His shirt said, “Misfit
Mudder” and he certainly fit the bill. Probably 300 pounds with excess skin
hanging on his under arms and chin that showed he had recently been heavier,
slightly balding, and totally alone. No other misfit mudders around him, no
cheering squad on the sidelines. Alone. Misfit.
In an event that touts
itself as one of the toughest events on the planet, one where you promise to
put your team mate before your course time, the infamous "Tough Mudder".
I had to wonder how he had got there? The
second to the last obstacle, finish line in sight without a team in an
incredibly physically draining event, even for the most endurance
seasoned.
I watched casually at first
as he tried to run up the half pipe slicked down with water and mud at an
incline that aimed to decelerate. A group of shirtless fitness junkies had
spotted him and stopped to reach for his hands as he threw himself up. But his
feet lost traction and the dead weight of his body was to much to hoist even
for them. He fell without even the strength to catch himself face down in the
mud. Un-moving, arms and legs splayed out. He finally would move again, drag
his massive body to standing and back up to try again. The run, the fall, the hit and
roll. The crowd started to notice, they moved in closer to cheer him on, the
men on the top started concentrating their efforts in new and creative ways…but
on the third fall I saw something in his face that was more dangerous than
fatigue, it was hopelessness. And something inside me felt it too.
It is the human story it
seems, at times, the fight to hard, the handicap to great, the fatigue too
much, you surface only long enough to see the next wave of overwhelming
proportions cresting for the kill, you’re going under and the giving up seems welcome
relief from the struggle…and he was giving up. His head going under for the
last time… and something in me rose up.
How many times had I felt my own demons of naysayers? How many times have I depended on another hand, on hope, on my deep seeded innate belief in the power of the human spirit? How many times have I been saved from my own failures by a God that believes in turning weakness into strength? How many times has that same God sent the help, sent the words, sent a hand to pull me out?
How many times had I felt my own demons of naysayers? How many times have I depended on another hand, on hope, on my deep seeded innate belief in the power of the human spirit? How many times have I been saved from my own failures by a God that believes in turning weakness into strength? How many times has that same God sent the help, sent the words, sent a hand to pull me out?
In my mind came clarity
of purpose. Get him over the obstacle. There was no other option. He hit the
mud again at the base of the ramp and I hurdled myself over the boundary flags and
hit it too. I got down in his face. Put my hand on his back and said, “you’ve
got this, you’re an inspiration to so many people here, you can’t give up.” He
slowly raised his head…silent and unspeaking, emotions raw on his mud smeared
face and stared at me. He looked done, but I wasn’t done. I knew if he was
here, he had to have fight. I knew he wanted it. I knew he had it inside of
him. And I knew he couldn’t give up.
I put out my hand and
braced myself as he leaned heavily into it. And as we rose the crowed rose too,
the collective battle cry of all of us who have been a misfit mudder, his fight
was all our fight and we each had a part to play in it. I squared his shoulders
with both hands and pulled myself up on my tiptoes to look him in the eyes and
told him he had it in him. Told him everyone here wanted him to do this,
everyone was cheering him on, they believed in him.
We backed up to the
starting, I told him I’d run with him, told him to get his feet up high trust
the hands…and we ran. Somehow, this man moved his huge body forward, he really
put his heart into it, I ran with him and the crowed accelerated with energy,
we willed him up, willed him forward. He hit the incline grabbed the hands and
lost his footing. Smashing his head against the wall in the process, I think it
stunned him a bit and he let go, rolling brutally down into the mud again. The
whole crowed groaned with him and then was very silent. I think they were
wondering if he’d get up, but I wasn’t wondering. Of course he was getting up.
He silently shook his
head as I knelt beside him. And to his wordless negative I answered, “no, you’re
going to do it, try again, you’ve got this in you”. He came to his knees and by
how the crowd responded you’d think a man just rose from the dead. And honestly
in that moment I think I did see him rise from the dead, I saw a spark come
alive, he believed me. We backed up again, we ran again, and he fell again. But
this time, this time I knew we had already won, because he was quicker in
rising and his eyes had hope.
As a young child I
remember watching Apollo 13 and thinking that the fight of the human spirit
makes men do the impossible, it tints everything with hope. It settled in me
and drives me to this day; it fuels my own endeavors and fills my ministry. My
battle cry is, and always will be…HOPE.
Six times he fell. Six
times he failed. Six times. On the sixth time I washed down his hands and arms
with a water bottle someone handed me. The mud was making it hard for the
shirtless junkies to grasp. I told him he had to only get one leg high enough
for someone to grab it. I told him to pull back on the hands that held him and
just get his leg higher. The crew at the top had thickened and grouped into a
mass of hands and hearts ready to help. The crowed at the bottom had thickened
and grouped into a pulsating mass of heartfelt encouragement. I told him this
was it. I asked him his name but it was lost in the den of screaming and chanting.
No matter, his name is mine, his name is yours, his name is all of us who have
faced our own wall.
I screamed, “GO, GO,
GO!!” and we ran. He hit the incline, he grabbed the hands that reached for him
and this time he leaned back and got
that foot, that one foot, two feet higher…Two feet, that’s all he needed.
Someone had his knee, another man flung his torso over the edged his legs
pinned down by another man to grab the second leg, and through human spirit, muscle
power, and deafening cheering…he did it. We did it.
There hasn’t been many
times I’ve cried from joy, but a choked sob broke my scream, and I felt the
waves of pride, and gratefulness, and relief wash me. It was simply, one of the purest emotions of sheer joy I have
ever felt. And I realized I was standing alone at the bottom of a ramp with
probably 300 people around me… sobbing. I quickly pulled down my sunglasses and
hopped the boundary flags because crying at the Tough Mudder is against the
rules. But I didn’t get far. A woman with as many tears as I stopped me, “did
you know him?” I shook my head no, but somehow felt that that wasn’t entirely
true. I did know him, because I knew his struggle. She said, “that was incredible and I can’t
stop crying”. I glanced around me and realized that no one was untouched, many
were crying, most were still jumping up and down and still screaming, the men
on the ramp were gorilla thumping their chests, butt slapping our misfit mudder,
and high fiving each other… And in that moment, I saw Heaven. Heaven on earth,
were everyone was equal, united by a common love, defined by the power of hope,
and rejoicing in the battle won.
“Weeping may come for a
night, but joy comes in the morning” Psalms 30:5