Commander Oxford’s challenge was just the spark that Minnesota Legionnaire and her family needed to embrace walking and a healthier lifestyle.
Teresa Ash had been a pack-a-day-smoker for 40 years before being able to quit on Flag Day. “I was overweight, I was not breathing well.”
Still, she needed something extra to keep her from reverting back to the habit that began as a teen when she took her mom’s Kool filter Kings.
Enter American Legion National Commander Bill Oxford’s 100 Miles for Hope challenge.
“It’s kind of crazy but it timed perfectly for me,” she said, pausing. “Because I was quitting smoking. One of the things I did as a smoker would be to pace around. I did it outside and my family would come out with me and talk. I would be pacing or moving. When I decided to quit smoking, everyone told me that I had to change all my habits.”
But Ash knew others who changed their habits when they quit smoking, “and it didn’t work out for them.”
Instead, she continued everything — without the cigarettes. “Everybody would continue to come outside with me,” said Ash, a member of Christie DeParcq Post 406 and vice commander for The American Legion Department of Minnesota. “I would just pace, continuing to do what I did when I smoked. That’s how this whole thing started.”
Now, she averages about four miles walking a day, admitting that she was pacing during the phone interview. “I feel so much better. I really do. It was wonderful that my family was so supportive of me.”
There is still time to get involved, join the challenge and help meet Oxford’s goal of 5,000 participants by registering at Emblem Sales. Participants will receive a tech shirt and proceeds will help American Legion service officers and military families with children in need through the Veterans & Children Foundation (V&CF).
Ash, an Army veteran, points out the importance of embracing healthy habits for American Legion Family members.
“You have to want to do this for yourself,” she said. “You have to want to feel better for yourself. Not for your kids. Not for your family. Not for anybody else. A lot of us go to a meeting to support veterans, or volunteer to flip burgers, or sell poppies. If you don’t quit smoking and keep your body healthy, you are not going to be able to do that.”
She has seen changes in not only herself but her family members. When she smoked, her family hung out with her outside as she paced during smoke breaks. Now, they walk with her.
“Everyone is feeling better,” she said. “I’ve lost 30 pounds since I quit smoking and started walking. My daughter works for the post office so she is constantly on her feet and on the go. My perfect husband walks with me and he has lost weight. My daughter’s boyfriend has felt much better.”
Joining her on her journey are:
• Her husband, Michael Ash , an Air Force veteran and also a member of Christie DeParcq Post 406.
• Her daughter, Amanda England, an Army veteran and Post 406 member.
• England’s 11-year-old daughter, Bree England, a Junior Auxiliary member in the 5th District of Minnesota.
• England’s boyfriend, Nick Oehrlein.
• Ash’s best friend, Lynne Nottage, an Air Force veteran and member of American Legion Minneapolis Post 1.
While the 100-mile challenge concludes on Veterans Day, Ash and her family will keep up their commitment.
“We absolutely will,” she said. “You feel better. You feel healthier. And you want to live longer and be stronger to do things. Michael and I go God, family and American Legion. We work to help veterans and we need to be healthy to do that. This 100 Miles for Hope really just came at the right time for us. Everything just fell into place.”
- Commander