4.30.2011

Advance teams enters Port-aux-Basques


The St. Christophers Hotel welcomed the advance team yesterday with a wonderful dinner and a room with a view - Thank you St. Christopher's!  

The advance team is now preparing for David's arrival into Port-aux-Basques, NL, this will mark the completion of one whole province - 905km!  Watch for David on the highway between Port-aux-Basques and Stephenville this coming weekend.  

If you would like to join David for a run or find out how you can inspire change in your community visit the 'Make A Difference' page on our website - www.runtoremember.com

4.23.2011

Pasadena joins in!

Check out this dashboard cam video...thanks for the support Baird family!
Pasadena runs with David

On the road to Corner Brook

Corner Brook here we come...

Corner Brook here we come...

David is on his way to Corner Brook this morning. It's a beautiful Newfoundland day...come out and cheer him on!

4.22.2011

Halifax gears up for A Run To Remember

Foot Solutions Halifax (287 Lacewood Drive) is celebrating “A Run to Remember Day” with a special event from 11am - 1pm on Saturday May 7th in support of this cause.

The public is invited to meet David McGuire and hear his amazing story. We Care Halifax is providing David with medical foot care, as he will have been running for over a month consecutively. David McGuire expresses “I want to inspire people, especially youth, who are at highest risk for brain injury, and think it won’t happen to them. I also want people to better understand brain injury - I’m not the same person I was before injury, but I have a lot to offer and am living my life to the fullest. I’m just a guy with brain injury, but I can run, and I have a story to tell.”

http://halifax.kijiji.ca/c-community-events-A-Marathon-a-Day-For-Brain-Injury-W0QQAdIdZ276849431


Links:
Foot Solutions Halifax
We Care Halifax

4.21.2011

A great day for a run!



Today David laced up his running shoes and set out to run that cold virus right out of his body.  In spite of the dusting of snow we woke up to it seems it was in fact a great day for a run - he ran a full marathon today...42km! 


Way to go David!  Take that cold virus!


4.20.2011

Sick Day!


The run team has declared today a sick day. David has been battling a relentless cold virus for the last few days but unfortunately today the cold has won and David is resting.

The run will resume tomorrow April 21 @ 8am in the Deer Lake area.

Check out the location page to see the gps locator for the run coordinates and follow David as he continues his journey to inspire change!

4.16.2011

Marathon Runner Leaving Grand Falls-Windsor

A British Columbia man who is running a marathon a day, to raise awareness and money for brain injuries leaves Grand Falls-Windsor today; two weeks into his cross-Canada run. 38-year old David McGuire, who suffered a brain injury five years ago, is spreading the message by speaking to various groups, especially young people. McGuire says he's been warmly received by people across the province and feels his message is getting through.

VOCM.COM 

4.14.2011

The Packet - Clarenville, NL



‘A Run to Remember’
BC man running across Canada in support of brain injury awareness
By KATHY  GOSSE
The Packet


Six years ago David McGuire sustained a brain injury. It was so severe he was told he would never walk again.

Today he’s as fit as any athlete and he’s running a marathon a day for the next seven months in support of brain injury awareness.

The only visible sign that McGuire underwent brain surgery is a scar along the left side of his head.

In a way he says he’s fortunate. People who suffer damage to the right side of the brain often end up with physical disabilities.

“I may have short term memory loss, but physically I’m fine,” he says.
McGuire embarked on his trek in St. John’s on April 1. Last week he was at Clarenville Middle School and spoke to the Grade 4-6 students. It was his sixth school visit since starting the run.

McGuire’s life changed dramatically after he sustained the brain injury. He could no longer hold down a job. He suffers from short-term memory loss, and constantly has headaches.

He began running as part of his rehabilitation and completed his first marathon in 2006, a year after his brain injury.

“I want to inspire people to better understand brain injury,” says McGuire. “I’m not the same person I was before the injury, but I have a lot to offer and am living my life to the fullest. I’m just a guy with a brain injury, but I can run, and I have a story to tell.”

McGuire has very little recollection of how he suffered his brain injury. At first it was thought he may have suffered a stroke, causing him to fall and hit his head, resulting in swelling of the brain.

“It’s one of those cases of what came first the chicken or the egg,” he says. “But however it happened I have to deal with it. I just want to get the word out that brain injuries are very serious.

