Good Thanks for Good Sportsmanship | Guideposts

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I heard cheers from the not-so-distant finish line. Brushed elbows with the runners clustered around me. But I couldn’t see a thing. Not really. All I saw were multicolored, human-sized blurs bobbing up and down on the gray streak of road, funneling into a pitch-black void ahead—the long tunnel into Nissan Stadium, home of the NFL’s Tennessee Titans and, for me, the final lap of the 13-mile Tom King Classic Half Marathon in Nashville. I’d made it this far, no easy task when you’re legally blind. I squinted for any sign of my running partner, my guide up until now. But I’d lost her in the crowd.

 

I didn’t want to ask for help. I’ve always been proud that my eyesight never held me back. In fact, my other senses are heightened—something that comes in handy for my job as a massage therapist. But I knew if I entered that dark tunnel alone I could stumble, injuring myself or others. I said a quick prayer, then took a chance. “Excuse me,” I said to the blurry woman next to me, “I’m visually impaired, can I hold onto you through the tunnel?”

 

Just what she wanted, right? A sweaty stranger clinging to her while she made her grand entrance into the stadium. To my surprise, she offered her arm immediately. “Of course!” We crossed into the tunnel and she put me at ease by making small talk. Her name was Caroline, and she was an experienced marathoner. She guided me safely back into the sunshine and we finished the race side by side. I caught my breath, and gave her my thanks. It didn’t feel like enough.

 

“I have to find some way to repay you,” I said.

 

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