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Five Reasons to Run the Portland Half Marathon

Posted: June 30th, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: races/destinations | Tags: , , , , | No Comments »

By: Jean Fitzgerald, NFE Portland Team Captain

The 2010 Portland Marathon on Oct. 10, 2010 is doing something different this year — offering a HALF Marathon — hugely exciting.  The 3,000 slots went quickly, but NFE has charity slots. We are hoping that you fill one of those slots and race for research.

You will be a part of a team that has attained the status of being the nation’s largest publicly funded NF Research entity.  Our teams raised $1.4 million in 2009.  All donations to the NF Endurance Team are restricted for use in the Foundation science and research programs.  NFE continues its commitment to advancing NF Research; we now provide close to one third of the funds to support the annual Foundation’s research budget.  Recent advances in NF research are moving us significantly closer to reaching our goal of FDA approved treatments for neurofibromatosis.

We have added our name to the Charity Team Roster of many events, and our signature neon yellow and blue race singlets are becoming known all over the country.  The ball is definitely rolling.  It is our job now to keep it going…to keep it growing!

Will you join us this year and fill one of these half marathon slots?  We are asking that you raise only $600…an easy goal to obtain, especially this far out!  This fundraising commitment will cover your registration fee. To register, go to NF Endurance, view our video, and click on enter site and then signup.  We will sign you up with Portland so that you only have to register once.

Our Gala Pasta Dinner on October 9 will be held again in the beautiful Buchan Reception Hall with its lighted courtyard at the First Unitarian Church.  A very special evening is being planned.

Let’s light up the streets of Portland in our bright NEON YELLOW!

Don’t miss out on the magic of the inaugural Portland Half Marathon on 10.10.10. It’s sold out, but NFE has charity slots! For more information, please e-mail Molly at (Enable Javascript to see the email address).
Check out the Portland Marathon website for more information about the race weekend or their latest newsletter.


Adopt nature’s pace. Her secret is patience. – Emerson

Posted: April 28th, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: motivation, races/destinations | Tags: , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

by: Pete Tanguay, Conway Running Club

Running is more than a sport, it is a way of life.  More than a destination, it is a bridge to new life.  Running in our society is as much about relationships as it is about fitness.  I heard someone say once that when we are not running we talk about running and when we are running we talk about everything else.

When we run, we eventually come face to face with simple truths that penetrate us at deeper levels.  We learn to breathe and relax so we can run longer, we realize that speed and endurance are centered in our core strength rather than the size of our leg muscles and we experience how worry and anxiety rob us of valuable energy.  The race is won at the finish line, we can dig deep to find strength in our weakness and that patience is nature’s secret are just a few of the real life lessons we come to know when we run.

People are running for reasons well beyond the health, fitness and personal accomplishment they receive.  Consider the story of Lesley Oslica, who with some of her best friends, traveled to Oklahoma City last weekend to run the 10th Oklahoma City marathon.  A lot was happening in this race and I’m going to see if I can capture some of it for you through Lesley’s experience within the broader context of the race.

For the last 10 years, runners have come from all over to run and remember.  If you run the race, you will never forget the 168 seconds of silence in memory of the 168 victims at the beginning of the race.  Music, energy and nervous activity are instantly replaced with the sound of the wind blowing through the tall downtown buildings and the songs of birds in the air.  168 seconds is a long time, long enough to deeply remember why you are there.  And after you’ve asked your body to give you all it has to complete 26.2 miles you walk through the 168 chairs that signify the people who lost their lives and see the medals from other runners hung on the chairs in their memory.  It’s at this point that you are ready to learn a deep lesson about the value of life and realize at a deeper level how blessed and lucky you are.

Lesley and Connie’s running began as a way to raise awareness for Neurofibromatosis (NF) and hopefully to fund the discovery of a cure for everyone who is living with NF.  Their NF Hero is their daughter Katie.

They have attended many endurance events this year and this was Lesley’s fourth marathon of 2010.  Of all she gives to the Children’s Tumor Foundation, the people who are touched by NF and to those she runs with, she would be the first to tell you that at the end of the day she feels like she receives more than she gives.  She was the leader of and in many ways the inspiration for the NF team who ran the 2010 Little Rock Marathon and raised over $10,000 to fund research at Arkansas Children’s Hospital.

While there are many reasons that we run, those of us who race fully understand the joy of a personal record (PR) for a given distance.  The PR can feel like the pinnacle of our accomplishment and the source of our despair.  Yes, we are running for more than a PR, but deep down most of us have a number in our head that we want to see on the clock when we finish.  Lesley has had a dream to break 5 hours in a marathon someday and has come within minutes a couple of times this year.  She had decided before the race that she’d completely focus on experiencing the race and give up the goal of getting under 5 hours.  “I went out not even thinking about time. I had decided it was just going to be a fun day because the wind was so strong (15-25 mile gusts), and I just didn’t want to fight it all day thinking about my time. So – I never looked at my time – and made an agreement with myself not to look at it until mile 25. If I was close at that point (25 mi), I would give it all I had.”

It was at this point that so many life truths that we learn through running collided and Lesley not only got a PR but she put 15 minutes between her finish time and her five hour goal.  The goal that had eluded her time and time again.  The expressions in the pictures below tell the story of accomplishment, patience, friendship and joy on many levels.  People often ask why we run.  We run for our health, for our friends, for people we don’t know who were killed in a horrific bombing incident, to raise money to find a cure for NF and to learn many of the deeper things in life first hand.  Oh yes, and also to get a PR.  Way to go Lesley, you did it!!!!!!

Pete Tanguay is also a NF Endurance member. He participated in the 2010 Little Rock Marathon, raising more than $4,000 for NF research. He currently resides in Conway, AR and is the  founder and president of Rock Pond Solutions.


Weekend Pacesetter (Jan. 15-17, 2010)

Posted: January 15th, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: nutrition, Take Three with Tracy, Uncategorized, Weekend Pacesetter | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

TREAD
Stuck in a treadmill rut? Try one of Runners World’s coaching videos on YouTube and boost your marathon fitness even when staying indoors.

PLAN
What are you Endurance goals for 2010? For Siobhan Clarke, it is the opportunity to run in an event for NF Endurance. Karen Trommer wants to run more and walk less at the ING Georgia Marathon in March. Jennifer Walsh would like to be able to complete the “Friends Ride for Neurofibromatosis” — 85 miles along Cape Cod, Mass. on a bicycle. Send us your Endurance goal and maybe some strategies you plan on using too.

CHEER
We have 17 runners at the P.F. Chang’s Rock ‘n’ Roll Arizona Marathon and 1/2 this weekend. So far they have raised more than $2,400 for NF research. Check out their efforts here. Steve will also be hiking the Grand Canyon with Bill Hardy.

phoenix-07-092

2007 NF Endurance Team in Phoenix, Ariz.