Why am I doing a marathon at Disney, you might ask? Or I might ask myself, actually... I have not heard great things about Disney, honestly. You have to get up at 2 am; they truck you out to the middle of nowhere, where they drop you off and you stand around for hours waiting for the race to start; the start is very slow and crowded (not that that matters to a plodder like me); last year, it was about 20 degrees at the start, I heard; in 2007, I heard they were actually running out of water at the water stops around mile 19 and 20 (um, hello... it's Florida. Please give us something to drink!).
But, even with all of that, I just want to run Disney. I want to run through Cinderella's castle. I want to experience the crowds, running around the parks. Plus, Disney holds a very special place in my family's hearts, and here is why:
See, we visited Disney with Abby almost five years ago exactly. When Abby was diagnosed with ALL, she was granted a "Wish" through the very wonderful Special Wish Foundation. Since Abby was only 2 when she went through the worst parts of her chemo, she was not really old enough to make a "wish", and we definitely wanted to wait until she was older and either done with treatment, or mostly done, to do something. However, we had to pick what her wish would be early, so we wished for her to take a trip to Disney World.
When she was 4 1/2, she was done with all of her chemo, and she had surgery to have her port removed from her chest. Perfect time for a trip to celebrate! We were treated to the trip to Disney World, including a limo ride to and from the airport and tons of special treatment all along the way. We got to stay, completely at no charge, at another very special place, Give Kids the World Village. My parents paid for themselves to come with us, and visit all of the parks with us. We had an awesome week in October of 2005, with Abby healthy and surrounded by those she loves, having fun and eating as much free ice cream as she wanted every day, and meeting those beautiful Disney princesses!
And that pink badge she is wearing in the pictures above? It was a badge that identified her to the Disney cast members as a kid on her "wish trip". It was a little disconcerting to be given so much special treatment, knowing that Abby was doing well and her prognosis was excellent; but this button meant Abby was bumped to the front of every line, and treated like a princess herself, and for a week I allowed us all to be pampered a little bit, figuring in the grand scheme of things, we deserved a bit of a break as a family after going through treatment. Watching the final fireworks show at the Magic Kingdom on our last night there, with Tinkerbell flying over our heads while "When You Wish Upon A Star" played, seeing Abby up on her Daddy's shoulder's gazing at the fireworks and light... well, Disney truly is a magical place for kids and parents alike, even cynical old Moms like me :).
It was hard for me to remember that it's been 5 years since we got to accompany Abby on her Wish Trip. I was looking for Disney pictures in Picasa today, and kept wondering why I couldn't find the pictures in the 2007 folder! Wow, 2005... 5 years ago. In May we celebrated Abby having her five-year-off-chemo anniversary! To leukemia survivors, this 5 year mark is a certifiable Big Deal. Although the docs will not usually say the words, you are CURED. Hallelujah...
So, if you are Mr. Money Bags just happening to stumble across this lowly little blog, or Bill & Melinda Gates looking to unload a cool few million or so, once you make a weetle donation to my fund-raising for the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society ;-) here: http://pages.teamintraining.org/soh/wdw11/jfasnacht, don't forget our good friends at A Special Wish and Give Kids The World Village. God Bless...
One foot in front of the other; OK, now another one. Repeat about 10000 times until you hit 13.1 miles.
Tuesday, August 31, 2010
Wednesday, August 25, 2010
Blowin' the Stank Off
So I skipped my run on Monday and my supposed cross-training yesterday; just too much going on, and too tired. It's interesting to me that, after only being back in the habit of running for a few weeks, I already am starting to look forward to it. It was late tonight after I got home from a long day at work, Abby's tae kwon do, dinner out with friends, getting the house semi-straightened up for tomorrow (our home-school coordinators are dropping in! Don't want dirty socks on the couch...), and the 45-minute long process that is "tucking Abby in". But I headed out for a few miles anyway; as I was leaving, I told Greg I was going out to run so I could "blow the stink off of me". He smirked and said "good luck with that." LOL
Speaking of smells... it's funny to run through our neighborhood and the one next to ours and smell the various things. Most houses have no smell at all. But I ran past one that smelled very distinctly of garlic. Must have been spaghetti night at their house! Another one smelled of dryer sheets. Another one smelled like the cigarette smoke of the guy sitting on his front porch, smoking (and coughing. And scaring me half to death :)) According to a friend of ours in the neighboorhood, if you sit on your back porch frequently enough in the summer, you will definitely smell the scent of some random neighbors smoking something else, if you know what I mean!
