by Senior Airman Meredith Thomas
315 Airlift Wing Public Affairs
9/22/2013 - JOINT BASE CHARLESTON, S.C. -- Several
members of the 315th Airlift Wing here joined forces and braved
boot-camp style obstacles, biting insects and lots and lots of mud
during Charleston's inaugural Dirty Girl Mud Run at Legare Farms on
Johns Island Sept. 14.
Dirty Girl partners with Bright Pink - an organization dedicated to
finding a cure for breast cancer - started the mud run to educate women
on the risk factors and warning signs of breast and ovarian cancer.
In addition to educating women, Dirty Girl plans on donating more than
$250,000 toward cancer research in 2013, according the organization's
website.
Organizers of the women's-only 5K touted the experience as an untimed,
non-competitive exercise in teamwork and perseverance. Participants of
all fitness levels were encouraged to tackle obstacles like the "utopian
tubes" tunnel crawl and the "PMS (Pretty Muddy Stuff)" mud pit.
Senior Master Sgt. Karla Rose, 315th Force Support Squadron
superintendent here, saw the event as the perfect opportunity to have a
great time but also show solidarity and support for cancer survivors and
women currently battling the disease.
"Initially it just sounded like fun," Rose said. "But then I looked at
the date and realized it was on Lisa Sweatt's birthday. She's a
multiple-time cancer survivor so it just seemed right."
Rose assembled a team of 12 "Mudruckers" including Sweatt and seven reservists to tackle the 3.1-mile course.
Sweatt - the chief of Family Support with the wing - ran the race free
of charge thanks to the Dirty Girl organizers who offer free
registration to any cancer survivor looking to take to the mud.
Others on the team ran in honor of someone close to them who had struggled with a cancer diagnosis.
Master Sgt. Barbara Sosebee, 315th Mission Support Group career advisor,
fought through a knee injury to complete the course for her friend who
is currently receiving cancer treatments.
"I just prayed the night before that I would have the strength to make
it through," Sosebee said. "She's in physical therapy right now to learn
how to the walk to the mailbox, walk to the bathroom. I figured if she
could do that, then I could do this run with a messed up leg."
Sosebee, despite spending the previous week on crutches, only had to
forgo one obstacle, a military-style low crawl under a wall, due to the
help of her teammates.
"It was difficult but we got each other through it," said Sosebee. "I
really enjoyed the spirit of our team. We were all in it together and
that's the way we are with everything."
In the end, the "Mudruckers" headed toward the finish line linked arm-in-arm and took part in one final, celebratory mud bath.
"We started as a team and we finished as a team and we laughed the whole way," said Rose.
Tuesday, September 24, 2013
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