Thompson Lange puts his legs to philanthropyGreat WAll Marathon

And he's off...

On May of 2003 Beau and I traveled to China to buy product for the store and ended up in a very empty Beijing during the SARS scare. The panic was world-wide, if you recall, and when I got home I was politely asked to self-quarantine for a couple of weeks before returning to my gym. Beau and I had the photo shoot for the naked fund-raising calendar coming up and it was going to be embarrassing enough without the loss of two weeks worth of desperately working my beer-belly, so I started running.

Two years later, I felt it was appropriate to try to run my first marathon by signing on to the Great Wall Marathon on May 21st 2005.

That brings me to the fund-raiser aspect of this whole diatribe. We're often asked to donate items to raise funds for worthy causes here on the Peninsula; now it's my turn to do the asking. Deafness runs in my family, both biologically and by marriage. My grandmother, Evelyn, was deaf; my sister, Tracy has hearing-loss and my sister, Keri's partner, Justin, and her partner-in-law, Jesse, are hard of hearing & deaf respectively, so I figure I should put Homescapes' high profile to some social good and run for the Deaf & Hard of Hearing Center in Salinas.

You can still donate. Click here to download the form with instructions.

- Thompson Lange

 

Justin Lewis & Keri MarionYou didn't think you could get away with not hearing from me, now did you?

When Thompson first talked about raising funds for DHHSC, I was personally moved. Since I have been with Justin I have become an active member of the deaf and hard of hearing community - most notably by joining "deaf nights" where I clumsily sign my way to order a cola and somehow end up with a burrito. I've gotten better, though, and have become a better person for it. As a hearing person in a deaf world, I easily understand and appreciate what they have had to overcome and accomplish.

Without DHHSC as a focal point for the deaf community, many of these events wouldn't happen. DHHSC serves as a commonplace for the deaf to know where to find jobs, schools and support in a hearing world.

Jesse Lewis (my brother "out-law") is the director for DHHSC. The office runs on the manpower of (I think) four people to help the deaf community in all of Monterey County.

On April 13, 2005 Jesse, Justin & I will be holding an event to raise awareness of Deaf Culture at our (Justin's and mine) art studio on Cannery Row. Justin & I are constructing a portable mural for - and to be painted by - the deaf and hard of hearing which will be placed in the DHHSC Office in Salinas. We chose to make it portable because DHHSC rents the building and it is designed to be an empowering icon for and by the community, wherever that community shall incorporate. Basically, they want to take it with 'em if they gotta go. T=his is a public event, and you're certainly welcome to join us - deaf, hard of hearing or not.

Justin & I are doing this to support DHHSC and the assistance they provide for the Deaf Community on the Monterey Peninsula. For more information on what DHHSC provides, please visit their website at www.dhhsc.org.

So to follow up on what Thompson is doing, I'll be putting up a downloadable donation/fundraiser form as soon as we figure out the logistics of the fundraiser. Of course, if you wish to donate today, just let us know.

- Keri Marion

 

Thompson finishes the Great Wall MarathonCurious as to how it worked out?

Thompson talks about the experience

The Results are in!

Thomspon came in at 5h 42m and raised over $2000 for the Deaf & Hard of Hearing Service Center in Salinas. Thank you for all who supported Thompson on his journey and we all thank you, Thompson, for your perserverence and philanthropy.

...directly from Thompson,

"Well it's done and I've lived to tell the tale. I'm still trying to decide what I think of the experience. It was WAY more difficult than I imagined and I sort of feel like a failure...though I came in at almost the exact time I predicted from my Carmel Beach stairs runs.

I finished in 5 hours and 42 grueling minutes of non-stop suffering. (Which, as we know, is a TERRIBLE time for a normal marathon...but this one was distinctly abnormal I keep trying to tell myself as justification).

Don't get me wrong...I know I had fun (I'm still processing so I quite don't know yet how much). The first part of the wall was really incredible, but the preceding 4 miles of uphill running was NOT.

Sadly at about mile 13 of all things I got kind of sick of it and had to do a walk/ run combination. By the time I got on the wall again at mile 20 I had charley-horses in both calves and I literally (and it sounds like a pun but it's not) now know what the "hitting the wall" thing means.

I kept thinking "should I cry", "should I vomit" "should I sit down and not move until crows pick at my bleached bones"? It was indescribably painful. I was absolutely shocked and disgusted with myself for not training right. But somehow when it started to rain and I got off the wall I was able to start running again and ran my way to the finish line.

It's kinda hard to believe I did this just this morning (and with having to wake up at 2 a.m. to catch a bus to boot.)

I'll bore you to tears with the video and endless recountings when I get home. I'm off to a massage, but surprisingly for all the agony, I don't hurt at all (yet). More later."

 

read the official blog entry for "china fun run"

 

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