scholarship

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2023 Erika Wells Memorial Scholarship Winner – Catherine Holtrup

Catherine Holtrup, Cathedral High School – University of Louisville

We are pleased to introduce our 2023 Erika Wells Memorial Scholarship winners, who each received a $1000 scholarship towards their college education. Please enjoy reading their personal essays, in which they discuss how running has made a positive impact on their lives.

Erika Wells was a beloved member of the Indy Runners who tragically passed away in October 2016. Her dedication to service, personal growth, social engagement, and an overall use of running as part of a healthy lifestyle and a way to help support the community were unparalleled. We believe these winners each exemplify these characteristics as well.

We are thankful that these young people were willing to share their unique stories of how running has influenced their lives. We hope that they will continue to make running a cornerstone of their life.

“On a hot, humid August afternoon, the cross country team was breaking up into groups for the first long run of the year. I was used to three-milers from middle school, but now, freshman year, I had to decide if I would join the five-mile group or the six-mile group.I couldn’t decide if I wanted to throw up or run away from practice. I looked nervously at my friend Brooke, secretly hoping she was planning on only running five. My stomach tightened when she told me she’d be doing the extra mile, but I decided to join her anyway.

By the halfway point I was really starting to wonder what I had gotten myself into. Heavy legs and arms, a dizzy feeling. Searching my mind for a good reason to just give up. Wishing I hadn’t gone left at that last turn but kept going straight instead, headed for a Starbucks strawberry acai refresher. Through all six miles, I never stopped thinking about quitting, but I also never stopped worrying what it would feel like if I did quit.

“There are no benches in cross country” goes a saying among runners. Whether it’s 20 degrees or 100, through tornado warnings or blizzards, cross country runners keep running. Our sport is your sport’s punishment. Cross country is also unusual because it’s both an individual sport and a team sport. But that’s why it has helped me learn so much about facing challenges. A runner has to persevere not only to improve their own abilities but also to support their teammates and the goals of their team. A runner can’t quit because doing so means not only letting herself down but letting her team down too.

I can’t even count the number of times I’ve thought of quitting a race or quitting my sport altogether. But any time I considered it, my mom would remind me that running is 10% physical and 90% mental. I believe that. Cross country has taught me how to face challenges in many areas of my life. I have struggled with learning disabilities throughout my education, and the classroom is another place where I’ve thought about quitting many times. In the end, though, I know that a geometry test or an English essay is nowhere near as painful as a six-mile run, and I know that I can persevere.”

2023 Erika Wells Memorial Scholarship Winner – Jonathan Reid

Jonathan Reid, Franklin Central High School – Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology

We are pleased to introduce our 2023 Erika Wells Memorial Scholarship winners, who each received a $1000 scholarship towards their college education. Please enjoy reading their personal essays, in which they discuss how running has made a positive impact on their lives.

Erika Wells was a beloved member of the Indy Runners who tragically passed away in October 2016. Her dedication to service, personal growth, social engagement, and an overall use of running as part of a healthy lifestyle and a way to help support the community were unparalleled. We believe these winners each exemplify these characteristics as well.

We are thankful that these young people were willing to share their unique stories of how running has influenced their lives. We hope that they will continue to make running a cornerstone of their life.

“Running, although now a major part of my life, initially was something that I largely disliked. I ran around and played tag with my friends in the backyard, but I never would’ve considered running if it wasn’t for my father forcing me to run cross country in 6th grade.

I initially hated every part of it. Every long summer practice, every lap around the school, every single day where I wasn’t able to go home like every other kid and have time to play outside. However, as awful as I perceived it to be, it only took a season to fully understand why my dad forced me to run and how much I would begin to love running.

My dad wanted me to have an emotional and mental outlet to sort myself out whenever I got angry or overworked. I never realized just how valuable this would be until high school, where the immense workload from AP classes, extracurriculars, and maintaining a top 25 spot in my class of 700 people would’ve mentally destroyed me if I didn’t have a cross country to act as my stress reliever. My parents especially knew me as the kid that won’t stop trying his best no matter what consequences may arrive from the intense perseverance, so instead of trying to stipend my work ethic, they gave me the gift of teaching me how to healthily deal with stress while also enjoying myself. No matter the distance, cadence, or speed, running is a sport that solely relies on pushing yourself to your absolute best to push new boundaries and break your own goals and records you set for yourself, so I naturally came to love running as its own activity while it also let me enjoy the rest of my life better due to the decreased stress.

