The Commercial Appeal

Three-time cancer survivor ready to run St. Jude 10K

- David Williams Special to The Commercial Appeal

There’s no heartbreak hill in the races of St. Jude Memphis Marathon weekend, where flat stretches and modest rises are the rule. But there’s a half-mile sweep that will make your heart swell.

It’s early in the course, when Shadyac Avenue gives way to Danny Thomas Place and the campus of St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. Patients and families, caregivers and supporters, come out to cheer on the runners. Signs are waved and cowbells ring out. Highfives are exchanged and uplift achieved.

“There’s just so many emotions,” said Hillary Husband, rememberin­g last year’s run through campus in the 5K. “And it wasn’t like a crying emotion. It was like an excited emotion. Empowering and inspiring and overjoyed and happy.”

She should know — and not just as a race veteran.

Husband is a three-time cancer survivor whose St. Jude story captures the very spirit of Marathon weekend. Con-

currently undergoing treatment and honor those who didn’t survive. It’s also when they take the heart-tugging run on the portion of the course winding through the St. Jude campus, with patients and caregivers lined up to cheer them on.

It is, in other words, a homecoming in the truest sense.

Hugs and high-fives

“I plan on being part of this ‘til the day I die. I mean, I can’t imagine that first week of December without doing this because it’s such a highlight of my year,” said Dean Ives, a Hendersonv­ille, Tenn., runner who lost his daughter, Sydney, to a brain tumor at St. Jude in 2009.

The devotion of former patients and family members helps explain why many participan­ts return again and again, and why the race has continued to grow in recent years, in contrast to national trends. They’re not only avid participan­ts, but major fundraiser­s, with roughly two-thirds of patient family runners signed up as St. Jude Heroes.

For Don Raborn, this year’s event will be the 15th he’s run. He began participat­ing when his son Jake was being treated for hepatoblas­toma, a liver cancer, and continued in the years since he lost his child in 2006 at age 4.

“I don’t run it for the athletic part of it. I run it to talk to the other families and talk to the supporters and the people who come and thank them and tell them about Jake and St. Jude,” said Raborn, 46, who lives in Texas and is a producwho tion supervisor in the oil and gas industry.

“Even though we lost Jake, even though he passed away, it’s everything St. Jude provided us. They provided us hope that our son might be cured.”

Raborn follows the same routine each year. After the pasta party Friday night, he and a few others, including a nurse who treated Jake, drive the Marathon course posting about 40 to 50 “Team Jake” signs along the way. Some have pictures of the youngster, others carry inspiratio­nal messages.

Once he’s completed his 5K race, Raborn returns to the course to encourage runners in the Half Marathon and Marathon. He holds a sign with Jake’s picture and the message, “Thanks for running for my angel.”

Many of the runners respond. “You got people stopping and hugging me — I mean, complete strangers hugging me and high-fiving me. It’s just a really good feeling.”

For Raborn, Marathon Weekend offers a salve for his grief, a “kind of therapy,” he said. It also makes him feel closer to Jake.

“I just feel like I’m going back home a little bit. You know, maybe he’s there, maybe he’s in the halls of St. Jude (or) on the Marathon course watching over me.”

Safe havens and old friends

At the Marathon Expo at the Memphis Cook Convention Center, T-shirts from a projected 70 or more patient family running teams are a sign of the vast support that loved ones muster around St. Jude patients.

And runners can get armbands -purple for bereaved family members and gold signifying current patients or those are cured or in remission -- to wear during the race.

On the day before the race, about 600 runners who include former patients and family members will travel from the expo to St. Jude to tour the hospital.

To Paula Head, a senior philanthro­pic adviser for ALSAC, the fundraisin­g and awareness organizati­on for St. Jude, there’s no mystery as to why patient families continue to support the hospital after their children are cured, or even after they’ve passed away.

“They just want to stay connected in the mission,” said Head, a bereaved mother herself who works with patient families engaged in fundraisin­g for St. Jude, “They don’t want any other family to have to be on the journey that they’ve already gone through.”

Physicians who work at St. Jude know all about the bond between patients and the hospital. Dr. Michael Neel, consulting physician in the Department of Surgery, said it’s “just seeing old friends who were there with you in the trenches” that makes patient families stay connected. As he has several times in the past, Neel plans to walk the 5K backward this year alongside former patients.

Head can attest to the emotional heft the armbands have for patients and families. Last year, she noticed a bereaved father waiting at the entrance of the Patient Family Suite at the Marathon Expo and invited him in.

“I was just crying, and he was crying, and he took my arm and he said, ‘I need one of those purple bands.’ It was so emotional, and we just shared that bond. And he said, ‘I’ve lost a child, just like you.’ And that’s all it took. I put that purple band on him and we just stood there and hugged.”

The armbands make the race and the St. Jude cause all the more tangible. At mile 16 or 18, during that toughest spot in the race, a runner might look beside them and see someone with an armband, a symbol of the much more difficult journey that family has had with cancer or other catastroph­ic illness.

Coming home

The portion of the race course through the St. Jude campus gives participan­ts an up-close look at what they’re running for. It is the highlight of the event for many of the former patients and family members who return year after year.

“Going through the campus is just the most overwhelmi­ng feeling, and seeing the kids on the sideline and just knowing that I think I’m at the point where it’s not about me being sick anymore, and that’s not really why we do it — we do it for those kids,” Elliott said.

Last year, Ives, the runner from Hendersonv­ille, completed his first full Marathon. He remembers passing through campus at about mile five and seeing among the spectators a St. Jude doctor to whom he’d become close since Sydney’s death.

“He was standing out there when I was running my Marathon, and he saw me, and we were both tearing up, but he started running alongside of me and we were jumping up and down,” Ives said.

Ives was more than 20 miles from the finish line, but in many ways he’d already made it home.

Tom Charlier is a writer at ALSAC, the fundraisin­g and awareness organizati­on for St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. He worked as a journalist in Memphis for more than 25 years.

 ?? ST. JUDE CHILDREN’S RESEARCH HOSPITAL ?? Hillary Husband is congratula­ted by friend Jay Cardiello after the 2017 St. Jude Memphis Marathon 5K.
ST. JUDE CHILDREN’S RESEARCH HOSPITAL Hillary Husband is congratula­ted by friend Jay Cardiello after the 2017 St. Jude Memphis Marathon 5K.

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