Bombshell: Allyson Felix finally reveals her biggest fear….

Death of a teammate, traumatic pregnancy, bruising pay war: how Allyson Felix survived it all to become a track legend…..

Felix’s 11 Olympic medals have made her the most decorated American track and field athlete of all time. She talks about her greatest battles inside and outside the stadium

When Allyson Felix won her final gold Olympic medal, at Tokyo 2020, it made her the most decorated US track and field athlete of all time. Eleven medals – seven of which were gold – over five consecutive Games. But that final gold, in the women’s 4x400m relay at the postponed Games, held in 2021, was all the more impressive given what Felix had been through since the previous Olympics. Just two years before, she had nearly died in childbirth, and now she felt she had a duty to tell the world about it.

“Although my mindset was completely dialled in to the task at hand,” she says, “I also knew that I was running for a bigger purpose.”

Allyson Felix, Iconic Athlete | PCMA Convening Leaders 2023Allyson Felix, Iconic Athlete | PCMA Convening Leaders 2023

Felix had been 32 weeks pregnant when she was diagnosed with severe pre-eclampsia – a complication of pregnancy that causes high blood pressure – at a routine prenatal appointment. She was taken to hospital for an emergency caesarean. Her daughter, Camryn, was born weighing just over 2kg (4lb 8oz) and was in a neonatal intensive care unit for a month. “I was unsure if I was going to make it. If I was ever going to hold my precious daughter,” she later wrote.

“I think that being an Olympic athlete I took my health for granted,” Felix says today. “Even throughout my pregnancy.” It was only at 32 weeks, when “everything went south” that Felix realised how much at risk she was. Pre-eclampsia is 60% more common among Black women than among white women in the US – and rates for Black women are increasing, according to the Black Women’s Health Study. And yet, Felix says, she was never warned about the dangers until it was too late. “You just don’t imagine these complications happening to a top athlete,” she says. But she realised that her story was “not unique or rare. So many women of colour have a similar story and I really wanted to be part of a solution.”

Paris 2024 Olympics - Allyson Felix: “This time of year will always feel like Olympic season”

She did not find it easy to speak out. “At the beginning, I was really unsure,” she says. “I wasn’t comfortable with sharing something so personal. But when I started to think about women who were affected, Black women, it made me understand that I needed to be vulnerable. Because going through that really changed me.”

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