A marathon does not negotiate. It reveals.
For Filipino actor Jake Ejercito, the road in Japan became less about pace and more about character after he crossed the finish line of the Osaka Marathon on 22 February.
The full 42.195 kilometers tested both preparation and resolve. What unfolded, he later admitted, was not the race he had envisioned.
“Underestimated the distance. Discipline faded late in the build and the marathon made sure I paid for it. Got ugly, but dug deep and stayed honest,” he wrote in a post after the race.
Ejercito clocked in at 3:38:20 — a personal record — but said the numbers were not the defining measure of the day.
“Not the race I hoped for. Still a PR, still moving forward,” he added.
Along the route, fatigue met familiarity when Filipino supporters unexpectedly cheered him on.
“Unexpected kababayan love on course too! Always a different kind of fuel,” he shared.
Ejercito has openly chronicled his evolution from casual runner to endurance athlete, previously completing a marathon event near Cambodia’s Angkor Wat. Reflecting on that milestone, he once wrote:
“No legs, all heart! Finally popped that anything-that-has-‘marathon’-in-it cherry and on the most majestic of courses.”
In Osaka, the lesson appeared to cut deeper. The marathon was not about perfection or pace but persistence — about continuing forward when the body signals surrender and the will decides otherwise.