Tuesday, 6 November 2007
Running Blind - Gary Wells
An insight to running blind in the Great North Run
All the training in the world could not prepare me for the challenge
ahead, I thought I had done enough preparation for the blindfolded
race but it proved to be tougher than expected.
The day had come, the start was minutes away and I was looking around
at the other 40,000 runners eagerly awaiting to see the start line
pass under their feet. The horn went and that was it, the blindfold
was on, it was lights out and I was in the hands of my guide, Karl. I
did not even see the start line under my feet, people were brushing
past my left shoulder, bumping me as they strived for the best start.
Karl kept me on a tight lead for the first mile as we started to
settle into a dark pace. The roars of encouragement seem to be ten
times as loud as normal but one spectator drowned them all as he said
" look at him, he's got a blindfold on". The next three miles went to
plan as I had ran up to this distance blindfolded before during
training, the sounds of feet striking the road and the crowd cheering
seemed enhanced as my sight was blocked. Five miles went by and we was
on target with our 8 minute miling but then I caught the heels of
someone in front of me which knocked me off my stride. I could hear my
heart thumping in a little panic as I reached out waiting to run into
someone but there was nothing there. Karl eased the nerves whilst
guiding me back to space, this reminded me that this was not going to
be an easy task. Approaching mid point in the course the sun is
shining and I felt hot, a little dizzy and a little sickly. Karl says
a drink station is ahead and I ask him to grab a water a bottle. I
feel Karl reached for a bottle and it happened again. I collided with
a runner who stopped dead in front of me only this time the sense of
panic increased as I felt my ankle twist. Karl tugged the lead hard to
pull me towards him as I stumble for the second time, once again I
could feel my heart thumping, my hand reaching out for space. With panic over and a little water on board we started to climb yet another hill, "nearly there" said Karl, "keep going".
All I could do was keep pounding upwards, the sense of not being able
to see made the hill hard work as I had no goal to aim for. You can
feel the road under your feet level off at the top of the climb and
this is a welcome feeling. Mile 10 passes, the crowd still shout for
us, the odd runner flies by shouting "well done lads, keep it up, only 3 miles to go"
My legs are now starting to tire, my eyes are now starting to ache,
even though I had them closed, and a head ache was now starting to
annoy me. I ran silent, as I was knew the last hill was going to be
tough, and tried to prepare myself for another bout of climbing. "A bit of a climb now"
says Karl, you can feel the incline of the road start to raise and my
legs tighten as we start to climb. Other runners sense I was tiring
and pat me on the back as they struggle past which gives me the urge to soldier on.
Karl tells me people are walking now and I can hear others puffing
their way up the hill. I try to pick up the pace, but struggle as now
more of me start to ache, even my left arm was now aching as I had
been clinging on to the lead, my lifeline, for over 1½ hours now. We
were at the top, a welcome relief and Karl urged me to run fast down
the last hill which I did to my surprise. As we turned the last corner
I was rapidly running out of fuel, my left leg was dead, energy levels
were at an all time low and my headache was now in full swing. I felt
delirious, as if I was drunk, but my hearing had always seemed to be
at a super level throughout the run. With 800 yards to go my left leg
was now numb and kept failing me, I could feel the lead tighten as
Karl was urging me on. Nearly there I thought! I could feel the
anxiety of the crowd as I somehow knew they were watching open mouthed
willing me on. My leg gives again and then I hear a voice saying "do
you want a lift with him to the line?" as another Guide Dog runner
grabs my arm to ensure I cross the line. It was over, I had done it!
As I gasped for air, Karl removed my blind fold to reveal the strong
sun light to make sure I was ok but it made things worse. I staggered
around feeling sick, unable to focus and for a few seconds unable to
breath. A first aid crew was on standby and as I tried to focus I
could make out a wheelchair in front of me. Somehow the feeling of
euphoria took over me, my eyes were beginning to focus, aches
beginning to subside and I stood up straight and walked over to
collect my medal thanking God that I was lucky enough have my sight and to be able to see my medal.
My good friend, Blind Dave, congratulates me having tried to put my
self in his shoes, but after 'running blind' he is the one who
deserves the credit. He is the one who will never see the start, the
crowd, the road, the scenery, the famous land marks, the finish, his
medal, his finishers T-shirt but nevertheless, his disability does not
stop him from doing what he loves to do....anything he wants to!
Blog 2
Running Blind: The Final Chapter
Driving home from the Great North Run on the 1st October was a drive I
will not forget for a long time to come, emotions where high as I had
just completed the first of three blindfolded runs and a personal best at that!
