Running with renewed spirit
Marisa O’Neil
Jamie Mead has the heart of an 18-year-old and the soles of a
44-year-old.
Those soles will hit the pavement running on Sunday six months
after their wearer got a new heart from an 18-year-old man. The
transplant ended years of illness and renewed his interest in
running, with the 21st annual Spirit Run as motivation.
The Spirit Run, a PTA-sponsored event that raises money for Harbor
View, Eastbluff, Andersen, Lincoln and Newport Coast elementary
schools, has grown from a small neighborhood event to the schools’
top money-maker.
“I chose the Spirit Run because it’s part of everything we do in
the community,” Mead said. “The money is great for the PTA. It
involves so many people. It’s such a great opportunity. In September,
I thought to myself, ‘That’s a good goal.’”
That his wife, Dina, has helped organize the Newport Beach race
most of the past eight years and that two of their three children
attend schools that benefit from the proceeds make it an even more
appropriate step in his recovery process. This will be the first race
he’ll have run since heart problems sidelined his recreational
running career at 37.
Doctors diagnosed him with ventricular tachycardia after he
noticed irregular heart rhythms when he exercised. Dead tissue in his
heart was keeping it from pumping blood to the rest of his body
properly.
He started taking medication for his condition and had a
defibrillator implanted in his chest to shock his heart when it beat
irregularly.
“I had to worry if got my heart rate up too high,” he said. “That
fear of too much activity builds in your psyche, and you’re always
careful not to walk too quickly because it would be the beginning of
a shock. I couldn’t even carry my kids.”
But his heart continued to fail, and doctors bumped him to the top
of the waiting list for a new heart after two and a half years.
Almost immediately after his surgery in September, he said, he felt
completely renewed.
“When you wake up after the transplant, you know you’re a new
person,” he said. “Just 24 hours after, they have you up and walking
around.”
After a week in the hospital, he started going for walks around
the block at home. A week later, he built up to mile-long walks, then
slowly started jogging.
Now he jogs three and a half miles four days a week. Doctors
encouraged him to stick with the exercise because it will help the
recovery process.
“Physically, he’s about 100% from where he was,” Dina Mead said.
“He’s back to being his normal self.”
The Meads are using the race as a chance to educate participants
about organ donation. Goody bags will contain informational pamphlets
and organ donor cards, and Jamie Mead and his 14-year-old daughter,
Christie, will answer questions at a booth during the race expo.
Jamie Mead will always have to take anti-rejection medicine that
weakens his immune system, making him more prone to illness. But
after years of being sick, the former executive for Irvine Apartment
Communities said, he has plenty to look forward to.
“I’ve got a bunch of things I’m doing that I hadn’t done before,”
he said. “I’m refereeing soccer games for my son, I’m an active
softball coach for my daughter. My next goal, after five years of not
being able to work, is finally being able to get a job.”
* MARISA O’NEIL covers education. She may be reached at (949)
574-4268 or by e-mail at marisa.oneil@latimes.com.
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