NEW YORK, May 10, 2006

'Fat Man Walking' Arrives In NYC

Cross-Country Walker Says Journey, Not Its End, Was The Point

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    Meg Oliver reports on the deadline to sign up for the Medicare drug prescription benefit, the infant mortality rate in developed nations and the "Fat Man's" journey from California to New York.

  • Steve Vaught looks out over the Hudson River, May 9, 2006, as he crosses the George Washington bridge into New York City, on the last leg of his approximately 2900 mile walk across the country.

    Steve Vaught looks out over the Hudson River, May 9, 2006, as he crosses the George Washington bridge into New York City, on the last leg of his approximately 2900 mile walk across the country.  (AP)

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(AP)  Steve Vaught didn't count each mile he walked or weigh himself every day along the way. And as he completed the final leg of his trek across America, he said making it to New York City from California on foot was only part of his story.

"I'm glad that I'm here, but for me it's never been about the destination," he said as he crossed the George Washington Bridge from New Jersey to Manhattan more than a year after he began the trip to lose weight and find happiness. "It's been about the journey."

Vaught, 40, began the roughly 3,000-mile trek from his Oceanside, Calif., home to Manhattan on April 10, 2005, when he was 410 pounds and suffering from severe depression after he accidentally killed two elderly pedestrians while driving 15 years ago.

He ended the journey Tuesday about 100 pounds lighter.

Along the way, Vaught slept in tents and motels and went through 15 pairs of shoes, more than 30 pairs of socks and six backpacks. But he didn't travel with a pedometer or measure the food he ate, and he said he aimed to change his behavior - not just his weight.

"This is not about obsessing about numbers, or times, or dates, or miles," he said. "It's just about going on a walk and sort of having time to get things straight."

Vaught's path wasn't a straight one. He spent a week at a Texas hotel, where he went off antidepressants, and he returned to California for Christmas and then to work out with a personal trainer.

Vaught chronicled his progress on a Web site, which lists the names of dozens of supporters in 26 states. He has a book deal, and his trip attracted the attention of documentary filmmakers.

As Vaught began walking the span from New Jersey to Manhattan on Tuesday evening with a flock of cameras and reporters, a passing bicyclist yelled, "Hey, that's the walking dude! Congratulations! Good job!"

Nicoline Biggio, who went to see him complete his journey, said her husband has been following Vaught's progress but was missing the finale because he was out of town.

"I think it's great that he's finished his goal," Biggio said. "So few of us actually keep them."

Vaught posed for photographs on the bridge with the New York City skyline in the background and standing in front of the "Welcome to New York, the Empire State" sign. Once he reached the other side - his final destination - he spoke to reporters for a few minutes on the street before being picked up by a black sedan that was to take him to a hotel.

His first order of business at the hotel, he said, was to "put on some new socks."

©MMVI The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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