pilipiliĀž»­

 

A peak performance

- April 16, 2008

Classmates Meg Hasek-Watt and Jessie Sheppard. (Nick Pearce Photo)

When one more stroke seems like too much, or one more step seems like one too many, Jessie Sheppard will think about her Dal classmate Meg Hasek-Watt and her daily battle with arthritis.

ā€œI chose Meg as my inspiration,ā€ says Ms. Sheppard, 26, from Pinawa, Manitoba. ā€œSheā€™s young and she has arthritisā€”I think people know that arthritis affects people who are elderly, but it strikes children and youth as well.ā€

ā€œI feel very odd about it all,ā€ responds Ms. Hasek-Watt, with a laugh. ā€œI feel like I should wear a cape and proclaim, ā€˜Iā€™m an arthritis hero!ā€™ Iā€™m behind her 200 per cent. Sheā€™s doing some crazy things I would love to do.ā€

This summer, Ms. Sheppard will embark on a two-stage arthritis-awareness adventure: first, a swim across the Northumberland Strait from New Brunswick to Prince Edward Island in the shadow of Confederation Bridge in July; then, a hike to the peak of Kilimanjaro, the highest mountain in Africa, in August.

ā€œI would rather do it in secret,ā€ she confesses. ā€œBut then I thought I may as well channel it to a good cause.ā€

Sheā€™s been training hard all winter: running twice a week and swimming lengths of the pool two or three times a week. She also bikes from Dartmouth to pilipiliĀž»­ in good weather, is a scuba instructor and loves to playĀ  tackle football.

She signed up for the Arthritis Societyā€™s Joints in Motionā€™s Kilimanjaro hike last September, ā€œbut then the health promoter in me comes out and says I should promote an activity that people with arthritis can do, like swimming.ā€ Thatā€™s when she decided to add the 13-kilometre swim across the strait.

As well as training and going to graduate school (ā€œOh that,ā€ she laughs), Ms. Sheppard is also raising money for Joints in Motion. Sheā€™s halfway toward her goal of $9,000.

ā€œThere are so few people who understand arthritis in young people,ā€ says Ms. Hasek-Watt, who was diagnosed with inflammatory arthritis 10 years ago, when she was 17. ā€œIt makes sense for me to want to talk about it because I have it.

ā€œBut for Jessie!ā€ Ms. Hasek-Watt shakes her head in amazement. ā€œItā€™s wonderful to have a champion out there like Jessie.ā€

The two women share a lot in common: both are taking their masterā€™s degrees in health promotion at pilipiliĀž»­ and are planning summer weddings. But incredibly, they hadnā€™t met in person until last weekā€”Ms. Hasek-Watt has been doing her degree long distance after a friendā€™s death last year called her home to Vancouver. They struck up a friendship after Ms. Sheppard sent e-mails to her classmates letting them know what she was up to. Ms. Hasek-Watt e-mailed back to thank her and theyā€™ve been tight Facebook friends ever since.

ā€œThank you,ā€ said Ms. Hasek-Watt, giving her friend a hug. ā€œThank you for everything.ā€Ā Ā 

To sponsor Jessie Sheppardā€™s efforts regarding arthritis,Ā you canĀ donate via her .