I'd like to invite you to join me in my New Year’s resolution, which is to run the Boston Marathon. But the marathon is only part of the picture -- and not the most important part.
Anyone who has set out to run a marathon (or ride a century, compete in a triathlon, swim across the Atlantic, whatever) knows that the event itself, while never easy, is the easy part.
When you sign up for a marathon, what you're really committing yourself to is the training. At first it’s just a two-mile run. Eventually it becomes a four-mile run. Before long, you’re running every day. In the wind and the rain. In the heat of the afternoon. Whenever you can fit in the time that day. There may be 20,000 people running alongside you on the day of the event, but ultimately a marathon is a race you run by yourself, hour after hour, mile after mile, day after day, week after week.
And yet that’s a walk in the park compared to the marathon that Michael and his parents were asked to run in 1986.
Here's where you come in. In order to run the Boston Marathon, I’ve pledged to raise money for the Michael Carter Lisnow Respite Center, which helps families and children with disabilities.
When I stop to think about the people who need the help of organizations like this, it puts the marathon training into perspective. The few days and hours I'll be training are nothing compared to the years that many people spend battling a disease or a disability. I might go running for an hour, but that's just one hour out of my day. Imagine running that marathon every minute of every day of your life.
How truly lucky we are, those of us who are in good health, who are financially secure. Please take a moment at the beginning of this year to reflect. In the coming weeks as I train for this run, I’ll be asking you to help me reach my goal of raising at least $2,500. (Stayed tuned for more information.) Together we’ll help someone who may be a little less fortunate.
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I pledge to help you, John. The nature and extent of the help is under consideration. At this moment I can only promise moral support, but I'm confident that there is more to come.
Go for it.
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