Thursday, August 24, 2023

Issue:

Mackay and Whitsunday Life

Marathon Man Runs In For A Mango Sorbet

Lachlan Spark, an avid runner and mental health advocate who’s spent most of 2022 running half marathons up the Australian east coast, dropped into Bowen’s Big Mango last week in the latter stage of his epic 5000-kilometre journey from Hobart to Cairns.

Over 200 days ago, Lachie began his mission in cold Tasmania to run 228 consecutive half-marathons up the country’s eastern seaboard in what he calls ‘The 222 Run’, arriving in sunny Cairns.

He had two goals aside from the physical and mental challenge of running 21.1 kilometres per day for the better part of a year: to raise funds and to raise awareness for Australians living with depression and anxiety, an issue deeply close to Lachie’s heart.

“I’d come up with the idea many years ago while I was living in Melbourne. I was incredibly depressed and was worried about my future because of it,” Lachie said.

“I thought I could do something extraordinary. So, I came up with the idea that I wanted to run the length of the Australian east coast.”

Lining up with the charities R U OK? and Heart On My Sleeve to raise awareness and funds, Lachie began his long, personal journey with an altruistic goal.

Last week, on day 196, Lachie dropped in at Bowen’s Big Mango for the “world’s best mango sorbet”.

“The mango sorbet is honestly the best thing I’ve ever tasted,” Lachie laughed.

Now in the journey’s closing stages, he reflected on what it all meant.

“The thing I’ll take with me once the race is finished is the impact that we’ve had on people who’ve never felt comfortable having a conversation about what they’re feeling,” he said.

“In a small way, I feel we’ve given their voice volume – just having a chat can do that. Keep having those conversations.”

You can donate to Lachie’s cause here: https://www.gofundme.com/f/the-222

Lachlan Spark has run almost 222 half-marathons in a row each day for the better part of a year, and dropped into Bowen for a Mango Sorbet as he approached his journey’s end in Cairns

In other news