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Fitness October 30, 2020


RUNNER MIKAH MEYER LAUNCHES LGBTQ OUTDOOR ORGANIZATION

Running is a great unifier, but here at AfterShokz, we recognize that the
running community isn’t a safe space for everyone until all people feel welcome
to participate, regardless of geography or background. We chatted with runner
and founder of the Outside Safe Space, Mikah Meyer, about his 200-mile
#RunAcrossMN and the launch of his organization dedicated to creating a
welcoming space for LGBTQ+ people in the outdoors. Get to know more about Mikah
and his unrelenting journey to raise awareness and understanding below! 


AFTERSHOKZ: Are you comfortable sharing your pronouns and orientation with our
audience? If so, what are they?

MIKAH MEYER: My pronouns are he/him/his. I am openly gay.


AS: Can you tell us a little bit about your both running journey and your
personal journey?

MM: I was inspired to Run Across Minnesota by Canadian athlete, Terry Fox. He
attempted to run across Canada in 1980 with an amputated leg in an effort to
raise awareness and money for cancer research. Since I had already done
something similar with a three-year national parks journey to raise awareness
for LGBTQ+ inclusion in the outdoors, I knew completing epic adventures was a
great way to bring attention to a cause. I was trying to launch the Outside Safe
Space (OSS)—a new program designed to make the outdoors more welcoming to
non-straight people—and had been getting back into running during the pandemic.
So I figured running across my state was a safe adventure to pull off even with
COVID restrictions in place.


AS: Now that the 200-mile run is done, do you feel you accomplished your goal of
spreading awareness and cultivating community?

MM: I do. Of course, I wish the OSS would’ve gone viral and become culturally
ubiquitous immediately upon its launch. But that is the exception, not the rule.
Most movements take years upon years of work to build, develop, and grow before
reaching the point they need to be. This run gave me a great foundation to build
from, and a launching pad to use more adventures to raise awareness and money to
grow the program. 


AS: In what ways did this cross-state journey help impact your organization
during and after the launch campaign was complete? 

MM: This Run Across Minnesota (Run for short) allowed me to bring attention to
the existence of the OSS in a way I don’t think I could’ve otherwise. I had done
a soft launch in July two months before my Run, and the response during my Run
was much larger!


So many people still doubt the homophobia that people face in the outdoors. Even
in an article that Minnesota’s largest newspaper wrote about my Run, someone
commented “In my 61 and 1/2 years of life, I've never heard anyone say that
outdoors was not for everyone.” As if because he hadn’t experienced feeling
unwelcome in the outdoors, no one must.


Just 4 miles into my Run, less than 30 minutes after crossing the South Dakota
border in Minnesota, three males passed me in a car and yelled, “F*G**T!” While
it was unfortunate, it was a prime example of why the OSS is needed, why people
need programs that raise awareness on issues they might not face themselves, and
why this Run is important. Their gay slur also reminded me why I needed to
complete the remaining 206 miles! I remembered that moment the day I crossed
from Minnesota into Wisconsin, thinking “Thanks for the motivation!”


AS: Was there any time you wanted to quit or felt you couldn’t finish? How did
you overcome that obstacle?

MM:  My legs began to hurt a lot two weeks in. So I took a day off and drove
back to the Twin Cities to visit my chiropractor and acupuncturist. After
pushing my following day’s run to as late in the day as possible, that time to
rest and doctor visits helped me reset and I was able to finish the rest of the
run.


AS: Can you share more with us about what inspired the creation of the Outside
Safe Space?

MM: I live in Minneapolis just a few miles away from where George Floyd was
murdered. The same streets I’d been running the whole pandemic were transformed
during May/June into spaces asking for justice, and specifically asking white
people to use our privilege to help.


