Run, Patti, Run
At a young and tender age, Patti
Wilson was told by her
doctor that she was an epileptic. Her father, Jim Wilson, is
a
morning jogger. One day she smiled through her teenage braces
and
said, "Daddy what I’d really love to do is run with you every
day, but I’m afraid I’ll have a seizure."
Her father told her, "If you do,
I know how to handle it so
let’s start running!"
That’s just what they did every
day. It was a wonderful
experience for them to share and there were no seizures at all
while she was running. After a few weeks, she told her father,
"Daddy, what I’d really love to do is break the world’s long-
distance running record for women."
Her father checked the Guiness
Book of World Records and
found that the farthest any woman had run was 80 miles. As a
freshman in high school, Patti announced, "I’m going to run
from
Orange County up to San Francisco." (A distance of 400 miles.)
"As a sophomore," she went on, "I’m going to run to Portland,
Oregon." (Over 1,500 miles.) "As a junior I’ll run to St. Louis.
(About 2,000 miles.) "As a senior I’ll run to the White House."
(More than 3,000 miles away.)
In view of her handicap, Patti
was as ambitious as she was
enthusiastic, but she said she looked at the handicap of being
an
epileptic as simply "an inconvenience." She focused not on what
she had lost, but on what she had left.
That year she completed her run
to San Francisco wearing a
T-shirt that read, "I love Epileptics." Her dad ran every mile
at
her side, and her mom, a nurse, followed in a motor home behind
them in case anything went wrong.
In her sophomore year Patti’s
classmates got behind her.
They built a giant poster that read, "Run, Patti, Run!" (This
has
since become her motto and the title of a book she has written.)
On her second marathon, en route to Portland, she fractured
a
bone in her foot. A doctor told her she had to stop her run.
He
said, "I’ve got to put a cast on your ankle so that you don’t
sustain permanent damage."
"Doc, you don’t understand," she
said. "This isn’t just a
whim of mine, it’s a magnificient obsession! I’m not just doing
it for me, I’m doing it to break the chains on the brains that
limit so many others. Isn’t there a way I can keep running?"
He
gave her one option. He could wrap it in adhesive instead of
putting it in a cast. He warned her that it would be incredibly
painful, and told her, "It will blister." She told the doctor
to
wrap it up.
She finished the run to Portland,
completing her last mile
with the governor of Oregon. You may have seen the headlines:
"Super Runner, Patti Wilson Ends Marathon For Epilepsy On Her
17th Birthday."
After four months of almost continuous
running from West
Coast to the East Coast, Patti arrived in Washington and shook
the hand of the President of the United States. She told him,
"I
wanted people to know that epileptics are normal human beings
with normal lives."
I told this story at one of my
seminars not long ago, and
afterward a big teary-eyed man came up to me, stuck out his
big
meaty hand and said, "Mark, my name is Jim Wilson. You were
talking about my daughter, Patti." Because of her noble efforts,
he told me enough money had been raised to open up 19 multi-
million-dollar epileptic centers around the country.
If Patti Wilson can do so much
with so little, what can you
do to outperform yourself in a state of total wellness?
By Mark V. Hansen
from Chicken Soup for the Soul
Copyright 1993 by Jack Canfield and Mark Victor Hansen