Modern Athlete Magazine Issue 114, January 2019 | Page 38

TRAIL RUNNING Cleo in Control Winning the women’s title at Cape Town’s iconic Three Peaks Challenge in 2018 put Cleo Albertus firmly on the trail running map, but few people knew of her battle with an eating disorder and then a broken leg that came before the success. – BY PJ MOSES By the time she got back to SA, she’d gained seven kilograms, and found her energy levels were way down. “I couldn’t run 5km without stopping, my clothes were extra tight and I felt really sluggish, so I decided to do something about it. Sport has always been my love and I played a lot in school, and I have always had an absolute passion for running, but I only started taking running seriously then in early 2016, because I wanted to change,” she says. That saw her revamp her eating habits, increase her running and supplement it with training at the gym – and the rewards for her hard work soon arrived. Early in 2017 she placed third woman at the tough 50km Three Peaks Challenge, which takes runners up all three peaks in the Table Mountain range in one epic day. “After finishing on the podium there, I knew I had it in me to win the race, and that just fanned the flames of desire inside of me,” says Cleo. Brakes Applied Unfortunately, fate had other ideas, when a bone fracture in her leg brought Cleo’s running ambitions to a screeching halt just one week after she had posted her best Two Oceans Half Marathon finish to date, and three weeks before she was due to run the three-day AfricanX stage race. “I was running a 25km Dirtopia trail race when it happened, and initially I didn’t want to believe it, as it made no sense to me… How can one’s fibula just break like that?” Unable to take it all in at first, Cleo obtained four medical opinions before finally going for X-rays, which confirmed the injury and brought the devastating news that she was 38 going to be spending at least two months in a moon-boot and on crutches. “I had two choices: Either I can have a bad attitude and feel sorry for myself, or see this as a blessing and reset myself. I chose the latter. I kept the faith that I would run again, and looked at it as a chance to come back stronger, more efficient and a lot wiser.” So Cleo put her head down and focused on what she could do, instead of what she couldn’t, working especially on her mental strength. “Anybody coming back from injury or a long lay-off needs to be patient and embrace the process, so that’s what I did.” And once she received the go-ahead to start running again, she made sure to balance it with a lot of cross-training, determined to become a more rounded athlete and stronger than before. This approach helped her to not only get back to running again in 2018, but also achieve her dream of winning the Three Peaks race! Loving the Mountains That win was a springboard for Cleo’s running, as she followed it up just two weeks later with a win at the 38km SkyRun, added another Two Oceans PB and other podiums along the way, and in December she finished the year with another high by placing in the top 10 of the UTCT 65km. She was also signed up by sporting brand K-Way as a brand ambassador. Unsurprisingly, she says she believes that mental strength has played a large role in her success. “A strong mind is a powerful tool, particularly when running ultras – when times get tough, as they do during the longer distances, you have to depend on your inner strength for the resilience to push through. When I am hurting or feeling unmotivated, or just feel like I want to quit, I keep reminding myself that it’s all good. We often give off negative energy when things are not going right, but I believe that we need to embrace the good with the bad equally in order to succeed.” And it’s not just the broken leg that she has overcome as she has climbed the running rankings this past year. She also says that she feels happy with her relationship with food these days. “For the first time, my eating has stabilised and my weight is constant. I feel the strongest I have ever been, and healthy overall, and it feels great that food doesn’t have so much power over me.” ISSUE 114 JANUARY 2019 / www.modernathlete.co.za Courtesy C leo Albertus (26) has always loved running. Originally from Johannesburg and schooled in Pietermaritzburg, she was even known to her schoolmates as the runner girl. Unfortunately, she also struggled with anorexia, which saw her weight go up and down through the years. Having moved to Cape Town in 2011, she began to take running more seriously in 2013 after doing a parkrun with her dad, just for fun. However, after completing her studies she did a stint working at a hotel in the USA in late 2015, where the crazy work hours badly affected her eating patterns. “Chocolates, chips and cookies were my staples,” she admits.