MT Sports

Disabled runner runs 104 marathons in 104 days

Published:2022-06-22 By Như Tâm(MetaSports) Comments
AmericanJacky Hunt-Broersma will set a world record, if her achievement is recognized by Guinness World Records.

With some jogging, completing a full marathon (FM) long 495 km long enough to challenge. To wake up the next day and continue to run marathon, repeated in three months and a half month and a half to ask for strength. And that's what Jacky Hunt-Broersma'- crippled runner in the state of Arizona, America, thinking before we got to the jogging six years ago.

"I've never been jogging while I'm healthy," Hunt-Broersma says on CNN Sport. "I think the runner is crazy... but every bit, I'm addicted to a jog when it's not good."

By mid-2022, Hunt-Broersma, at 46 age, has completed an independent program as 104 FM in 104 in ten days in 1 and 4.

For the beginning of 100 FM in a 100-day, Hunt-Broersma starts testing with many unknown. "Will my feet be able to take that number?" But every week goes by, Hunt-Broersma gets more surprise about himself.

I don't know how my body reacts, and I realized how strong our body is, Hunt-Broersma says, "Every day, I'm just going to move on and stronger and stronger, our bodies are absolutely extraordinary."

Hunt-Broersma's challenge, as you claim it, is the middle of the "90%mentally ill". Finding motivation to get out of the house every day, running FM is always the biggest problem. "You never know what a new day will bring, Hunt-Broersma said more. "There's a little bit of a flow, and one day you're gonna have to finish the unpleasant-- but have to take this leg up before the other and keep going, you're gonna feel great and run like light."

The Boston street competition is one of the draft of the challenge, but "downs" is a lot, like FM fifth 50, when the thought of a sudden passing of Hunt-Broersma.

"It was a weird moment, because of physical, I was fine, Yes, you did. "I realized that the body was hurt and other things, but nothing was so unusual, it was just a thought in my head, I had to fight through those feelings and say to myself, you know, you can still do it. Target, like, a 100-foot foot foot rate."

15 day, Hunt-Broersma facing another obstacle, you're about to split every day into two marathon once in 210-95, and there's time to take care of you. However, after some of you wondered if the FM was right with "rules," Hunt-Broersma felt you had no choice but to run FM the same night, completed at midnight, only five minutes before the new day.

After completing the first start of the F-104, Hunt-Broersma begins the Guinness Book of Records. The current record is 95-five-year-5 running on 95 on Alyssa Clark, five. This process will last months, Hunt-Broersma needs to hand over evidence like GPX files on every run, shoot a shot at a destination, between destination, video, evidence and witness.

"That process seems harder than running", Hunt-Broersma is joking.

She had to have one leg amputated after being diagnosed with Ewing sarcoma infection - a rare cancer that affects bones or tissues around bones - in 2001. Thanks to jogging since 2016, Hunt-Broersma began to understand what her body could do.

"When you become a handicap, you'll feel a lot of restrictions, everyone says,"8216666666th;you can't do this, you can't do that." Hunt-Broersma says, "And when I wear a jogging leg, it's a feeling of freedom, I feel like I'm flying and I'm doing what I used to think I can't."

Hunt-Broersma started with a five-mile range and soon past the 10-mile mileage, HM and FM, and now heading to the marathon.

Hunt-Broersma is training to compete in Leadville 100-mile leagues (160-km) organized here in Leadville, state of Colorado, Mont8 and bring Moab 240-mile-mile-mile-mile radius, over the Utah, over the mountains, and we's.

This is a very far from the days Hunt-Broersma started running. "There is one thing that makes me feel ashamed of myself, Hunt-Broersma said, "I don't want to be a handicap, I don't want everyone to see me differently, jogging it to me, I can be myself, I know I can run a mile away, do a lot of things at my own time.

On the test of 104 FM, Hunt-Broersma has been mobilized near 200.00 0 USD for Amputee Blade Runners, a prosthetic charity for prosthetic team to run for a mile-eight-mile-mile back on the list of his head. Like Hunt-Broersma passed your own target and ran 104 FM in ten days of continuity.

"Run for me to understand that I can do more than that," Hunt-Broersma said, "I think it's a great way to show you what you can do when you're out of your own safety."

Latest Comments
Sign in to comment
Send
No comments