Presented in partnership with Under Armour as part of the Limitless series
When Jocelyn Rivas set a goal to be the youngest Latina to run 100 marathons鈥攁 record she established at age 24鈥攕he had no idea her dream would take on a life of its own. Once she crossed the finish line for her 100th marathon on November 7, 2021, Rivas became not only the youngest Latina to complete 100 marathons but also the youngest female and youngest adult to accomplish this feat鈥攖hree records she still holds today. 鈥淲hen I first started, I was just going for the youngest Latina to run 100 marathons. I didn鈥檛 know about the other records,鈥 says Rivas. As she started working toward her initial goal, however, the running community caught wind of her ambitions and encouraged her to aim even higher. In 2019, the L.A. Marathon reached out in partnership with Guinness World Records. The organizers let Rivas know she had the opportunity to break the other two records. 鈥淚 was like, 鈥極h no, I have to change my whole plan,鈥欌 Rivas says.
Rivas did the math. She鈥檇 have to accelerate her marathon schedule drastically to break the additional two records. Instead of running six marathons a year over about 16 years, Rivas would need to condense the timeline down to two years. It was a crazy dream, but it wasn鈥檛 impossible鈥攃ertainly not compared to other obstacles she鈥檇 overcome in her life.

Born with a broken back, legs, and feet, Rivas came into the world with physical disadvantages鈥攁t least that鈥檚 what her family believed. Despite making a full recovery as a baby, Rivas internalized those birth defects for much of the early part of her life. 鈥淚 always thought I was limited,鈥 she says.
Rivas immigrated to the U.S. from El Salvador with her sister at the age of six. 鈥淭he first thing I noticed when I came to the U.S. was the floor. You guys have cement and there it鈥檚 all rocks. That was me as a six-year-old thinking, 鈥極K, I鈥檓 somewhere new. I鈥檓 no longer in El Salvador.鈥欌 Although the U.S. provided a life Rivas and her family could not have had in El Salvador, Rivas grew up knowing there were still many opportunities she would not be afforded as an immigrant. 鈥淢y mom always told me very young, 鈥榊ou are going to be working double or triple to get the same opportunities as everyone else,鈥欌 says Rivas. 鈥淪he ingrained in my head that I would need to work hard, but since I didn鈥檛 have citizenship my dreams were limited.鈥
Rivas鈥檚 world opened up with the announcement of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program, which allows immigrants who arrived in the U.S. as undocumented children to attend college and obtain work permits. 鈥淚 remember watching the T.V. when Obama made the announcement about DACA,鈥 says Rivas. Even as a teen, she understood the program had the power to change the trajectory of her life. 鈥淚 spent most of my childhood thinking I wouldn鈥檛 be able to go to college or get a good job or dream of a better future. DACA made it possible for me to do those things and to have big goals.鈥

Running wasn鈥檛 the first goal added to Rivas鈥檚 list, however. 鈥淕rowing up, I never had anyone to look up to in regard to sports or running,鈥 says Rivas, whose initial foray into running was part of the one-mile P.E. requirement for high school. Like many Latino immigrant families, Rivas鈥檚 mother was more focused on making ends meet than extracurriculars, so sports were never a priority. 鈥淟atinos tend to work a lot. They make a lot of sacrifices to provide for their kids,鈥 says Rivas.
It wasn鈥檛 until high school, when Rivas was connected with Students Run L.A., a program that supports underserved youth by providing training and mentorship through running, that she found the passion that set these dreams in motion. With support from Students Run L.A., Rivas trained for and ran the L.A. Marathon鈥攈er first of many. As she crossed the finish line, Rivas wasn鈥檛 met by cheering family members the way many runners were. 鈥淢y mom was always worried about me for medical reasons,鈥 Rivas says. 鈥淓very single day she would tell me to stop running. When you鈥檙e young you want to have someone tell you to keep going, but for me it was the opposite.鈥
Instead of being discouraged by the lack of support, however, Rivas used it to fuel her running ambitions and pave the way for other Latina runners. 鈥淔or me it鈥檚 all about representation. I want to represent Dreamers, Latinas, women, and girls. Throughout my journey of running 100 marathons, so many people told me, 鈥榊ou鈥檙e too young鈥 or 鈥榊ou鈥檙e going to injure your body.鈥 There were so many people telling me to stop, but I just kept going. I felt like we needed it.鈥
Looking forward, Rivas is already dreaming about the next big thing. She recently ran her first 50-mile race, the Mt. Hood 50. Rivas is also mentoring young runners in the L.A. area to give the next generation the support system she didn鈥檛 have as a young Latina and Dreamer in the running world. 鈥淚 want to show girls like me鈥攐ther Latinas鈥攖hat they can be like me and do what I do,鈥 Rivas says. But mostly, Rivas continues to run to get the most out of life鈥攖he life she once scarcely imagined having. 鈥淚 run because I know there are people out there who don鈥檛 have the opportunity to run or can鈥檛 run,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 realized I鈥檓 living. I鈥檓 a living human being, and I really want to maximize my life the most I can. I find I can do that through running.鈥
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