This article appeared in the November 18, 2020 edition of the Monitor Daily.

Read 11/18 edition

Ironman Chris Nikic: Defying limits and redefining possibilities

IRONMAN/Reuters
A spectator cheers on Chris Nikic as he approaches the transition from the bike portion to the run portion of IRONMAN Florida in Panama City Beach, Florida, Nov. 7, 2020.

From the day he entered their lives, Chris Nikic’s parents were told what their child would not be able to do.

But the Nikic family refused to accept a label or limits. As a child diagnosed with Down syndrome, Nikic didn’t learn to walk until age 4. He was dogged by health challenges. He didn’t ride a bike until age 15. 

But at 21, Chris Nikic has now achieved something no one like him has done before.

On Nov. 7, he finished an Ironman Triathlon, one of the most grueling tests of strength and stamina ever devised. He swam 2.4 miles in the Gulf of Mexico, then bicycled for 112 miles, and topped it off with a 26.2-mile marathon – all in under the regulation 17 hours. The race wasn’t without a struggle. He crashed his bike once. He was bitten by fire ants during a water break. And he nearly quit on Mile 10 of the marathon. But he finished. 

“I learned that there are no limits,” Mr. Nikic told The New York Times. “Do not put a lid on me.”

In a life so often challenged by assumptions, that defiant statement may be the most important take-away from his latest victory. No limits. No labels.

 “Our hope,” his father, Nik Nikic, told NBC’s Today Show, “is that Chris will launch thousands of parents to look at their children differently.”


This article appeared in the November 18, 2020 edition of the Monitor Daily.

Read 11/18 edition
You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.