet are already at work, pacing out the steps of that first mendacious mile.

The first mile of every run is usually a big lie: Stiffness masquerades as pain, sleepiness pretends to be central nervous system exhaustion, and every bad turn of the foot seems a sure omen of an injury to come or a bad run. The higher the weekly mileage, the fitter the athlete, the more the first mile lies. In this hardest of miles, the tech of the watch becomes your ally. By meticulously monitoring your speed, the cadence of your feet, and the beating of your heart, the tech reminds you that this first mile is always slow, always clumsy, always harder than the second. It reminds you, too, that someone else has already run the first mile today — or is taking his first steps virtually at your side.

It's never just "someone else" who is running with you, though. Maybe before the smartwatch, it was just "someone" — or even no one — who was by your virtual side on those solo runs. But now they have names: Chris, Matt, Carl, Dan, Al, and Will. They're your friends, your rivals, your nemeses, and they are always with you because, as runners say only half-jokingly, a run doesn't count if it isn't on Strava.

Kudos are king of all

Strava is the addictive fitness app that pretty much every competitive runner and cyclist uses to track work and measure themselves against others. It syncs with your smartwatch to track your mileage, pace, heart rate, and many other metrics, and it measures your progress and personal records. It also maps where you run or ride, lighting up the map in bright orange with stats on elevation gain, distance, and relative difficulty adjusted for the steepness of your ascent.

Men will die for Strava miles, and perhaps they actually have. In 2018, Strava made the highly questionable decision to publish its users' 13 trillion GPS data points online. It was a marketing ploy to showcase the strong appeal and adoption of the app. But it turns out that the adoption of Strava was more widespread than even its owners knew and that its users were more devoted than even the app's engineers realized. Soldiers, special forces troops, and intelligence operatives around the world posted all of their runs and workouts to Strava religiously. By publishing their routes, Strava inadvertently revealed the location of U.S., French, and Nigerian military camps and intelligence facilities around the world. CIA "black sites" that had remained opaque to enemy surveillance for years were suddenly lit up in bright orange blueprints for all the world to see. Strava has since considerably increased its focus on user privacy.

Why did America's soldiers and spies post every last run, lift, and swim to a GPS-enabled app that syncs to the web? They did it for the kudos, of course.

Like Facebook and other social media, Strava's notification button lights up red to draw you in, promising a rush of serotonin. But where Facebook users live for "likes," Strava's currency is "kudos," congratulations or compliments, which comes from the Greek word kudos, which means "glory for a great deed."

Kudos are as addictive as likes, but the addiction is different — and helpful.

Because every post is based on real physical activity, your followers don't hand out kudos indiscriminately. Every runner has a handful of followers (or a lot of followers) who praise him for every activity, and there's nothing wrong with that; it's the virtual equivalent of friends high-fiving after an easy jog and saying, "Good run." But to get a lot of kudos, you have to do something unprecedented for yourself (like a big personal record or PR), something simply impressive to everyone (like winning a race), or something that is just kind of crazy (like running 24 miles on New Year's Eve and 25 miles on New Year's Day — because it wouldn't do to start the year off by going backward).

The ancient Greeks had a saying: nomos panton basileus: "Custom is king of all." For the modern athlete, kudos are king of all. The two sayings are closer than they seem.

The customs of the ancient cities were the works of men who were equal citizens. Still, they were based on the recognition that a natural hierarchy must be respected: The customs constituted the law of the ancient city, honoring the nobler and condemning the base.

Strava kudos are trivial by comparison, addressed as they are to coffee rides and fun runs, but they are very similar in structure; they are human honors rendered in response to a hierarchy of natural excellence. In its own little way, Strava, more than any other modern app, might have a better claim to having built an aristocracy.

The most popular social media apps and networks tend to democratize their users — for good or ill. Everyone is, in a sense, equal in the scrum of the comments section, and Facebook's algorithms strive to make us more so by dragging us toward ever more reductively ideological discourse.

Twitter is more beneficial because it can at least reward users for fostering a diversity of perspectives: Retweets recast a "hot take" rather than merely repeating it dumbly. Because you can retweet, you can "ratio" tweets, making the reimagined version of a speech more popular than the original. This turns the app into a kind of virtual democratic forum — an unruly but egalitarian scrum. Everyone is equal on Twitter, too, because the value of each original tweet has no grounding other than its evaluation by the public; it has no external reference in nature.

