Pictured during this yearâ??s race, Terry Carella, Director of Communications at Thomas M. Cooley Law School, among group of Lansing area attorneys competing in the April 15 event.
By Tom Kirvan
Legal News
It’s been over two weeks since the finish of the Boston Marathon became news for all the wrong reasons, but the aftershocks continue to be felt by three members of the local legal community who all completed the 26.2-mile race within minutes of the bombings that killed three spectators and injured more than 180 others.
Attorney Marcy Ford and Terry Carella, director of communications for Cooley Law School, were among the finishers of the annual Patriots’ Day race that tragically was turned into a war scene near the 4-hour mark of the event that attracted more than 24,000 runners.
“It’s hard to put into words how scary an experience it was for all of us,” said Ford, executive vice president of Trott & Trott in Farmington Hills. “One moment there was a feeling of elation in having finished, and the next there was a sense of panic after hearing the back-to-back explosions. There also was a real level of uncertainty about whether there were more explosions to come. Nobody knew what could be coming next.”
Ford, a resident of Huntington Woods, broke the 4-hour barrier, finishing the grueling race in 3:58.17, a 9:06 per mile pace that earned her a coveted qualifying spot in next year’s marathon. But there was little time to celebrate the accomplishment, she indicated.
“I had just had my photo taken after finishing and was probably no more than 200 yards from the finish line when the first explosion occurred,” Ford said. “As many people have said, it sounded like a cannon went off, but when we saw all the smoke that was billowing up, it was obvious something else had happened. And then within seconds, there was a second explosion, which really set off alarm among all those in the finish area.”
Terry Carella, a 3:53.08 finisher, was among those caught in the ensuing chaos.
“I was so pleased to have finished in the time that I did because it had been such a hard marathon,” said Carella, who has competed at Boston multiple times over the past decade. “As anyone who has run Boston knows, the course can really take its toll because of the hills, but I was so elated to have broken four hours again and to have earned a qualifying time for next year.”
A Lansing area resident, Carella was so delighted with her effort that she somehow missed the opportunity to pick up her finishing medal.
“I had gone through the finish chute, gotten the blanket they give each finisher, grabbed some food, and made it to the race buses when I asked someone about the medals,” Carella related. “When I found out they were given out back at the finish line, I decided to make the trek back there, even though I could barely walk at that point. My legs were really hurting, but there was no way I was going to leave Boston without that medal.”
It nearly proved to be a fatal decision, she admitted.
“I had to go back several blocks, making my way against all the finish traffic,” Carella said. “As I got near the finish area, there was an enormous blast and a tremendous amount of smoke. I immediately said to myself, ‘This is not good.’ A few seconds later, the second blast went off. By that point, people were moving as fast as they could to get away from the area.
It was panicky at that stage. I was cold and I was shivering, but I knew that I had to get out of that area as quickly as possible. We all wondered whether we had heard the last of the explosions.”
Carella’s husband, Mike, a Lansing physician, was among the marathon spectators who quickly became separated from his loved one.
“Our routine is that Mike sees me at the halfway point, at the 25-mile mark, and then we hook up in the meeting area after the race,” Carella related. “Of course, everything after the race became very problematic with the lockdown. Movement was really restricted until the police could get a handle on all that was happening. Fortunately, Mike and I finally hooked up, and before long we got word that all of our running friends from the Lansing area were all right. It was a huge relief because you start thinking about the worst at a time like that.”
The Boston tragedy has given Carella pause for thought.
“As a runner, as part of a group of athletes dedicated to a lifestyle of health and fitness, this just makes me dig in my heels even more,” Carella said of the bombings. “I’m not about to let terrorists change the way we go about our lives, especially in an event as great as the Boston Marathon.”
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