There are days when everything comes together, not because it’s easy, but because it’s shared.
London felt like that.
The sun was out, not too hot, just enough to lift the mood. A bit of breeze, pockets of shade, and a sense, even before the start, that this was going to be a good day to be part of something.
I pinned my number on, put the sunflower on my head, and stepped into it.
I hadn’t quite expected what came next.
Somewhere in those early miles, it started. A voice from the crowd — “Sunflower Pete!” Then another. Then more. “Love the sunflower!” “Sunflower power!” “Go on Pete!”
It turned the run into a conversation.
And what a crowd it was.
The diversity of London on full display. Every street a little different. Music coming at you from all directions — drums, trumpets, bagpipes — each one lifting the mood, carrying you forward.
And the signs… thousands of them. Handwritten boards, funny, thoughtful, personal. Messages for strangers that somehow land exactly when you need them.
People I’d never met calling my name, offering encouragement, holding out hands for high fives. It’s a strange thing, the marathon. You arrive as an individual, but you’re never really on your own.
For a long stretch, it all felt steady. The rhythm of it. The movement through the city. Letting the miles come rather than chasing them.
And then, as it does, the race shifted.
After 30 kilometres, the body starts to ask different questions. The legs get heavier, the pace begins to drift, and the simplicity of just running gives way to something else. A negotiation. A quiet conversation with yourself.
Slow down. Keep going. Walk if you need to. Start again.
No drama. Just adjustment.
And in those tougher moments, it wasn’t just about the race.
Thoughts came and went. Faces. Conversations.
People I’ve met over the last couple of years — living with cancer, sitting in waiting rooms, awaiting results, sharing stories, and the people who care for us through it all.
That’s where the words come back.
Keep on keeping on.
Not as a slogan, but as something lived.
Something tested.
Because it wasn’t just about what I had left — it was about what was around me, and what I carried with me.
The crowds didn’t thin. If anything, they grew. The noise, the encouragement, the energy. It carries you. Not in a dramatic way, but enough to keep putting one foot in front of the other.
Laura and Jenny were there, part of that thread of support that runs through the whole experience. Familiar faces in a sea of strangers. A reminder of why you’re there in the first place.
At one point I even spotted a work colleague in the crowd — one of those unexpected moments that brings your different worlds together for a second.
Along the way, there were moments with runners from Lawley Running Club — the same group that helped me get started. A few words, a shared effort, a quiet recognition of how far that journey has come.
And then there were the others — fellow runners for Lingen Davies. Different journeys, same purpose. You catch glimpses of each other, exchange a nod, an understanding.
All the while, the messages were coming in. Donations building. Support from people following along, each one adding something to the day.
At the front of the race, history was being made. A marathon run in under two hours. Something that, for years, felt just out of reach. And yet there we all were, part of the same event, spread out across the same 26.2 miles, each answering it in our own way.
Mine took 4 hours 46 minutes and 11 seconds.
By the time the finish came into view, it wasn’t about time.
It was about arriving.
And about something else too.
Forty-five years ago, my brother Dave ran the first London Marathon.
My brother Tone followed.
Today, I became the third of us to complete it.
And behind that sits a different journey.
From a diagnosis of tongue cancer.
Through treatment, the radiotherapy mask, the difficult days.
Starting again with couch to 5k last January.
And now, finishing a marathon.
What stands in the way becomes the way.
42.65 kilometres later, it ends quite simply.
You stop.
And later, a quiet pint with Jenny, letting the day settle, replaying it in small moments — the crowds, the calls, the miles.
A good way to finish a brilliant day.
But something carries on.
Keep on keeping on. 🌻🏃♂️