Walking the walk
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Mike Sciacca
Valerie Hardy and Rosanna Starr know the talk and walk the walk when
it comes to multiple sclerosis.
The two Huntington Beach residents joined thousands of others for
the 2004 MS Walk on Sunday.
The walk was staged by the Orange County chapter of the National
Multiple Sclerosis Society and was held at three sites.
Sunday’s walk was at Huntington State Beach, starting in the
parking lot at Pacific Coast Highway and Magnolia Street.
Participants walked either a 5k or a 10k along the beach path,
passing the pier, and then returning to the starting point, where a
rainbow of balloons formed two arches.
Rain fell on the participants during Saturday’s walks, but did
little to dampen walkers’ determination.
“The rain aside, it was a great event,” said Hardy a member of
“Joshie’s Chicken Monkeys,” a team named in honor of her 28-year-old
nephew, Josh, who was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis two years
ago. “The part of the walk that amazes me is just how upbeat it is.
You see everybody walking this, from the young and old, to those who
have different stages of the disease.
This is our second year walking and we do it for Josh and others
who are afflicted by this disease. Last year, we raised around
$3,000. This year, we are still calculating, but we perhaps will
raise a little more than $5,000. We’re really happy about that.”
Two other walks were held Saturday, one at Santiago Canyon College
in Orange, the other at Salt Creek Beach in Laguna Niguel.
The three events drew a total of 2,540 participants, with about
1,200 people in Surf City’s walk, said Jim Graves, communications
coordinator for the Orange County chapter of the National Multiple
Sclerosis Society.
“There was lots of enthusiasm and a lot of fun,” said Graves, who
attended the Huntington walk. “We at the society are thrilled with
the effort of all these terrific people who raised funds and came out
to walk.”
The events raised a total of $550,000, Graves estimated Tuesday.
“This walk just gets bigger and raises more money each year,” he
said. “This was our best walk ever.”
Multiple sclerosis, the most common neurological disease of young
adults, is a chronic, disabling disease that attacks the brain and
central nervous system. The progress, severity and specific symptoms,
which range from numbness to paralysis and blindness, can’t be
predicted.
More than 3,000 people in Orange County, and some 400,000
nationwide, have this disease for which there is no known cause, cure
or prevention, Graves said.
A team of 25 local walkers formed “Rosanna’s Racer,” named in
honor of Rosanna Starr, a resource teacher at Sts. Simon and Jude
Catholic Church in Huntington Beach.
The team captain of “Rosanna’s Racers” was 14-year-old Karafaye
Buffa, a fifth-grade student of Starr’s when she was diagnosed with
multiple sclerosis.
“She is a great teacher and I just wanted to do something to
help,” said Karafaye.
Karafaye estimated that “Rosanna’s Racers” raised more than $1,600
from Sunday’s walk.
Starr, 50, pinpoints Nov. 1, 2001, as the day she was diagnosed
with multiple sclerosis.
“I’ll never forget the day,” she said. “I was pursuing my master’s
in administration. I graduated on Dec. 14, but was very ill by then.
I typed my thesis with two fingers.”
Sunday marked the third time Starr has participated in the MS
Walk. The first time, she couldn’t walk the event. Last year -- like
this year -- she walked with the use of a cane and rode the rest of
the walk in a red, wooden wagon bearing the American flag, a wagon
given to her by a family belonging to the Sts. Simon and Jude parish.
“I never want to be pitied because I have this disease,” said
Starr, who twice has been nominated as a Who’s Who Among America’s
Teachers. “It’s easy to want to give up, but I choose not to. It has
a lot to do with your spirit, your heart, your soul.
“The best medicine for me is my students. Every morning they make
my day by saying, ‘Hello, Mrs. Starr, how do you feel today?’ Nothing
can replace that.”
* MIKE SCIACCA covers sports and features. He can be reached at
(714) 965-7171 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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