After driving for an hour, my eyes where aching non stop from the
pressure of the blindfold during the half marathon, my legs did not
feel like my own and the feeling of sickness kept me company for the whole trip home.
The feeling of sickness seemed to increase once I realised that this
was only the first of three blindfolded runs but hey, I will make a
full recovery, unlike the blind!
Liverpool was the next stop where Mac was guiding both myself and
Blind Dave around the 10K course, a race that Mac was not looking forward to.
After a brief interview with the local radio station at the start it
was time to embark on race number two but it was with a difference as
we started at the very back of the pack. This was new to us all as
none of us had ever started last before and as I donned the blindfold
for a second time, the look of despair on Macs face was one to
remember! Soon we were amongst the pack and trying to get three
abreast through a pack of over 3500 people is not an easy task, even
with sight. "Blind runners coming through" Mac would shout as I
clipped the heels of fellow runners. People parted in amazement as
they saw us pass and I have to say, everyone we passed gave us huge encouragement which made us feel at ease some what.
Feeling at ease did not last long as the pack tightened towards a
bottle neck, "stay close to me" said Mac, "Dave you go first". My
heart missed a beat when I heard Mac ask Dave to go first, that really
was the Blind leading the Blind but with a few training runs around
his home town of West Brom, I have learned to trust his judgement. The
rest of the race was much the same and we even managed a good pace
towards the end as the pack thinned. Mac did a tremendous job, guiding
us from very last to over half way up the pack and to a finishing time
of just over 52 minutes. This race was all about raising awareness for
Guide Dogs and with coverage from local radio and newspapers, this was definitely mission accomplished.
The next stop was The Great South, held in Portsmouth, which is a ten
mile race on the flat. Krazy Karl once again was my guide for the
race, the last one of three was about to begin. We managed to get to
the very front of the first wave and as we watched Mac and Blind Dave
leave before us I was donning the blindfold for the last time. It was
starting to rain as we started but it had not dampened my spirits as
we got off to a flying start with the first mile done in little over 7
minutes. Karl was keeping an eye on times and we agreed we needed to
slow down. It was now raining hard and as mile two passed, once again
it took just over 7 minutes. I could hear the chants from the crowds, who where out in force despite the weather.
Kids would shout "look there's Superman" as we pass. The road surface
would change from cobbles to tarmac, the rain was pouring down and we
had
8 miles to go. There was more space around us this time than at the
previous runs, a thing I am sure you sense easier when you have no sight.
This made for better running and as we approached mile 5 I was feeling
very Olympic especially as I heard Mac and Dave shout encouragement as
they passed on the return leg of the course. It was then Karl said "oh
no, my lace has come undone, keep going it will be alright". I urged
Karl to stop as he was now dragging his foot to keep his shoe on and
reminded him that if he falls, I fall too! This put me off my pace a
little but with cheering out of our names from the crowd, we were soon back up to speed.
As we ran close to the finish, I could hear the excitement of the
closing stages of the Elite runners but we had over 3 to do yet before
we doubled back. As we turned to run back down the sea front at around
mile 8, the wind took our breath away but with encouraging words from
Karl I focused on running the last 2 miles. With a mile to go, Karl
was pushing me to run faster but the flying start was taking its toll
and I promised myself to keep the same pace and not flake out at the
finish line. The first I knew of the finish was Karl shouting "ok, ok,
ok, stop, you have finished", he had made up his mind not to tell me
when I had crossed the line in order for me to keep the pace up. It
worked as we crossed the line in 1 hour and
19 minutes, another personal best!!
Having completed three races, blindfolded, there was something a
little different about the last one, some kind of weird feeling which
I could not put to rest, something that stands out from the other
two....... Then, I realised the difference! Unlike the other two, I
had just ran a race but I have no idea where! Yes, in Portsmouth, but
that's it. Yes I knew that I would not see the sights along the way,
the celebrities competing or the crowds lining the roads but it's a
very strange feeling, almost a dizzy one, knowing you have just ran a
race but don't know where. You see, the Great North and Liverpool, I
know well but Portsmouth is a place I have never been before so this
is kind of unique to me. Then I get to thinking about Blind Dave and
realise that all his races are like this and that the man himself deserves more credit than most for running without sight.
The whole idea for me with these three races was to put myself in Daves'
shoes and to try and understand what running blind feels like. Every
runner in every race can soak up the atmosphere, the excitement, feel
the adrenalin, see the crowds cheering you along but without sight all
these are left to a blind mans imagination.
