Times Standard (Eureka)

Man runs 218 miles to virus stricken ‘Nana’s’ nursing home

- By Luis Andres Henao

SCRANTON, PA. » Endurance athlete Corey Cappelloni once ran six days through the Sahara Desert in what’s considered the most grueling foot race on Earth. But a 218-mile run to grandma after she was sickened with COVID-19 turned out to be the longest, toughest and most rewarding of his life.

Cappelloni spent seven days covering the distance from his home in Washington, D.C., to the nursing home where 98-yearold Ruth Andres, lives in his hometown of Scranton, Pennsylvan­ia, arriving June 19 to cheers, flags and purple balloons, her favorite color.

Dozens of workers at the Allied Services Skilled Nursing & Rehab Center applauded as he crossed the finish line. Out of breath but smiling, he pointed to “Nana’s” fourthfloo­r room, where she peered through the window. A sign hung outside read, “I Love You Corey.”

“Nana, you’re a strong person,” Cappelloni said into a cellphone and microphone, as a nurse held up the other end of the line to Andres. “You’re going on 99, and you still have many more miles.”

Unable to visit in person out of safety concerns for residents, he promised to give her a long-awaited hug soon.

Cappelloni’s “Run for Ruth” has raised more than $24,000 so far for smartphone­s and tablets to help older adults isolated due to the pandemic communicat­e with loved ones.

It also aimed to raise awareness about residents and caregivers in such facilities, many of which have been hit hard by the coronaviru­s, and to honor the lives lost, including Cappelloni’s great-uncle Charles Gloman, who died May 11.

Andres was diagnosed in early June. She began running a high fever, was too weak to talk some days and had to get supplement­al oxygen. Cappelloni, who was calling daily, noticed she was becoming more and more afraid.

“She was no longer able to have family, visitors, friends visit her,” he said. “And she became a little depressed, so I knew that I had to do something to try to uplift her spirits.”

At first he sent photo books from his travels around the world. Then his girlfriend, Susan Kamenar, had an idea: What if he ran to her?

So he set out northward along trails and streets, through forests and residentia­l neighborho­ods. Kamenar followed behind in an RV the couple rented to better maintain social distancing while eating and sleeping.

Cappelloni had been training for an ultramarat­hon scheduled for midMarch, but he pulled out because of the pandemic. He ran an ultramarat­hon in Peru in December, and was still in good shape.

But even though he’d previously finished races like the more than 150mile (251-kilometer) Marathon des Sables in Morocco, he wasn’t sure he could endure the equivalent of seven ultramarat­hons of 31.2 miles (50.2 kilometers), longer than a standard 26.2-mile (42.2kilometer) marathon, in as many days.

 ?? PHOTOS BY JESSIE WARDARSKI — AP PHOTO ?? Nursing home workers cheer as Corey Cappelloni completes his seventh ultramarat­hon in seven days in Scranton, Pa. Cappelloni ran roughly 218 miles from Washington, D.C., to Scranton to visit his 98-year-old grandmothe­r and raise awareness for older adults in isolation amid the coronaviru­s pandemic.
PHOTOS BY JESSIE WARDARSKI — AP PHOTO Nursing home workers cheer as Corey Cappelloni completes his seventh ultramarat­hon in seven days in Scranton, Pa. Cappelloni ran roughly 218 miles from Washington, D.C., to Scranton to visit his 98-year-old grandmothe­r and raise awareness for older adults in isolation amid the coronaviru­s pandemic.
 ??  ?? Ruth Andres, 98, left, looks through her fourth-story window at Allied Services Skilled Nursing & Rehab Center as she awaits the arrival of grandson Corey Cappelloni in Scranton, Pa.
Ruth Andres, 98, left, looks through her fourth-story window at Allied Services Skilled Nursing & Rehab Center as she awaits the arrival of grandson Corey Cappelloni in Scranton, Pa.

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