The other main reason my dad forced me to run was because of what it meant to my family. ‘The Running Reids’ was an established running group that ran in multiple areas around central Illinois and held many charity events in the form of races as a part of that. Even to this day, my cousin (a fellow John Reid, ironically) still runs a 5k event in the summer every year.

However, my ‘Running Reid’ that made me love running more than anything was my grandfather. A paratrooper in Vietnam, he was stranded from his squad and blasted by a grenade so he had to return home early. Before his now crippling Parkinson’s disease (from the grenade) fully set in, he dedicated his life to his family and running. Despite constantly fighting against the scars of his past, he’s managed to run 20 marathons, including 3 Boston marathons, in his 26 year running career.

Running was his personal fight against the wickedness of the world; it’s mine too.

Put plainly, I love running because of what it does to people and what it forces them to become: healthier and happier than they were the day before.” 

2023 Erika Wells Memorial Scholarship Winner – Claire Monahan

Claire Monahan, Bishop Chatard High School – University of Dayton

We are pleased to introduce our 2023 Erika Wells Memorial Scholarship winners, who each received a $1000 scholarship towards their college education. Please enjoy reading their personal essays, in which they discuss how running has made a positive impact on their lives.

Erika Wells was a beloved member of the Indy Runners who tragically passed away in October 2016. Her dedication to service, personal growth, social engagement, and an overall use of running as part of a healthy lifestyle and a way to help support the community were unparalleled. We believe these winners each exemplify these characteristics as well.

We are thankful that these young people were willing to share their unique stories of how running has influenced their lives. We hope that they will continue to make running a cornerstone of their life.

“I have a love/hate relationship with running, like many who have chosen it as their sport. In just the six years I have been involved in it, my feelings have alternated between both of these and more. It has been a big part of my life, and I know it will continue to be important as I get older and participate in running as a lifestyle, rather than a sport I compete in.

I started running in seventh grade as a part of the track and cross-country team. I was a “social runner”, using the sport to be with my friends. I did not plan to run in high school. That changed the summer before my freshman year when I reluctantly decided to train with the cross-country team. It turns out I loved it. Part of the reason was the actual running and the accompanying feeling of accomplishment and I also deeply appreciated the feeling of community, each teammate pushing each other to be our best. But the main reason I continued running was our coach. She was like my older sister, friend, and mentor combined into one person. Maris showed me how to be a role model and gave me a sense of who I wanted to be, and she did this in such a selfless way as our volunteer coach.

I’ve always been passionate about helping disadvantaged people. The summer before my sophomore year I decided to take initiative with a specific goal of helping children in a forced transition from their home by providing a backpack with items that would give solace in a time of need. I worked with police and firemen to select items to include and determined an initial budget. To pay for the items, I created a GoFundMe page, called “Bag of Comfort”, and contacted newspapers, radio stations, and television shows to get the word out. My team helped me by offering encouragement and helping spread the word themselves, showing me that we had much more than running in common.

The summer before my junior year, my family moved from Illinois to Indianapolis. The transition from a town and group of friends that I had known my whole life was not easy, and it still isn’t, but the constant during the change has been running. I was able to form new friendships and make the town and school feel smaller by immediately joining the Bishop Chatard cross country and track teams. I found my ‘group’ in the summer workouts. A challenge I didn’t anticipate was a stress fracture in my ankle, but this limitation helps me appreciate and be grateful for the ability to run when I am healthy.

Being new to Indianapolis, I had not heard of Ms. Wells until my coach, Dan Kinghorn, mentioned this scholarship opportunity. I enjoyed reading about her and regardless of the outcome, this essay has helped me see how running can be a part of my life well after I compete in my last meet.”