While at home under the citywide curfews, I remembered the stories of thousands
of LGBTQ+ people I’d heard from during my parks journey and how they didn’t feel
welcome or safe in the outdoors. So I decided to make a racially-inclusive
symbol that allies can wear to nonverbally show their support and to cue others
that they are an LGBTQ+ outdoors ally.


The symbol includes the Rainbow Flag, Trans Flag, Bi Flag, a trunk of all skin
tones, and is made completely out of triangles for any non-straight-identifying
person who doesn’t see themselves in one of the three flags. It was very
important to me that all queer people felt included, so I consulted members from
each LGBTQ+ community while designing the symbol, and used the
racially-inclusive trunk as the foundation to indicate that people of all
identities come from all races.


AS: In addition to wearing Outside Safe Space merch and gear, what are some easy
things allies can do for LGBTQ runners in their own communities?

MM: Pay attention to the language you use. It’s the main way I determine if
someone is welcoming of LGBTQ+ people or not (other than the OSS). If I meet
someone on the trail and they say, “Do you have a girlfriend?” I wonder if
they’re LGBTQ+ friendly. If they say, “Do you have a significant other?” I
presume they’re consciously not assigning a gender and asking it open-ended on
purpose. Imagine if everyone said, “Do you have a girlfriend/boyfriend?” instead
of just picking the opposite gender and assuming someone is straight by default?
Sure, 90% of the world likely is, but maybe the percentage of LGBTQ+ people
would be higher if everyone felt free to be anywhere on a spectrum. I know lots
of “straight” people who know they aren’t 100% heterosexual, but it’s easier to
present as straight than having to deal with other people’s judgment.


Imagine what freedom it would give people if they felt like they weren’t put
into a box by someone else. So basically, just don’t assume the people you meet
on runs are straight.


AS: What advice do you have for other runners who may be interested in doing a
similar awareness campaign? 

MM: Decide who you want your audience to be. I had a very hard time getting
national or international news to cover this story because to them it was just a
“Minnesota story.” I had to learn to lead with the OSS and make the MN part the
least important, so they realized the story went beyond just one state. So focus
on the mission/reason behind your run, not the actual physical run.


AS: How can people get involved in supporting Outside Safe Space?

MM:  Get a pin, patch, sticker, water bottle, apparel, and more on the OSS
website or support the expenses of launching and growing the program with a
donation here. 


AS: Is there anything else you want to tell our audience or think they should
know?

MM: Join me on my social media channels because in February 2021 I’m taking the
Outside Safe Space on a “Run Across” a state in America’s Deep South!
Internationally, I plan on hiking across a European country in 2021 or as soon
as borders reopen. Then after that, I plan on biking across another U.S. state
in early 2022.


Especially during the pandemic, armchair travel via social media is one of our
main entertainment outlets right now. I’m trying to go to interesting places
(safely) and share them on my socials to give people a sense of
happening-right-now adventure during a time of global uncertainty.


And if there’s an OSS item you’d wear in the outdoors that you don’t currently
see, send me a message and I’ll work on getting it made!




Follow Mikah on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and Instagram for more updates on
his future runs and information on his organization, Outside Safe Space.





Photo courtesy ofMadeline Elli/Instagram.

ABOUT MIKAH MEYER

Called everything from an “Emerging Outdoor Industry Leader” by SNEWS to a “Sexy
Travel Guru” by Gay Cities, Mikah Meyer chases adventure in honor of his road
trip-loving father who passed away unexpectedly from cancer when Mikah was 19.
Some journeys have taken Mikah as far as all 56 U.S. states/territories on a
world record, 3-year road trip to all 419 National Park Service sites, while
others have kept him closer to home, like his most recent Run Across Minnesota.
Mikah seeks to provide the adventure-loving, openly gay role model he wishes he
had as a child, and encourages everyone to “Travel Beyond Convention” chasing
their bucket list dreams as soon as possible. Because as he learned, tomorrow
may be too late. Send him your adventure goals at www.mikahmeyer.com or
@mikahmey.


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