How it all came together
This was how it all came together for those who are reading this for the first time. And for our friends and supporters who’ve been along for the duration, a re-cap of all things running to inspire action for a beautiful Planet that wants to keep on sustaining us for the long haul.
For everyone, enjoy and remember: 1 single action can change your world. It did for us.
That was the motto for our 17,700km “Run For One Planet” run across Canada and around the perimeter of America, to inspire Environmental Action, one step at a time. Our goals were simple: 1 marathon each per day, inspire 1 million new actions for Earth from our website’s top 10 action steps list and raise $1 million for our Legacy for Kids, to fund their “green dreams” and connect them with their daily habits and our Planets health.
Our names are Stephanie Brooke Tait and Matt Hill. We Co-founded this dream together from a collective desire to give back and step out of our comfort zones to use running as the vehicle to deliver the message of simple daily actions all adding up for our Planet’s health.
The idea was conceived while on a flight to Detroit as I had been asking for many years, what was my life purpose and how can I use my love of running, people, the planet, and now Steph, to make a big difference. So when the captain said we’d reached our cruising altitude of 27,000 feet above the surface of our big blue Planet, the answer came rushing in like a torrent of water, freshly released from a long held dam.
I knew I was on to something much larger than I. I also knew I wanted my partner in crime, to leave her life and hop onboard this crazy but purposeful dream. I think destiny stepped in over the next 3 weeks as I finally uttered the dream to Steph and tentatively asked, “do you think I’m crazy”? She had this instant feeling of, “I remember” and responded with an emphatic “YES, but I love crazy people”!
So exactly three weeks after, as we ran along one of our favorite urban trails, Steph said “let’s build this together and we made a pact to each other, that stated “if we decide to go for it, we’ll never look back and we’ll do everything in our power to make it a success. And as the final miles tick away under our blistered feet and tired bodies, we’ll smile in the knowing because we left it all out there on the pavement, left no stone unturned and we will have nothing left. We will truly be spent”.
Thus ensued 18 months of the biggest, most stretching, largest life learning’s we could have ever signed up for, willingly. 80-hour weeks of training, planning and team building were the norm. We had a tour fundraiser Barn Burner that raised well over $25,000, supported by our personal “army of peeps and peep’ettes” from the four corners of our lives.
We spent a year securing a 28-foot diesel powered RV (affectionately named Racy Verna) and retro-fitted her with as much and as many Earth friendly alternatives as we could, to make a lighter foot print for the tour and to show people what they can also do in their own lives and homes, to make a lighter foot print.
http://www.runforoneplanet.org/erv.php
On May 4th, 2008 we hit the ground running along with our world class team of R41P volunteers (30+) and in 369 tour days, Steph and I ran about 215 marathons each, presented to over 30,000 people (mostly elementary school kids), in 200 presentations, burned roughly 1.5 million calories each, destroying 14 pairs of Asics running shoes in the process.
The kids we presented to and met in each town and city became our “army of pint-sized eco warriors”, 30,000 and growing and was the wind beneath our feet, especially when the days got long and miles ran deep. They met us with 100% ebullient enthusiasm, eagerness to commit to change and became the main mission of our tour’s message as we constantly presented and connected with the real leaders of our NOW, not just our future. Kids don’t make an appointment in their day timers to think about eliminating plastic bags, they just say, “ok I’ll do it” and it’s done.
We received letters from teachers and parents saying things like, “know that you changed these children’s lives and ours. Why? Because since you were here, they’re now always reminding us to turn off our cars and please turn off the water and the lights when we leave a room”. This confirmed to us a we ran each day, that people just need to feel inspired to care and to change because it makes them feel good, not because they feel guilty. This was why kids made the tour so special, because they look for fun in the moment and believe in their own power to do the right thing.
The big kids (adults aplenty) were also a huge source of inspiration along the winding, twisting, ever changing, ever exciting, Run for One Planet highway. We would have been lost without the hundreds of “local hero’s” everywhere, lending their expertise, sweat equity and connections within their local communities to ensure we made an impact everywhere we ran through. The power of the human spirit is alive and thriving as we were always welcomed in like old friends and treated like family everywhere we went.
Some of the tour highlights would be:
Having the privilege of running your dream with your partner in crime at your side.
Witnessing change happening right before your eyes as people become empowered by their goodness.
Running 26.2 miles everyday, watching the miracle of sunrises and sunsets that leave you speechless.
Realizing just how BIG Canada really is.
Experiencing that “Maritimer spirit”.
Being part of history in New York City on election night, Nov. 4th 2008 and seeing “yes we can”, happen.
Receiving the gifts of “Southern Hospitality” and actually gaining weight in the process.
Standing in the exact spot where your childhood hero “Terry Fox” had to leave the pavement and know what it took to get there having two legs.
Standing in the exact spot where your childhood hero “Terry Fox” had to leave the pavement and not knowing what it took to get there, having one leg and cancer in your lungs.
Seeing the beautiful blue Pacific again after 10 months and running into a southern California sunset.
Knowing we made a difference by just continuing to go “one small step at a time”.
Having a 14-day homecoming celebration as we hit Canada again on April 24th 2009 at the ferry dock in Victoria and made a run for home up Vancouver Island and had some our most treasured experiences as a result.
That same homecoming back into to Canada day, seeing the faces of the two beautiful souls who gave us life, our Moms.
Feeling totally complete in our mission as we ran the final tour day #369 under full Police motorcycle escort as we were brought across the Lions Gate Bridge in our own lane and greeted by a collection of family, friends and hundreds of supporters to unlace at the Epic Expo and change the “miles ran” to read: 11,000.
Never underestimate how powerful just one single step can be. It was the sole reason we eventually completed 11,000 miles, covering two countries. It’s the same with environmental action and the core reason we decided to ask people all along our journey, to just commit to doing 1 single daily step from our website’s list of top 10 action steps (see above link).
In closing, we’d like to end with one very worn, very old, and VERY truthful quote from Indian Leader, Mahatma Gandhi as he led his country’s men and women peacefully headlong to meet the British Army, vastly out numbered and outgunned.
“Be The Change You Would like to See in The World”.
And our quote, as we reflect on our odyssey to heaven, to hell and back because our journey was hard, was fraught with a few disasters and we were very much out numbered (especially by cars passing us on the highways and a business as usual from many). But like Mr. Gandhi, who continued to ask his people to go peacefully and know that even though they were hugely outnumbered, the fire in their hearts for change would be all the power they would need, if they stuck together.
So we ask you, “What’s your marathon a day”?
Run for One Planet…
I just received this remarkable Facebook message from one of my favourite super-duos: Matt Hill and Stephanie Tait.
On May 4th, 2008, Steph and Matt began their 369-day journey running one marathon a day around North America (totaling 11,000 miles!) …
Trackback by So you want to change the world?! — Friday, August 28, 2009 @ 8:12 am
Hey Matt, I don’t know if you remember me or not, but we did meet a couple of times at my dance here in Vancouver. Stephanie was taking some swing dance classes through my company. Anyway, I just wanted to congratulate you both on a remarkable journey and raising awareness for this lovely pale blue dot. Only by the actions of like minded people can we hope to keep our planet the sustainable, life giving place that it has been for billions of years.
Kudos to you two and your team. I hope to see you both again soon.
Cheers,
Darren
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