×

HOW TO SHOP

1 Login or create new account.
2 Review your order.
3 Payment & FREE shipment

If you still have problems, please let us know, by sending an email to su*****@*****te.com . Thank you!

SHOWROOM HOURS

Mon-Fri 9:00AM - 6:00AM
Sat - 9:00AM-5:00PM
Sundays by appointment only!

SIGN IN YOUR ACCOUNT TO HAVE ACCESS TO DIFFERENT FEATURES

FORGOT YOUR PASSWORD?

FORGOT YOUR DETAILS?

AAH, WAIT, I REMEMBER NOW!
QUESTIONS? CALL: 0900 800 900
  • HOME
  • NSGA OFFICIAL STORE
  • PARTNERS
  • VOLUNTEER
  • DONATE TODAY
  • LOGIN
  • SUPPORT

National Senior Games Association

National Senior Games Association

Kallyas is an ultra-premium, responsive theme built for modern websites.

T (212) 555 55 00
Email: sales@yourwebsite.com

Your Company LTD
Street nr 100, 4536534, Chicago, US

Open in Google Maps
  • ABOUT
    • About the NSGA
    • How To Qualify
    • FAQs
    • History of the NSGA
    • Board of Directors
    • Team
    • Sports Chairs
    • National Games Awards
    • Contact Us
    • Career Opportunities
    • 30th Anniversary
  • STATE GAMES
    • State Games Information
    • National Senior Games Week
    • State Regions
    • Team Partner Finder
    • NSGA Award Winners
  • NATIONAL GAMES
    • How To Qualify
    • National Games Information
      • Registration
      • Limited Events Verification Form
      • Competition Schedule
      • Rules & Minimum Performance Standards
      • Results & Records
      • Transportation & Parking
      • Special Events
      • Venue Information
      • Volunteer for the Games
      • NSGA Official Merchandise
      • Athlete Check-In
      • Hotels & Lodging
      • Team Partner Finder
    • Mile for the Ages
    • NSG CUP
    • National Senior Games Partners
    • 2027 NSG Tulsa
    • 2029 NSG Birmingham
  • SPORTS
    • Individual Sports
      • Archery
      • Badminton
      • Basketball – Shooting Skills
      • Billiards – 8 Ball
      • Bocce
      • Bowling
      • Climbing
      • Cornhole
      • Cycling
      • Dance
      • Disc Golf
      • Golf
      • Golf (Scramble)
      • Pickleball
      • Powerlifting
      • Power Walk
      • Road Race
      • Shooting
      • Shuffleboard
      • Swimming
      • Table Tennis
      • Tai Chi
      • Tennis
      • Track & Field
      • Triathlon
    • Non-Ambulatory Sports
      • Bowling Non-Ambulatory
      • Cornhole Non-Ambulatory
      • Pickleball Non-Ambulatory
      • Shuffleboard Non-Ambulatory
    • Team Sports
      • Basketball
      • Beach Volleyball
      • Dance
      • Flag Football
      • Softball
      • Volleyball
  • HEALTH & WELL-BEING
    • Sustained Athlete Fitness Exam (SAFE)
    • Health & Well-Being Blogs
    • Sports Performance
    • Exercise Resources
    • Fitness Videos
    • Well-Being Resources
    • NSGA Ambassador Program Activities
  • MEDIA
    • Blog
    • Newsletter Sign Up
    • Press Room
    • Photo Galleries
      • 2025 Photo Gallery
      • 2023 Photo Gallery
      • 2023 Softball Championships Photo Gallery
      • 2022 Photo Gallery
      • 2019 Photo Gallery
    • Videos
      • NSG Video Stories
      • 2022 NSG Video Recaps
      • 2019 NSG Video Recaps
      • #StayFitSeniors Athlete Videos
    • Press Releases
    • Athlete of the Month
    • Personal Best Features
    • Humana Game Changers
    • Games Daily News Archives
      • 2025 Games Daily News
      • 2023 Games Daily News
      • 2022 Games Daily News
      • 2019 Games Daily News
      • 2017 Games Daily News
    • NSGA Newsletter Archive
FREEQUOTE
  • Home
  • Personal Best Featured Athletes
  • Archive from category "2024 PB"
May 12, 2026

Category: 2024 PB

Digging Out

Monday, 16 December 2024 by Del Moon

By Del Moon, NSGA Storyteller

Monique Wilson, 61
Redondo Beach, California

Selfie of Monique Wilson holding a medal from the 2023 National Senior Games presented by Humana.

Photo courtesy Monique Wilson.

Any parent will tell you that losing a child is one of the most difficult tragedies to overcome. Finding a pathway to return to everyday life is complex and can bring depression and other health issues.

Monique Wilson’s family was devastated when her son Erik died suddenly at age 29 after he took what he thought was medicine, but it was laced with fentanyl. The schoolteacher took the rest of the school year off and ultimately retired to allow herself to heal. However, Monique still lacked a direction to help her move forward.

A phone call from an old friend she had played volleyball with provided a ray of light, and that has led to a revived passion for volleyball and eventually to the 2023 National Senior Games presented by Humana. People might think going to play games would not be more than a distraction from grief. But, Monique found purpose and a team of women who supported and helped her get back on the court as a senior athlete and start enjoying life again.

In the following poignant edited interview, Monique shares her journey through a nightmare and how participating in sports has carried her to a new perspective and a forward-facing outlook. As expected, she says things will never be the same, but the tragedy no longer keeps her from living her best life.

As we talked, it was clear that it was very difficult for Monique to share details of her experience. She agreed to the interview because she had herself sought out stories of other mothers who lost a child on the Internet. These stories showed her that her feelings and emotions were normal, and now she wants her story told with the hope that it will help someone else in a similar situation.

Overcoming the challenges and obstacles everyone faces with a positive outlook and by pursuing a healthy and active lifestyle is a huge characteristic of living your Personal Best. Senior Games often provide a way for people to remake or improve their quality and duration of life, and we’re grateful that Monique Wilson has found a caring family and a meaningful activity with new friends.

Monique, thanks for agreeing to share your story with us. Let’s get some background. Were you always athletic and was volleyball your main sport?
Yes, my parents were more into the arts, but I was the only one out of seven kids that went into sports and athletics.

I did play volleyball. I’m tall, so when I was young, probably around the eighth grade, there were some PE teachers and coaches at the high school that saw the tall girl always playing sports on the playground, and they started recruiting me. They could see that I was athletic as well as tall, and I do have a competitive spirit. Straight out of Central Casting. [Laugh]

Did you play in college?
I did go to college, and I was offered to play but chose not to. I wanted to just get into the college scene, so that’s probably not a very good quote, but I played intramural volleyball and other sports.

I met my husband, Brad, when I was 17. I was a senior in high school. He was two years out at 19. He was an athlete, too, and played football, baseball and volleyball. He doesn’t play Senior Games, however. He has some knee and shoulder issues that prevents him from playing some sports, but he does kickboxing almost every day.

How many children did you have, and did you promote sports to them?
I had two children. We introduced both our kids to all the sports when they were young, and then they picked a few as they got older.

