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    SCTEx run highlights Pinoy’s heart of gold
     

    ANYTIME you think you’ve seen enough, think again, dolls and guys.

    A while back, 10 hardy souls ran 94 kilometers on foot.  Ethiopians they were not.  Boston marathoners they were not.  Penal colony escapees they were not.

    Filipinos they all were, yes, but they were not really of the Olympic-type runners.  Believe it or not, they ran for a cause.

    “At first, my target was 45 km. But, after running 45 kilometers, I realized, konti na lang. After 45 kilometers, my target moved up to 70. So when I reached 70 kilometers, I said, mga 20 kilometers na lang, kaya pa.”

    Thus said Pen Nepomuceno, one of the 10 runners in the recent 94-km ultramarathon from Tarlac to Subic.

    Some days ago, I had covered the SCTEx (Subic-Clark-Tarlac Expressway) myself—but onboard the ninth generation Lancer on a historic test-drive.  But me negotiating it on foot?

    Nah!

    NOTHING compares with the poignancy of the runners’ mission: They did it for kids afflicted with cancer.  And they did it three days before the commercial opening of the SCTEx, the latest architectural road wonder in Luzon. 

    If only for its sheer beauty and world-class appeal, the SCTEx is yet another of the exceedingly few face-saving accomplishments of this deeply troubled administration.

    Take a bow, Ate Glow.

    DO you know that the marathon was one for the books?  

    Consider:  The runners made history by being the first to have traversed the SCTEx on foot.  They covered the mega highway for nearly 15 hours, enduring the summer-day heat, a cold night, almost blistered soles and sore muscles.

    To Pen and her nine pals, the run looked insurmountable—what with barely a month’s training to prop them up.

    OVER time, though, the group would learn to overcome overwhelming odds. For, indeed, what is pain when done for a cause?

    Others may shun such a noble cause for one reason or another, but not these 10 Chosen Ones. They did it for the benefit of the Cancer Fund and Child Life Program of the Kythe Foundation, a nongovernment organization that provides psychosocial care for pediatric patients in government hospitals around the country.

    The runners began their project in 2007 with the “Run for Your Life,” a fundraising project for Kythe Foundation by negotiating a 100-kilometer race.

    LONG after the vision and mission was hatched, the runners looked for kindred souls donating P500 for every kilometer run.

    On its first 100-km run in July, the group raised P250,000. By its third race, it fetched P450,000.

    The group members are welded together by the loss of a loved one due to cancer.  

    But the Pinoy Ultra Runners also extend help to those who have no means and resources to avail themselves of expensive medicines for cancer.

    “The poorer patients’ fight against cancer may seem hopeless. But just like running 100 kilometers continuously, where there is sheer will and a solid support network, the battle can be won,” said one of the runners.

    OVER time, Nepomuceno and her pals would plod on and on.  Then they got invited by the Bases Conversion and Development Authority (BCDA) to run the SCTEx as a highlight of the highway’s opening celebration dubbed the “94-K Weekend.” The event was cosponsored by the Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority (SBMA) and Clark Development Corp.

    During the SCTEx run, the varying temperature from one hot afternoon to one cold evening slowed the pack.

    But they egged themselves to push on, counting falling stars along the way and sharing ghost stories to fight seeping weariness.  Representatives of the Recreational Outdoor Exchange (R.O.X.), the group’s sponsor, were with them all throughout.

    At the halfway mark, some of them had shed off five pounds of body mass.  But they plodded on and were simply awed by an expressway that “runs through mountains with the precision of a laser beam,” said one of them.

    NEPOMUCENO and her fellow runners were Neville Jay Manaois (captain), Olive Cortez, Jose de Vera, Dean Cunanan, Wellington Yao, Gilbert Mabasa, Paul Padilla, Al Viado and Dr. Paolo Punsalan.

    At the finish line, they were surprised by a full marching band, enthusiastic spectators and supporters, the media and local officials.

    These runners are unaccustomed to hype. What they are most accustomed to are the smiles of the children at Kythe.

    A month later, they received trophies and cash from the BCDA, represented by Gen. Robert Gervacio, SCTEx program manager and spokesperson; and Lanie Macasaet, BCDA public-relations manager.

    That same day, the team motored to the pediatric ward of the Armed Forces of the Philippines Medical Center to turn over their cash awards to Kythe Foundation.

    GIVEN that their abode is not your typical idea of what a real home is, it was still a place as homey as it can be, punctuated by the laughter every now and then of children in the playroom. No chemotherapy today, so there’s time to play.

    For Kythe’s children, these runners are their Kuyas and Ates who help make their plight more bearable.

    And, to the rest of us, the runners have delivered a heart-tugging message: Don’t give up on these children, because they have not.

    Pee stop. Happy birthday to Pareng Louie Visorde and Pareng Fiscal Joven Florido, both from the beautiful town of Calauag, Quezon.  Louie, the proud Isuzu Trooper owner, will celebrate tomorrow, June 21, and Joven, the coowner of the Super Grandia with my Mareng Elvie, on Sunday, June 22.  Here’s wishing the two of you many, many more birthdays to come!

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