Life May Throw You A curve!NEW CONTEST! WOW!!! Join Suite 101.com between October 2 and December 31, 2000, and you could be eligible to win weekly cash prizes of $500 and a grand prize of $10,000 on December 31st. Click here for complete Contest Rules and to sign up, all on one page! Remember, it is free! CONTEST! Just for runners Marathon & Beyond Contest! Go to the M&B article and details about their contest here - Marathon & Beyond is offering one of their 100% supplex windshirts. The M&B windshirt is wind resistant but breathable; these babies are dynamite! A $30 value) Pretty cool, huh! The following article was written by Lynn Seely, my wife. Since it is about what happened to me after the Steamtown marathon and since I believe it may save your life; I asked for and got permission to post it here. By Lynn Seely Everything has changed and yet, thankfully, nothing has. Let me explain. On October 16, John Seely (my husband) turned 50 years old. On that same day we were told that a lesion that had been removed was Malignant Melanoma. To make a very long story short, we knew that early detection was vital if the cancer was to be contained. However, the spot had been on his back for a long time. The news looked as if it was to be very bad indeed. However, days later, the pathology report showed some very good news which was confirmed. The cancer had not yet spread down deep enough to have invaded his lymph system and therefore, his body. We were very fortunate! Everything else in my life, aside from researching all I could about this disease, had been on stand by until we learned the final results. Now here we are, with our lives back on track and I find myself thinking about running the Harrisburg Marathon again. Something that I could not even conceive off just a short time ago. And the fact that I had to drop out of the Steamtown Marathon due to a knee injury a few weeks ago seemed ridiculously unimportant in comparison to what we had just faced. To be honest, I did not need this scare to appreciate life or running or being. I have always held life as precious and truly value being healthy enough to run. So has my husband I am grateful beyond words that he does not have to go through an ordeal that rarely has a happy ending. And yet, as I write this, it strikes me that there are those among us that do not get off so easily.
The copyright of the article Life May Throw You A curve! in Distance Running is owned by John Seeley. Permission to republish Life May Throw You A curve! in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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