Jessica Martell on left, Ashely Martell on right. Photo by Julie Supple
Gary Nelson on left, James Craig on right (TPAN staff that organized the RFAC). Photo by Julie Supple
Ashley Martell and Jessica Martell. Photo by Julie Supple
Christine Joly. Photo by Julie Supple
Ashley Martell, Julie Supple and Yvette Pryor. Photo by Julie Supple
Organized Chaos. Photo by Julie Supple
Photo by Julie Supple Mags Bouffard. Photo by Julie Supple
Team Touche:Leather 64 Ten. Photo by Julie Supple
Stephen Osgood on left, Jeff Berry on right. Photo by Julie Supple
Stephen Osgood on left, Jeff Berry on right. Photo by Julie Supple
Lauren Warnecke on left: Kelly Southard on right. Photo by Julie Supple
Jessie and John Timmins. Photo by Julie Supple
John Menefee, Nirmalpal Sachdev. Photo by Julie Supple
Gary Nelson, David Hackett and Jeff Kendall. Photo by Julie Supple
Dr. Rob Garofalo. Photo by Julie Supple
Ald. Ariel Revoyras. Photo by Julie Supple
Photo by Julie Supple
Tim Meehan and friend. Photo by Julie Supple
Photo by Julie Supple
Steven Acosta on left, Jose Salinas on right. Photo by Julie Supple
Keith Peltason on left, Brice Harris. Photo by Julie Supple
Rider John Smith. Photo by Julie Supple
Jose Lopez, Lorraine Hayes, Merrill Kenna, Dayna Flores, Paul Konz, Jeffery Pullam, Erin Conley. Photo by Julie Supple
Jessica Martell on left, Ashely Martell on right. Photo by Julie Supple
Dr. Rob Garofalo. Photo by Julie Supple
Angie Frank and Yvette Pryor. Photo by Julie Supple
Kelly Southard was in her fourth Ride For AIDS Chicago—the two-day, 200-mile bicycle ride July 8-9, organized and benefitting the Test Positive Aware Network (TPAN)—and it still personal, emotional for her.
Southard was riding in memory of her cousin, Scott, who lost his fight with HIV/AIDS in 1995.
“Being an experienced rider, I had some idea of what to physically expect out of Ride weekend,” Southard said. “[There’s] the adrenaline of day one, the pain of riding when your body is tired on day two, how difficult some of those hills are, the adrenaline push of the last 10 miles to the finish line in Evanston, how emotional it is at the start, and the finish [with] the Riderless Bicycle,” representing those who have passed from HIV/AIDS.
Southard said the camaraderie, spirit, and cheerleading-like support this year “was amazing.”
“[Cycling] 200 miles over two days gives one a lot of time to reflect—on where my life is [at] in general, about what I want to change, [and] most importantly, it gives me time to reflect on my cousin, [such as] the fun memories growing up to the heartbreaking ones at the end of his life.
“I curse the hills I have to climb, but I am motivated because what I do is a small part of finding a cure, a small part of ensuring that my friends who live with HIV/AIDS don’t have to go through what he did. I am grateful that the people the Ride has brought into my life, the friendships I have made, my Ride Buddy Lauren, that my friends and family are generous with the money they donate, but most importantly that I am physically able to ride and represent those who can’t.”
Patrick Lannon was in his eighth Ride and his first on the executive committee board. “After every Ride, I think it can’t get any better or more fulfilling, and yet it does. I learned this year all the hard work, energy and heart it takes to make this event successful.”