Friday, January 30, 2009

Taylor's Tale

"There is a road from the eye to heart that does not go through the intellect."
G.K. Chesteron

The magic is there. We've all seen it, felt it and experienced it. Girls on the Run has this mysterious way of exposing something from deep inside…something raw, real and vulnerable. Like unpolished ruby or emerald, the beauty revealed rests not in the glimmer of the gem, but in the cracks, dirt and crevices that weave their way through the daunting red or green.

Daunting, glimmering, real and vulnerable…Words to describe my new friend Taylor.

Taylor is in fifth grade. Average build and average height, Taylor looks like many fifth grade girls. Short blonde hair that bobs up and down when she runs…her stride is colt-like, unsteady a bit but beautiful and innocent in its being that way. She loves Miley Cyrus and has a dog named Sunshine. Her sister and brother are a lot older and her parents are older than most of the other girls’ parents too, but that’s okay with her. She likes being the baby in her family. “My mom says I’m special.”

In the summer after second grade Taylor was diagnosed with Batten Disease, a degenerative neurological disorder that begins first by attacking the optic nerve. In second grade, Taylor could see and now in fifth grade she can no longer. But that wasn’t stopping her. When the Girls on the Run brochure came home in her back pack, she begged her mom to sign her up. And so…a two foot rope with handles on either end would be Taylor’s lifeline to our program. Each step she would take around that school track would have her hand on one end and her sixteen year old running buddy’s hand on the other.

Over the course of the 12-weeks the girls were, as we all know, training for their big 5k while playing games and activities to enhance their confidence. It was about 2/3 of the way into the 12 weeks, on the date of her practice 5k that I got to meet Taylor.

The weather was crisp, stringy white clouds suspended like small spider webs beneath a round yellow sun. Balloons lined the track as did a handful of parents and supporters.

Forty-five minutes or so into the practice 5k all but one of the girls had finished. Many of them were resting beside the track, chatting with their parents, classmates, other runners. Some were eating cookies, oranges and holding joyfully onto the certificates that signified their first 5k finish.

When Taylor came around.

“How many laps do you have left Taylor?” one girl asked.

Taylor stopped, head slightly cocked to one side, her face moving in the direction of the inquiring voice. “Just one more. I’ve got just one more!” She shouted out enthusiastically.

There was a momentum building…the spectators were cheering, clapping and encouraging her, when one girl asked, “Taylor can I run it with you?”

Taylor turned her face to the enthusiastic query. “YES. YES. Please do. Please do run with me.” She bubbled over.

A sudden surge in energy, another girl chimed in. “Can I run with you Taylor?”

And another. “How about me? Can I run with you Taylor?”

Before Taylor had taken twenty steps into her final lap, all nine other girls in her Girls on the Run group had joined her. Magically they encircled her, each gently placing a hand on her.--one on a shoulder, one on her back, one gently touching her arm, another her fingertips. And, in the center Taylor beamed. She trusted, let go and lifted her head toward the sky to feel the sun’s warmth kiss her cheek. A smile as big as California, stretched from ear to ear across that beautiful fair skin…light radiating from her every step, every thought, her every tear.

And if that wasn’t enough…Somewhere over the course of that last lap, something miraculous happened. Taylor let go of her rope. She honored that moment, her circumstances and her state of being by surrendering to them. She let go and took hold of something far greater. She held onto the love that reveals itself when we open our eyes to the stuff that really matters…like compassion, tenderness and acceptance.

I watched in awe…at what would certainly be a dot on the timeline of my life…an important moment when all that I have ever known would shift…all of the cells in my body, my neurological pathways that had carried information in one way would now be carried and realigned in a slightly different way…transformed from what I was becoming to what I am becoming.

When I run, I see what is real, present and good in the world.

2 comments:

  1. Molly this is amazing story and I really love the experience girls on the run has not only for the girls, but for the coaches. I was honored to coach and when I get a car I am going to be a coach in Chapel Hill. If you ever talk to her again, please tell her I said anything is possible it is all in HOPE and COURAGE!

    Powerful!
    Jessie L.

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  2. Jessie...you are, undoubtedly one of the most radiant souls around. Love to you.

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