BOSTON (AP) She didn’t even know the Boston Marathon was going on when she wandered out for a walk along Boylston Street. Nor could she understand why someone would run 26.2 miles for “a statement necklace and a banana.” Then, Adrianne Haslet says, “My life changed.” The ballroom dancer was standing next to the […]
BOSTON (AP) She didn’t even know the Boston Marathon was going on when she wandered out for a walk along Boylston Street. Nor could she understand why s
BOSTON She didn’t even know the Boston Marathon was going on when she wandered out for a walk along Boylston Street. Nor could she understand why someone would run 26.2 miles for “a statement necklace and a banana.”
Then, Adrianne Haslet says, “My life changed.”
Ten years after two bombs exploded at the finish line of the Boston Marathon, a few survivors of that difficult day tell WBUR the moments in their lives that are bringing them joy.