A denied a medal. A name erased from the record. A legacy carried not in trophies, but in footsteps. This second chapter continues the first-person monologue of a trailblazer who raced not for glory, but for dignity. From segregated streets to international arenas, from quiet heartbreak to thunderous ovation, this is the story of what it means to endure—and to be seen. Set against echoes of archival static and reverent silence, the voice returns with clarity and grace, tracing the aftershocks...
All content for Echoes In The First Person is the property of Michael Washington Brown and is served directly from their servers
with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
A denied a medal. A name erased from the record. A legacy carried not in trophies, but in footsteps. This second chapter continues the first-person monologue of a trailblazer who raced not for glory, but for dignity. From segregated streets to international arenas, from quiet heartbreak to thunderous ovation, this is the story of what it means to endure—and to be seen. Set against echoes of archival static and reverent silence, the voice returns with clarity and grace, tracing the aftershocks...
The Fastest Man you Never Knew: Part 1- Monday Monologue
Echoes In The First Person
9 minutes
1 week ago
The Fastest Man you Never Knew: Part 1- Monday Monologue
A child gifted a bicycle. A racer banned from the track. A champion who outran hatred, exhaustion, and history itself. This first-person monologue traces the arc of a forgotten pioneer—raised between two worlds, propelled by grace and grit, and tested in ways few could endure. From childhood wonder to six-day endurance trials, from whispered prayers to public triumphs, this is a story of motion: physical, emotional, ancestral. Set against ambient textures and subtle strings, the voice invites...
Echoes In The First Person
A denied a medal. A name erased from the record. A legacy carried not in trophies, but in footsteps. This second chapter continues the first-person monologue of a trailblazer who raced not for glory, but for dignity. From segregated streets to international arenas, from quiet heartbreak to thunderous ovation, this is the story of what it means to endure—and to be seen. Set against echoes of archival static and reverent silence, the voice returns with clarity and grace, tracing the aftershocks...