My daughter, Danielle, played sports through high school and college. She played volleyball and softball. She’s currently 37. My son Erik played football, baseball and golf. His goal was to letter in as many sports as he could. He ended up playing football for the University of Washington.

Erik played for Coach Steve Sarkisian. He was on the team for four years, most of the time as the quarterback for the scout team.

Five family members pose together in winter outfits.

Right to left: Monique, Erik (son), Brad (husband), Danielle (daughter), Colton (son-in-law). Photo courtesy Monique Wilson.

That’s a big job because you have to mimic the opponent’s quarterback each week, and you also get beat up.
Oh, yeah. The defense is going hard, so there was no letting up. He did suffer some concussions. He also suffered a knee injury and had a back issue. But he loved it. [Pause] It rocked our world when he passed away at only 29.

That’s tragic, Monique. We are so sorry for your loss. What happened, if you don’t mind sharing?
It was traumatic. He had just broken up with a girlfriend and moved home. Because of COVID, he had nowhere else to go.

He had just got a new job and was preparing to start the following week. And then Monday morning, we found him in his room. He had taken half a pill that looked like Xanax, but unfortunately, was laced with fentanyl. It was determined that he died immediately after taking it.

That is horrific. So many people have suffered because of that drug. Of course you were devastated to lose your son.
Our whole family spiraled into this tailspin of overwhelming grief. My daughter and son were very, very close. In fact, she and her husband were with him the night before he died. It definitely rocked our world, and we experienced all the grieving you would expect. We couldn’t eat, we couldn’t sleep and we gave up on exercise.

A elementary school class photo with their teacher, Monique Wilson. Hearts cover the students faces for privacy reasons.

Monique with her 2019-2020 class. Photo courtesy Monique Wilson.

How did you finally start to feel coming out of it?
Well, we still grieve. After the funeral, I thought I’d go back to teaching to get my mind off of things. He died in April, so I took the rest of the school year off. I went back in August, and then my mother passed away a month into the new school year. She was 94 years old and ailing so it was expected, but still, this made things more difficult.

I spiraled again, and one day, I collapsed. I always had low blood pressure and a low heart rate, but it got dangerously low, because I wasn’t eating or exercising properly. I wasn’t living my normal life like before. I ended up in the hospital. My blood pressure and my heart rate dropped so drastically low that I now have to take medication to keep everything working properly. Now they’re saying I need to get a pacemaker.

That had to be your lowest point. How did you pull out of it?
It started with the kindness of my workmates. I was a schoolteacher and taught mostly fourth grade for my entire career. After I had collapsed, the teachers at work were generous and donated their sick days to get me through the rest of the year, so I could continue to heal. I ended up retiring because they happened to be offering a golden handshake at that same time. At this point, I was still kind of moping around, not really getting back to my old self.

Now, that was when Senior Games changed your trajectory, right?
Yes. A girlfriend who I used to play volleyball with called me and told me she is playing in an open gym league down in Orange County. She said, ‘I think you should play- it would be really fun.’ I was so reluctant and didn’t want to go down there. But then my husband said, ‘No, you need to go. You need to go.’ So I went down there and I ended up playing horribly. They played five games that day, and I could barely get through three. I was out of breath; my knee and lower back were hurting. I literally had to step off the court.

But it was definitely an eye-opening experience. I woke up the next morning thinking, ‘What the heck has happened to me? I need to start working out again.’ I began lifting weights and getting out to walk again. I was so sore, but just started to build from there.

My girlfriend got into pickleball and quit volleyball, so I thought I wasn’t going to be able to play in Orange County anymore. I didn’t really know any of these girls, but my husband encouraged me again, saying, “Just go by yourself. Who cares?’ So, one morning, I got dressed and went down there, and it opened up a whole new world. These ladies were just so nice. They didn’t know my story but were so encouraging and wanted me to come back and play.

Then, one of them called me and asked me to play on her Senior Games team. I had no idea this even existed. but it looked like something I might want to do, so I went to a tournament in Sonoma. I didn’t play great, but we did win the gold.

From there, I started lifting more weights, walking more and doing jump squats, and I got myself back in shape. We started playing more tournaments together. And now we play almost every month.

Seven women holding medals stand on a volleyball court with a net in the background.

Monique and her teammates at the 2023 National Senior Games presented by Humana. Photo courtesy Monique Wilson.

You played in your first National Senior Games in Pittsburgh in 2023, less than three years after the tragedy. How surprised are you that going out and playing a game is what was going to heal you?
100% surprised. And the healing is not over, I will always grieve for Erik. When I went to my first games in Sonoma, I needed my own hotel room because I literally went to my room every night and cried because it was the first time away from my family.

But my gosh, these girls helped me. They are amazing. It’s great to be involved in a team sport because the camaraderie on and off the court and the relationships are unbelievable. That’s what saved my life. When you play on a team, you get close fast when you’re staying in the same place. Soon everyone learned my story and these women have all been incredibly supportive.

Now, if I hit a ball and get a kill someone will shout, ‘There’s an Erik Wilson hit!’

What would you tell someone else who’s reading this and going through a similar kind of tragic situation?
When I was going through the worst of my grief, I would search and read other people’s stories online. Before I knew it, my feed was filled with these kinds of stories.

It made me feel like I wasn’t alone. And it gave me some inspiration to wake up and keep moving every day. I hope that people will read my story and know that they aren’t alone, too.

I’ve learned that you have to give yourself grace. I am not always going to have upbeat, perfect days. I still have periods of time to this day where these waves of grief take over, and I just cry. Reading other people’s stories taught me that it is completely normal.

Well, now you have something to look forward to, and you’ve got volleyball sisters who are helping you through a new journey. You’re going to be doing this for a long time, right?
Yes, that’s the goal. As long as I can stay in shape. It’s funny because when I went to my first tournament, I looked around the room and thought wow, there’s a bunch of old people. [Laugh] And I’m one of them. Then I quickly saw that these ladies are amazing athletes. It’s eye-opening to see the 80-year-old teams play.

Once, when I came home from a tournament, I told my husband, ‘Don’t let the gray hair fool you.’ Because these ladies are great athletes. I want to keep on playing until I can’t, that’s literally my goal now. I want to be that 80-plus person still playing and moving on the court.

Monique, we know this has been difficult to recount, but you know how much sharing your story may help somebody else, and we are proud to have you in our family.
Well, thanks for that. Like I said, other stories have inspired me, so it’s important to share mine.

Read more
  • Published in 2024 PB, Personal Best Featured Athletes, Senior Games Blogs
No Comments

A Cycling Champion Spins Off a Family Legacy

Wednesday, 16 October 2024 by Del Moon

By Del Moon, NSGA Storyteller

Luigi Fabbri, 89
Eva Fabbri, 82
Lake Worth, Florida

Gabriella Fabbri, 60
Riviera Beach, Florida

Luigi Fabbri, Eva Fabbri, Gabriella Fabbri and Phillippe Mailleaux pose with the cycling road race start/finish line at the 2023 National Senior Games in the background. Phillippe, Gabriella and Luigi stand with their bikes.

