Summer of 2011 my sister was a few months after having her second child and had a friend who had run a half marathon at Disney a couple years prior. I knew nothing of this, had not been to Disney since I was a kid (the parks in full since the early 90's, I went to AK in the late 90's on a one day ticket but remember almost nothing other than the safari) and was an incredibly unhealthy 260-ish pounds (scales were not my friend, I have no idea of the actual, sad tally). Anyway, needless to say neither running nor Disney were on my radar. At a family golf outing she was floating the idea of running the 2012 WDW Half Marathon during Marathon Weekend and looking for someone to go with her. She, and the rest of my extended family, just about fell over when I was the person who said it sounded like fun. For me, as the obese kid who turned into an obese adult, it represented a final opportunity to try to get things with my health headed in the right direction. Also, I was of the opinion the Disney wasn't for people my age (hence the long absence) but I remembered how much I loved going as a kid and I wasn't going to miss my 2.5 year-old nephew's first trip.
I'll freely admit, the decision to run the Half Marathon was 90% going to Disney World/10% Half Marathon (or maybe 99.9/0.1) and my lack of training reflected the dichotomy. I was terrified for the last couple weeks before the trip, completely unsure of whether I'd be able to finish. The trip finally came and Disney and the Half Marathon exceeded all my expectations. The run (walk) was a painful, miserable, self-doubting, awful experience; but it was also amazing and everything i never dreamed it could be. I finished, with blisters instead of feet by the time I did, and even though I was ashamed of my training and in horrific pain I knew this wasn't my last race at Disney. I needed to do it better. Unsurprisingly, my sister had the same feeling (absent the training shame, she'd actually done the work). The next day was the portion where Disney exceeded my expectations. We were rank amateurs at Disney, had no idea what we were doing, just had one day tickets to Magic Kingdom, and probably only hit 4-5 attractions in an entire day. But we had an absolute blast and the magic hit all of us adults just the same as my nephew.
We met many full marathon runners that day in MK and realized 2013 would be all about taking the step up and running a full marathon. From there we were determined to run Goofy, which quickly became Dopey when it was announced there was going to be a challenge beyond Goofy. We wanted to be in on the ground floor and we are both perfect through the first 6 Dopey Challenges. I've had a crisis of confidence the last few years, but I still love Marathon Weekend and am determined to get back to doing it the right way rather than just struggling through. I plan on keeping my Perfect Dopey as long as I possibly can and the same with our family tradition of Marathon Weekend.
The thing I love about RunDisney and that keeps me coming back, as
@The Expert pointed out, is the accessibility and atmosphere. I am incredibly introverted, painfully so. Social interactions are incredibly difficult for me and I am very easily embarrassed. RunDisney is the one place where I could have run that first race and not felt as though I was being judged. It remains the one place where I can feel my own disappointment at not being trained the way I want, but still get out on the course and not feel the judgment from others that would cause me to avoid so many other running events. Without that type of atmosphere I probably would have given up on getting back to the fitness level I want but, as it stands, Marathon Weekend is what keeps me motivated and excited about running and doing better for myself.