
She made history as the first Mexican and first Latina to conquer the world’s five toughest deserts: 1,250km across Namibia, Gobi, Jordan, Antarctica, and Atacama. Each race was a six-day, self-supported suffer fest with brutal heat, altitude, and isolation. Just four weeks later, she stood on the start line of Cocodona 250, one of the hardest ultramarathons in the U.S.In this episode, we dig into what it really takes: the mental toolkit that carries you through when the body is wrecked, the strategies for fueling and hydration under extreme conditions, how she handled sleep deprivation and hallucinations, and why she believes women are built for endurance. We talk setbacks, like the melted shoe that forced a DNF at Cocodona, and what it means to come back stronger with a plan to finish sub-100 hours.This is raw, unfiltered ultra running, proving that women can do hard things, and showing what happens when you chase adventure beyond your comfort zone.Keywords: ultra running, endurance athlete, Cocodona 250, desert racing, women in ultra, mental toughness, sleep deprivation, hallucinations, fueling strategy, proving women can do hard things#ultrarunning