The Fabbri family at the 2023 National Senior Games presented by Humana. Right to left: Luigi Fabbri, Eva Fabbri, Gabriella Fabbri and Phillippe Mailleaux. Photo courtesy Gabriella Fabbri.

Those who know Italian-born Luigi Fabbri will agree that cycling is at the heart of his being. He has been competing and raking in medals and championships internationally for 45 years, and he is still hungry for more at 89 years young.

Luigi also has a greater passion – his family. The evidence is that he took a two-decade pause midway in his racing career to work and support his family, but the wheels were always spinning in his head. Cycling is also rooted in the family with Luigi’s wife, Eva, racing on velodrome tracks in many countries and having a Pan American Games championship in her accomplishments.

Luigi was grateful to find Senior Games when he brought the family to Florida from Uruguay, and he has been a fixture at the Florida Senior Games qualifiers and at National Senior Games since 1997. Luigi was honored with a Florida Senior Games Lifetime Achievement Award in 2021 for his state participation. Other athletes delight in just listening to his thick accent and dry wit.

Now, a new Fabbri generation is rising as their daughter, Gabriella, took up Luigi’s suggestion and pedaled her first competitive 5K and 10K time trials at the 2022 National Senior Games presented by Humana in Fort Lauderdale. Then, she added the 20K road race for her second Nationals in Pittsburgh last year.

As you will discover in the following Personal Best conversation with the three Fabbris, Gabriella caught the fever from dad and “recruited” her husband, Belgian-born Phillippe Mailleaux, to also enter the field in 2023. Gabriella’s twin brother, Renzo, and sister, Anissa, have also raced, and the elders are proud to see their granddaughter, Anyssa, hop in the saddle to ride with the wind hoping to be the next Fabbri champion.

Our chat reveals Luigi’s colorful history as he recalls how his family escaped from Italy to avoid political persecution and ended up in Uruguay, where Luigi met Eva and started his cycling adventures. Then we learn about the Fabbri’s transition to America, where Luigi continued his work as a craftsman restoring vintage furniture in a workshop he built. He only recently retired but maintains a regimen of riding 20 miles at Okeeheelee Park in West Palm Beach almost every day.

Luigi now enjoys the health benefits from his fitness, sharing with us publicly for the first time that he has battled and contained Parkinson’s disease in recent years and that he feels good about continuing as he approaches 90. He often hears he is an inspiration, but the fire to compete has not subsided and he is excited to have a lane where he can still ride and compete with his peers. His passion is tempered with caution as when he encourages others to safely train and compete in cycling. While he has had many falls, he has yet to break a bone and does his best to advise others on safe racing.

He wasn’t thinking about it all along, but when Luigi clipped onto a bike in 1952 he set a legacy in motion that will continue through generations. We’re glad to have the Fabbri family among our ranks to show how much a Personal Best attitude can positively influence others. For that, Luigi deserves our whole-hearted “Grazie!”

Luigi, it’s great to speak with you and your family. You’ve been cycling in the Florida Senior Games for nearly 30 years since you moved here. How long have you been competing?
I have been cycling for a long time! I had to take a break to work and support my family during my life, but I have 45 years as a competitor.

You have been all over the world, and you are an Italian native who came to us through Uruguay. Tell us how you got here!
I was born in Rome during the war time. The only thing that was interesting when I was about 8 years old was the radio. And the radio was transmitting bicycle races. I liked the way they transmitted. They gave me a lot of…I don’t know how to explain, but…the radio made an impression on me and I got interested in racing.

My father was a political man. He fought against Mussolini, and they wanted to kill him. We had to flee Italy and went to France. In France he had the same problem, so we went to Argentina. He still had some problems, so we moved to Uruguay where we felt safe. I was in Uruguay for 20 years.

I used to work for a decorator as a craftsman. I did a lot of antique restoration. At one time my father was a restorer in the Museum of the Vatican. Sometimes we restored, and many times we made a copy. They would say, ‘Look, Luigi, I need a cabinet this size for a Louis XIV room.’ So…we make the cabinet.

But I didn’t want to work with my father and looked for other things to do. I bought a camera – a Leica, very good camera – and I worked as a photographer.

 

Vintage black and white photos of Luigi Fabbri cycling and standing next to a teammate, both with their bikes.

Snapshots from Luigi’s early racing days. Photos courtesy Fabbri family.

 

Did you start racing while you were working?
I raced for about 20 years when I was younger and I did well. Then I stopped because there was no money in the races, and I needed money because I was married, I had kids. Then I had a big crash and I gave up.

That brings in your wife Eva, who has a cycling history herself. Eva, how did you two meet?
Luigi used to live close to my older sister’s house. It was my 15th birthday, and you know the Spanish people celebrate with a quinceañera for girls. I have Italian ancestry but was born in Uruguay.

So I needed a photographer, and my sister talked to him because he was a photographer at the time. So he took my pictures. The rest is history.

Eva, you did some racing back then. Luigi must have inspired you.
EVA:
Well, it really wasn’t Luigi telling me to do it. I went to Italy with him to visit one of his teammates from Uruguay who lived on a mountain. His wife and I went all the way down to the town and back – she was impressed that I didn’t use a cane, and I didn’t stop to sit. So, she told me, ‘You have to race.’ I said, ‘I’m too old, I never raced in my life.’ But I tried and I like to ride the bike. I competed in Italy, in Ecuador, and I competed in Argentina in the velodrome. I like velodrome a lot.

LUIGI:
She won a Pan American championship while we were in Ecuador.

EVA:
Luigi was a world champion, a world record holder. He was a nominee to compete for Uruguay in the 1964 Olympics in Rome. But then the Uruguay federation didn’t have enough money to send cyclists.

 

Multiple photos of Eva and Luigi Fabbri on medal stands at cycling competitions.

Eva and Luigi on the medal stand over the years. Photos courtesy Fabbri family.

 

Wow, Luigi, it must have been tough to have to quit to support your family. But then you moved to Florida and started all over again. How did you get back on the bike?
LUIGI:
When I reached 50, I decided to do some exercise. And I was looking for a place and a group of cyclists to practice with, because it’s very dangerous to practice on the streets in Florida.

I found a velodrome near us to practice with others. I started beating people 20 years younger. I was impressed by what I was able to do and decided to race again. I rode on an old bike. I disassembled it and reassembled it the way I was thinking to make it my own track bike. And in a year or so, I was one of the fastest sprinters. I competed in the Pan American Games and won a sprint. And from that, I started racing all over the world again. I raced in England, Portugal, Italy and other places.

And you have been a fixture in National Senior Games since 1997. Eva has joined you for several Games, and in 2023 we saw a new Fabbri generation hop on. Gabriella, your parents say you didn’t start sooner because you are a workaholic.

Gabriella Fabbri sits on a bike with a helmet on. Luigi Fabbri stands next to her holding the bike.

Gabriella gets a hand with cycling training from her dad, Luigi. Photo courtesy Gabriella Fabbri.

