Yesterday
was like any other Monday morning; got the kids up for school, dropped off
Liam, and was ready to bring Owen to school. We stopped a Dunkin Donuts and we
sat down at a table so Owen could enjoy his donut, and me, my coffee.
A man
behind us heard me talking to Owen and asked, “Where are you from?” Living away
from Boston and New England since 1997, I am very used to the question. I know
I sound “different” outside of the New England area. Even in New York City, people can
pick up on where I am from by my strong accent.
“I am
from the Boston area. I grew up about 20 miles north of the city on the New
Hampshire/Massachusetts bordah," I said.
“Have you been in New York a long time,” he
continued. “Yes, I moved here in 2001 after the 9/11 attacks. I really wanted to
be closer to home and to my family,” I said. “But, I left Boston in 1997,” I
added. (I lived in various cities before heading to NY.)
“Oh, still
got that accent though ey,” he laughed. “I used to travel to Boston a lot.
Boston is a great city. I love the people. They are a bit crazy about their
sports teams up there though,” he added. (Like NY isn’t! I wanted to reply.)
I
proceeded to talk to him for about five minutes or so about what a great day it
was going to be in the city; how it was the Boston Marathon, Patriot’s Day, how the
Red Sox play at Fenway Park and everyone has the day off from school and work.
It is an awesome day to be in Boston.
“Oh," he
said. "I will have to make it up there for that one year. Sounds like fun.”
(At the Red Sox game on Patriot's Day in 2006 with my sister Shannon)
We parted
ways. I took Owen to school. I thought about all my friends, family and fellow
New Englanders enjoying the day. I longed to be there, to see the runners, and to
run another marathon with my family at the finish line cheering me on. (I have run in four marathons, so many races and several triathalons too-- see above picture taken in 2002 in NY!)
I have
always been proud of my New England roots. I wear a Boston Red Sox hat to
Yankee games (despite Paul’s protests and pleads!). I walk around New York City
with my Patriots jersey every October and; I dress my boys in as many Boston
sports team logos as my husband can stomach. I am proud of where I am from…
accent and all!
(At the Yankee game in the Bronx with Paul -- no fear!)
And, after
a two-year injury I had just started running again. So I was doing the happy
dance yesterday watching the Boston Marathon. Two of my favorite things…
running and Boston, I was psyched. I shut the TV off at 2:48 p.m. to head to
Liam’s school to pick him up from his day. We went to go get a bagel. The marathon was on
the TV in the bagel place. “Breaking news at the Boston Marathon….” My first thought was it was
news surrounding some sort of Rosie Ruiz controversy. (The Cuban American was
declared the winner in the female category for the 84th Boston Marathon in 1980,
only to have her title stripped after it was discovered that she had not run
the entire course.)
But no! The
unimaginable. The horror. We asked the bagel place to shut off the TV. School
had just gotten out and the shop was filled with elementary school children
that are far too innocent to be subjected to the images that had now become our
new reality.
I wanted
home. My home in NYC where I was safe to cry and to find out what had taken
place; My “home” in Boston where so many of my friends and family live.
I
couldn’t bring myself to lace up my shoes to run, like I had planned on Monday
night. I was up late into the night and early morning watching the news,
combing through Facebook. I don’t know what I was looking for. I think I felt
that if I kept watching maybe I could get some glimmer of good news. That no
one had died. That people just got some cuts and bruises. That the authorities
caught the people that did this. But, none of those things happened.
Today, I
laced up my sneakers, and went out to tackle four miles on the East River in
New York City. I couldn't run long enough, hard enough or strong enough today to
take away the numb feeling. Like so many
of you, I still weep (and probably will for quite some time) for so many
things.
I weep
for the thousands of runners who didn’t cross the finish line and trained
through the long, hard, snowy winter; Their moment was stolen. I weep for the
victims who were out there at the finish line to support the runners, who at
mile 26 need the mental and physical support; Now, they need support more than
ever. I weep for little Martin Richard, who will never grow up to run his own
marathon with his Dad. I weep for the Richard family and so many other
families. I weep for my running community, this marathon and others will never
be the same. I weep for my city.
As that
man said to me in Dunkin Donuts on Monday morning before the world got a little
darker, “You people from New England are a tough group.” Yes, yes we are! Keep
the light and love shining through Boston. We are a tough group.



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