Dave loves to run and as long as he can run, he will carry on
inspiring people like me and raising thousands of pounds year after
year for his beloved charity, Guide Dogs. But let me tell you a
little secret about my good friend, Dave would hang up his running
shoes without any hesitation just to be able to see again even if it
was just for one last race!
Dave, you are definitely a Superhero, I would like to thank you for
all your help and support during this challenge and wish you all the
best for forthcoming events.
Garry Wells
Great North Run Weekend
We traveled up on the Saturday morning, Uncle Pete taking us in the Team Bus, along with Garry, who we were picking up from his home in Wigan, we had another team member, a chap called Huw, he is the commentator for the Bunbury’s and after last years cricket game, agreed to take part in the North run, in aid of guide dogs.
After stopping off at Scotch Corner, for a cuppa and a slice of Aunty Mavis’s cake, nobody particularly likes the lemon cake she has done in the past, so I asked her nicely to bake me one and suddenly every one decided it was very nice, so after ending up with only one slice, Grrrr, we carried on to Newcastle and the expo. We met up with some of the other guide dogs supporters and they came out for a meal with us on the Saturday night, had a mosey round and a chat with the Lucozade Sports team, persuading them to give us a few bottles of various drinks, Uncle Pete seeing these, frowned, “Where are you going to put that lot”, we squeezed it in the team bus. Lucozade got me to do a video diary, explaining the challenge for next year and to the delight of the Lucozade team I convinced Kay, one of their team to run the last leg in London with us next year and it’s been captured on film, no getting out of it now Kay!
I still can’t believe 12 months has passed by, 30th September and another Great north run. Up with the larks, that’s if you’ve slept at all, kit on, check you have your number and chip, we had another blind young lady meeting us at the Lodge, as Garry was guiding her this year, we set off for the start of the world famous half marathon. The start and the morning to me is always brilliant, there is a great buzz about the place, the PA system blurting out music and information, thousands of runners preparing to start. First stop for us all, even before the baggage bus is the toilet, then we made our way to the start area, being blind I get to start directly behind the wheelchair competitors, this year Garry was also with us as he was guiding Sue.
A great result this morning I had an interview with the BBC which was broadcasted nationally, they gave some good publicity for the challenge next year, 7 marathons, in 7 days, over 7 continents, the interviewer was Jonathan Edwards, Olympic triple jumper, mind the funny thing is they had to fetch me out of the bushes for the interview, when nature calls, one has to participate and I was desperate! The funny thing was, I asked where the camera would be pointing, I was told from my waist up, it was a relief as the paper overalls I was wearing to stay warm were around my ankles, please don’t drop the camera down I thought, my street cred would have gone in an instant, they didn’t and I’m safe.
The hooter went for the start of the 27th Great North run, the wheelchairs went and so did I, as the elite women started 5 minutes after us and the elite men and the masses 30 minutes later, we like to see how far we can get before they over take us. Paula Radcliff passed us around 3 miles, Mac told me when she was passing and I gave her a real good shout, welcome back I thought, we normally hold the men off until around ten and a half miles, but today we were moving along a bit quicker it seems, we held them off until nearly 12 miles. The run was very relaxed today; a lot of the crowd had seen my interview that morning and were wishing us all the best for the challenge next year. We were having a great banter with the crowd, especially the kids, giving them all an Oggy Oggy Oggy as we passed by, to be honest I felt absolutely great today. The miles passed by until the elite runners passed us at 12 miles, Mac suggested we were running very well and should we up the pace, he’s a sadist, but I managed a few paces quicker, down the hill to the finish apparently I was storming, we passed the guide dogs cheering bus and they were surprised, just managed a quick photo, mind after the last mile the finish was very welcome, our time 1 hour 34 minutes 20 seconds, yes I was pleased with that.
We got back to the guide dogs marquee and a nice drink and an even nicer massage, oh how the legs needed that, and then I pondered on the 7 marathons next year, perhaps we won’t think that far ahead, not just yet. Garry and sue came through some time later and said they had been interviewed as the first blind pairing back, we must have been shifting a bit quick as the officials must have missed us, never the mind it created some banter and that’s always good for relaxing, fancy the donkey getting that sort of recognition! Sue you need to make him run a lot quicker next time. Huw came through in just under 3 hours, to be fair he power walked all the way, he wanted to finish in around 3 to 3 ½ hours, but to his surprise he finished in under 3 hours, what a result and after a cup of tea and a massage he has told me he will be doing it with us again next year, an even bigger result.
