CROSS-COUNTRY TREK Journey coming to an end



The obese man said he was naive about how long the trip would take.
STAFF/WIRE REPORTS
FAIRFIELD, N.J. -- Steve Vaught may have lost more than 100 pounds on his walk across the country, but he says he's gained something else: peace of mind.
At 410 pounds a year ago, the 40-year-old father of two from San Diego was battling a severe eating disorder and deep depression, caused by the guilt over accidentally killing two elderly pedestrians 15 years ago.
"It threw me into a tailspin. In the three years after the accident, I gained 150 pounds," Vaught said. "When something like that happens, you lose the ability to care about anything. You don't put value on anything because you know it can end at any second."
Vaught's tipping point came last year when he was so obese that he couldn't walk across a department store. So he decided a walk from Oceanside, Calif., to New York City would be just the cure.
He was to conclude the journey Tuesday night, crossing the George Washington Bridge into New York City.
Vaught, formerly of Youngstown, moved to the West Coast in 1983.
What he planned
He set out on his journey April 10, 2005, hoping to complete the trip in six months. By early November, he had reached the halfway point after walking 1,400 miles. After taking a break for the holidays, he resumed walking in January.
Vaught's original goal was to reach Youngstown by the end of July 2005 and stay through the beginning of August 2005 to celebrate his 40th birthday. He told The Vindicator in October 2005 he was naive about the time it would take to walk the distance.
He said along the way the time frame was no longer as important as exploration of new places and interaction with people.
Vaught has kept a running log of his trek on his Web site, TheFatManWalking.com, which has gotten hundreds of thousands of hits, while others have watched him on Oprah Winfrey's TV show.
"People try to make this about calories and scales, but this is about living your life," he said Monday, walking briskly as cars hummed past and beeped, a large paunch still part of his 305 pounds. "I spent 15 years either regretting the past or fearing the future. Now I'm living in the present."
Problems encountered
He says he's gone through 15 pair of shoes, 12 pairs of pants, three shirts, 30 pairs of socks and his own sanity -- twice.
His first bout of deep depression was in New Mexico, where he stopped at a truck stop and didn't want to continue through the desert. The next time was in an Amarillo, Texas, hotel when he went off his antidepressants and stayed there for seven days.
Vaught's other problem on the trail has been a lack of healthy food to eat. Most of his options have been fast food. He says he eats what's available, trying to stock up on carbohydrates in the morning and eat protein about 70 percent of the time.
He has slept in a tent or in motels along the route. The bearded hiker has no formal support team but is often accompanied by a documentary filmmaker.
"This trip has been horrible, and it's been wonderful," he said. "But the best thing about all of this is the people I've met."
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