STORY
HIGHLIGHTS
Norma Bastidas plans to swim, bike and run 3,762 miles
She's running toward Washington, where her journey
ends
Bastidas says she hopes to raise awareness about human
trafficking
(CNN) --
The first time I spoke to Norma Bastidas, she was having a rough couple of
days.
Thirty miles into her attempt to set the record for
the world's longest triathlon, Bastidas, 47, had to start over due to a GPS
malfunction. The saltwater off Cancun, Mexico, was eating away at her gums and
throat. Her face
was sunburned. She'd been stung several times by sea creatures, so her lips
were swollen.
"I wanted to look like Angelina Jolie, but I
probably look like Mickey Rourke in 'The Wrestler,' " she joked.
Her laid-back sense of humor belies an ambitious
drive. A year ago, Bastidas didn't even know how to swim. But on March 20, she
finished swimming 95 miles in the Caribbean to complete that leg of her
triathlon challenge. On April 4, she crossed the U.S.-Mexico border, averaging
about 130 miles a day on her bike.
In 1998, Australian David Holleran completed a
triathlon consisting of a 26-mile swim, 1,242-mile bike ride and a 310-mile
run. He holds the record for the longest triathlon, according to Guinness World
Records.
Bastidas will more than double that distance, swimming
95 miles, biking 2,932 miles and running 735 miles for a total of 3,762
miles before reaching Washington near the end of April.
It's a grueling journey, even for someone used to
tackling ultra races. But there's something driving Bastidas other than the
desire to break a world record: She's determined to raise awareness about human
trafficking and stop it.
"I'm prepared to do whatever it takes,"
Bastidas said after a particularly rough patch of riding in Mexico. "If
you don't risk everything, that's not courage."
Just a few days ago, the triathlete hopped off her
bike and laced up her sneakers to begin her run into the U.S. capital.
"Her triathlon route covered major human
trafficking routes," team member Alexis Rhyner said when I asked why
Bastidas was traveling so far. "It
was also important to her that the route pass through both countries and both
capitals, to unify both nations to fight the issue together and take
responsibility for what is happening in and between our two borders."
Thousands of children are sold for sex every day in
Mexico and the United States, according to iEmpathize, a child advocacy
group Bastidas has teamed with to film a documentary of her journey.
"We all know it's wrong," Bastidas said. "It's still happening. And
it's preventable."
She was sexually abused, first by a family member, she
said, then again later in life. At 17, she said she was kidnapped in Mexico
City by men who intended to sell her into slavery. She escaped only with the help
of the brother of one of her captors.
Some
days, when Bastidas finishes her mileage, survivors wait to thank her.
"You can't meet someone who's said, 'I've been
raped, too' and go home and not care about it," she said. "What I do
is that just remind people it's not just a cause. We're your family, your sisters,
your daughters, your mothers."
She tells anyone who will listen that what she's doing
is a metaphor for life. If she can do this -- break the world record for the
longest triathlon -- then human trafficking can be eradicated forever.
"This is the best way I can illustrate that
nothing is impossible," she said.
Bastidas first started running in 2006 when her oldest
son, Karl, was diagnosed with an incurable eye condition called cone rod
dystrophy. Soon after she signed up for the Canadian Death Race -- and made it
56 miles before having to pull out due to hypothermia.
Since then she's run hundreds of races and even
climbed the world's seven highest peaks on seven continents to raise
money to find a cure for genetic blindness.
With this triathlon, she's supporting a new cause. Anywhere
from600,000 to 800,000 people are trafficked across international borders
each year, according to a 2007 report from the U.S. State Department. Those lucky enough to be rescued
are left with permanent physical and emotional scars.
Bastidas wants the "Be Relentless"
documentary to change people's perceptions of true strength. It's not the
strength it's taken her to attempt the world's longest triathlon. It's the inner
strength found in women and children who survive years of unimaginable abuse.
"It's only 3,500 miles," she told me
emphatically, at the beginning of her journey in Cancun. "It's so worth it. Think
about it! It's a child's life. It's a human being's life. (This is) nothing --
it's nothing compared to that."
By Jacque
Wilson, CNN
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