Facebook is the social media analog to a mob, and Twitter has the potential to be the social media equivalent of a pure electoral democracy. In that case, Strava comes closest of any app in existence today to the social media version of an aristocracy because the value of its original posts is inextricably tied to actual physical deeds that are intrinsically hierarchical.

Strava's quasi-aristocratic focus on honor makes life inside its walled garden very different.

Inside Zuckerberg's walled garden, algorithms reward you for posting rants that infuriate fellow users, driving engagement and artificially expanding your reach to false "friends" with whom you share nothing but ideological prejudice. Facebook's algorithms are designed for a zero-sum game of attention in which the social network's number-one rival is the real world and virtual friendships compete for time with real friendships. The Zuckerbots are designed to pull users out of natural reality into an artificial hall of mirrors designed to distort every comment to its ideological extreme.

Strava, too, is all about extremes, but it's about extreme deeds in the real world. Every Strava post starts with an activity posted from a smartwatch — a run, a ride, a swim, a workout. Entrepreneurs talk blithely about sweat equity, but in Strava, sweat equity is literal: Every post can only be purchased with sweat.

Like Facebook and Twitter, Strava users compete for followers. But relationships with followers are different, too, forged in bonds of often mutual respect — and usually arising from actual physical proximity. The way that most people build their followings is to simply go on a run or a ride. The app automatically groups your activity with that of your friends, using proximity in the natural world as the basis for identifying a digital friendship.

By grounding every post in a natural, real-world activity, the smartwatch tech directs its users' eyes toward a natural hierarchy rather than a constructed mediocrity. It does more than that: Unlike Facebook, which rewards navel-gazing obsession with social bickering, it draws our attention out into the physical landscape of the natural world.

Running as a physical art of memory

Ryan Pierse/Getty

The physicality of Strava goes beyond human beings: it takes you into a relationship with your city, neighborhood, and land.

I was the world's worst navigator in the dark days before smartphones. In my defense, I don't live in an easy city to learn: The grid of Dallas looks like it was laid out with all of the forethought of Epimetheus, and most of the streets in my neighborhood are about as straight as the Stonewall Bar on a Saturday night. But even considering these excuses, I was a particularly hopeless case. On more than one occasion, I would end up at the intersection of Armstrong and Preston, in the heart of the mansions of the Park Cities. My beat-up Honda Civic idled in front of a baroque gate, a fountain, or a manicured lawn (no doubt drawing the suspicious eyes of the Highland Park Police) as I tried vainly to decide which road went back to Irving.

Later, smartphones and maps apps papered over my cognitive weakness, but they never cured it; once the phone battery died, I was as lost as Aguirre up the Amazon River and only in a marginally better mood.

But running the streets of my city changed all of that.

When you run with a smartwatch, every run is outlined on a map. Some users even use their runs as an athletic Etch A Sketch to draw the shape of Texas, a dragon, a heart, or even a sketch of Golgotha for Easter Sunday. The maps can be much more than a goofy lark, though: When you go over them enough, they become an invaluable aide-memoire and a tool for enhancing the faculty of spatial reasoning.

The habit of running routes, reviewing them on my map, and then running them again trained my mind and body. Roads were no longer interchangeable abstractions. They became memories of effort. A road became the memory of a threshold run when my heart rate redlined; a hill became the feeling of lactate flushing the legs; a turn became the feeling of hips extending and feet rebounding off the asphalt as cadence and turnover increased.

Through the tech of maps and the practice of memory, the streets of Dallas are no longer Cartesian data points; they are opportunities for action and possibilities for movement. The result is that my spatial memory and ability to navigate have significantly improved — not only for the streets I've run but for all streets, even in other cities I visit for the first time.

The key to this process is that it is sequential and recursive: You start by inscribing the dimensions of nature on your soul with physical activity, without the mediation of tech; you use tech afterward to deepen, cement, and intensify the action of memory. The sequence of natural experience, production of memory, and tech-aided reinforcement of memory multiplies the power of the mind through the body. It opens our eyes to see the natural world more clearly.

The tech of the smartwatch, paired with Strava, makes it possible for human beings to better use their bodies as instruments of memory, tools for inscribing upon their souls the dimensions of the natural world around them. Tech draws men and women out into the world and lets them see it as it ought to be seen — not as a dataset for optimization but as a field for human action.

A road map toward a more human tech?

How do we build a new kind of tech that is better than modern technology, a tech that makes us more rather than less human?

