Mark Blakey will be pleased if he doesn't finish last. Photo / Supplied
For some it is the elite competition, for others victory comes with completion. And for others it holds special significance.
Take Whenuapai cancer survivor Mark Blakey, who was given a grim prognosis after contracting cancer of the bladder. That was three years ago and Mark, a former runner, has already completed the Auckland marathon and, after a challenge from a workmate and his stepdaughter, is taking on the State Harbour Crossing.
"I am just a fat boy from England who works too hard and likes to push himself by doing dumb things like swimming across the harbour. It should be fun," said the 48-year-old.
Blakey is fortunate he can swim at all. His world was turned upside down when he was told by doctors that his days were numbered. Blakey never accepted that diagnosis and travelled to the United States to get innovative surgery on his bladder to ensure he wouldn't have to carry a bag around for the rest of his life. Now he can focus on other battles that are much more positive.
"Once you have picked yourself up from cancer, you can overcome any other challenge - it is all easy compared to what I have been through. I have got back into running marathons and this is another thing for me to tick off the bucket list. It is out of my comfort zone. The doctors had given up on me and thought I had little time to live, but here I am feeling fighting-fit and about to do the State Harbour Crossing."
Blakey, who now works as a building company manager, had his bladder removed and had everything rewired and replumbed to create a false bladder inside his body using part of his large intestine. Once he'd recovered, the hard-case Yorkshireman, who has lived in New Zealand for the past 15 years, didn't fancy moping about, so he ran the 2009 Auckland Marathon, harking back to his running days when he ran the New York Marathon twice.
"Running that marathon was murder," he said in his broad accent. "I didn't want to drink too much before the race because I can't wee properly and I need to use a catheter too and that was not really an option in the middle of the race, so it was bloody difficult. I was so relieved to finish."
He expects he will feel the same next Sunday when he has safely negotiated the harbour crossing. Blakey is the first to admit that swimming really isn't his forte.
"The problem with my training is that as a Pom we grew up doing breaststroke. I go to the pool out west and see all these fit, slim-line Kiwis swimming all these lengths and here I am, a big fat Pommy bobbing up and down like a British bullfrog."
He reckons swimming 2.9km is at the limit of his ability.
"It's huge and I am bloody nervous. But it is another challenge. I'll be pleased if I don't finish last."
His humour is a long way from all the pain and heartache he and his family have suffered during his battle with cancer.
"There were some times when I'd wake up at three in the morning and be totally depressed about the whole situation, but that is the normal. I think it is my Yorkshire determination that helps me just get on with it."
Event organiser Scott Rice is amazed by Blakey's resilience.
"Mark is an inspirational character for us all to take motivation from. Often it seems to take a moment of adversity for someone to produce an extraordinary feat. Mark shows that anyone can achieve anything.
"Being active and healthy is so important to us all. Swimming is an ideal way to achieve that and the State New Zealand Ocean Swim Series is an achievable target for all."
Blakey has simple advice for people looking to overcome adversity in their own lives.
"Look for all options available and never give up. There are some clued-up people out there and there are a lot of ways to get rid of the cancer ... and on a personal level, stay positive, positive, positive. It is not easy, but when you get through it is a huge thrill to be able to live again."
By Peter Thornton
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