Competing in her third marathon ever and her first Boston Marathon on Monday, Chaska's Michelle Love rolled toward the start line on her hand cycle and received a stunning bit of information: The race she had signed up for months ago, which at the time was just a demonstration event with no winners and losers, had suddenly become a competition thanks to the efforts of fellow hand cyclists.
Love said she was told, literally minutes before starting the race, "Oh, by the way, this just became a competition. … And you're the only female racing."
Imagine competing in one of the most revered races in the world with hopes of just managing to finish. And then imagine finding out that if you finish, you will be a champion.
It's a lot to take in, even in retrospect. Love, 49, is back in the Twin Cities now and chatted about the experience Wednesday by phone — often using words like "surreal" to describe what it's like to be a Boston Marathon winner.
Love was 13 when she lost the use of her left leg and was told she would never walk again. She does walk now thanks to the help of arm crutches, but until seven years ago she hadn't done much in the way of strenuous competitive activity. Her husband, Daniel Kessler, competed in triathlons and marathons and suggested to her that she take up hand cycling — a form of cycling that, as the name suggests, is powered by the arms and not the legs.
That led to some initial races and ultimately two marathons in which she attempted to qualify for Boston. On her first try, she came up a few minutes short of the 2-hour, 45-minute standard. But competing at the Med City Marathon in Rochester — which allows hand cycles, unlike Twin Cities and Grandma's — she made it with 20 minutes to spare.
"My goal was just to qualify for Boston," Love said. "I wasn't even really sure I wanted to go to Boston. I just wanted to qualify."
But she decided to race — and in the process, she had an unforgettable experience.