It is
true to say that the dog walkers that I meet on a daily basis come in all
shapes and sizes – some, as we have discussed in previous postings, resemble
their hounds, others complement them. So
a wiry lurcher may encourage on his rotund lady owner, as she struggles up the
hills in joggers and trainers on a new fitness regime, or a huge Italian
Spinoni bounds alongside his human friend, who is small enough to use him as a
pony. But they all of course, have one thing
in common, and that is to give their furry companions a run outside, where
those legs, big or small, rejoice in the sheer luxury of uncontained exercise-
skidding or skittering around trees and dips in the roads, racing up and down
hills, jumping with joy into the muddiest puddles.
There is
a benefit of course to the owner too – and that is the constant need to get
outside and walk, whatever the weather, or the inclination. And it does us
good.
G and I
regularly attend social functions at weekends, mainly of the dinner party
variety (we seem to have segued into that age rather seamlessly) and after days
of running around with 3 busy boys and their lives, we enjoy the benefits of
those functions immensely – the good food, intelligent (most of the time)
conversation, and of course in the main, fine wines. It was on one such occasion that a friend of
mine L, asked if I would step in and fill the shoes of a friend of hers on the
London Moonwalk. For those of you
unfamiliar with the event, it is a 26.2 mile walk around the streets of London
from midnight in aid of Breast Cancer.
Feeling rather buoyed up with red wine, I rather rashly promised to do
so,saying ‘It’s only a walk’, and then promptly forgot all about it.
Unfortunately,
L hadn’t, and with only 10 days of ‘training’ – where Muttley thought all of
his Christmases had come at once as I walked his little legs off, reaching a
maximum of about 8 miles on my peak day – I found myself standing at the start line
with 15,000 other women, and a few men, a quarter of an hour before
midnight. Somehow we had managed to
cobble together an outfit each (bras
feature heavily, to highlight the issue of breast cancer), wore our bright pink
Moonwalk hats with pride, and our very dear and generous friends had donated
over 5 times the target we had originally set – probably because they couldn’t quite
believe that I was actually going ahead with this.
The great
British weather did us proud that night and threw at us downpours of rain,
bitter freezing wind chills and icy temperatures. And yet for the first half of the walk it
didn’t really bother us – L and I both walk our dogs in these conditions – as the
snake of bright pink hats wended chattering through the silent streets of
London. By sunrise, I was struggling - but as Big Ben was illuminated by
heavenly rays, my determination kicked in.
We had talked and walked solidly for 6 hours, but the final miles were
trodden in a grim and painful silence.
Buffeted
by winds on the Albert Embankment, and crossing Vauxhall Bridge we were greeted
by an amazing sight – hundreds of families with children jumping up and down in
excitement, little dogs straining at the leashes, all looking for their beloved
walkers. Women and men walked arm in
arm, staggering and stumbling towards the finish line, some crying, some
stoical, some reflective.
In the
crowds stood two little boys holding two banners – one read WELL DONE GRANDAD,
the other simply said GRANDMA WOULD HAVE BEEN PROUD OF YOU…
Life is
simply too short to keep putting off those things that you’ve always wanted to
do, even if, like me, you didn’t know you did until you do them. Do something different today, no matter how
big or small – and take a little step forward on your own journey…
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