J
jgmacg
Guest
I took the liberty of starting a thread for your story.
jgmacg
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Here's a story I recently did for the paper I freelance for. Any comments would be nice.
Cooke heading for the other ocean
Dominic Cooke won't let paralysis slow him down.
That mentality has led him to ride a special bicycle 3,000 miles across country to raise money and awareness for people with spinal cord injuries.
Cooke, 26, left St. Augustine on Wednesday in his black, arm-propelled cycle on a 45-day trip to San Diego. Joining him are two of his childhood friends, Tommy Vierra and Andy McIntosh. They plan to cover between 80 and 100 miles a day and will occasionally stop to hold fund-raisers.
"Just because you're in a wheelchair and you have a spinal cord injury, there's a lot of stuff you can do," Cooke said. "Life is still good."
But Cooke's life wasn't always this good.
In college at the University of California, Cooke played on a national championship rugby team.
"I was in the best shape of my life," Cooke said.
On Dec. 20, 2001, Cooke went out with his friends. He came back to a friend's house for a few hours, then decided to drive home. It had been raining heavily that night, but his parents lived in the same neighborhood, less than a mile away.
On the way, he spun on wet grash, whipping his sport utility vehicle around into a tree. The crash caused a spine separation, paralyzing him from the waist down.
"You don't really think it's happening to you," Cooke said. "It kind of just feels like a bad dream."
Going back to school and only being able to watch his team play was the hardest thing to deal with, he said. A year in France, living on a sunflower farm, helped him see his situation differently.
"Before I was looking at all the things I couldn't do," Cooke said. "Being away from all of the people who felt sorry for me and wanted to help me, I realized there is a lot I actually can do."
Cooke returned to San Diego and found a few foundations that help paralyzed people. They sent him skydiving, snow skiing and paragliding, and one organization bought him the hand cycle he is using on his cross-country trip.
In 2004, he decided to start his own nonprofit organization to help victims of spinal cord injuries, Try For Others. He now tries to lead by example.
"People look at disabled people and they see the wheelchair, and it's obvious the struggle." Cooke said. "But everyone has their handicap. Ours just happen to be in plain view."
jgmacg
******************************************
Here's a story I recently did for the paper I freelance for. Any comments would be nice.
Cooke heading for the other ocean
Dominic Cooke won't let paralysis slow him down.
That mentality has led him to ride a special bicycle 3,000 miles across country to raise money and awareness for people with spinal cord injuries.
Cooke, 26, left St. Augustine on Wednesday in his black, arm-propelled cycle on a 45-day trip to San Diego. Joining him are two of his childhood friends, Tommy Vierra and Andy McIntosh. They plan to cover between 80 and 100 miles a day and will occasionally stop to hold fund-raisers.
"Just because you're in a wheelchair and you have a spinal cord injury, there's a lot of stuff you can do," Cooke said. "Life is still good."
But Cooke's life wasn't always this good.
In college at the University of California, Cooke played on a national championship rugby team.
"I was in the best shape of my life," Cooke said.
On Dec. 20, 2001, Cooke went out with his friends. He came back to a friend's house for a few hours, then decided to drive home. It had been raining heavily that night, but his parents lived in the same neighborhood, less than a mile away.
On the way, he spun on wet grash, whipping his sport utility vehicle around into a tree. The crash caused a spine separation, paralyzing him from the waist down.
"You don't really think it's happening to you," Cooke said. "It kind of just feels like a bad dream."
Going back to school and only being able to watch his team play was the hardest thing to deal with, he said. A year in France, living on a sunflower farm, helped him see his situation differently.
"Before I was looking at all the things I couldn't do," Cooke said. "Being away from all of the people who felt sorry for me and wanted to help me, I realized there is a lot I actually can do."
Cooke returned to San Diego and found a few foundations that help paralyzed people. They sent him skydiving, snow skiing and paragliding, and one organization bought him the hand cycle he is using on his cross-country trip.
In 2004, he decided to start his own nonprofit organization to help victims of spinal cord injuries, Try For Others. He now tries to lead by example.
"People look at disabled people and they see the wheelchair, and it's obvious the struggle." Cooke said. "But everyone has their handicap. Ours just happen to be in plain view."