November 18, 2016
At the start of a training run, I have a goal. I set the distance, and usually I decide I
will run it at my normal pace…an 8:30 minute mile. Not the fastest, but I can run like a sturdy donkey
at this speed (smile)…I know my body can keep on keeping on if I keep this
pace. So I begin. But something happens in the first mile or
two as my muscles get cranking (I like to just start running and I always nix
any warm up). I think I need to
quit. I think maybe my lungs aren’t up
for it and “why does it feel so much harder today?!” But I tell myself, “just a
little longer. Don’t stop yet.” Because I know what is coming. I will break through that wall, my body will
pace itself and mile three goal could turn into mile five. I will get in a steady rhythm of breathing
and my legs will find their stride as they take me yard after yard down the
road. I love that feeling, like I could
run for days and come back home, tired but soul refreshed as I listen to praise music and enjoy the beauty that God as gifted me with all around.
So, I think I am in the first 400 yard stretch. We are two weeks into IV’s and it takes my
breath away that we have only come that far.
I am not sure I can do it. My
body is so tired, my veins are not healed before I am back in for another treatment.
I am gasping for air but I am only 400
yards into my three mile race! I know we
can do it- we have to do it. We will do
the only thing we can do…take another step.
We will take each miserable, terrible step filled with desire to turn
back around and side-step the other runners.
I know they are out there…I know a few of them myself. We are all in a race that we didn’t sign up
for and each one is desperate to find a way out. If only we could cross the finish line
without all the painful miles we will have to show for it. If only our coach could tell us definitively
that all these miles will prove worth it because the finish line is really
there- complete healing. But each
“coach” defines victory a different way, and most would call remission a
“victory.” But it is only a victory for
how long? A month? A year? Two?
Until the race is back on and you didn’t even know you were running
again. And what about those of us who
run our race and drag others along with us?
Willing them to have the strength to keep up- our children, our family,
our loved ones too precious to leave behind.
Yes, we will run this race.
It is worth every step forward, because it is one more step you are
choosing not to take backward. It is
sometimes more important to do something to keep you in the FIGHT than it is to
make sure that you are moving forward.
We must not give up hope, and not let apathy become a companion. We cannot see the finish line when we are not
even clocked in at mile one yet. But that
doesn’t mean the finish line isn’t there. Keep
on keeping on. One step at a time.
You are so strong!!! God is your strength, and He is giving you what you need... It's amazing to see.
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