Training for a marathon is hard. It hurts. It drains you. It demands discipline when you would rather quit. But none of that compares to what many wounded veterans live with every day after their service ends. Their injuries do not heal on a schedule. Their financial stress does not disappear. The fight to rebuild a normal life does not stop when the uniform comes off. Until this marathon is over, I am not cutting my hair or shaving my beard. It is a small and visible reminder of something most of us never have to think about. Basic dignity. A haircut. A clean shave. Things that many veterans, even after sacrificing everything, cannot easily afford. Our veterans give us our freedom. Freedom to live our lives. Freedom to speak our minds. Freedom to push our personal beliefs and agendas without fear. Those freedoms exist because others were willing to bleed, suffer, and carry the weight long after the rest of us moved on.
This run is not about me. It is about standing in discomfort out of respect for people who lived in far worse. Every mile I run and every dollar raised goes toward helping veterans recover, rebuild, and survive in the country they already gave everything for.
Organizer
Wounded Warrior Project
Beneficiary

