Thayer Prime

Thayer's First Marathon

Fundraising for Barnardo's
£2,012
raised of £1,000 target
Donations cannot currently be made to this page
Event: Virgin London Marathon 2016, on 24 April 2016
Barnardo's

Verified by JustGiving

RCN 216250, Scotland SC037605
We help children, young people & families to feel they can belong

Story

SUMMARY: It would mean everything to me to have this support from you, you’ll be a part of my life goal, geeing me on and holding my hand with your support. In turn we can all feel bloody marvellous knowing that we’re giving money to a great cause, Barnardos, at the same time. It’s the most lovely win win ever. My company Team Prime, will also match all donations to £2,000.

Anything you can spare, anything at all, will be gratefully received. If you’d like to donate the cost of a pint to buy me a “virtual” drink to keep me going – that’d be fine.

LONGER VERSION:

I’ve always watched the London Marathon, both on television and in person. There’s something about it that brings me to tears every time, hearing every story and watching all those people push towards an insane distance. It makes me feel like as a bunch of people, with that much drive and ambition, we can achieve anything.

Sometime in my very early twenties, whilst regaining my fitness lost in my late teens through too much drinking and partying, I managed to run 15 minutes non-stop on a treadmill – I couldn’t believe it, it felt like I’d just smashed a new world target – I had never enjoyed running, was always awful at it, and never done more than 10 minutes without feeling I was going to die even in my youth. I had a very clear and determined thought that if I can get to 15 minutes, I can get to a marathon. It was so clear, so obvious, and became a reality in that moment. I didn’t have the time to push it then (work got in the way, and alas, more partying and drinking) but the moment stuck with me.

Fast forward a decade. A long, life changing decade – filled with two pregnancies, two births, breastfeeding, and lack of care to my body from Just Getting Through It All. I was tipping over 15 stones (100kgs - I've added a photo in my album for you to giggle at), and feeling pretty groggy in myself. I was fat. I was unfit. And I snapped, something had to change: I wasn’t ready to give up on my body yet – I was 33, and there’s life in the old girl yet.

I didn’t want to go to the gym, I didn’t want to do exercise classes. I’d done both of these things before and found the amount of time invested compared to the results and the diary constraints weren’t worth it. A lot of my friends were runners, and I’d been watching them achieve things for themselves and getting caught up in their enthusiasm. I bought a pair of trainers, and decided I’d give it a go. The marathon dream stirred.

I got as far as the end of the street, about 80 meters, when I realised *quite* how unfit I was. I wanted to puke and cry in equal measure. I did neither. I walked a bit, got my breath back, and ran on a bit more. I managed around 5 minutes that day. It was the hardest most humiliating run I’ve ever done.

Lacing up my trainers and getting out the door was awful, every time. There was never a time in the first few months where I wanted to go. So I set myself a goal – to do a 5k charity run dressed as Santa to raise money for the Special Care Baby Unit my daughter had been looked after in after birth. Every time it hurt when I ran, every time it rained, every time I wanted to give up I thought of her, and other babies fighting for their lives and realised I could keep going. I had so much to give them in charity donations from my friends, and so much to give my children by being fit and healthy, the pain is temporary, and you forget it. You never forget your achievements.

Somehow, I got to 5k. I got round the course in 36 minutes, with a chest infection. I was over the moon. My chest infection got really bad, and I had to stop running. It took me 6 weeks to get rid of the infection and it knocked all my fitness out. I drifted out of the habit, and stopped running for a year. I’d lost my mojo, and my drive.

Fast forward another year, and I was completely over being overweight. I needed to change my diet, lifestyle and get some exercise. I dug out my trainers at the start of 2014.

I started running to lose weight. I put on 3lbs in the first month. I was determined to try harder. I ran more, surely more running will help me lose weight? I got up to 10k on my own within a few months, and then started doing parkruns to get used to the idea of running with people (something that had always scared me due to my size). Settings goals like parkrun, and 10k races kept me going. Someone once said to me that races and public runs are the End of Level Bosses to all the grinding and levelling up. I love that analogy, and for me it’s completely true.

A few months in to my grinding and boss slaying, I was still putting on weight – but by now, I loved running. I kept the running up and changed my diet. I tracked everything I ate and made changes. I lost 20lbs in 3 months at the end of 2014. I bought some compression wear, and started to enjoy how my body was feeling.

In 2015 I ran a half marathon on my 1st runiversary. I managed a time of 2hrs 28minutes, and I was over the moon. I ran all over the summer, and loved every minute. Running has become my favourite hobby, and I can’t believe it. It’s pushed me to places I didn’t know I could go to physically and mentally, and helped control my anxiety and depression.  Regards weight if you're interested I'm down to 178lbs now, with another 13lbs or so to go.


So here I am, on the eve of a life goal I’ve carried since 21. Those of you who know me well will know that I like achieving things I’ve set out to do, and knowing that this crazy pipedream is now a reality means so much to me. I get emotional just thinking about it, and the long, hard journey it’s taken to even get this close. 

I’ve never run more that 22kms so far, so getting to 42 (probably more like 45 with weaving!) is going to be one hell of a ride in the next 6 months. I’m equal parts terrified and excited. My stomach does backflips even thinking about it. When I visualise crossing the finish line I actually well up. I can’t begin to tell you what this means to me.

If I can ever ask of you one favour, it’s this one: please sponsor me. I don’t want you to sponsor me for running the marathon, as one thing I’ve learned in all my training of the last 2 years is that if you get ill you really mustn’t run – and I’d hate to let you all down. If you sponsor me you’re sponsoring me for the last 2 years of lacing up every time I didn’t want to. Every pizza I’ve passed up to get to weight that’s smart to lug round a marathon distance. Every run I’m about to do in the next 6 months, every blister and injury that makes me want to stop: but I won’t stop. If for any reason I can’t run the London Marathon from illness or injury, I will run the next available one upon fitness.

It would mean everything to me to have this support from you, you’ll be a part of my life goal geeing on and holding my hand with your support. In turn we can all feel bloody marvellous knowing that we’re giving money to great cause, Barnardos, at the same time. It’s the most lovely win win ever.

Anything you can spare, anything at all, will be gratefully received. If you’d like to donate the cost of a pint to buy me a “virtual” drink to keep me going – that’d be fine.

Thanks, and thanks to everyone who’s ever inspired me to run, and not stop. x

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About the charity

Barnardo's

Verified by JustGiving

RCN 216250, Scotland SC037605
When life gets tough or it feels like there's nowhere to turn, Barnardo's is here. We make sure children and young people feel safer, happier and more hopeful by directly supporting them with specialist services across the UK. We have been changing childhoods and changing lives for over 150 years.

Donation summary

Total raised
£2,011.88
+ £417.50 Gift Aid
Online donations
£2,011.88
Offline donations
£0.00

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