Cedar Lake 22 to Fight Pandemic Blues at Cedarville University

If COVID-19 shut down your favorite marathon and you were fighting the pandemic blues, what would you do? In the case of Jason Stafford, you answer with the Cedar Lake 22. And a half.

On September 19, Stafford, a Cedarville University freshman management student from Prairie City, Iowa, decided to create his own marathon, minus a couple miles, by doing laps around Cedar Lake, which sits in the center of Cedarville’s campus. Each lap was a little more than a half mile. He added a jaunt downtown to the village of Cedarville to mix it up.

With his friends cheering him on, he made multiple passes of the new Chick-fil-A dining facility, the Stevens Student Center and Dixon Ministry Center. For the first 20 miles of Jason Stafford’s journey, he ran around the lake, but then took off around the town of Cedarville for a change in scenery.

Although he didn’t complete the entire 26.2 miles, he was still able to complete 22.5 miles.

“I was listening to this podcast called the ‘Yes Theory Podcast,’” said Stafford. “These are guys that go out of their way to make their lives uncomfortable. They challenged their listeners that although we’re living in quarantine, we have a lot of things we can still do while the world is shut down.”

Stafford said that he already had a bucket list written out, and wanted to take it a step further after listening to this podcast. Although he had run cross country in high school and trained for a half marathon during quarantine, Stafford had never attempted to run something as long as a marathon before.

“There was nothing holding me back, so I decided to run it that Saturday, especially during a time when there were a lot of things holding me back from doing other things I’ve wanted to do,” he said.

He planned on running it on his own initially, but many of his friends joined him for certain miles. Paul Manring, a sophomore mechanical engineering student from Richland, Michigan, unicycled while eating a sandwich.

When he finally completed the race, he felt defeated because he hadn’t finished the entire 26.2 mile distance, but that quickly changed.

“I felt very loved at the end through the pain,” he said. “While my body was physically aching, I felt love from my friends cheering me on.”

And that’s how you defeat the mental battle of COVID-19 with a Cedar Lake 22. And a half.