Christy Turlington Burns is my girl crush because today she ran the New York City Marathon for mothers everywhere.
It’s not just because I grew up flipping through the pages she graced in fashion magazines. Not just because she married Ed Burns, who is the totally hot and amazingly talented Director & Actor. Or that she perfected her yoga practice, along the way producing a line of conscientiously made yoga gear. It is because she then went on to champion for mothers around the world with Every Mother Counts. After her own frightening experience during childbirth Christy became aware that her scenario could have been fatal, as it is for many women globally without access to the quality healthcare she had been provided. Every year hundreds of thousands of women die during or due to childbirth, mostly from preventable causes.
I have a girl crush on Christy because today she and her Every Mother Counts Team #RunEMC ran in the New York City Marathon to raise money for maternal health with the tag line, “we are running so other mothers don’t have to”. And I think that is AMAZING. Recently I ran the FEED 10k and barely made it across the finish line, I can’t imagine the strength and dedication it takes to run a marathon!
This photo posted on Facebook the other day stopped me in my tracks.
It made me think, this is why I do what I do, and I want to do more. It made me think about the organizations I know who posted this photo, Maternova and Flight For Every Mother, of Clean Birth Kits, and of Every Mother Counts, and Christy running the marathon. All for the sake of preventing a mother from losing her life while giving birth to another.
Why do we run? Every Mother Counts participates in the NYC Marathon annually and other running events throughout the year to raise awareness about the impact distance and lack of transportation have on maternal mortality. Whether it’s a 5K, 10K, half or full marathon these familiar racing mile-markers represent common distances pregnant and laboring women must travel in many parts of the world to reach basic and emergency healthcare services. Most of the time, they travel these distances on foot. When roads are un-passable, transportation is unavailable and distances are too far, countless women go without prenatal care or skilled assistance at birth and far too often, the results are dangerous and tragic. Distance is the leading contributor that kills almost 300,000 women per year from pregnancy and childbirth-related conditions.-EMC Website
Here is the exciting thing, even though we didn’t run the marathon today, (I actually just got out of my pajamas), this month by downloading and using my favorite App, Charity Miles we can all participate in team Every Mother Counts. Charity Miles donates 25 cents for every mile we run or walk, so if we each do just one mile a day or a collective 26.2 miles by the end of the month, you will have generated enough funding to provide transportation for a mother in labor or in trouble to the hospital in Uganda. That or you can join the team and/or donate to the Every Mother Counts CrowdRise Page.
Congratulations to the Every Mother Counts Team for running the NYC Marathon while inspiring and helping mothers around the world. I’ll be running my #CharityMiles with you this month.
Thank you, Elizabeth! These organizations and people who support safe and clean birth around the world are amazing! We have our own birthing challenges here in the US – and rank low on so many markers regarding birth among all developed countries – but we ALL DO have access to clean birth and so many birthing options here.
It always makes me smile with gratitude knowing that Americans rise to fulfill needs where ever they are – if something touches us, we CAN make a difference!
Leah I know you work in this same realm of Maternal Health and that this is an important priority to you and the work you do at http://www.motherscircle.com as well. I do believe we can make a difference, and even by saving one mother, we save two lives because then a child does not have to grow up without its mother.