To all of my many friends and family who reached out to me this
week, I want to thank you. Your
encouragement and love has been amazing.
I hesitated in writing anything about my experiences this past weekend,
because I don’t want it to sound like I am patting myself on the back or saying
“look what I did.” But I am a writer,
and something inside me felt like this story needed to be told.
I am not looking for congratulations. Just awareness to the good of people all over
this area. The anger and hate get
tiring. Just want to throw some positivity
in there.
Thanks for reading…
**********
Runners have strong hearts.
This is evident from the several months of training through all kinds of
weather, over all kinds of terrain, at hours others would rather be
sleeping. Strength training, hill
training, speed training and long training every Saturday morning for the past
5 months. Giving up trips, social
engagements, sleep etc.
We train for many different reasons. Some run to symbolize a certain personal
achievement. To prove they can. To celebrate their own strength and personal victory. Others run for charity, raising millions of
dollars for those who cannot run.
It is both an invigorating and exhausting journey.
I am not going to lie and say that the cancelation of the
marathon was not a huge disappointment. It
was. Had it been canceled on Tuesday or Wednesday, it would had been easier to
take, than 36 hours before the race. I had spent most of the week torn as to
whether to run when so many were hurting anyway. It was also hard to read countless nasty
comments and articles online vilifying marathoners. Comments about people who run the marathon
deserving to be shot were quite hard to take.
It was evident that NYC needed someone to be angry at during the trying
time. The marathon served as that.
I found out the
marathon was canceled while on my way to the Team in Training Inspiration
Dinner. At first I wanted to turn around and not go to the dinner. Afterall, I didn’t really feel like being
inspired at the moment. All of the
emotions of the rollercoaster-like week came crashing down. But, I have learned through marathon
training, when you don’t want to go on…you do just that. You go on.
Of course, the Inspiration Dinner was very emotional. There were many tears. But also, a celebration. The New York City TNT chapter’s 515 NYC
Marathon team members raised over $2.2 million for cancer research and support
services for patients. This is $400,000
more than last year’s team. Without even
setting foot at the start line, we had accomplished a lot. It was evident, we had a lot to be proud of.
But there was still so much more to do.
Saturday morning my Brooklyn team met in Prospect Park. Carrying the warm throw-away clothes we
planned to wear at the start line, bags of towels, jugs of water and cans of food. We loaded up two cars to capacity and sent
them on to relief efforts in the NYC area.
And then, it was marathon Sunday. As planned, over 100 of my teammates got our
busses to Staten Island, but with a different purpose. With rakes and shovels and work gloves
galore, we traveled over the Verrazano Bridge to one of the hardest hit areas
of Staten Island. A short drive from the
“would be” starting line.
There we were exposed to devastation I cannot even begin to
describe. And we got to work, cleaning
up alongside those who had been affected.
We emptied basements of muddied belongings, we ripped out carpeting and
insulation, we tore down sheet rock and dry wall. And in doing so, we created some of the
largest piles of garbage I have ever seen.
Garbage that used to be people’s homes.
It was heart breaking.
We saw lots of other marathoners there, as well, from other
teams or brought there by their own heart.
At the end of the long day, we boarded our busses and that’s
when it was the hardest. To get back in
our busses and wave goodbye to or hug those poor Staten Islanders who would
have to stay there in the cold with only NYPD flood lights to illuminate them
as they continued a job that wasn’t going to end soon.
As we quietly drove across the Verrazano Bridge, a bridge we
had spent months or years dreaming of running over this particular day, a teammate
solemnly held up an iPhone and played Sinatra’s “New York, New York”. The grief was palpable. Off we rode to our warm, powered Brooklyn
apartments while those we had met were still hurting. It was overwhelming.
So, although it has always been evident that marathoners
have strong hearts, it is very clear that we have BIG hearts, too. I am proud of my team and all that they have
done to help the recovery. We might have read ridiculing accounts in local
papers and on the internet, but we know the truth. And those we helped this weekend do,
too.
There is still so much work to be done. I urge anyone who can, find time to volunteer
at a local shelter or in a neighborhood clean up effort.We will continue to reach out as a team. We will continue to help heal our city. And next year, November 2013 we will run proudly through the greatest city on Earth and be proud of our “would be 2012 marathoner” title.