GABRIELLA:
Yeah, unfortunately I am, but you know what? I inherited that. Both of my parents are workaholics. [Laugh]

Dad encouraged me and bought me a bike for my birthday. At the beginning, he trained me, and that’s when I did my best. It was like a bonding moment for us. Then he stopped training me because my schedule as a flight attendant was so messed up. I did much better when he trained me than when I was on my own.

I didn’t have any expectations, and it wasn’t something that I thought of doing. But once I started I enjoyed it. And I’m like, ‘I should have done this a long time ago.’

LUIGI:
I feel proud of her because she works a lot and has little time to practice. I don’t care if she wins or she becomes the last one in. As long as she doesn’t expect more than what she can do.

EVA:
I love that she’s doing it because it’s not only going to help with her health, but she’s also following in her father’s steps.

We’re always happy to see generations get involved in Senior Games. Gabriella, you competed in your first time trials in 2022, and there’s more to the story because your husband Phillippe also competed in cycling in 2023. How did he get involved?
GABRIELLA:
Well, I just went out and bought him a bike, and he had no choice. [Laugh]

At first, he’s like, ‘I’m not doing this.’ And I’m like, ‘But you’ll like it. I used to say the same thing.’ Now he trains more than I do, actually. I don’t have the time now to get into the road racing much. I like the time trials.

EVA:
Me too. I always race in time trial because I don’t have a lot of road experience. And I’m afraid to be in a group and make somebody fall. So, I always race just by myself.

Cycling road races do have more risk than time trials. It’s best to know your lane and be careful. I’m sure Luigi has had some spills in his racing career.
LUIGI:
Cycling is a dangerous sport. You have to prepare well. I have crashed over 40 times, but I have not broken any bones! I’m very careful. I like to race in front, between the first 10 people. Usually, it’s more safe.

Have any of your other children raced bikes?
EVA:
Yes. When we first came to the U.S. in 1974, we lived in Massachusetts, and Gabriella’s twin brother, Renzo, and our daughter, Anissa, entered a race and we watched them win. So everybody in the family is on the bike except Adriana. Adriana is not a sport person but supports us.

In Pittsburgh we had the whole family including grandchildren come to celebrate. It was beautiful, beautiful. Our granddaughter, Anyssa, was there and she is racing now, so we have four generations of cyclists. For me, the family is number one. And anything that we can do with the family, for me, is very enjoyable.

Obviously, cycling is a huge part of Luigi’s identity, but he had to set it aside for 20 years to support his family, which must have been hard. We can assume that family is even more important than cycling to Luigi.
GABRIELLA:
Well, maybe! [Laugh]

So Luigi, you are 89 as we speak and you don’t seem to be slowing down. You still ride 20 miles every day. There’s no doubt this keeps you in good shape. Besides your obvious love for the sport, is that why you do this now?

Luigi Fabbri smiles at the camera while cycling in a road race.

Luigi Fabbri cycling in the 20K Road Race at the 2023 National Senior Games presented by Humana.

LUIGI:
Yes, that’s why. There is one reason nobody knows, but I’m going to tell you. I found out I have Parkinson’s six years ago. The doctor told me to do some exercise, because it’s good to keep the Parkinson’s away. I started practicing harder. I don’t trust just the medicine. But by practicing hard I don’t feel to be worse now. On the contrary, I feel better.

EVA:
I’ve been telling him he had Parkinson’s for like 12 years. But he’s very stubborn and would not accept it. It took him some time to realize that there was something in there, but he’s keeping it under control through his intense exercise.

I worked many years with people with Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s, so I have an idea how this disease progresses. He really hasn’t progressed that much, which is good.

LUIGI:
I feel strong, and I still race to win. I understand that with some people it’s not important to win. You don’t have to be there to try to win the medals. I like to win, but I’m also competing against myself and against my best time.

How do you feel about being a role model to these other athletes? They love you!
LUIGI:
I feel it’s something I have to keep doing because everybody tells me, ‘Luigi, you are my inspiration.’ So many people are looking at me. But I do this for myself first, not for other people. I don’t care about anybody else around me. I’m doing what I’m doing. I’m staying healthy.

You have to do it for yourself, because it’s not easy. And that’s what I try to tell people.

Read more
  • Published in 2024 PB, Personal Best Featured Athletes, Senior Games Blogs
No Comments

Surviving the Roller Coaster

Tuesday, 09 July 2024 by Del Moon

By Del Moon, NSGA PR Specialist

Dr. Vincent Pearson, 60
Owings Mills, Maryland

Headshot of Vincent Pearson smiling into the camera.

Dr. Vincent Pearson has a long list of accomplishments and passions, highlighted by a busy career as a pharmacist and a solid family life. The successful bowler has won amateur events, earned Senior Games medals, bowled on a PBA regional tour and coached. Along the way, he also became a tournament chess player, runner and licensed pilot.

With so many achievements, it may surprise you that Vincent has battled Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD), a form of depression, since he was young. In the following edited conversation, he describes his life as a roller coaster each year, with thoughts of emptiness and desiring to be left alone coming in the fall and winter, then receding as spring advances. The cause of SAD is unknown, and treatment was not available when Vincent was growing up in the ’70s.

How did Vincent work through this potentially debilitating disorder? Read on to find out, but his bottom line was the voice in his mind that told him to take a step to do something. As a youth, he buried himself in solitary hobbies like model building to keep the dark thoughts at bay. As an adult, family and faith play a significant role in his support, and his hobbies and sports keep him moving forward.

Vincent happily reports that after a rough patch following the pandemic in 2022, he found the right combination of therapy and medication and feels the best he has in his life. Bowling remains a constant, and he looks forward to more PBA and Senior Games competitions. Vincent now enjoys social interaction and has found the lanes he can roll with to continue to live a fulfilling life.

That voice inside Vincent that said, ‘Do something,’ gave him the spark to persevere through challenges. This attitude signifies a Personal Best journey through life. His positive outlook and forward thinking will surely translate into the best years of his life. Listen to your voice, and keep moving!

We have a lot to unpack with as many things as you have done so far in your life. You just earned a medal at your first National Senior Games in Pittsburgh last year, so let’s start with your bowling history.

Vincent Pearson finishes a throw during bowling competition at the Maryland Senior Olympics.

Photo courtesy Maryland Senior Olympics

I’ll give you the Reader’s Digest version. My first encounter on a bowling alley was at nine years old with my cousin and my brother. I was fascinated by the game and took it up at an intramural level in high school. I didn’t make the cut for the high school team, but still liked it.

I didn’t take it seriously as a competitive sport until after I got married. My wife also bowled, and we did doubles leagues for the first few years. It wasn’t until after our son was born in 1997 that we really got into it. Our daycare provider needed a couple to join her triples league team at the local bowling alley. So we said okay, we’ll give it a try. And it turns out people started saying, ‘Hey, you know what? This couple is pretty good. Especially Vince here.’

