글래디스 버럴 (사진, 92세)는 아마 가장 고령으로 마라톤을 완주한 사람으로 기록될 것입니다. 기네스 북 레고드에 따르면 90세인 제니 우드-알렌이 90세에 런던 마라톤을 완주한 것으로 되어있는데 이것을 앞서는
기록이기 때문입니다.
재림교인인 그녀는 지난 12월 12일에 있었던 호놀루루 마라톤 대회에서 26.2 마일 마라톤 훌
코스를 파워 워킹으로 완주하였습니다. 일주일에 30 마일에서 50 마일을 걷고있으며 마라톤이 끝난 다음 날에도 4마일을 걸었고, 그 다음 날에는 10마일을
걸을 수 있을 정도로 건강합니다.
사실 2004년 부터 2007년까지 계속 시(city) 마라톤을 완주하였으나 2008년에는 남편이 세상을 떠나고 4일 후에 마라톤이 열려서 참가는
했지만 완주를 1 마일 앞두고 기권하였었고, 2009년에는
위장 경련으로 16지점에서 포기하고 말았지만, 2010년에는
다시 완주하게 된 것입니다.
핀란드의 이민 2세
6명 중 막내로 태어났고 2살 때에 아버지를 여의였습니다.
11세에 소아마비에 감염되었으나 회복하였으며, 그 후에 결혼하여 5명의 자녀를 두었고 18명의 손주와 26명의 증손주를 두었습니다. 그의 아들을 뇌종양으로 1985년에 잃기도 하였습니다.
비행기조종사로 일하였고 등산을 즐긴 활동가였습니다. 재림교인으로서
알콜과 담배를 입에 댄 적이 없으며 대부분 채식위주의 생활로 후식(dissert)은 하지 않았습니다. 앞으로도 계속 건강한 생활을 하시기를 기대합니다.
소스: 재림교회 공식홈페이지 (http://www.adventist.org )
Gladys Burrill says life is like a marathon. She would
know -- she's 92 and believed to be the world's oldest woman to have
completed an official 26.2-mile race.
Burrill finished the December 12 Honolulu Marathon, power-walking
across the finish line at 9 hours, 53 minutes and 16 seconds. If her
time is confirmed by the Guinness World Records company, she would
surpass current record holder Jenny Wood-Allen, a Scot who completed the
London Marathon at age 90, according to the company's website.
Like life, a marathon requires "perseverance, strength, courage ...
you just have to keep going," Burrill said in a recent phone interview
from her condominium in Honolulu. "It's very important to think
positive," she said.
Locally, she's a beloved competitor -- in 2004 the Honolulu
Advertiser nicknamed her "the Glady-ator." She completed the city
marathon each year from 2004 to 2007. But two consecutive un-finished
attempts left some wondering if her marathon days were over.
In 2008, her husband died four days before the race. Burrill said
stress and grief caused her to end her attempt just one mile short of
the finish line. Last year, stomach cramps put her out at mile 16.
"I felt a lot more at peace this year," said Burrill, who walked four
miles the day after the race and 10 miles two days later. She regularly
walks 30 to 50 miles a week, usually with a training partner.
Her time this year might have been two minutes less -- she stopped to
pray a few hundred feet from the finish line. "I thought my life would
change once I crossed that line. I knew some people needed encouragement
so I thought that was very important," said Burrill, who is a
Seventh-day Adventist.
Burrill's son and grandson walked with her at different points during
this year's competition. She has 18 grandchildren and 26
great-grandchildren.
Jim Barahal, president of the Honolulu Marathon, said he was astonished by Burrill's feat.
"I think it is absolutely unbelievable," Barahal told KITV News. "It
is inspirational and to anyone who has an elderly parent or perhaps has
lost someone to realize what she is doing at her age. It is just
astonishing. What an inspiration."
Barahal and marathon organizers donated $2,500 on her behalf to the
Lokahi Giving Project, which helps needy families with food and basic
household necessities.
Burrill said she regularly uses her local notoriety to help such
projects. "I know what it's like to go through poverty," she said.
The youngest of six kids of Finnish immigrants, her father died on
her second birthday, leaving her mother to work their farm in Washington
state. At age 11, she contracted polio but later recovered.
The mother of five, Burrill said she lost her son Kevin in 1985 to a brain tumor.
"I had a lot of obstacles in life, but God was always there with me," she said.
Burrill has been an airplane pilot and a mountain climber. She said
she was always athletic -- as a child she ran up the hills above their
farm.
Adventure and exercise have helped her deal with stress and grief
throughout her life, she said. "Sometimes I go out [walking] with the
weight of the world on my shoulders and come back feeling so strong and
renewed."
When asked about fitness tips, she gives simple advice: "Eat
healthfully and exercise. So many young people don't realize the
importance of exercise. Just put one foot in front of the other."
Burrill said she's never used alcohol or tobacco and eats a healthy diet -- she's mostly vegetarian and skips dessert, she said.
Just as important, she said, is staying mentally well. "It's very
important to think positive." Also, "dream about things you want to do
in the future, even if they're impossible. It keeps you going."
Burrill would like to one day climb Mount Kilimanjaro in Africa and
travel into space, but is content that neither will likely happen. She
said she'll continue to encourage people and compete in charity walks.
Now on her own, Burrill divides her time between her home in
Prospect, Oregon, and Honolulu, where she enjoys the weather and the
lifestyle.
"People have such a great Aloha spirit here," she said.
The city mayor will honor her in a January 7 ceremony.