Marcie, this was beautiful.
ReplyDeleteFabulous, moving post. I am so glad you wrote this experience for us, Marcie. I suspect this experience of solidarity will be as significant for you all as completing the 23 miles next year will be. Your team does have a lot to be proud of.
ReplyDeleteWhat a beautiful post....
ReplyDeletexo
You are all amazing for all you did for those touched the hardest by this horrific event. What you did for the residents of Staten Island will help them long after your bus drove back over the bridge. What touches ones heart, remains in ones heart forever. Thank you! <3
ReplyDeletewell-said. thank you, marcie.
ReplyDeleteWhen I heard the race was canceled, I thought about you. All that hard work to train! But you and your team turned the disappointment into something more, for cancer research and for the residents of Staten Island. Hugs!
ReplyDeleteOh my Marcie! Tears are rolling down my face as I read this warm, truely inspiring post. I am very proud to know you. I know only to well, it is not only the brutal event but the aftermath that is hardest to bear, and it is only in times like this that people show their true colours, put aside their own thoughts, wants and needs and are lift a helping. caring hand. Good for you! I am glad you posted this. Thankyou Marcie, for sharing.
ReplyDeleteMarcie, I immediately thought of you when I found out the marathon had been cancelled. What a wonderful post and tribute to all the lives you have touched without even crossing the starting line! Indeed, you SHOULD be proud of your efforts...
ReplyDeleteDonna L Martin
www.donnalmartin.com
www.donasdays.blogspot.com
What your team has done to refocus is wonderful! Brought me to tears. So sorry I can't be 'home' to help out too. Thanks for sharing this!
ReplyDeleteWhat a beautifully written testimonial to the heart of a runner - not just your own beautiful heart but all the others as well. It made me cry too. It would also make a wonderful story for young people if you ever felt inspired to write it. Thank you for your courage and beauty.
ReplyDeleteSuch a beautifully written post about what must have been, and surely continues to be, such an emotional roller-coaster. You continue to amaze me, Marcie! And I look forward to donating to your marathon charity in 2013!
ReplyDeleteThis is a beautiful post, Marcie. Before the marathon was canceled I commented (on FB, I think) that this would be a marathon that would have great meaning...even though you didn't run, it sounds so meaningful. Thank you for sharing.
ReplyDeleteAmazing, Marcie. Thanks for writing this, it's everything I've been feeling and doing for the past week as well.
ReplyDeleteThere will be other marathons...and if anything we'll be even more prepared to rock.
Thank you for sharing this, Marcie. I don't know what I can say to add to the comments already written, except "thank you" from the bottom of my heart for doing what those of us who are far away cannot do. Our hearts are with all who are dealing with the aftermath of nature's fury.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful. I can't imagine a better way NOT to run a marathon.
ReplyDeletethank you for sharing your story. it was beautiful.
ReplyDeleteKudos to you and your team! This is how everyone should behave all the time. You are an inspiration!
ReplyDelete:')
ReplyDeleteI thought of you when I heard it had been cancelled, you worked so hard to get ready for the marathon. I'm sorry that you had to hear such hostility around this. People involved in a tragic event can lose perspective (understandably) and I think that sometimes turns into resentment and anger when life moves forward. The marathon was a convenient release.
ReplyDeleteThank you for writing this and, more importantly, thank you for donating your time to help.
So awesome, Marcie, and so glad you decided to write it. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad you wrote this, Marcie. Thanks for sharing it.
ReplyDeleteLovely! You should submit this to the editorial in your newspaper as a rebuttal to all the cruel things said against marathoners!
ReplyDeleteWell-said. So many of us were concerned that all those "resources" planned for the marathon could be better used elsewhere. The humans were not the resources I first thought of, but OMG! YES! To redirect the strength (both physical and mental) that you had nurtured in your training into strength that changed lives is mind-blowing.
ReplyDeleteThis is beautifully written Marcie! You did so much more with your relief efforts, and I'm sure bonded more closely with your team than you ever could in a marathon. You have a big heart! Thanks for making those of us in the Midwest aware of the devastation in NYC.
ReplyDelete