Long story short, I have done 25 years of elite league and amateur bowling and joined the PBA in April of 2020. I bowled on the Eastern Regional Tour for about a year and a half. I have won four titles on the amateur circuit, nine state senior Olympic medals and a National Senior Games medal. Oh yes, and two perfect games, although only one is sanctioned. The second one was at a holiday party. But it sold the concept to my wife and son that when you guys come to watch me bowl, good things happen.

However, I took some time away to get my own mental health squared away. Your mental health is just as important as your physical health. You can’t separate the body from the mind. If the mind is a mess the body is going to follow suit.

Are you dealing with mental health issues?
I have dealt with seasonal depression since childhood, and I waited for the spring and summer to come around to pull out of it. It was like a roller coaster. When school started, the depression would start and go deeper until it hit bottom around Christmas time. Then as it went towards springtime, the days get longer, and things just started to click again.

People were always asking me, ‘Vincent – you are doing so well here. What happened over here?’ I would never have a good explanation. How do you describe wanting to disappear from the rest of the world? How do explain you feel like you don’t exist and that you just want to be left alone?

I would be perfectly content sitting in the corner, by myself in the dark with a little light from the door crack. I felt like my spirit had a hole punched in it and my essence was flowing out the hole like water through a drain. I knew it was a bad thing, but I didn’t have the gumption to try to stop it.

Wow, this is an unusual turn. Where do you think this depression came from?
Oh, who knows? People are spending their entire careers trying to answer that very question. Back in the ‘70s children that had psychiatric disorders were not treated as they are now. Many of those children were usually kept at home or put into institutions. Nobody thought to ask, ‘Is this child really undergoing a psychiatric disorder?’ I mean, people didn’t think that way.

My condition is now called Seasonal Affective Disorder, but it was not made a defined diagnosis until about three years ago!

You sound like you’ve found some solutions and are moving forward. Is that how you feel?
That’s exactly right. It’s been a combination of things. I see my therapist about every six to eight weeks, I take light treatments, and I’m on prescription medication.

My depression was turning malignant around 2022 as we were coming out of the pandemic. When I was bowling on tour my nerves would get tied up in knots whenever I would go into a place I had never bowled before. And more often than not, I was there by myself, and my nerves would go completely haywire. I realized I gotta do something about this.

It’s taken quite a while and some experimentation with various things. Now, after going to therapy and being put on medication I’m probably mentally as best as I’ve ever been. I’m hoping to go back on the PBA regional tour this summer.

People with depression often struggle in their careers and relationships. How did you overcome your seasonal experience to go to school, become a pharmacist and pursue all these other hobbies?

Vincent with his wife, Crystall, and son, Terry.

I just had to get my mind to tell me to take the first step. I have three answers that will point you in the right direction. The first is for the patient to ask him or herself, ‘Do I want to get well?’ I knew I was in a bad spot, and it was getting worse, so I answered that question yes. You have to make the conscious decision in your mind.

The second thought is to recall the story of Jesus at the pool at Bethesda. He speaks to the man who’s been laying at the poolside for 38 years, waiting for somebody to put him in the water. Jesus said to this man, ‘Do you want to get well?’ and he says yes. Jesus replies, ‘Rise up, pick up your bed and walk.’ If you want to get well, you’re going to have to do something. The remedy is not going to fall out of the sky into your lap, you have to go and get it.

Now my next thought goes to the old saying the devil makes work for idle hands. If that’s the case, he’s not going to find them here. I said to myself, ‘I’m going to keep myself busy doing stuff, even if it’s puttering around the house, doing house chores, doing the laundry, vacuuming the stairs, cooking dinner, filling the bird feeder, stuff like that. If I stay busy, then I have no time to sit around and mope.’

Allow me to offer another point: If Jesus died on the cross for us to have an abundant life then by Jove, I’m going to have some of this life and have some fun. I’m going to be as big as bold and as loud as I know how to be!

That’s how you get out of that shell and realize that, hey, there are people out there who actually want to see you succeed. I said, ‘Okay, this works. I can work with this.’

When did you come to that recognition?
It was actually about 15 -20 years ago when I started my own journey into different therapies. I tried a course of St. John’s Wort, and it was as if a veil had been lifted off of my head. I said, ‘Wow, so this is what the world actually looks like.’

We’re happy you are part of the Senior Games family now. Let’s look back to how you got there. Did you do organized sports in your school years?
Oh, no, I did not. I was strictly lab test tube, notepad and calculator going through school.

Vincent Pearson at work in the pharmacy mixing compounds.

Did you want to be a physician?
I knew that I was going to go into the health sciences, but medical school would have been for my father, not for me. He was an Army medic and wanted to go to medical school and he wanted me to become a physician.

I was interested in becoming a pharmacist when I learned that drugs are chemical compounds that can be synthetic and can be from natural sources. They also have an effect on what the body does and how it does it. Once I learned that I was sold right then and there on what I wanted to do.

And you persevered through the work and your seasonal depression to do it. What was next?
I met my wife, Crystall, in pharmacy school. We were in the same class in the fall of 1984. The sad truth is that they found lumps in her breast in my second year and she had to drop out. We continued to date while I was earning my doctorate, got engaged midway through my residency and married after I finished in 1990.

Did you have any hobbies while you were coming up?
I love chess and played at the tournament level since high school. I got into organizing events in the mid to late ‘90s. At one time I was “Mr. Chess” in the state of Maryland. I was president of the State Association and ran a club that met every Tuesday during the school year for tournaments, plus during the summer.

You certainly put everything into what you do. We hear you got a pilot’s license in recent years?
It came about at this time when I was a chess player and organizer. One night, when I came home from directing a tournament, my wife met me at the door with a look on her face that said, ‘We’re having an argument and you’re not winning.’ [Laugh]

Our son, Terry, at the time was only a toddler. Crystall had taken it upon herself to take care of him and not seek help from other people, even though my parents would have gladly come down and spent time with him so that we could have a break. You need to take time for yourself, especially if you’re new parents. Her bottom line was for me to get a new hobby that didn’t take so much of my time. So, I retired from playing and organizing right then and there.

Preparing for a night flight.

I prayed to the Lord that I had no problem giving up chess in order to help my family, but my identity had been wrapped up in chess since high school. I needed something else.

At that very moment, on comes a commercial on the TV for BeAPilot.com saying your first lesson is $49. Epiphany moment! I’m gonna learn how to fly. Financially, it was a big mistake because it nearly drove the family to bankruptcy. But, but the ability to get up and go pretty much at your leisure is a huge thing to have. You don’t have to go through security line at the big airport, deal with, the airline schedule or pay the fees for the bags.

So now tell me about Dr. Vincent Pearson the runner. How long have you been running?
Seven years. I was big into bodybuilding and hit the weight machines and free weights several days a week. My wife said I was building up a lot of muscles but didn’t have any stamina anymore. Running made sense so I put the Couch to 10K app on my phone in 2017 and have not looked back.

You have done some Senior Games races at the state level, but it’s mostly for exercise and fitness?
That’s correct. I joined a social running group in Baltimore called RunnersRun, and we are entered into a team challenge with all the other running groups in Baltimore City.

