Gabby Landsverk  |

  • It's a myth that runners are all thin or that becoming a runner has to involve weight loss. 
  • Meet three high-level endurance athletes who are changing people's perceptions of what runners look like. 
  • Latoya Shauntay Snell faced heckling during a marathon. She's completed an ultramarathon and hundreds of other events since.
  • Ragen Chastain broke a Guinness World Record for being the heaviest woman to run a marathon. She's now training for an Ironman triathlon. 
  • Marathoner Martinus Evans said he gets "a lot of hate for being a fat black man," but remains a role model in the running community. 

Latoya Shauntay Snell didn't intend to become an advocate for runners with all kinds of bodies

Picture a stereotypical runner, and you'll probably think about someone thin, wiry, and white — at least if your image is informed by what's usually seen in media and in popular culture. 

But athletes, including high-level endurance runners, come in all shapes and sizes. Insider talked to three runners — Latoya Shauntay Snell, Ragen Chastain, and Martinus Evans — with the medals to prove it.

They discussed their athletic journeys, the societal barriers they've faced, and their efforts to inspire people of all sizes to become their best selves, whether that's by taking on an ultramarathon or completing a 5K. 

Snell has completed more than 100 running events, including marathons, obstacle course races, and even ultramarathons. 

Snell began running to improve her health in 2013. She quickly found that even though she lost weight during the process, people online and even in person remained incredulous that she was an athlete at her size. 

"There's a lot of ignorance as to how this works; that endurance sports and running is not necessarily weight loss," she told Insider. "You have to eat to go out there over and over and do those grueling miles." 

After her blog post about being heckled at a marathon went viral, Snell began to gain a following from people who were inspired by her strength and dedication to her sport. She started her own website called the Running Fat Chef to share her experiences.

"I didn't realize I was building a platform as I was living my own life. I was telling people to be loud and brave and be themselves," she said. "Someone would look at me and say she's not a runner, but because of the noise I've made, I don't get those doubts anymore."

In total, Snell — whose background is in social work but who has also been a chef, writer, and photographer — has completed more than 100 running events, including 15 marathons, five ultramarathons, and many half-marathons and obstacle races.

She's slated to run a total of 46 in 2019, while also training for an upcoming 100-mile event. 

But Snell's path to success hasn't been easy. She's worked through an eating disorder, injuries, and continues to cope with chronic pain.

"You don’t have to be apologetic. If you feel angry, be angry. If you feel vulnerable, be vulnerable," Snell said about being an athlete and advocate. 

Snell struggled with an eating disorder that left her seriously injured after training for a marathon on just 1,200 calories a day. After being hospitalized, she worked hard rebuilding a healthy relationship with food.

Snell also lives with invisible disabilities, including sciatica and endometriosis, that cause chronic pain. She manages the pain by getting plenty of rest between workouts, and also involves massage and cupping therapy in her recovery.

Through it all, she's been a staunch advocate for inclusivity in the running community. "It's about embracing yourself at any state, loving yourself, saying, 'I'm worthy of being in the same space as anyone else,'" Snell said. 

Latoya co-hosts a podcast called "The Long Run with Martinus and Latoya."

Ragen Chastain's first athletic achievements were as a competitive dancer, winning national awards despite open hostility from judges.

"Show up fat and refuse to leave" is Chastain's philosophy. It's led her to complete a marathon and, she hopes, an upcoming Ironman triathlon.

Like Snell, Chastain became an activist by accident, after working her way up in the competitive dancing scene and encountering repeated instances of judges and spectators making demeaning comments about her body. 

"I wanted to be a fat dancer and I learned I needed to be a fat activist to do that," she told Insider. Meantime, she managed to pick up three National Dance Championship awards. 

Chastain, a Los Angeles-based writer and blogger who's been chronicling her confrontations with fatphobia for years, has since moved on to new challenges, including running a marathon, which she finished despite 40-degree weather, wind and rain, and a partially torn ligament.

For this feat she earned the Guinness World Record for heaviest woman to complete a marathon, although the record has since been broken by another runner.

Now Chastain is training for an Ironman triathlon — which involves a 2.4-mile swim and a 112-mile bike in addition to a marathon — and hoping her story will show people that health and fitness comes in all sizes.

"Our whole society is based on the idea that a thin body is a better body, and that you can tell everything about a person based on what they look like," she said. "I want to make space for people who maybe don't want to be activists who maybe just to run a 5K without doing all that extra."

Evans started running to spite a doctor who laughed at his weight. He's since completed multiple marathons. 

Evans consulted an orthopedic specialist in 2012 for pain and joint problems, but the doctor assumed he was there for weight loss and called him fat. When Evans retorted that he wanted to run a marathon, the doctor laughed in his face. 

Evans bought a pair of running shoes and hit the pavement that day.

He ran his first marathon in his hometown of Detroit, Michigan. Since then, he has completed dozens of events and become a role model and mentor in the running community as well as a running coach, writer, and podcast host with Snell.

"My main objective is to show you can start being active regardless of what you weigh," Evans told Insider during his 7 a.m. daily run. "I want people to use my big a-- as an example, doing it for the joy and not focusing on weight loss."

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