Tuesday, August 21, 2012
Targets
I've got a target, and I intend to hit it! This morning I ran (jogged/walked) at 12:53 mile on my third mile today, so it's starting to look like my goal time of 2:50 for the half marathon is possible!
I also learned yesterday what an amazing network the Team in Training group is. I've got a friend who encouraged me to participate now offering to share my fundraising link with her network of former TNT participants and coaches. Awesome!
Wednesday, August 8, 2012
Winning has nothing to do with racing. Most days don't have races anyway. Winning is about struggle and effort and optimism, and never, ever, ever giving up. ~Amby Burfoot.I had to look up who Amby Burfoot is, but I loved the quote. Turns out he won the Boston Marathon in 1968. I know I'm never going to do something like that, but I certainly appreciate the sentiment!
Saturday, August 4, 2012
Fearless
Of course, that's the phrase I use to describe Anita. I always got such a kick out of the way she just jumped in and tried things. Then laughed at herself when the results weren't stellar, or became self-deprecating when the results were. So writing that word made me think of Anita, and I spent a lot of time on my run thinking of her. And thinking that she would have really gotten a kick out of me doing this. I found it a little overwhelming, particularly as I reached the end of the run and there were all of the placards up for the people we are running in memory of or in honor of.
I'm not fearless. But I refuse to let fear dictate what I do. I'm a heavy middle-aged introvert who hates to ask for help, so what better challenge in my life right now than to raise a substantial amount of money from friends, acquaintances and strangers, by running a half-marathon? Watching the Olympics today I saw this commercial. I hope it speaks to you the way it does to me.
Saturday, July 21, 2012
This is Easy!
Real athletes are really into their gear. Which of course I always thought was a bit silly. But after the recommendation last week, I bought a handy little watch that beeps at intervals, and today I just did what my watch told me to do. When it beeped I started running; when it beeped again I switched to walking. I think that watch is going to make a huge difference in training - I'm horrible at following directions, but resetting the watch is a pain. So It will just be easier to keep doing what my watch tells me to do, and somehow I'll be ready in October!
Thursday, July 19, 2012
My Mission
On May 18, 2005, I finished my last round of chemotherapy. My Mom was able to celebrate that, as well as my 6 month clean bill of health. My Mom lost her battle with cancer on May 6, 2006, 21 months after she was given 3 months to live.
I began doing Relay for Life the following year. It was important for me to be part of something that raised funds for cancer research. The year after that, my friend Anita was diagnosed with CML. I walked in her honor, and then after she lost her fight in 2010, I walked in her memory. I also began participating in the Light the Night walk to honor her as part of the team her husband put together. I raised money on her husband's behalf for the Man and Woman of the Year program, and I'm happy to say I was part of getting a research project named in Anita's honor.
My scans have all been clear, and my prognosis is excellent. The survival rate for Hodgkins has increased from 40 percent when my aunt was diagnosed, to 92 percent now. That's because of the research that's been done, and I want to make sure continues to be done. I don't want another family to go through the loss that Anita's family did. Finding better treatments could have prevented that.
So, that's my mission and sense of purpose. That's why I'm challenging myself to this half marathon. That's why I'm raising money for the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society.
I hope you'll join me in helping to improve treatments and find cures.
Monday, July 16, 2012
In the Beginning...
In my case, Hodgkin's Lymphoma. Stage 3A to be exact. I knew it before the call came; family history and lumps like golf balls above my collar bones made it pretty obvious. But even so, that call made me go hollow inside.
I read somewhere that you become a survivor the moment you are diagnosed with cancer. You may not recognize it then and there, but it happens. Something shifts inside you. For me, "survivor", with all the fear and promise that the word entails, is now and forever a part of who I am.
This is my story of surviving and thriving. It's my story of growth. But more than anything, it's my story of hope.