Is retirement in your near future?
I’m a pharmacist, I have worked retail, both the chains and independents. I’ve worked hospitals. I’ve taught. I’ve done research. I’ve worked for the state associations. This year will mark 38 years that I’ve been a licensed pharmacist, and quite frankly, I really don’t see myself doing anything else. I joined Ascension St. Agnes hospital back in January and it will probably be my final chapter as a full-time pharmacist.

Then it’s just more time for all this fun stuff.
Yep, that’s right. As long as I can get this house paid for and my son’s student loans taken care of, I think I can safely fly off into the sunset. [Laugh]

Well now, flying off into the sunset includes continuing to let bowling balls fly. You bowl at PBA Tour level where you have a higher level of competition. What benefits does Senior Games offer to you?
I want to play with them for two reasons. Number one, you want to bowl! The mere fact that you are as good as you are means that you spend a lot of time getting to that level. So you want to bowl and the Senior Games gives you an opportunity to bowl.

Number two is the people and the atmosphere. There’s not a lot of smack talking at the Senior Games. Now, talking smack may get a lot of people fired up at the tournament clubs and on the tour. But at Senior Games it is actually somewhat frowned upon. You are here to try to win, but at the same time you’re making friends and enjoying life.

Welcome to the Senior Games family!
Thank you very much! I appreciate the chance!

Read more
  • Published in 2024 PB, News and Events, Personal Best Featured Athletes
No Comments

The Fine Art of Running

Tuesday, 05 March 2024 by Del Moon

By Del Moon, NSGA PR Specialist

Norma Minkowitz, 86
Westport, Connecticut

Norma Minkowitz has drive. She doesn’t know why or how she got it, but it pushed her from modest beginnings to attain world recognition as a fine artist. It also manifested when she took up running in midlife, found her way to masters track competitions and captured attention with a world record and Senior Games gold medal.

The child of Russian immigrants, Norma grew up in the Bronx of New York City. Her father was a concert and club pianist, and her mother was an aspiring singer. Norma says her brother, Paul, got all the music genes, because she spent her time sketching and doodling. She sat with her mother making stuffed dolls and crocheting on nights when her dad was performing. She dreamed of pursuing art.

Norma was fortunate to attend the prestigious Cooper Union School of Art on a full scholarship. She met her husband, Shelly, there, and her Cooper Union education earned her a job at a large art company as a textile colorist, taking original art and making color combinations of them. In the following edited interview, Norma relates she started selling some of her own designs and got a big break when she started showing craft pillows and other stitched and embroidered items at the American Craft Council’s Museum of Contemporary Craft in New York.

It was then that Norma Minkowitz elevated her work from crafting to fine art. Read on in her words how she has evolved her own style transforming crocheted fiber and found objects into intriguing art statements. Her works are now in the permanent collection of 35 museums internationally.

This is where the story takes its twist. Norma only played street games as a kid but loved to run and knew she was fast. In her 40s she wanted to get more exercise, and her husband bought her running shoes. She never looked back, entering three New York City Marathons in her 50s and learning the importance of training and coaching. She dropped back to shorter distance races and local races for several years, but that competitive drive to test her limits eventually led her to enter masters track and field and Senior Games in her 80s.

Last year Norma surprised everyone – including herself – when she set a world record in the W85-89 400 meter event, and a national record in the 800-meter race at the 2023 USATF Masters Indoor Championships. Incredibly, it was her first attempt at an indoor event, and she had to adjust to a banked track. She then went on to Pittsburgh and set an American record in her 400-meter event at the 2023 National Senior Games presented by Humana.

Norma is now both a world-renowned artist and athlete, a combination never seen before in Senior Games. While unusual, Norma says it makes sense because her activity complements her artistic endeavors. She now exhausts herself running and then can better sit and focus on the often-tedious creative work that has captured the imagination of millions.

Norma Minkowitz may be famous, but her example shows that anyone can improve and enhance their life and well-being by finding their own drive. In our conversation she shares that she is still learning how to fine-tune running and has gotten faster in recent years due to coaching and focused training. We can’t wait to see how she does in Des Moines in 2025. Competition, take notice. This lady is bringing her Personal Best drive!

You are a unique person in many ways, Norma. We are all fascinated that a fine artist has also become a world-record holding track runner!
I post some of my running news on my art page on Facebook and most never knew I did that. But I’ll tell you it’s a wonderful combination because my artwork is so tedious. Most artists work with heavy thread but I work with the thinnest possible threads, almost like sewing thread. That means many more stitches but a fine line effect as if I was drawing with pen and ink. So, I like to exhaust myself with running and then I want to sit and do this relaxing, meditative work.

Norma Minkowitz as a young child with her mother and brother.

That makes sense. We’ll ask about your track records later, but first we want to meet the Norma Minkowitz that is famous in the art world. Did you grow up around the arts?
Yes, but in music. I was born in 1937 and grew up in the Bronx. It was a low- to middle-income neighborhood of diverse religions and colors, and we all got along. Both my parents are immigrants from Russia. My father was a concert pianist. My grandfather was a composer and teacher and tried to teach me piano, but I wasn’t very good at it. My mother had ambition to be a singer and that attracted her to my father in New York.

My brother and I both went to the Music and Art High School for gifted children, he for music and me for art. I guess he inherited the music gene. I was always drawing and doodling and making pictures. I loved to draw and my favorite technique was drawing with pen and ink. I am attracted to the linear element that came out later in my fiber art because I consider fiber a line and it is connected to my drawings in pen and ink.

I also made stuffed dolls, wall hangings and detailed objects that my mother, Fania, taught me to make. We sat on the bed of our one-bedroom apartment in the evenings because my father played nightclubs and hotels. He had to give up his quest to be a concert pianist in order to feed his family. He played elite hotels like the Barclay and the Hotel Astor as Alexander Chigrinsky and his Continental Music. I remember he took us to the hotel for New Year’s Eve where he was featured.

How were you able to pursue your artistic leanings from there?
After high school I applied to Cooper Union and Pratt and was accepted to both. Cooper Union only accepts 100 art students, but I was able to get in, and it was free! My parents couldn’t afford to send me.

In my last year at school I met my husband, Shelly, who was an engineering student there. He got his first job at Sikorsky Aircraft in Connecticut and asked me to marry him. We got a garden apartment in Stamford and I kept myself busy wearing an apron and being the good wife at home. One day he asked, ‘Did you ever think about getting a job?’ [Laugh]

Ruh Roh! [Laugh]

Norma and her husband, Shelly.

My friend Barbara Kokot worked as a textile colorist, which involves taking an art design and creating three or four different color combinations. She suggested I get an interview, so I went to this big company called Cohn-Hall-Marx, and with my Cooper Union background they gave me a job. It paid $80 a week. I really didn’t know what I was doing at first. I later made some of my own designs which they bought. That was encouraging.