I submit that such a new tech will:

  • Help us number our days purposefully and think of time as an action.
  • Be grounded in a natural hierarchy and use honor to strengthen that hierarchical order.
  • Turn our gaze outwards toward the beauty of a nature that is more than human.

What does the nobler social media network of the future look like?

For the past couple of years, many on the right have tried and striven in vain to build a "Facebook for conservatives," a "based version of Amazon," or a "free-speech Twitter" — and hey, maybe we just got one of the three!

But if we want to build a genuinely new, revolutionary tech, we need to take a humbler point of departure, one grounded in the sweat of the brow and the dirt of the road.

What if the tech of the future looks less like "Facebook for Republicans" and more like "Strava — for the soul"?

Eunuch who stabbed athletics officials over questions of his eligibility to compete as a woman still holds women's Parkrun record. Female athletes aren't pleased.



Fury is mounting over the revelation that the Aberystwyth Parkrun women's record is still held by a eunuch who brutally slashed and stabbed three UK Athletics staff over questions of his eligibility to compete as a female athlete.

What's the background?

Michael Jameson, who changed his name to Lauren Jeska, attempted to murder Ralph Knibbs at Birmingham's Alexander Stadium in March 2016.

According to the Guardian, at the time of the attack, Jeska's status as a female athlete was under review, as there were concerns he had a significant advantage over the real women with whom he was competing. The murderous transvestite had, after all, bested women in the 2010, 2011, and 2012 English Fell Running Champion and as well as in the British Championship in 2012.

Jeska, who did not "transition" or have his testicles removed until he was 26 years old, reportedly refused to provide relevant samples of his testosterone levels and other documentation to the governing body, prompting officials to void his race results in September 2015.

After questions were raised about his eligibility, Jeska packed up two large kitchen knives and traveled nearly two hours from his house in Wales to the offices of UK Athletics in Birmingham.

In Birmingham, he savagely stabbed Knibbs in the head and neck, leaving a hole about an inch wide. A witness said it looked as though the transvestic eunuch was "trying to skewer meat."

The premeditated murder attempt, which the judge presiding over Jeska's case indicated was executed with "chilling precision," left Knibbs with limited vision in both eyes.

The BBC reported that in the "cool, calculated attack," Jeska also grievously injured two other UK Athletics employees, Kevan Taylor and Tim Begley, who had tried to intervene during the attack.

Police indicated that "Jeska carried out a violent and unprovoked attack on a man whose sole objective was to enable [him] to compete. [He] will now have plenty of time behind bars to contemplate the devastating consequences of [his] actions."

Jeska was ultimately given an 18-year sentence.

Women's record-holder despite all his stabbing

Mara Yamauchi, former Olympian and British elite marathon runner, was among the first to highlight the abuse of the Parkrun's gender self-identification policy by opportunistic men, reported the Daily Mail.

Yamauchi indicated earlier this week that a Parkrun female group course record had been "smashed to smithereens by a trans-identifying male" and possible put "out of female hands forever."

The Olympian and other feminists noted that Jeska still holds the top two women's records for the Aberystwyth Parkrun, a weekly competition held in Wales.

According to the Parkrun's official records, Jeska has a time of 17:38 in the Aberystwyth run and is also ranked first in the Bryn Bach Parkrun and third in the Heaton Parkrun, both in the women's category.

Heather Binning, founder of the Women’s Rights Network, told the Telegraph, "I am lost for words that a male is stealing what should be women’s records first of all, and setting these records that will not be broken — these records are frozen, women won’t beat them."

Binning added that it was "gobsmacking," not just that the violent eunuch in jail for stabbing innocents over the question of his eligibility would still hold the title, but that he was "in a women’s prison despite politicians' mealy-mouthed words that violent male offenders should not be in the female estate."

"Politicians are turning their backs and sports associations are frightened and are being hung out to dry," continued Binning. "More people take part in Parkrun than the Olympics — it does matter. The grassroots is where the elite athletes come from — girls and women will not in these circumstances want to participate."

It appears that the actual top female in the Aberystwyth parkrun is Charlotte Morgan, who had a time of 17:55 on June 24, 2017.

Jeska is eligible for parole in 2029. It is unclear whether Parkrun will permit him to resume competing against women.

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Science Proves Fitness Protects Against COVID, But My School Makes It Impossible To Work Out

School administrators and COVID advisors need to 'follow the science' and stop discouraging students from trying to live healthy lifestyles.