Los Angeles Times

Finish line just the start for inspired Gonzalez

- ERIC SONDHEIMER

There’s something more important than winning or losing a race. It’s called conquering life, and 17-yearold Dulce Gonzalez of Canoga Park is headed on a journey that has teachers, classmates and strangers alike cheering her on.

The senior competed in Friday’s state championsh­ips in the 1,600 and 800 meters in Clovis. She didn’t qualify for the finals.

After crossing the finish line in her final high school race, she said, “I was tired. It was crazy that was it. But in my mind, that wasn’t it. I want to keep going and see where it leads.”

The road is leading to Harvard.

On New Year’s Eve, at the urging of classmates, a sleep-deprived Gonzalez pushed the button on her computer just before midnight and submitted her final applicatio­n.

“I wasn’t expecting to get in,” she said. “It was through the help of my team, my family, my friends. They were all encouragin­g me to try.”

On March 31, after track practice, surrounded by Canoga Park track teammates, she opened her computer again and clicked to see if she had been accepted. Then came screams from friends. Gonzalez started to cry.

“The best part of getting into Harvard was knowing if I could do it, my teammates could,” she said.

The straight-A student who won the City Section Division III cross-country title last fall started to like running in middle school when she joined Students Run L.A. and trained to run in the L.A. Marathon.

She joined the crosscount­ry team in high school and has made running her escape from all the pressures and stress associated with trying to get into a good college.

“Running is that positive escape,” she said. “Even though I’ve always had this image being a good student, it came with drawbacks. I had to maintain the perfect image and perfect frame. Running allowed me to get away from that person and run for myself and be myself. I’ve always had these perfect grades.

“It’s difficult to slip. The only way is to go down. It can be suffocatio­n. When you run, it can release that pressure.”

Her parents came here from Mexico and provide inspiratio­n.

“My mom would walk me to school,” she said. “Before she sent me in, she’d say, ‘Go study, you’re going to be No. 1.’ Those words are imprinted in me. My father, because he’s a gardener, I didn’t get to see him. He’d wake up early and come home late. He was caring for the family. I just wanted to repay him. That inspired me to work harder.”

To get into Harvard, she had to write several essays getting personal. Her advice?

“Don’t beat yourself up about not getting into a certain school,” she said. “Be true to yourself. Write about what’s true. Who is that person behind all these words?”

The plan for Gonzalez is to graduate from Harvard, attend law school and become an immigratio­n lawyer.

“I’ve seen too many stories of immigrant hardships and want to give back to the community,” she said. “That’s truly my goal.”

As for running, she finished 25th in the 1,600 in Clovis and 21st in the 800.

“Honestly it was surreal,” she said. “I was running with all these great runners from California. Crossing the finish line was bitterswee­t.”

The journey isn’t finished. It has only begun and who knows where it will take her in running and in life.

 ?? Steve Galluzzo For The Times ?? CANOGA PARK runner Dulce Gonzalez ended her prep career at the state championsh­ips and is headed for Harvard after using her parents as motivation.
Steve Galluzzo For The Times CANOGA PARK runner Dulce Gonzalez ended her prep career at the state championsh­ips and is headed for Harvard after using her parents as motivation.

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