Dotson finds strength from his late father to complete triathlon

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For most people running a marathon or a triathlon, it’s all about them and the many miles that lie before them.

For Spring Valley’s Jason Dotson, it was much more than that.

He was not running for himself or by himself. He was running for his dad when he competed in his first Ironman Triathlon on Sept. 25 in Madison, Wis.

As he crossed the finish line after competing the grueling three race event, Dotson carried a banner in memory of his dad, George, who passed away last June from lung cancer.

When Dotson, 38, needed a push to make it over the course of a 2.4-mile swim, a 112-mile bike and a 26.2-mile marathon, he only needed one thing — his dad.

“When I was in pain and didn’t think I could make it, I thought about the pain my dad went through with his cancer and knew what I went through wasn’t near what he experienced,” Dotson said.

“That’s where I found my strength. I was definitely running for him.”

Dotson started his crusade for lung cancer awareness when his good friend, Mike Hagen, 53, of Mattoon was diagnosed with small cell lung cancer, and asked Dotson if he’d do something in his honor. The prognosis for Hagen is now much better.

Dotson held an indoor triathlon this spring in Peru and raised $700 for lung cancer research.

Little did he know, his very own father would develop the killer disease as well. George Dotson was diagnosed with Stage 4 lung cancer when he went to see a doctor; he passed away a short time later.

Dotson has learned the numbers of lung cancer are staggering. He found one in every three cancer deaths is from lung cancer, but due to the stigma surrounding it to be associated with smoking, it has the least amount of money devoted to it for research.

According to statistics, Dotson said 60 percent of new cases of lung cancer are not smokers or former smokers. Only 16 percent of victims are being diagnosed at an early stage, he said, and his dad learned from his doctor that the majority of people (75 percent) inflicted are diagnosed at Stage 4.

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