I quit when I got pregnant, and I started doing freelance work for another company, and they printed some of my work. That was my early art history as I started caring for my young son, Steven, and later my daughter, Karen. Shelly wanted a better living so he started a homebuilding company in Westport, Connecticut, with his friend Bill Kokot, Barbara’s husband, and they were very successful with it. We bought a house, and 16 years later built our own house in Westport. We have been here 45 years and have been married for 64 years. Have four lovely grandchildren Max, Sammy, Lily and Jack. Imagine that! [Laugh]

So how did you become a recognized fine artist with exhibits all over the world?
I was always doing sculptural work as well as pen and ink drawings. I joined the Society of Connecticut Craftsman because at that time what I was doing was not exactly fine art. I was making pillows and creative wall hangings and selling them to Woman’s Day and other art magazines. A lot of my work started selling.

The American Craft Council had a store under their Museum of Contemporary Craft, and I started showing craft pillows and wall hangings. I even made a huge stitched and embroidered chair. Remember the folk singer Melanie? She bought that chair, and I was encouraged to continue doing sculptural art.

The museum curator, Paul Smith, really liked my work and included me in numerous shows, and then things took off. I was invited to show in galleries and museum exhibitions. My first major show was in 1976 at the Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art in Ithica, New York, then a show on fiber structures at the Museum of Art at Carnegie Institute, also the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. It just kept getting better from there, and my reputation escalated.

My artwork is now in 35 museum collections both here and internationally, and I have exhibited in 20 solo shows that received positive reviews.

Left to right: “Trove,” “Goodbye Goddess,” and “Nesting” by Norma Minkowitz.

Can you give an example of how your craft work is lauded as fine art?
My major way to work is crochet, which is often thought of as a ‘little old ladies’ technique, but when I take it in my hands it becomes almost a transparent mesh filled with detail and cross-hatching as in the drawings. For example, I would crochet around a mannequin or other hard object, covering it with an open stitch and then I stiffen the fibers, slice the fibers so as to be able to remove it from the mannequin. The view is almost transparent, like looking through mesh. Then I can manipulate different threads with color and accent. I can put things inside of it, a heart or another body, or a bird. A lot of my work has birds and flight motif. I love birds and the idea of the freedom of flight.

Well, let’s break from your art and love of flight to your running. You are pretty fleet of foot yourself! You started running late – have you been athletic all your life?
Yes, I was always a bit of a tomboy and enjoyed the street games, you know, Red Light Green Light and Tag. I always wanted to be the fastest even at that age. Cooper Union had no athletics for girls. We just had a gym class, and I was always the swifter one. I really didn’t do anything sports until I got married and started playing tennis, and I was pretty good at it and won a few matches. I tried skiing with my husband and was absolutely terrible at it. I couldn’t figure out how to lean and turn properly. I was fast but couldn’t figure out the science. I hated it, but we did it for 10 years.

Then I started running in 1985. Shelly had put on a few pounds, and I also needed to lose some weight. I joined the local Roadrunners Club and ran with them every summer. In between I started entering local races and always came in first, second or third in my 50-year-old age group. I had no coaching and followed my gut feeling.

I ran three New York City marathons as I turned 50. In the first one I started too fast and had to stop at 20 miles. They took me to the medical tent and ripped off my bib. I was not prepared. The second year I trained with a local high school coach and finished with a 4:06. The following year I had bronchitis but ran the marathon anyways and did it under five hours.

Norma, center, atop the podium at the 2022 National Senior Games presented by Humana.

You certainly learned the importance of training and preparation.
Eventually I decided I liked the shorter distances better and wanted to do more serious competition with masters and Senior Games. I qualified in 2018 and traveled to the National Senior Games in Albuquerque in 2019 but tore my hamstring and couldn’t run. I tried to run the 400 and qualified but was in agony and withdrew.

Then I went to the 2022 National Senior Games where I won four gold medals in track and finished first in the 5K. NSGA counted the 5K and all the American track records, but USATF would not ratify it by rules because I had to be 85 when I ran it and my birthday was after the Senior Games event. My time was unexpectedly so good, and I went home a little disappointed.

Let’s finally talk about the world record you ran in the 2023 USATF Masters Indoor Championship. Congratulations!
It wasn’t easy. I was injured and my knee was hurting. I had what’s called a Baker’s Cyst. They’ve drained it several times and it keeps coming back. Next time I see the doctor we’re going to see what else they can do. I am back to running now, but I have to address that.

Norma at the 2023 USATF Masters Indoor Championship.

The world record race was on February 25th of 2023 in Staten Island. I had never run indoors before. I signed up for four races but only completed the two I did well in. I ran the 400 in 1:50:99. I was also afraid of the track because it was banked on the curves. Because everybody else was in their 50’s they stuck me on the highest part, probably thinking ‘She’s 85, it doesn’t matter.’ [Laugh] Of course when we took off those young ladies looked like flying saucers and I had to tell myself ‘Don’t look at them! Don’t look at them!’ At least they didn’t lap me in the 400, but a few did in the 800.

I also had to remember the 400 was two laps and I was afraid I would stop at one. [Laugh] The worst part was the races were only 30 minutes apart. I might have done better in the 800 with more time to recover.

But you now have two huge records, especially for a ”newbie.” You set an American record at the 2023 National Senior Games in Pittsburgh too.
Yes, I ran the 400 at 1:50:04 in the 85 to 89 group. I was scheduled to also do the 200-,800- and 1500-meter races but my knee gave out after that 400 and I had to pull out. I felt like I could have won gold in all of them. It was one of the best races – everything was on schedule with efficient officials.

Now I also set the outdoor national record in the 800-meter at the 2023 Middleton Masters meet last March. But they are not going to sanction it because of their errors by not having the proper paperwork. I’m still upset about that.

How surprised were you that you had actually set a world record?
I didn’t believe it, and then the flares were going up and somebody from USATF interviewed me. I don’t remember what I said. I just remember a lot of tall people around me taking pictures- I’m only 4 foot eleven.

Does this success give you more motivation to continue to strive in your running events?

Norma and her coach, Steve Kurczewski.

Yes, I want to do better. I keep thinking my times are going to get slower but they’ve actually improved over 2019! I have a good coach now, Steve Kurczewski, who is an endurance runner himself.

It makes sense, Norma, because you are still learning competitive running and still have the upside to improve. This is bad news for all the ladies in your 85-89 age group!

[Laugh] Hopefully that is true. I didn’t know how to start or pace myself. I also looked at my videos and I tend to slow down when I see the finish line, and every second counts.

I had meniscus surgery last October and I’m just getting back to normal. During recovery I run one tenth of a mile and walk one tenth until you hit two miles. I’m up to walking one tenth and running four tenths. I’ll try to run a mile without stopping soon. I’m now running 2.5 miles without stopping. I hope I stay in good condition.

Norma, let’s close talking about your art again. Most artists are known for certain styles or themes. Many of your works we see seem dark in mood.
My art is kind of on the dark side. A lot of it is black and mysterious. Sometimes it’s connotations of death, sometimes struggles, sometimes nature. I like to work and delve into the possibilities of the human body as well as objects relating to the natural world. I also experiment with mixed media and found objects. Many of my works started with interesting dead branches that suggest a body or form. I crochet right over them and make shapes that conjure up possibilities that people may see in a different way than I intended. I like when the viewer is participating and value that the work is speaking to people in different ways. A lot is about me but also about what people have seen in them.

