This being National Donate Life Month, it’s sad to acknowledge that more Utahns are<a href="https://www.kidneyfund.org/all-about-kidneys/quick-kidney-disease-facts-and-stats"> dying of kidney failure</a> than breast or prostate cancer, trapped in limited lives, stuck at home. This weekend, the Salt Lake City Marathon will form a 26.2-mile human wave of health from the Olympic Legacy Bridge at the University of Utah, behind the Capitol, through Liberty and Sugar House Parks, on to the Library Square finish running right past those<a href="https://www.niddk.nih.gov/health-information/health-statistics/kidney-disease"> thousands</a> in the Salt Lake City area that are homebound in kidney failure. Several runners on the course will demonstrate how those with the good fortune of good health can help those with the bad fortune of bad health. And saving a life can be a life-changing, life-upgrading act.