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Sorry–No Excuses Accepted!

September 6th, 2012

As is highlighted on the Home Page of this website, I am now a regular blogger for The Huffington Post.? I submit weekly articles, but the editors of The Huffington Post do not always publish them.? This particular article was turned down, I think because The Huffington Post likes to publish articles centered on current events, and this one is more of a ?feely good? story.? But I like it and am including it here.

Glenn Cunningham personally told me this.? The first part of the story is public record, but I have never read or heard the second part of the story from any other source.

The Cunninghams lived on a farm in Kansas, and Glenn and his brother attended a country schoolhouse that was heated by an old-fashioned pot-belled stove.? Glenn was eight years old, his brother thirteen.? They regularly went to school early to light the fire, using kerosene left in a can by a nearby farmer.? But one day the can had mistakenly been filled with gasoline, and there was a terrible fire.? The skin and muscle on both of Glenn’s knees and shins were burned to the bone, and the toes on his left foot had been burned off and the arch destroyed.? Doctors wanted to amputate his legs, but his parents said “no.”? Glenn’s brother was killed in the fire.

Following an extended stay in the hospital, Glenn’s wounds began to heal.? After being bedridden for months, he finally was able to get around using crutches, but no one expected he would ever walk again–that is, no one except Glenn.? After being on crutches for two years, he learned to stand, gradually retraining his leg muscles to work again and then learning to walk by working his way from one end of the picket fence in his front yard to the other end, using the fence as a support as he walked.? As time went on, just walking was not enough.? He tried playing baseball, his favorite sport, but couldn’t keep his balance when batting.? So he turned to running.? And run he did!

Defying all odds, his left leg being an inch shorter than his right one and limping as he ran, he set all kinds of middle distance records in high school.? He continued running at Kansas University, where he is remembered as being one of the university’s all-time track greats.? And after KU, where he set numerous records, he went on to run at amateur track meets in the USA and Europe, winning a good part of the time and continuing to set records.

The track meet Cunningham liked telling about the most was a mile run that featured Cunningham and another runner who was considered as one of the world’s fastest milers on outdoor tracks.?? People expected the race to be a close one, even expecting a new record for the outdoor mile to be set.? Even though Glenn had set a new record for the indoor mile four months earlier at Madison Square Garden, the other runner was widely expected to win on an outdoor track.

The other runner, whose name Cunningham didn’t tell me and I didn’t bother to ask, was famous for his strong kick on the last lap, and getting well ahead of him before the last lap seemed Glenn’s only hope of winning.? Glenn carefully calculated the times he should run for each of the first three laps, which were faster than he had run before, and he worried about his ability to maintain that pace.? It was a risky strategy, but necessary to win.

Glen started out the race taking the lead, but he could hear the other runner matching him step for step.? He was surprised at the time yelled out at the end of the first lap by the official timer–it was faster than Glenn had planned.? Yet, he could hear the other runner matching his every step.? The same happened for the second and third laps–running faster than planned, but still the other runner matching his every stride.? As Cunningham started the last lap, he thought there was no way he could out-kick the other runner.

Glen ran the last lap as fast as he could, but coming off the last curve with only fifty yards to go, he could still hear the other runner right behind him, and he feared he didn’t have enough left to fend off the other runner’s strong finish.? But Glenn was able to stay ahead of him and win the race.? Right after crossing the finish line, Glenn turned to shake hands with the other runner, but he was just coming off the last curve, with another fifty yards to go.? How could that possibly be?? Glenn had heard him matching his every stride.

It turned out that the paper number safety-pinned to the back of his shirt had come loose on one side and was flapping in the wind, sounding as if his opponent was running right behind him.? And with a glint in his eyes, Cunningham concluded the story: “Had I looked backward instead of foreword, I would not have set the world record for the mile.”? Yes, that day Cunningham set a new record, making him the holder of the indoor and the outdoor records for the mile run.

“Forward” is defined as “looking toward what is ahead,” and “backward” is defined as “directed toward the past.”? So many times we get bogged down in life looking backward.? The past is not what is significant!? We need always to be looking forward, to the things that are yet possible in our lives, regardless of the problems, failures, mistakes, or handicaps of the past.? Overcoming the past may not always be easy, but it is possible.? The entire life of Glenn Cunningham is a testimony to that.

Looking forward or backward, it’s up to you to decide what you want out of life and to work hard enough to make it happen–sorry, no excuses accepted!

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  1. September 8th, 2012 at 00:43 | #1

    I love when you talk about this type of stuff in your posts. Perhaps could you continue to do this?

  2. denise
    October 17th, 2012 at 06:44 | #2

    I have long said, “If one goes through life looking backward, they are bound to run into walls”, and this story so hits the mark. As always, it is a pleasure to hear and read your words. Here’s to happy feet! ;-)

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