a5K Story: One more chance

Today’s a5K Story was submitted by Lissa Chambers

lissa chambersIn August 2009, I had surgery to remove an ovarian cyst that the doctors had been watching for years. Surgery was successful, and I was back to work within a week. On the day of my 2-week follow up appointment, my doctor called me at work and ask if I was bringing anyone with me to the appointment.

Let me skip all the details, the cyst was not a cyst at all, it had been ovarian cancer. Well, September 11, 2009 at the age of 42, I had a total radical hysterectomy, as well as had my cervix and appendix removed. The recovery was slower, but through the grace of God, I needed no follow up treatment. No radiation, no chemo, no more surgeries.

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a5K Story: My Sister’s Runner

Today’s a5K Story was submitted by Theresa Williams.

msrI am Theresa. I am a mom, wife, and sister. My kidneys have not been perfect since 1993, but it has been manageable. I take my medicine and things are pretty stable. In 2010 it got a little shaky, and things became less stable. I became borderline diabetic, borderline because I convinced my doctor to postpone medication for 6 months.

I put myself on a strict clean-eating diet with a regular workout routine. I’ve dropped almost 100lbs and have all my numbers back in check. And then I was diagnosed with Sjogren’s Syndrome. Ugh, can there be any more?

My younger sister has Crohn’s Disease, it is a crappy disease. She is definitely sicker than me. In December 2011, I ran in Vegas to raise money for the Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation. I was not much of a runner and my body wasn’t in tip-top shape. But honestly it wasn’t about me. It was about my sister. I couldn’t cure her, but I could run.

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a5K Story: A Body Made Better By Running

Today’s a5K Story was submitted by Rachel Langley.

photo collageIn late September 2012, a couple months into a new found fitness addiction, I decided to try a Couch to 5K Running program. I had never run a day in my life, but decided that maybe it was time I give it a try. Not for myself, but in honor of those I had loved and lost.

My goal was to run 1 mile of the Free to Breathe Lung Cancer Awareness 5K in October. I would participate in memory of my grandfather, Joe and my mother Paula, who I had lost in 2010 at age 60, to lung cancer. I had remembered, toward the end of her illness while resting in bed, she was moving her legs while sleeping. When she awoke, she shared that she dreamt she was running. And I thought, what a beautiful way to pay tribute to my mother’s memory. I would run. 1 mile. For her. Because I had never felt a desire to run for myself, ever.

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a5K Story: Donna Robinson

Today’s post was submitted by Donna Robinson, a cancer survivor and runner.

Donna RI am a 7 year cancer survivor. I had never run a race before my cancer treatment but saw a walker-friendly half marathon two years after chemo and wondered if my body was capable. So, I signed up, not telling anyone, and walked it.

I was so moved as I crossed the finish line that I burst into tears, and vowed to continue walking. For the past 4 years I’ve completed at least a 5K every month and two half marathons each year.

I am so grateful to be alive and healthy enough to walk and run. I walk to celebrate life!

Special thanks to Donna for sharing her story! If you have comments or questions for her leave ‘em below or send us an e-mail at a5k@anywhere5k.com.