Amy Palmiero-Winters's 3:04 in the
2006 LaSalle Bank Chicago
Marathonmeant far more than shaving 12 minutes off her
personal best. It proved that anything she ever did on two legs she
could do on one--and faster.
By breaking the 3:16 she had run 13 years earlier, before losing
her left leg in a motorcycle accident, Palmiero-Winters
demonstrated the power of an unbreakable spirit. "'Disabled' means
something you can't do," says the single mother of two and welder
by trade. "I don't know of anything that I can't do."
Readers found the 35-year-old so inspiring after reading about her
in our pages that they selected her as our first-ever Reader's
Choice Hero.
In 1994, Palmiero-Winters was riding her Harley when a car
broadsided her. After surgeries to repair her mangled foot were
unsuccessful, Palmiero-Winters opted to have her left leg amputated
below the knee. Running on a prosthesis designed for walking, she
won the 2005 Ossur National Leg
Amputee Half-Marathon(1:57).
Still, Palmiero-Winters knew she could do better. So in 2006, she
contacted A Step Ahead Prosthetics & Orthotics, a company that
serves the needs of active amputees, and was fitted for a true
running leg. Three months later, she smashed the world record for
female amputees by 27 minutes. Five months after that 3:26
performance, she set her 3:04 PR, breaking her own world
record.
Her wish list is ambitious: run a sub-three-hour marathon and a
100-mile ultra, qualify for the Olympic Marathon Trials and the
Hawaii World Ironman Championships. But Palmiero-Winters wouldn't
have it any other way. "If you could give me my leg back today,"
she says, "I wouldn't take it."
By Susan Rinkunas
www.runnersworld.com







