Glen Cunningham was a runner. However at one part in his life, it was doubtful he would walk:
"Cunningham's legs were very badly burned in an explosion caused when
someone put gasoline instead of kerosene in the can at his schoolhouse
by accident when he was eight and his brother Floyd was thirteen. Floyd
died in the fire. When the doctors recommended amputating Glenn's legs,
he was so distressed his parents would not allow it. The doctors
predicted he might never walk normally again. He had lost all the flesh
on his knees and shins and all the toes on his left foot. Also, his transverse arch was practically destroyed. However, his great determination, coupled
with hours upon hours of a new type of therapy, enabled him to gradually
regain the ability to walk and to proceed to run. It was in the early
summer of 1919 when he first tried to walk again, roughly two years
after the accident" (Wikipedia)
However Cunningham was not content with just being able to walk. He continued to develop the strength in his legs by running. He had a favorite scripture: Isaiah 40:31: "But those who wait on the
Lord shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings like
eagles, they shall run and not be weary, they shall walk and not faint."
Cunningham became so good at running, he was able to attend college as a runner, University of Kansas.
He participated in the Olympics of 1932 and 1936 taking fourth and '32 and silver in '36. His specialty was the mile, and he held the world record at one time. "Cunningham's goal-unachieved was a four-minute mile. Many people tried
that before and failed. Several theorists proclaimed it was impossible
physiologically for humans. Runners tried running steady and fast-paced
the whole time. Others tried to go steady for the first half then give
it all they had. Cunningham tried many different ways. His greatest
success was a strategy, developed from childhood, of running his fastest
right from the beginning and then throughout every race."
He retired from running in 1940.
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