The courageous autobiography of the first legally blind athlete to compete
in the Olympic Games.
Marla Runyan was nine years old when she was diagnosed with Stargardt's
disease, an irreversible form of macular degeneration. With the uneasy but
unwavering support of her parents, she refused to let her diagnosis limit
her dreams. Despite her severely impaired, ever-worsening vision, Marla
rode horseback and learned to play the violin. And she found her true
calling in sports.
A gifted and natural athlete, Marla began to compete in the unlikeliest
event of all: the heptathlon, the grueling women's equivalent of the
decathlon, consisting of seven events: the 200-meter dash, high jump, shot
put, 100-meter hurdles, long jump, javelin throw, and 800-meter run. In
1996, she astonished the sports world by qualifying for the U.S. Olympic
Trials and, along the way, set the American record for the heptathlon 800.
It was then that she decided to concentrate on her running. Four years of
intense effort paid off. In 2000, she qualified for the U.S. Olympic team
by finishing third in the 1,500 meters. In Sydney, she placed eighth in
the finals, the top American finisher—the highest women's placing for the
United States in the event's history.
With self-deprecation and surprising wit, Marla reveals what it's like
to see the world through her eyes, how it feels to grow up "disabled" in a
society where expectations are often based on perceived abilities, and
what it means to compete at the world-class level despite the fact
that—quite literally, for her—there is no finish line.
"Blind? I think there's no doubt that Marla Runyan can see things much
clearer than most of us with 20/20 vision." —Lance Armstrong