“Your brain controls everything – breathing, sense of smell, personality, walking, memory, and your ability to learn and make decisions,” he told the students. “But, your brain doesn’t heal like your arms and legs. Brain injury is permanent. However, you can help stop preventable brain injuries by making the right decisions and taking the smart risks like checking how deep the water is before you dive in. Don’t drink and drive, or get in a car with someone who has been drinking. Wear the gear. Helmets prevent up to nearly 90 percent of brain injuries.”

Brain Trust Canada, a community rehabilitation association with a focus on brain injury prevention is coordinating the cross Canada run.

The name of the event is significant because problems with memory are often a major outcome of brain injury, as they are with McGuire.

Magda Kapp, director of communications for Brain Trust Canada, says David is truly an inspirational human being.

“With his help we hope to change the face of brain injury in Canada. Brain injury is much more prevalent than people realize, and also virtually every day there is a story about concussions and brain injury,” says Kapp. “People are more aware of the fragility of their brains, but we need to bring more awareness to this issue. The brain is not fully formed until the mid 20s and areas responsible for judgment and reasoning are among the last to develop, which contributed to youth 16-24 being at highest risk.”

McGuire plans to visit other schools with his message as he makes his way across the island. He expects to be in Port aux Basques on April 26. He will finish his cross Canada run in Victoria, British Columbia in October.
For more information or to make a donation, visit www.runtoremember.com.

4.10.2011

David Reaches Gambo!

A little taste of the weather conditions...


David Mcguire will be running on the TCH from Gambo to Gander Monday April 11, 2011.  So far the weather in the Central Region has been much kinder than the East...let's hope it holds out.  

The run team is also working out the kinks in a live GPS feed so everyone can see where David is in real time.  Check back on April 13, 2011 for details!




4.05.2011

R2R Speaks to the schools


David spoke to the students of Whitbourne Elementary and Holy Family Elementary this week about the importance of protecting their heads and why he is running a marathon a day across Canada. 

4.01.2011

Brain-injured runner to traverse Canada - UPI.COM


ST. JOHN'S, Newfoundland, April 1 (UPI) -- A brain-injured Canadian man began running a cross-country marathon Friday in Newfoundland to raise awareness of what people with brain injuries can do.
David McGuire, 38, set off from St. John's to cheers and a ceremonial contingent of Royal Canadian Mounted Police on a 7-month odyssey across the country to end in Victoria, in his home province of British Columbia, in October.

In 2005, the former bill collector for a major bank suddenly began bleeding in his head and doctors had to remove part of his skull to allow brain swelling to subside. McGuire awoke after a week in a coma unable to talk. He had no memory, didn't recognize his family and was told he would never walk again.
However, he underwent intensive speech and physiotherapy and is now functional with one very debilitating after-effect: His memory is impaired and unreliable.

Accordingly, his marathon is called "A Run to Remember."

In a telephone interview with UPI earlier this week, McGuire said he relies on family and friends to keep him on track and employ him in part-time jobs. His wife Mandy works three part-time jobs to supplement the monthly $625 federal disability payments he receives.

Asked if he was nervous about the cross-country run, the effect of his brain injury showed in his answer.
"I forget what I'm nervous about, then it goes away and then it comes back and I remember what I'm nervous about again," he said.

Although he wasn't a runner before his injury, he ran in the Chicago marathon 14 months after and has been training daily for weeks. He said he has had repeated problems with blisters on his feet earlier this week, but that he and support staff from Braintrust Canada have come up with improvements to his footwear.
In addition to seeking donations, Braintrust is encouraging runners along the route to come out and run with McGuire as he traverses the country. The group works with people with brain injuries and urges prevention, as it says most brain injuries are preventable.

There was a setback for Canadian groups dedicated to brain injury and research a week before the run began when the Conservative minority government was voted down before it could pass a budget that included a $100 million allotment to establish the Canada Brain Research Fund. The government said the fund would "support the very best Canadian neuroscience, foster collaborative research and accelerate the pace of discovery, in order to improve the health and quality of life of Canadians who suffer from brain disorders."
Regardless, McGuire is on the road running toward many western sunsets with his parents following in a motorhome.

His progress can be followed at www.runtoremember.com and can be seen on YouTube by searching his name.