Self-portrait by Norma Minkowitz. Pen and ink and collage.

Your art expresses your darker side yet you do so many positive things and embrace life. You are not a pessimistic person!
I’m not pessimistic, maybe I fear death. But I feel strong and healthy so it’s a weird combination. But there’s also hope in a lot of my work, like a burst of birds flying freely and things that have deep meaning, not laying down and dying but fighting for what you want. I think I fight for what I want in my running. I don’t know where this came from with my sedentary background, but I’ve always pushed myself to the limits. It wasn’t enough to have my work in a craft magazine, I wanted it in a museum.

It hasn’t always worked out running with all my injuries and backing out of races. But I’m still learning and trying to be careful.

Read more
  • Published in 2024 PB, News and Events, Personal Best Featured Athletes
No Comments

Recent Posts

  • “Max” Recovery

    May 2026 Athlete of the Month By Del Moon, NSGA...
  • Invest in Preventive Health to Stay in the Game

    By Andrew Walker, MPH; NSGA Director of Health ...
  • Promise Made, Promise Kept

    April 2026 Athlete of the Month By Del Moon, NS...
  • Considering Senior Games? “Don’t Wait Until You Feel Ready”

    Are you looking for a new challenge or spark af...

Archives

Categories

Recent Posts

  • “Max” Recovery

    May 2026 Athlete of the Month By Del Moon, NSGA...
  • Invest in Preventive Health to Stay in the Game

    By Andrew Walker, MPH; NSGA Director of Health ...
  • Promise Made, Promise Kept

    April 2026 Athlete of the Month By Del Moon, NS...
  • Considering Senior Games? “Don’t Wait Until You Feel Ready”

    Are you looking for a new challenge or spark af...
  • Humana Returns as Presenting Sponsor of 2027 and 2029 National Senior Games

    Senior athletes train with discipline and purpo...

Recent Comments

    Archives

    • May 2026
    • April 2026
    • March 2026
    • February 2026
    • January 2026
    • December 2025
    • November 2025
    • October 2025
    • September 2025
    • August 2025
    • July 2025
    • June 2025
    • May 2025
    • April 2025
    • March 2025
    • February 2025
    • January 2025
    • December 2024
    • November 2024
    • October 2024
    • September 2024
    • August 2024
    • July 2024
    • June 2024
    • May 2024
    • April 2024
    • March 2024
    • February 2024
    • January 2024
    • December 2023
    • November 2023
    • October 2023
    • September 2023
    • August 2023
    • July 2023
    • June 2023
    • May 2023
    • April 2023
    • March 2023
    • February 2023
    • January 2023
    • December 2022
    • November 2022
    • October 2022
    • September 2022
    • August 2022
    • July 2022
    • June 2022
    • May 2022
    • April 2022
    • March 2022
    • February 2022
    • January 2022
    • December 2021
    • November 2021
    • October 2021
    • September 2021
    • August 2021
    • July 2021
    • June 2021
    • May 2021
    • April 2021
    • March 2021
    • February 2021
    • January 2021
    • December 2020
    • November 2020
    • October 2020
    • September 2020
    • August 2020
    • July 2020
    • June 2020
    • May 2020
    • April 2020
    • March 2020
    • February 2020
    • January 2020
    • December 2019
    • November 2019
    • October 2019
    • September 2019
    • August 2019
    • July 2019
    • June 2019
    • May 2019
    • April 2019
    • March 2019
    • February 2019
    • January 2019
    • December 2018
    • November 2018
    • October 2018
    • September 2018
    • August 2018
    • July 2018
    • June 2018
    • May 2018
    • April 2018
    • March 2018
    • February 2018
    • January 2018
    • December 2017
    • November 2017
    • October 2017
    • September 2017
    • August 2017
    • July 2017
    • June 2017
    • May 2017
    • April 2017
    • March 2017
    • February 2017
    • January 2017
    • December 2016
    • November 2016
    • October 2016
    • September 2016
    • August 2016
    • July 2016
    • June 2016
    • May 2016
    • April 2016
    • March 2016
    • February 2016
    • January 2016
    • December 2015
    • November 2015
    • October 2015
    • September 2015
    • August 2015
    • July 2015
    • June 2015
    • May 2015
    • April 2015
    • March 2015
    • February 2015
    • January 2015
    • December 2014
    • November 2014
    • October 2014
    • September 2014
    • August 2014
    • July 2014
    • June 2014
    • May 2014
    • April 2014
    • March 2014
    • February 2014
    • January 2014
    • December 2013
    • November 2013
    • October 2013
    • September 2013
    • August 2013
    • July 2013
    • June 2013
    • May 2013
    • April 2013
    • March 2013
    • February 2013
    • April 2012
    • June 2011

    Categories

    • 2013 PB
    • 2014 PB
    • 2015 PB
    • 2016 PB
    • 2017 Games Daily News
    • 2017 PB
    • 2018 PB
    • 2019 Games Daily News
    • 2019 PB
    • 2020 PB
    • 2021 PB
    • 2022 Games Daily News
    • 2022 PB
    • 2023 PB
    • 2024 PB
    • 2025 Games Daily News
    • Athlete of the Month
    • Games Daily News
    • Get In Shape With Ageility
    • Health & Well-Being
    • May 10-11, 2022
    • May 12, 2022
    • May 13, 2022
    • May 14, 2022
    • May 15, 2022
    • May 16, 2022
    • May 17, 2022
    • May 18, 2022
    • May 19, 2022
    • May 20, 2022
    • May 21, 2022
    • May 22, 2022
    • May 23, 2022
    • Mobile
    • Moon Walking
    • Networking
    • News and Events
    • Newsletter
    • Personal Best Featured Athletes
    • Personal Best Tour Blogs
    • Posts
    • Press Releases
    • Senior Games Blogs
    • Staff
    • Technology
    • Uncategorized
    • Zibrio

    Meta

    • Log in
    • Entries feed
    • Comments feed
    • WordPress.org

    Featured Posts

    • “Max” Recovery

      0 comments
    • Invest in Preventive Health to Stay in the Game

      0 comments
    • Promise Made, Promise Kept

      0 comments
    • Considering Senior Games? “Don’t Wait Until You Feel Ready”

      0 comments
    • Humana Returns as Presenting Sponsor of 2027 and 2029 National Senior Games

      0 comments
    • DISCLAIMER
    • SUPPORT POLICY
    • LEGAL
    National Senior Games Association

    © 2015 All rights reserved. Buy Kallyas WordPress Theme.

    TOP
    NSGA Uses Cookies
    This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish. Cookie settingsACCEPT
    Privacy & Cookies Policy

    Privacy Overview

    This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these cookies, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may have an effect on your browsing experience.
    Necessary
    Always Enabled
    Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
    Non-necessary
    Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.
    SAVE & ACCEPT