
My mother Bonnie ran her first marathon this past summer. Never being one to half-ass anything, she decided to not just run a marathon, but to run THE marathon, in Greece, and convince half my family to do it with her.
So began the training. This woman who had recently become a grandmother began logging miles. No matter the fact she’d barely run in her entire life. She’s a tough woman and would do it her way.
The text message on race day months later confirmed her training and stubbornness paid off. She had run her first-ever marathon at the young age of 67.

The woman who taught me to walk had run a marathon. She taught me to never quit, so it was no surprise at all that she didn’t, either.
Today is Mother’s Day, a time we as a society take pause to recognize the extraordinary efforts of those women who inspire us, raise us and help form us into the adults we have become.
I don’t think anyone inspired my love of the outdoors more than my mother; she was the first one to take my hand and lead me to the woods and fields, lakes and rivers where I would spend my childhood. As an adult, I am continually amazed by her adventurous spirt that seems to grow with every passing year.



