That is wonderful.  I remember a similar thing happened to Mike Utley, one of 
our Detroit Lions.  I am not sure if he ever has been able to walk, but he 
started the Utley Foundation to help people with that kind of injury.
Thanks, Steve.
Lora

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: steve doyle 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Sunday, September 27, 2009 10:43 AM
  Subject: [RecipesAndMore] Happy Endings


  Happy Endings

  You could hear a pin drop. Then, some sniffles in the mob of thousands. 
Eventually, after what appeared like an eternity, the crowd roared with 
applause as the ambulance took him away.

  His name is Kevin Everett, and he was playing for the Buffalo Bills football 
team.

  He was hurt, hurt very badly trying to make a tackle on a kickoff. The blow 
injured his spinal column, causing a paralysis. He could not give the "thumbs 
up" to the crowd, no matter how hard he tried.

  Meanwhile, back home in a small town near Houston, Kevin's mother was 
watching the game in a sport's bar. Very few things in life are worse than 
watching your "baby" on television, and he's not able to move.

  His fiancee was also near Houston, washing her car. Soon she would find out 
the horrible news. Soon, everyone would find out the horrible news as the 
doctor reported in a TV news broadcast that Kevin was in critical condition, 
his life was at risk, never mind the fact that he possibly might never again be 
able to walk.

  Luckily, Kevin's doctor who was in the ambulance with him, tried a new 
procedure to immediately cool his spinal column. Also, he was fortunate he had 
a neuro-surgeon waiting for him at the trauma hospital.

  Slowly, very slowly, he began making progress. Eventually, he was stable 
enough to be flown to The Institute for Rehabilitation and Research, a 
rehabilitation hospital near his home in Houston. At TIRR, he continued making 
great progress. He took his first steps there.

  Mind you, very few people who sustain that kind of injury are ever able to 
take a first step. But he did, and he continues to keep proving the experts 
wrong.

  When he walked on the Oprah show recently, he proved to have made a 
miraculous recovery.

  If you had not known him or his story, you would not have realized that he 
had an injury that almost cost him his life.

  Back at TIRR, many patients are obliged to learn to deal and cope with 
dramatic changes after those life altering experiences. A person, often, is 
simply thankful for the small things, like being able to brush one's teeth, 
tying one's shoes, combing one's hair, etc. The small things in life are really 
huge. Often, it takes much time to deal with the many losses. However, with a 
positive attitude, support, as well as many other factors, life after a spinal 
cord injury can be very successful.

  The proverb, "Be thankful for what you have, and do not dwell on what you 
have lost" is a great attitude. The patients at TIRR realize this, and people 
everywhere should accept that proverb, since everyone in life experiences some 
kind of loss. That is the definition of being human.

  Kevin Everett, and so many others, are trying to show the world that life is 
not over when one sustains a major loss. In fact, for many it is just 
beginning. Perhaps the reason Kevin Everett healed so miraculously was because 
of the care he received in the ambulance, or in the hospital, or in the rehab 
hospital, or because of his excellent conditioning, or because of his faith, or 
because of so many other reasons, or a combination of the above.

  Today, he is doing great and helping others.

  Many people, who have sustained a spinal cord injury, as well as those who 
have not, possess the desire to get better. For many, that equates to being 
more independent.

  People want to believe that getting better is possible. People enjoy stories 
with happy endings, and people want to be positive.

  Kevin Everett's story reminds us that sometimes there are happy endings.


  


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