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News Supporters' stories

Chance meeting spurs on marathon runner

Published on 20 Mar 2024

A supporter, who is preparing to run this year's London Marathon, has been spurred on following a chance meeting with a blind veteran who ran in the inaugural event.

Staffordshire woman Stephanie will take on the 26.2-mile London Marathon course alongside thousands of others on 21 April to raise money for our charity.

No stranger to the event, this will be 40-year-old Stephanie’s third London Marathon, having first taken on the challenge in 2022. Each year she has been joined by a team of her Thea Pharmaceuticals colleagues as part of their organisation’s employee fundraising efforts.

Stephanie and Mike are stood together in front of the 'Victory over Blindness' sculpture depicting a group of soldiers from the First World War leading one another away from the battlefield. Mike is holding hi white cane.
Supporter Stephanie meets blind veteran Mike at our Llandudno Centre
Stephanie running in the London Marathon wearing a Blind Veterans UK T-shirt displaying her name. Steph is smiling with her thumbs up.
Stephanie during the 2023 London Marathon
Stephanie wearing a Blind Veterans UK T-shirt with her name on posing for a photo after completing the marathon. In one hand she is holding a foil blanket and around her neck is her 2023 London Marathon medal
Stephanie proudly displays her medal from the 2023 London Marathon

This year Team Thea consists of six runners using charity event places to achieve their personal goals while working together to support our charity. Stephanie says:

“Having run twice before, I know what to expect now and that will hopefully make it feel a bit easier. I’m aiming to run a little faster this time but just to get over the finish line is an achievement.
“I’ve had other people training with me this year which has motivated me but what is spurring me on the most is a chance encounter with 87-year-old blind veteran Mike, who ran in the first London Marathon in 1987, during a recent visit to the Blind Veterans UK Centre of Wellbeing in Llandudno.”

Blind veteran Mike

Mike, who we have supported since 2017, was called up for National Service with the Army in 1954 and joined the Royal Signals. He undertook batman duties with the regiment serving at Colchester and Chester.

In 2016, Mike underwent an operation to have a cataract removed from his eye. He initially thought the operation had been a success, but a huge shock was to come. He says:

“I was driving home and suddenly everything went black. My sight had completely gone. My wife had to help me pull over safely and park the car and I never drove again."
“I thought my world had come to an end and that it wasn’t worth living if I couldn’t see."
Mike
Blind veteran

Mike did eventually regain some sight and, during treatment at the hospital, was told about our charity. Mike says:

"I was initially hesitant and didn’t think it would be for me, but my wife encouraged me to give it a go which was the best thing that ever happened to me.

“Blind Veterans UK has changed my life. I’ve tried things such as woodturning that I never would have thought about and have been provided with equipment that has helped me including a big screen reader and an accessible phone which talks to me and helps me to keep in contact with people.

“I’ve now lost my wife and I spend a lot of time on my own so having the opportunity to visit the charity’s centres is lovely. I stayed at the new Centre of Wellbeing in Rustington over Christmas.”

Mike and Stephanie meet

When Stephanie and Mike met each other, Stephanie happened to mention that she was running the London Marathon and Mike shared with her that he had run in the first ever London Marathon. Mike says:

“I ran in nine London Marathons between 1981 and 1989. The first London Marathon was nothing like we see today, there were only 2,000 runners.

“When I spoke to Stephanie, I was envious of her as I loved to run, and I can’t do it anymore. Marathon running is addictive, I used to go out for a run everyday.

“I wish Stephanie the best of luck. My advice to her would be to run your own race. The worst thing you can do is to try and keep up at the beginning. Trundle along at your own pace and do your best."

"I am so thankful to fundraisers like Stephanie, without people like her, us blind veterans wouldn’t have the opportunities we have.”
Mike
Blind veteran

During their meeting, Mike sponsored Stephanie £5. She says:

"Mike says he will sponsor me another £5 if I beat his fastest time of 2 hours and 53 minutes. He was some sort of semi-professional with his times though!”

You can show your support for Stephanie and help her to reach her fundraising target of £1,000.

Visit her Just Giving page

Stephanie is one of 15 staff members from Thea Pharmaceuticals who are taking on fundraising challenges in 2024 such as the London Marathon, London to Brighton Cycle and the Great North Run

Would you like to take on your own challenge for our charity?

Get some ideas here