Los Angeles Times

Making sure troubles are on the run

Amy Robinson has found that marathons, including L.A., truly are a lifesaver.

- By Curtis Zupke sports@latimes.com

Running marathons, including Sunday’s L.A. event, is a mood elevator in Amy Robinson’s battle with depression.

The details come back to Amy Robinson when she describes the first time she told her story in front of people.

It was akin to the nervousnes­s that comes with public speaking, but most speakers don’t expose themselves emotionall­y the way Robinson did when she stood in front of about 1,000 people at a community event in Santa Monica.

“I have a picture where you can almost see my knuckles are white,” Robinson said. “I’m holding on to the podium.”

Robinson found the courage to describe the years of depression that led to two suicide attempts in 2007, and her subsequent path to health through running.

After her speech, that anxiety turned to enlightenm­ent.

“I was kissed and hugged by so many strangers,” Robinson said. “I had no idea that was going to happen. People came up to me and said, ‘Thank you so much.’ The point of that speech was to share my story, but also to give people hope. There’s a lot of people who are needlessly suffering, and they don’t know how to ask for help.”

Robinson, 40, has since provided hope and will continue to spread encouragem­ent when she runs in Sunday’s Los Angeles Marathon.

It will be her eighth marathon since she turned to running just two years ago. She’s not an elite runner but more representa­tive of an event known for welcoming people from all walks of life to tackle a 26.2-mile course from Dodger Stadium to Santa Monica.

Robinson sometimes wears a race bib that reads “Anyone Who Lives With Mental Illness” to show whom she’s running for, and she emphasizes the “lives” part.

“A lot of people do struggle, but I don’t like the word struggle,” Robinson said. “I just live with it. Sometimes I think about it as a really annoying passenger in the backseat that just tries to change the radio. You’re just like, ‘Stop.’ I just have to manage it.”

It took Robinson a long time to quiet that passenger, let alone put her story out there.

Traute Winters, director of the L.A. chapter of the American Foundation For Suicide Prevention, first encouraged Robinson to do it.

“She’s definitely an inspiratio­n and has worked really hard to get healthy again, and used running and the marathon as her lifestyle to stay healthy,” Winters said.

Depression has been in the spotlight in profession­al sports in recent years, but often in relation to retired NFL and NHL players who suffered head trauma during their careers. Former Dodgers and Angels pitcher Zack Greinke and former NFL running back Ricky Williams are among the more well-documented cases of depression.

Winters saw the connection between running and depression through the booth that the AFSP has at the marathon expo.

“A lot of people come up to our table and talk about how running has helped them with their depression,” Winters said. “That was a surprise to me.”

Robinson was diagnosed with depression in 2005. She turned to food and “selfmedica­tion” as coping devices and, one day, stepped on a scale and saw that it read 226 pounds. Robinson sought profession­al help but says it took her three years to emerge from the dark space that had consumed her.

Her two suicide attempts were within three days of each other as she nearly became one of more than 44,000 people who die from suicide each year, according to the AFSP.

“There’s an inertia,” Robinson said. “You don’t want to move. You don’t want to get out of bed. I had to find something to keep me moving, to get out of bed, to combat that feeling of not wanting to do anything.”

It was difficult to say no to Riley, a border collie mix that was given to Robinson at the time. The responsibi­lity got her out of the house.

“The dog was helpful, because you can’t not walk the dog,” Robinson said. “That’s not really an option. Their eyeballs get really big.”

Robinson did her first 5K without stopping in 2014. Her first marathon was L.A. last year. An Inglewood resident who works as a director of student services for a university, Robinson is a board member for the AFSP. She organizes the community walks she first spoke at and raises awareness at campuses.

Running has allowed her to cross paths with other inspiring people. Her coach is a breast cancer survivor, and last year Robinson met former Olympic middle distance runner Suzy Favor Hamilton, whose brother, Dan, committed suicide.

The depression never goes away, but Robinson feels she has chipped away at the stigma associated with it to help others.

“It can get better,” she said. “It does get better. They may have a totally different path than I took. They may not want to run a marathon, but it does get better.”

 ?? Rick Loomis Los Angeles Times ??
Rick Loomis Los Angeles Times
 ?? Rick Loomis Los Angeles Times ?? A SURVIVOR of two suicide attempts, Amy Robinson, 40, will run in her second L.A. Marathon Sunday.
Rick Loomis Los Angeles Times A SURVIVOR of two suicide attempts, Amy Robinson, 40, will run in her second L.A. Marathon Sunday.

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