Luckily, one thing that I did NOT smell tonight was skunk. I saw one about 1/4 mile from home again, in another front yard, sniffing around in the grass. What do skunks eat, anyway? And why do I keep seeing them in people's front yards, grazing around like little cows?
Speaking of smells... it's funny to run through our neighborhood and the one next to ours and smell the various things. Most houses have no smell at all. But I ran past one that smelled very distinctly of garlic. Must have been spaghetti night at their house! Another one smelled of dryer sheets. Another one smelled like the cigarette smoke of the guy sitting on his front porch, smoking (and coughing. And scaring me half to death :)) According to a friend of ours in the neighboorhood, if you sit on your back porch frequently enough in the summer, you will definitely smell the scent of some random neighbors smoking something else, if you know what I mean!
Luckily, one thing that I did NOT smell tonight was skunk. I saw one about 1/4 mile from home again, in another front yard, sniffing around in the grass. What do skunks eat, anyway? And why do I keep seeing them in people's front yards, grazing around like little cows?
Wednesday, August 18, 2010
My Top 5 Running in the Dark Fears
- Attacked by dogs
- Sprayed by skunks
- Lost
- Running by dark spooky woods
- Assailed by crazy odd-balls
By the time I got home this morning at 5:58, I had been barked at by a pair of yappies down the street, luckily who seemed contained by an invisible fence, but who I'm sure if the power was out would have chased me halfway to N. Germany-Trebein. I had gotten turned around by the Hindu temple, unable to find the pedestrian cross-over from the "nice" new neighborhood bordering ours. I had come across a skunk ambling through a neighbor's front yard, about 10 feet from the spot I was running on the road. I had been startled by at least 4 other people walking and puffing through the neighborhood (really? 5:30? You too? OK, maybe they had the same thoughts about me... I'm sure I look pretty skeevy without my makeup, my hair in shreds.) And the streets where I live are just filled with dark, spooky patches of woods I have to run by to get to those nice, lighted areas.
It's OK, though. I made it just fine, singing nice songs from church to myself the whole way to pep myself up. Maybe next week I'll take a MagLite with me, though. I think I could swing it pretty well at numbers 1 & 5 above :).
FUNDRAISING UPDATE: Wow, now that is a cool number. I am up to 27% of my fundraising goal!! Thank you, thank you, donors! As I run this week, I'm going to be keeping my cousin's son, Alex, close to my heart. He is around Abby's age; earlier this year he was diagnosed with medullablastoma, brain cancer. He has had surgery and radiation, and starts his chemo this week. Saturday's run is for you, Alex!! We are praying for you!
Saturday, August 14, 2010
Why I Run
These two pictures are a piece of our past; thankfully, and praise God, they are way in the past. They are from 2003, right before our daughter Abby's 2nd birthday, in March. For a couple of months before this date, she had been ill with strange symptoms (multiple bouts of pneumonia, limping, lethargic). Her pediatrician sent us to Children's Hospital in Dayton for blood work, and she was admitted the next morning. A bone marrow test confirmed what the pediatrician suspected, and what the blood work showed - Abby had Acute Lymphocytic Leukemia (ALL - http://www.leukemia-lymphoma.org/all_page?item_id=7049).
These pictures are from Abby's week of admission to the hospital, where she had multiple procedures, and a port placed under the skin in her chest where she could get IV chemo. That chemo would take her the next 26 months to complete.I don't share these pictures to be sad or gloomy. Instead, whenever I look at these, I am thankful and over-the-top joyful that Abby is the strong, smart, sassy girl she is today. I want every kid with leukemia or lymphoma to have the outcome we are blessed with. I want every kid with these cancers to get through it, to survive. I want every parent to be able to feel the relief and thankfulness that Greg and I are so grateful to feel.
