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Christian Alvarado, who is blind, will rely on his guide, training and instincts in the L.A. Marathon on Sunday. He took up running, though he didn't like it, to prove a disability couldn't stop him.
At the starting line, some runners will shed their warm-up gear and Christian Alvarado will hear the jackets, sweaters and sweatpants hit the ground. The air will be warmed by the combined body heat of so many people clustered together.
In a moment, the first wave of the 20,000 or so runners will start in the 27th annual L.A. Marathon. But just before this happens Sunday, Alvarado will shed his sweater, revealing a light blue T-shirt with two lines centered chest-high on the front, "CHRISTIAN," and below that, "I'M BLIND."
Alvarado will notice details many runners might miss: nearby sweat, sour in varying degrees; the dog barking at a fence's edge; the familiar sweetness of a miniature chocolate candy at a refreshment station and its ensuing sugar rush.
But unlike them, he cannot see where he's going.
His dark brown eyes don't give away that he can hardly see. They are healthy. However, the nerves that tell his brain what to see are not, a disorder known as optic nerve atrophy.
For the run, Christian will rely on a guide, Tania Gongora. She'll be alongside, shoulder-to-shoulder, just inches away, tethered to him by a black shoelace. She'll hold one end, he'll grip the other. If he starts to veer off path, she'll tug on her end to help him correct.
When necessary, she will guide his hands to a cup at water stations. Along the way, she'll advise of every mile marker, every turn and warn of any bump, crack or debris, staying one step ahead to make sure his next one lands safely.
"It's something I want to do right because he deserves it," she says.
This will be their first marathon together and the first ever for Gongora, 22, from Van Nuys. But it will be the 11th for Alvarado, 26, of Mid-City. He's completed seven in L.A., one in Long Beach and two in New York, all despite vision so poor he can see only the faintest of shadows with his left eye and slowly read 3-inch-tall magnified text with his right.
He manages, listening to audio books instead. He's on his sixth about former president Franklin Roosevelt, who was crippled by polio.
"He saved the country," Alvarado says. "He helped get us out of a depression. And back then, a lot of people believed having a disability was really an obstacle.
"He didn't let a disability stop him."
In the late 1980s, Christian and his family left war-torn El Salvador and moved to Los Angeles. Months after he arrived, he was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes. A few years later, at age 7, his vision began fading.
At Los Angeles High School, where at 15 he walked the halls with a cane, he began to accept his disability. But by December 2004 of his senior year, he felt bored, unchallenged. He searched for something new.
His research led to marathons, and he decided to run in the L.A. Marathon the next March. Though he didn't like running, he wanted to prove a disability couldn't stop him or others like him.
"I don't know if you've noticed or if you knew, but in the blind community, there are so many people that are couch potatoes, who are not doing anything with their life," he said. "There's so much that they can do."
A track club offered 51/2 weeks of free professional training, but his trainer later told Christian that he'd need far more.
On mile 22 of the 26.2-mile run, Alvarado called his trainer and told him he was almost done. He finished in 6 hours 48 minutes 32 seconds. The next day, he wore his medal to class. He wore it to his high school graduation. He ran another marathon that year and was hooked.
Source: Los Angeles Times
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