For those who may not know her story, Christina Gruber is the definition of strength and perseverance. She is a survivor of the Las Vegas, Nevada shooting, and knows what it takes to be strong both mentally and physically.
Pushing her body and mind through the hurdles of triathlon is in part how she copes with the mental trauma she has from that fateful night. It is her outlet when the fear and uncertainty of Vegas resurfaces. It has helped her heal.
Her athletic career began in 2008, when Gruber took up running to manage the stresses created by life and work. Training and racing became a core part of who she was.
“I did loads of half marathons and full marathons,” said Gruber. “My main focus was not on finishing times or qualifying for anything, I just wanted to train.”
In 2016, a close friend introduced her to triathlon. “Triathlon is something I’ve always wanted to do. I just got the idea and kept running with it.”
She hired a coach and completed her first sprint triathlon in 2017. It was then Gruber knew she’d discovered something much larger than herself.
“I can’t imagine my life right now without the training. I’m my best self when [training] just gives me what I’m supposed to do and my job is to just stay consistent.”
This new found sense of structure and stability became Gruber’s foundation, something she could always fall back on. “I always say that triathlon saved my life,” said Gruber.
But after sustaining a crash while training for Hawaii 70.3 in 2021, she began to struggle with the psychological effect the fear of descent would bring. Gruber was descending down a fast section of road when her front tire punctured, causing the tire to jam into the brake calipers, sending her over the handlebars. The result could have been much worse, but she only sustained minimal scrapes and cuts.
“Descending was always a challenge, every time I would always ride the brakes and say a prayer,” shared Gruber. This pushed her over the edge.
Since that day, Gruber’s phobia has only gotten worse. One month later, at the Hawaii 70.3 race, Gruber was blown off her bike due to high wind gusts, again during a descent.