
| "As a cancer survivor, patient, and advocate, I get my inspiration from fellow cancer patients and the general cancer community. I am inspired by my family, teammates, friends, and even strangers who lend a hand in support of all good causes." |
![]() I would like to tell you about my hero, an amazing person who recently passed away from a 4 1/2 year battle with Leukemia. His name is Louie Bonpua. Instead of spending the past 4 1/2 years focused on himself and the cancer trying to take his life, Louie connected with a group that's dedicated to finding a cure. He entered the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society's "Team in Training" to be an honoree, which is essentially someone surviving the disease that provides the team members with visible motivation to why their fundraising efforts are so important.
![]() Louie didn't stand still for long, nor did he do things in any way but his own. It wasn't long before Louie insisted upon adding the title of "Team in Training member" to his "Honoree" status. He joined the team and started training for his first triathlon, raising money for the society, and elevating his ability to motivate team members to a new level. It soon became common to hear, "If Louie is out here doing it, then what am I complaining about?". His actions motivated the many he touched, which included those he met in person, through email, visitors to his web site, and even through the many news stories published about his strength and courage to battle his way through triathlons. He became famous for his smile, he never left home without it, even during the nastiest workouts, during the most painful moments in a triathlon, or even after bad test results from the hospital, Louie always had that smile. Soon he got the Ironman bug. He started training with the Ironteam, 10 months of workouts, 6 days a week, Saturdays and Sundays swimming, biking, and running. Why, I asked? "Because I want to show people that you can still live, even when they tell you you're going to die" he responds. He wanted to prove that there's no reason to ever give up hope, and he did. On August 26, 2001, Louie crossed the finish line in Penticton, British Columbia with the crowd chanting "Louie, Louie, Louie." Does it stop here? No.
Louie complained "but it's only .2 miles, think they'll let me run it for a couple miles?". He wanted more... there's no doubt that that
was definitely Louie speaking.
Louie was hospitalized only 3 days before the Olympic Torch Relay, but you've probably figured there was no way to stop him
from performing his duties. While the doctors were hesitant to release him for this once in a lifetime chore, there was a team of
friends working on project "Breakout Louie." We had an Ambulance, a nurse, a group that wouldn't take "no" from the medical
staff, and one determined Ironman. Louie was going to carry the torch, no question there.
Louie passed away just a couple days after the Olympic Torch Relay, fighting for every last achievement, living life to the
fullest for each second that ticked off, and always doing it "Louie's way."
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Written by
My Hero
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Leukemia Lymphoma Society Team in Training
Mia Hamm
put Louie Bonpua on her heroes list. |
Last changed using MY HERO by My Hero on: 7/23/2006 11:25:30 AM