This is why I run.
Week 3
- Saturday
Had another hot and humid one this morning. We ran 4 miles this morning, from the Up & Running store in Centerville. I ran with the Team in Training mentor for the Walt Disney Marathon, Jim. Still feeling pretty good, though! I bought some new running shoes today too, because I get the feeling my cruddy ones from WalMart just aren't going to carry me much further :)
It was, however, fairly distressing this past week to step on the scale and see that I am now officially 2 1/2 lbs. heavier than I was when I started running two weeks ago. I am going the wrong direction! Argh!
Wednesday, August 11, 2010
Week 2
- Saturday
Funny story... On Saturday morning, I was the only one running with the group (this is the Tnt [http://www.teamintraining.org] group that is training for Disney); the rest of the participants on Saturday were walkers or run/walkers. So, our head coach, Tom, told his assistant to run with me (we did about 3 1/2 miles). I started off running with this young man (Brad? Brian? I actually forget... sorry, dude, I'll figure it out next week!), and I realized pretty quick I was going to be in trouble trying to keep up with him. He's about, oh, who knows, 25? 23? Anybody under 35 is starting to look the same age to me now - YOUNG! He's also about 3 weeks away from participating in his first Ironman Triathlon. A full Ironman, mind you. Basically, I gasped and heaved for 3 1/2 miles, while he blithely chatted away at me. ;) It was quite a sight to see, I'm sure.
- Sunday
- Monday
- Tuesday
- Wednesday
- Thursday
Week 1
My training officially started Saturday, July 31st, I guess, but Abby & I were off at church camp that weekend, so I didn't start doing anything until Monday August 2nd. Oh, but to make up for not running on July 31st, I decided to run everywhere at church camp. It was a busy weekend, so I know I got a lot of running in! In between the zip line and the rock wall climbing and the archery, etc. I came home very sore and tired, but more inspired than ever to get busy with the training.
That first week of training was uneventful. I did my running I was supposed to do, in spite of the heat. I'm supposed to cross train and do some weights on Sundays and Tuesdays. Didn't do either day :) Oh well, it's the first week...
That first week of training was uneventful. I did my running I was supposed to do, in spite of the heat. I'm supposed to cross train and do some weights on Sundays and Tuesdays. Didn't do either day :) Oh well, it's the first week...
Monday, August 9, 2010
So far...
Don't really want to labor too much at this first post. So, here's the scoop in a nutshell (a scoop in a nutshell? Unless that's a coconut, that'd be a pretty small scoop!):
- I ran a marathon (the Cincinnati Flying Pig) about 3 1/2 years ago with Team In Training (TnT) (http://www.teamintraining.org/), an organization that trains you to do endurance events in exchange for you fund-raising for the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society (http://www.lls.org/). Had a blast, at least as much of a blast as you can have running in what has to be the hilliest city in the Midwest :)
- My daughter Abby (9 years old now) was diagnosed with ALL (acute lymphocytic leukemia) a week before her second birthday. She did 26 months of chemo; I did 26.2 miles in a marathon and raised money for leukemia and lymphoma research and support. Simple... And my husband did a triathlon, a marathon, and a 100-mile bike ride and raised money too, over the years. If we add it all up, I think we've raised somewhere around $9 or $10K for the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society through TnT. And we've done some cool events, made some good friends, and traveled to some awesome places.
- I started training for a second Flying Pig marathon about 2 years ago with TnT. Unfortunately, that year I signed up a little too late and starting trying the longer distances a little too quickly; I ruptured a disc in my lower back and had to quit running or doing much of anything for a while. At which point I started a love affair with my comfy couch and television. :) And the chips and dips that keep jumping out of my fridge onto my lap as I sit on the couch.
- 10 lbs. and 2 years later, I realize my back is fine now, and I have become rather lazy. We got an e-mail about 5 weeks ago from the lovely folks at the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society, asking us if Abby can start coming out to TnT meetings again as an "honored teammate". We say yes, I take her to a meeting two days after my 40th Birthday, and promptly sign up to run the Walt Disney Marthon in October 2011! My fund-raising goal for the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society is $2200.
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