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Leap of Faith

Trish Porter's passion for high jumping led to a spot on the 1988 Olympic team. Now, as a fortysomething wife and mother, she's competing again—and showing others that you're never too old to dream.
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Trish Porter's dream of making the U.S. Olympic team started on a fourth-place platform at the 1980 California state high school track and field championships. Fourth place might not inspire some people to reach for Olympic gold, but it was plenty to inspire Trish (who back then went by her maiden name of King). In fact, somebody snapped a photo of her standing on that platform, and she drew motivation from it many times over the next several years.

"It was a constant reminder of my passion," Trish says. "The dream that many young children have of receiving the Olympic gold medal. That was my ultimate goal."

She attended the University of Oregon, where she competed on the track and field team. But, at times, her dream seemed to be a fairy tale. She gained more weight than the typical "freshman 15," and her performance on the track suffered. By most accounts, even her own, her college career was mediocre at best. But her dream wouldn't die.

Keeping the faith

Trish didn't compete collegiately during her senior year at Oregon in 1984. Instead, she left the team and began working on the heptathlon (a combination of seven events). As she got into better shape, she started to see results. In 1986, she made her first U.S. national championship team in the heptathlon, and that opened the door for chances to compete in other meets. Eight months before the Olympic trials in 1988, she started working with a coach named Allan Hanckel who put her on a strict training and nutritional regimen, and she stuck to it. She ended up qualifying for the Olympic trials in the high jump with an astounding jump of six-feet, one-and-a-half inches.

"Driving home from that event, a thought crossed my mind," Trish remembers. "All of a sudden, I believed I could make the Olympic team in the high jump. It had to have been God inspired, because it changed the course of my whole life."

A month later at the Olympic trials, she jumped six-feet, five-inches—higher than she'd ever jumped before—and her dream of making the U.S. Olympic team was realized. She represented the United States at the 1988 Olympics in Seoul, South Korea. She didn't do as well as she'd hoped, but she did meet Pat Porter, a fellow Olympian. Three years later they were married.

Battling injuries, Trish went on to compete in Europe in 1989. She then attempted to qualify for the 1992 Olympic team, but it wasn't meant to be.

Her Olympic dreams unfulfilled, Trish made peace with her new reality. Leaving competitive high jumping behind, she happily settled into married life and had two beautiful children, Connor and Shannon.

But deep inside, she never lost the itch.

Continuing to dream

In 2002, at the urging of a friend and with the cooperation of her husband, Trish trained hard to compete in the U.S. National Masters outdoor champion-ships in 2003. Two months before that event, she broke the world record in the 40-44 age group with a jump of five-feet, seven-and-three-fourths inches. She went on to break her own world record three more times. Her best jump was five-feet, nine-and-one-fourth inches.

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