Worth the Wait
By Rick Reilly
Sports Illustrated
Why do they come? Why do they hang around to watch the slowest high
school cross-country runner in America? Why do they want to see
a kid finish the 3.1 miles in 51 minutes when the winner did it
in 16?
Why do they cry? Why do they nearly break their wrists applauding
a junior who falls flat on his face almost every race? Why do they
hug a teenager who could be beaten by any other kid running backward?
Why do they do it? Why do all of his teammates go back out on the
course and run the last 10 minutes of every race with him? Why do
other teams do it too? And the girls' teams? Why run all the way
back out there to pace a kid running like a tortoise with bunions?
Why?
Because Ben Comen never quits.
See, Ben has a heart just slightly larger than the Chicago Hyatt.
He also has cerebral palsy. The disease doesn't mess with his intellect
-- he gets A's and B's -- but it seizes his muscles and contorts
his body and gives him the balance of a Times Square drunk. Yet there
he is, competing for the Hanna High cross-country team in Anderson,
S.C., dragging that wracked body over rocks and fallen branches and
ditches. And people ask, Why?
"
Because I feel like I've been put here to set an example," says
Ben, 16. "Anybody can find something they can do -- and do it
well. I like to show people that you can either stop trying or you
can pick yourself up and keep going. It's just more fun to keep going."
It must be, because faced with what Ben faces, most of us would quit.
Imagine what it feels like for Ben to watch his perfectly healthy
twin, Alex, or his younger brother, Chris, run like rabbits for Hanna
High, while Ben runs like a man whacking through an Amazon thicket.
Imagine never beating anybody to the finish line. Imagine dragging
along that stubborn left side, pulling that unbending tire iron of
a leg around to the front and pogo-sticking off it to get back to
his right.
Worse, he lifts his feet so little that he trips on anything -- a
Twinkie-sized rock, a licorice-thick branch, the cracks between linoleum
tiles. But he won't let anybody help him up. "It messes up my
flow," he says. He's not embarrassed, just mad.
Worst, he falls hard. His brain can't send signals fast enough for
his arms to cushion his fall, so he often smacks his head or his
face or his shoulder. Sometimes his mom, Joan, can't watch.
"
I've been coaching cross-country for 31 years," says Hanna's
Chuck Parker, "and I've never met anyone with the drive that
Ben has. I don't think there's an inch of that kid I haven't had
to bandage up."
But never before Ben finishes the race. Like Rocky Marciano, Ben
finishes bloody and bruised, but never beaten. Oh, he always loses
-- Ben barely finishes ahead of the sunset, forget other runners.
But he hasn't quit once. Through rain, wind or welt, he always crosses
the finish line.
Lord, it's some sight when he gets there: Ben clunking his way home,
shepherded by all those kids, while the cheerleaders screech and
parents try to holler encouragement, only to find nothing coming
out of their voice boxes.
The other day Ben was coming in with his huge army, Ben's Friends,
his face stoplight red and tortured, that laborious gait eating up
the earth inch by inch, when he fell not 10 yards from the line.
There was a gasp from the parents and a second of silence from the
kids. But then Ben went through the 15-second process of getting
his bloody knees under him, his balance back and his forward motion
going again -- and he finished. From the roar you'd have thought
he just won Boston.
"
Words can't describe that moment," says his mom. "I saw
grown men just stand there and cry."
Ben can get to you that way. This is a kid who builds wheelchair
ramps for Easter Seals, spends nights helping at an assisted-living
home, mans a drill for Habitat for Humanity, devotes hours to holding
the hand of a disabled neighbor, Miss Jessie, and plans to run
a marathon and become a doctor. Boy, the youth of today, huh?
Oh, one aside: Hanna High is also the home of a mentally challenged
man known as Radio, who has been the football team's assistant
for more than 30 years. Radio gained national attention in a 1996
Sports
Illustrated story by Gary Smith and is the hero of a major movie
that opens nationwide on Oct. 24.
Feel like you could use a little dose of humanity? Get yourself
to Hanna. And while you're there, go out and join Ben's Friends.
You'll be amazed what a little jog can do for your heart.
Issue date: October 20, 2003
Rick Reilly is one of the writers featured in the new Sports Illustrated
book Fifty Years of Great Writing, available wherever books are
sold, through amazon.com or by calling 800-423-9444
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