I’m
happy to report I finished the 300 mile Chefs Cycle ride from Santa Barbara to
San Diego and to almost everyone’s surprise never had to get into the support
van, and the automatic defibrillator never had to come out. We raised more
than $330,000 for our No Kid Hungry work and had more than one thousand brand
new donors to Share Our Strength. None of it would have been possible
without your generous support and your wonderful friendship.
It
was almost all fun, except for a few excruciatingly painful hills. The two
fingers I am typing with are the only parts of my body that don’t hurt.
Most
important, there are some wonderful new Share Our Strength leaders emerging
among the riders, a new generation of chefs, restaurateurs, athletes, and
fitness enthusiasts passionate about No Kid Hungry and eager to raise more
money and more awareness. They taught me a lot about team work. If
even one of the 20 riders had not been there I’m not sure I would have made it
to the end. It was also a great lesson in how each of us is capable of far
more than we think, of how many limitations are self-imposed and can be
exceeded, and of how many people out there are looking for ways to share their
strength and make a difference for others.
The
end of the ride included a one and a half mile climb up a mountain in an area
called Torrey Pines. The intimidating hill had been talked about so much
in advance, in such fearsome terms, that it took on the mythic quality of a
ghost story repeatedly told at a camp fire. The apprehension beforehand was
almost worse than the ride itself. If you had taken of a video of me on
the climb it would have looked like a still shot, except for the sweat pouring
down my face and onto the bike frame.
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