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About Tim
Tim has been running since 1998 when he trained for his first triathlon, a half-ironman, in order to lose weight and get into shape. Since then, he has run cross country for his junior college, raced on the triathlon team and worked as an endurance coach in a corporate fitness facility. Along with over 25 marathons and other events under his belt, Tim continually challenges his body. After feeling that he conquered the distance of “regular” marathons, Tim decided to join a small subculture of individuals called ultra-runners who run ultra-marathons. Tim’s training started to take such time and energy that the idea of exerting such significant physical and mental energy solely for his own benefit was becoming less and less important.
Tim decided to partner with A-T Children’s Project to create The A-T CureTour through his friendship with the Achilles family whose 15-year-old daughter Cathryn has A-T. Her incredible sense of spirit despite adverse circumstances inspired Tim to raise awareness and funding for A-T research. The Tour allowed Tim to use his talent, passion and energy to accomplish an extraordinary goal that is much greater than any one person, while investing in a cause that is doing great things in the lives of children and families around the world.
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Imagine a disease that combines the worst symptoms of cerebral palsy, muscular dystrophy, cystic fibrosis, cancer and immune deficiencies. The A-T Children’s Project is a nonprofit organization that raises funds to support and coordinate first-rate biomedical research projects, scientific workshops, and a clinical center aimed at finding a cure or life-improving therapies for ataxia-telangiectasia (A-T), a rare, fatal genetic disease that affects children. Children with A-T are usually confined to wheelchairs by age 10 and often do not survive their teens. And, because A-T causes various symptoms and the disease involves many different systems in the body, scientists believe that A-T research will help more prevalent diseases such as Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, AIDS, and cancer.
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