When Katherine Brown started lifting weights in 2015, she simply wanted to get into better shape. She had never touched a barbell in her life, and didn’t know if she could succeed in her newly chosen activity. If somebody would have asked her back then about breaking national records and winning world titles, she likely would have laughed. Those types of achievements were simply unfathomable to her.
But as she continued to lift, her outlook began to change. She lost dozens of pounds. She began to not only enter competitions, but place highly in them. And, eventually, she learned just how good she could be if she set her mind to achieving her maximum potential.
Brown’s ascent culminated in June, when she earned an individual title at the 2021 International Weightlifting Federation (IWF) World Masters Weightlifting Championships. The 46-year-old Washougal resident won the 45-49 age group in the 71-kilogram weight class, successfully snatching 71 kilograms (156.5 pounds) and lifting 96 kilograms 211.6 pounds) in the clean and jerk.
“For a good two years, that’s all I was thinking about — how do I win worlds, what do I need to do to win worlds? So, to actually come away and do it was just a phenomenal experience,” she said. “It was so personal for me. These last two years were a lot about sacrificing and putting in the work to get to where I want.”
Brown, who currently holds 11 Washington state and national Olympic weightlifting records, will now compete at the Pan American Weightlifting Championships in Orlando, Florida, in August. The event will conclude her quest to win all four of the major masters championships in a single year, an accomplishment known as a “grand slam.”