An apple a day
Marathon runner Kristin Bodkin, D.O. (’09),
follows her own advice
By Colleen Kiphart
Aug. 12, 2009
Kristin Bodkin, D.O. (’09), was known to her
OU-HCOM classmates as “the fruit girl.” Not
because she’s nuts, but because, during long
hours of medical lectures and study sessions,
she brought in fruit to sell to her hungry
classmates.
“We
would sit through these all-day lectures,”
Bodkin says, “and you would see your classmates
going out and getting junk food from vending
machines, because it was the only snack option.
So, I started bringing in apples and bananas,
charged fifty cents apiece, and it just caught
on.”
This
proactive commitment to health distinguished
Bodkin from many of her peers. While her
classmates often lapsed into rounds of
late-night lattes and chocolate binges, Bodkin
peddled fruit and ran marathons.
But like
many good habits, marathon running came with a
struggle. Bodkin started running after fitness
classes at Ohio State University piqued her
interest, but her first jog was hardly a
marathon. “I would run two minutes and think,
‘This is miserable! Why would any one want to do
this?’”
She
persevered and finished the 2005 Columbus
Marathon, her first one, shortly after she
stared medical school. Her time was three hours,
57 minutes. She has since run five more,
including two Boston Marathons, and she’s
training for a sixth marathon in Columbus this
October. Her record time is three hours, 20
minutes.
Richard Klabunde, Ph.D., assistant professor
of physiology, saw that same tenacity during
Bodkin’s first and second years at OU-HCOM. “She
always impressed me as a diligently disciplined
young woman, not just in her studies but in her
total life,” he says.
Bodkin
applies her dedication and proactive approach to
health to her field, family practice. “One thing
that bugged me in my surgical rotation was that
people often needed (surgery) because of a poor
decision they made in their life. So many
lifestyle problems, and I was like, ‘Man! I want
to be there helping people so they aren’t here
in the first place.”
Like
many family practitioners, Bodkin aims to effect
change in her patients’ lifestyles, and
athletics has made this conversation easier. “I
know how hard it is to fit in time for exercise.
I understand it, and that not everyone will be
running marathons.” Bodkin says, “But, if I can
get a person who is obese and diabetic moving to
the best of their ability, I can improve that
person’s life.”
Bodkin
had not considered an osteopathic medical school
until her step-uncle, Stephen Morgan, D.O.
(’92)—who hooded her at OU-HCOM’s 2009
Commencement ceremony—began talking to her about
the college. “He thought the osteopathic
principles were really in line with my
philosophy. I gave OU-HCOM a good look, and I was
surprised by what a good fit it was. He was
right!”
Bodkin
has just begun her medical career with a
residency at Doctors Hospital in Columbus. She
knows it will be a few years before she can
start her own practice, but she’s ready for it.
“Running has taught me about endurance,” she
says. “It might sound silly, but it teaches you
to push through, to get through anything.”