Jessel Lumapas fell into sports nearly by accident—since she was such an active child, playing tag with her preferred playmates, the boys, her school principal challenged her to channel all that energy onto the track instead. “They made me join — oh , go run over there! So I ran. Until I was surprised that, huh? I won already?” she narrates in Filipino, bemused.
After a slight detour where she studied taekwondo, she once again found herself on the track team and eventually, the national team when she was just 18. “My first SEA Games at Clark was my first time to wear a two-piece,” she says in Filipino. “I was embarrassed, I couldn’t focus on my run.
And then, it was like everything in my life was happening so suddenly. I was shocked, having to just face all that God was giving me.” Another thing that surprised her: their team breaking the national record for the women’s 4×400 meter relay at last year’s SEA Games .
“My teammates were celebrating, but I was frozen. Huh, Philippine record? All the difficulty from training, the breakdown days..
. it felt so good to see it all finally bear fruit.” As sweet as victory is, the path towards it is often bitter and sour.
Like any other journey, Jessel’s path is one with struggles, dictated by her circumstances. “I wanted to perform well. I wanted to give my best.
But the opportunity that I was given was limited,” she says. Despite these obstacles, she continues, one foot in front of the other, gathering .
