
99 laps for 99 years. How this Cambridge woman is looking to give back for her birthday
This Cambridge woman is walking 99 laps for her 99th birthday
3 hours ago
Duration 2:23
Joan Thomlinson has only one wish for her 99th birthday: to help sick children.
By the end of May, the Cambridge, Ont., woman will have taken 99 laps around the walking track at her retirement community. She started walking at the beginning of the month and plans to walk the last few remaining laps on May 30. The last day of the fundraiser is May 31.
She's hoping her feat will help raise at least $3,099 for the Ronald McDonald House Charities, a non-profit that provides families with a place to stay close to where their sick child accesses medical care.
"I just tell myself 'you've got to do it,' and I just do it," she said. "You have to keep moving. It's healthy."
Thomlinson says she chose to help raise money for the Ronald McDonald House because she wants to help children. She was also inspired to help last year, for her 98th birthday, when she raised money for Sick Kids Hospital in Toronto. And the year before that, on her 97th birthday, she raised money for the Cambridge Food Bank, which says it served 2,363 children during just the first four months of this year.
Thomlinson's birthday was in March. She moved the fundraiser to May to take advantage of the warmer weather.
"I just walk the track. It's nice. And if I'm lucky, I can get some of the other residents to come and walk with me," she said.
"It's important to me because who else is going to do it?"
'She's inspiring others'
Erica Boer is a staff member at the Seasons Retirement Community in Cambridge, Ont. where Thomlinson currently lives. She has worked closely with Thomlinson for three years, ever since the idea to raise money for charity first came up.
"I think she is so well loved here and she really inspires others to participate in things, not just in her fundraisers -- but in the community in general," she said.
"All of the celebrations we've had at the end of her last two fundraisers, we've had some of our biggest turnouts for events because everyone wants to cheer Joan on."
Boer says Thomlinson is a reminder that you're never too young or too old to do something.
"She said to me that she feels like she's doing something so small walking for charity, but I don't think she realizes she's inspiring others," Boer said.
Thomlinson says her inspiration comes from Captain Tom Moore, a British Army officer who raised money by walking for charity in the lead up to his 100th birthday in April 2020. He raised almost 33 million pounds, or more than $58 million, with international support from as far away as North America and Japan.
"I thought if he can do it, I can do it. And that's how it all started! Thanks to Captain Tom," she said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CTV News
an hour ago
- CTV News
The Lung Health Foundation warns Canadians about the dangerous effects of wildfire smoke
Toronto Watch The Lung Health Foundation is warning Canadians about the dangerous effects of wildfire smoke. It's even been named a factor in the air quality warnings in the U.S. CTV's health reporter Pauline Chan has the latest.


CBC
an hour ago
- CBC
Health P.E.I., McMaster University partner to fast-track international medical graduates
Health P.E.I. is collaborating with McMaster University in Ontario to help fast-track foreign-trained physicians become licenced work on the Island. The province will pay for up to four seats in the university's fellowship program, which will begin training doctors with international credentials this fall. McMaster is offering a course that is split into 13 blocks, with each block lasting four weeks. One of the training blocks will take place here on P.E.I. After the physician completes the program and is qualified to work, they are expected to practise in P.E.I. for at least a year. Health P.E.I.'s interim chief medical officer, Johan Viljoen, hopes they'll stay longer. "During that rotation, it's incumbent on us to demonstrate to them that the work environment is a very supportive one," he said. "They have the infrastructure around them to be successful as physicians and... it is a welcoming community where they can see themselves and their families come to settle." P.E.I.'s health-care system has been strained in recent years. In 2024, the province was ranked last in terms of access to care. The president of the Medical Society of P.E.I. said at the time that the province needs to focus on recruiting and retaining primary health providers. 'Worthwhile investment' A single seat in the McMaster fellowship will cost the P.E.I. government about $80,000, but Viljoen said it is a good investment. "The time and effort that goes into educating a physician on any kind of level... is costly because it is being done by highly trained, highly skilled individuals and within environments that are costly to maintain," he said. "There may be a bit of a sticker shock when you hear those numbers, but in the big scheme of things, that is a very worthwhile investment." Internal medicine... are the non-surgical backbones of any health-care system. - Johan Viljoen, Health P.E.I. This will be a "first-of-its-kind" collaboration in Canada, said Haroon Yousef, who runs the hospitalist fellowship program at McMaster. The program existed before, he said, but this is the first time the university has collaborated with a government agency. "They'd graduate and then we kind of scramble and see if we could find a place for them to fit," Yousef said. "This is much more structured and leads them towards a pathway of independent practice." This program will see students working in hospitals, but Yousef said internal medicine goes beyond the hospital. "If this individual is so inclined, they can branch out and offer their specialist service and consultations to family physicians as well," he said. "They don't have to be limited by the hospital, but I think initially that's where things will start." Internal medicine consists of a wide range of care, said Viljoen. "Some individuals may be general internal medicine, they literally cover the spectrum — heart, lungs, kidneys, liver, brain, you name it," he said. "Then there are individuals who will choose to do another fellowship... and they will either become a cardiologist or a neurologist, etc. So internal medicine along with the family medicine specialty, those are the non-surgical backbones of any health-care system."

CBC
2 hours ago
- CBC
TikTok blocks #SkinnyTok due to extreme weight loss, disordered eating content
TikTok says it has blocked search results for the hashtag "SkinnyTok"due to a high volume of content that was promoting disordered eating and unhealthy weight loss behaviours on the social media platform. "We regularly review our safety measures to address evolving risks and have blocked search results for #skinnytok since it has become linked to unhealthy weight loss content," said a statement from TikTok emailed to CBC News Wednesday. "We continue to restrict videos from teen accounts and provide health experts and information in TikTok Search," the statement read. The term SkinnyTok has become widely used to describe an online subculture of influencers and content creators that promote extreme thinness. Under the umbrella of #SkinnyTok, creators make videos with snappy one-liners such as, " Skinny is the outfit," encouraging viewers to achieve their goals by following extreme weight loss advice. Now, searches for SkinnyTok will yield no results except for a message that prompts users to check out expert resources. In Canada, viewers will see contact information and links for groups such as the National Eating Disorder Information Centre and Anorexie et boulimie Québec. TikTok's decision to block SkinnyTok came after the platform noted an increase in content promoting disordered eating and unhealthy weight loss behaviours earlier this year, according to the spokesperson. In April, France's Minister of State for Digital Affairs Clara Chappaz reported the hashtag to the country's digital watchdog and the European Commission. Chappaz and French nurse Charlyne Buigues have been campaigning to have TikTok block the hashtag since April. A petition Buigues started to get the hashtag banned gained nearly 35,000 signatures. On June 1, Chappaz said in French on X: "Today, @tiktok just confirmed to me that it has finally removed this unacceptable hashtag from its platform. This is a first collective victory. I salute it."