Ocean Challenge Live!
Rich Wilson's Asthma
Spring 2003
Hello. This
is Rich Wilson, skipper of the champion, ocean-going trimaran Great American II. Ive had asthma since I was a one year old kid. And when I was growing up there werent any medications available to help when I got an asthma attack. When I was seven, the first asthma inhaler came out. It looked like a turkey baster, with a rubber bulb at one end, a bunch of chambers in the middle, and an opening at the far end. My Mom would use an eyedropper to drip medication into the chambers, then shed squeeze the bulb and it would blow the air through the medication and make a mist that Id inhale. Amazingly this contraption helped and thats why I remember it so clearly. It was really hard to keep up with my friends when we were playing
outside or playing sports at school. My friends didnt really understand my asthma,
but that wasnt their fault, because they didnt have asthma, and if you
dont have it, you cant understand it. I didnt want to be left out of the games, so I just tried unbelievably hard to keep up. I think that in a strange way, this toughened me up, mentally, because I just wouldnt quit no matter how much I was gasping for breath. I was allergic to leaves, grass, trees, flowers, my sisters cat, all dogs, dust in the house in the winter, wool blankets and rugs, smoke, it seemed like just about everything, I was even allergic to eggs, grapes, peas and chocolate! And a peanut butter sandwich? That could have killed me. Sometimes, when people with asthma grow older, they grow out of it, but I didnt. So what I began to realize was that if I was going to be stuck with this I had better get really smart about it. I had to really pay attention to what caused my asthma, and try to avoid those things. I had to be a scientist about my own body, because even if I saw my doctor twice each year, for a half hour, that was only an hour each year. But I had to live in my body for the whole rest of the year, he didnt. So I had to be smart and help him to help me with my asthma. And that meant that even though the schedule for taking the new medications as they became available seemed overly complicated, and it seemed as though I just spent all day every day attending to my medication schedule, doing that meant that I could do the other things that I wanted to do. My birthday is April 19, which here in Boston is Patriots Day, when Paul Revere rode to warn that the British were coming. The Boston Marathon is run on Patriots Day. We lived outside of Boston, just a block from the famous Hills of Newton that seemed to make or break runners in the race. I always dreamed of running that Marathon, on my Birthday. And so, gradually one year, I began to run a little bit, then a little bit more, huffing and puffing, then some more. I had to strengthen myself, both for my legs and for my lungs. It hurt, but little by little, I got to run further, and eventually I ran a 3 mile race, then a 5 mile race, then a 10 mile race. Then I began thinking, hey, maybe I can do this and really run the Boston Marathon. And eventually, in 1982, I did run it and I finished, and then I ran it three more times. Id run with an inhaler tucked in the waistband of my running shorts, just in case, but I hardly ever used it. The confidence that I gained by those efforts was what started me thinking about doing the long distance sailing that Ive done in the last 10 years. When I was growing up, I read and dreamed about the great solo sailors - the American Joshua Slocum, the Englishman Francis Chichester, the Frenchman Bernard Moitessier. I always wondered whether I could do what they did, could I be as strong, as brave, as smart as they had been? I didnt know, but I wanted to try.
|