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"I
swam the Waikiki RoughWater with Jeff's
training."
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Athlete's Body is
Dying Muscle by Muscle
By Michael Tsai
Special to The Advertiser
Monday, August 28, 2000
Francean McClain crosses
the hot sand to train for the Waikiki Roughwater
Swim.You are still able to see light, you
just can't make out the shapes. So every
once in a while, when your imperfect stroke
turns you off course, you find yourself
running aground or, worse, into the jagged
reef bordering the open ocean. You used
to run marathons. You used to climb mountains.
Now, with no feeling below your knees, you
rely on a wheelchair to help you along.
You crawl on your elbows just to reach the
water. And that awful pain in your thighs
and stomach and hands is a constant reminder
that your nerves and muscles have not stopped
dying yet. You are Francean McClain. For
nearly all of your 52 years, you have lived
with the knowledge that your body is slipping
slowly out of your control. Not just aging
- atrophying, dying. Nerve by nerve, muscle
by muscle. You are losing your sight. You
are losing control of your muscles. But
none of that matters right now. At this
moment you are belly down, dragging your
legs across the warm sand of Ala Moana Beach.
Your feet are drawn back ballerina-style
by a system of ribbons you designed to help
you move easier once you reach the water.
You crawl across the sand and into the sea.
In the water, you escape gravity. Here you
are free - and scared. As you slowly make
your way into deeper territory, you try
not to think about the vastness of the ocean,
of the vast uncertainty and danger. You
concentrate on the rise and fall of the
waves, the tug of the current, the feel
of the water on your fingertips as you trace
the wake of your training partners. You
are still able to see light. Born and raised
in Pennsylvania, Francean McClain was first
diagnosed with Type A diabetes at age 10.
With limited treatments available to manage
the disease, she resigned herself to what
she knew in her heart would be a life of
transient opportunities. "In those days,
there wasn't a lot they could do about diabetes,"
she said. "Without all of the advancements
we have today, I guess you just died. So
I thought I should get my money's worth
out of this body." And she did. McClain
ran marathons as a teenager. She hiked and
biked and did everything she could think
of while her body was still strong. "I'm
really into physical stuff," she said. "I've
never been terribly intellectual or spiritual,
but I've always been very physical." McClain
also was aware that, given her condition,
it was almost inevitable that she would
eventually need government assistance to
help pay for her medical bills. But as long
as she was able to work, she was determined
to do her share. Still, those were the days
before the Americans with Disabilities Act,
and McClain said she found herself shut
out of better-paying jobs because of her
condition. "At that time, you couldn't get
a job if there was anything wrong with you,"
she said. "You'd fill out these applications
with all these questions about your health.
They'd always find out what you had. And
if there was anything wrong, you couldn't
get a job to save your life." To make ends
meet, McClain stocked shelves, delivered
newspapers and waited tables - anything
to be productive.
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In
1972, unemployed and struggling, she sold
everything she had and moved to Hawaii.
She thrived in her new home, taking advantage
of Hawaii's year-round good weather to indulge
in outdoor activities. But her condition
was catching up with her. Her eyesight worsened,
and, by age 30, she no longer had the strength
to stand on her toes. It took her an hour
to walk five blocks. When the bones in her
feet finally broke through the thin layer
of atrophied muscle and skin surrounding
them, she went to the doctor. McClain was
diagnosed with neuropathy, a degenerative
disease associated with diabetes. As the
disease progressed, McClain lost most of
the feeling in her legs. Eventually, she
was forced to stop working. Four years ago,
she started using a wheelchair. But McClain
was too busy to despair. Within months,
she was speeding down H-3 as the lone wheelchair
entrant in the 1996 Trans-KoÔolau Run. The
next year, she finished the Honolulu Marathon
in 12 painful hours. More recently, McClain
has turned her focus to swimming. If all
goes well, she will be among the hundreds
participating in next month's Waikiki Roughwater
Swim, considered by many to be the premier
distance swimming event in Hawaii. Though
she has trained diligently for months, she
is reluctant to send in her entry until
she is sure she can complete the grueling
2.5-mile course on her own. "I've been wanting
to do this for the last five years, but
I was nowhere good enough," she said. "I
don't want to embarrass myself. I don't
want to get pulled out of the water. But
I think I'm closer than ever. I'm not looking
to set any records. I just want to participate.
I'd love to tell people that I did that."
The difference this year is Team Ulua, a
group of noncompetitive swimmers that trains
together for open-ocean events like the
Waikiki Roughwater. With the help of her
coach Jeff Swafford and her new training
buddies, McClain has made huge strides in
the water. "When she started she basically
had no power and she had the meanest zigzag
in the world," Swafford said. "She's improved
a lot, and it's all from training and hard
work. Mentally, she's an iron woman." McClain
finds encouragement in the fact that, despite
her worsening conditioning, she is just
now coming into her own as a swimmer. And
although it was never her intention, she
hopes that in pursuing the things she loves,
she might also serve as inspiration to others
with diabetes. "A lot of people go blind,
and they feel ashamed. They withdraw. I
don't understand that. All they did was
stay alive," she said. "I'd like it if other
people came away thinking ÔMaybe I can do
that. Maybe my life isn't over just because
I can't see or walk.' " You are Francean
McClain, and on a warm summer evening your
hands are slicing through the water just
the way your coach taught you. You are rocking
your body to help bring movement to those
legs of yours. You are reaching and pulling,
reaching and pulling in a tiny corner of
an immense sea. The sun will set soon. But
for now, you can still see light.
By
Michael Tsai
Special to The Advertiser
Monday, August 28, 2000
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