Well yet another Great North over, my sixth one, only the South to do and we then really knuckle down to some serious training for the challenge ahead, how quick it is coming, the legs are starting to quiver already! So with Mac and myself happy, Sue and the donkey, Garry, happy and Huw certainly happy, it’s heads down in the team bus and a sleepy ride home, hopefully I’ll wake up for next weeks blog, so it’s Blind Dave signing off.
Monday, 24 September 2007
September so far
Great Yorkshire run, in Sheffield, I hadn’t run for nearly two weeks as Mac my guide had been on holiday and so had I, so it was going to be a blow out to get sorted again. The run was 10 k and challenging, quite hilly but to be fair an enjoyable run, puffing like an old Billy goat and the legs hurt, finished in 44.o4 minutes and thoroughly enjoyed the run, will certainly go back again next year.
Must now put in some serious training for the North, although we are slowly working in a training schedule for the challenge next year, so the North will be a hard training run, would like to run it in around 1 hour 30/35 minutes.
Monday 10th Sept.
Approx 8 mile run, through the town and parklands, legs were hurting from yesterday, but we had quite a brisk but relaxed run.
Tuesday rest
Wednesday 12th Sept.
Same run as Monday, relaxed run chatting pace with about a 30-minute tempo in the middle.
Thursday 13th September Same course again, morning run with another guide, brisk run with 6 3-minute efforts, with 2 minutes rest in between.
Friday 14th September approx 8 mile run through and around town, with hills, brisk run working hills.
Saturday 15th September Our first long run, not specifically for the North, the training is stepping up for the challenge next year, out and around town, 15 mile, steady at chatting pace.
Sunday 16th September In the morning incorporating our Monday run with extra to make it up to 11 mile, steady chatting running with a few points where we forced the pace occasionally.
Sunday evening a relatively quick 7 mile run incorporating a couple of miles off road along a local canal, fitness is coming back rather quicker than expected.
Thursday, 6 September 2007
Blind Dave
Dave was born 24th November 1957, but any one asking him, on his next birthday he will be 39 and 132 months. He was always known as a clumsy kid, never a day passed without cuts, bruises or a broken pair of glasses, until at around ten years of age all was revealed, he was diagnosed with an eye complaint called Retinitas Pigmentosa, just a slight problem, it meant he was going blind. When first diagnosed he was quite a celebrity at school, “Wow Dave’s going blind”, no one else was so it was a case of “ I’ve got some thing you haven’t got”. He attended mainstream schools, Greets Green Junior and
The realisation of his eye complaint hit him with some force at the age of seventeen, his career in the army shattered and with all his friends taking driving tests made him realise the true implications of going blind, it was at this point he inwardly started feeling sorry for himself, “Why me”, but in life there are two paths to tread, negative or positive and as he will tell you he took the positive route.
Regardless of his sight problem, he’s had a varied working career, mainly office bound, other than his short stint on a fork lift truck, he admits he wasn’t always honest about his sight problem, he had his own company for around seven years, distributing suspended ceilings, partitions, dry lining and joinery, he loved the buying and selling but with bad luck, bad debt and bad eye sight, all good things come to an end. After spending three years at the
Dave tried hard over the years to conceal his blindness but with his eyesight gradually declining the accidents kept increasing until he had to admit defeat and resort to using the white stick, which made him feel incapable, vulnerable and extremely frustrated
Suddenly overnight Dave’s life was changed when he was introduced to Peter his first Guide Dog. No longer the hunched figure trawling the footpath, but full of confidence, standing and walking tall, feeling very proud, striding out with a sure footed four legged friend, mobility assured, as for independence, the perfect recipe for adventure, with a social life, second to none, his only regret is not having a Guide Dog sooner.
For fun he’s up for most challenges, he’s had a go at most things, ski-ing, water ski-ing, horse riding, cliff jumping in Corfu, drove around Brands Hatch, rode motor bikes, drove a tank in the Highlands of Scotland, abseiled, was let loose in a speed boat, completed the Go Ape course in Grisedale forest, an Aerial assault course in the trees and he certainly enjoys his running. Competing in many half marathons, including the Great North and South runs and this year completing his fifth consecutive London marathon, in a very respectable time of 3 hours 30 minutes, with many other challenges yet to come. He has just heard that he is in the New York Marathon.
Dave cannot thank the Guide Dog Association enough for how they have changed his life, with the help of his wife Debbie, his three daughters, Grace, Georgie-lee and Dannie along with a very supportive family and a great bunch of friends they will continue to raise awareness and funds, when and where ever they can, to date raising well over £100,000. In recognition of his charity work he was invited to
Blind Dave, along with his three guide dogs, firstly Peter, secondly Carla and now Wicksie his latest, would like to thank each and every one of you for your kind and generous support.