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Date: 11/8/2004 8:00:00 AM PROFILE: CRASH CHANGES COURSE OF STUDENT’S EDUCATION
Heather Sturgill, 33, can’t use her legs, her trunk, her arms, hands and fingers. But she can use her brain, and that’s what matters most to her.
“I like working on all the events and programs I do. I want that solid rep as someone who can get things done. I’ll need it once I graduate (in spring 2006) and am looking for work…I’m hoping to work in some fashion on issues of accessibility or in community organizing,” says Heather, whose rep should be solid gold by the time she graduates. There’s certainly no need to look further than Heather’s 1862 Northside home to appreciate what she can accomplish. When she was injured on April 15, 2000, Heather was actually living in a different house, one that became incredibly hard for her to negotiate or even leave after the accident. “My husband, Gerald, rigged up a ramp, but our old house was a shotgun style, three rooms deep and three stories high. It was incredibly difficult for people to help me in and out. It was just ssssoooooo incredibly scary… especially after one of my best friends tried. It had been raining, and the wood was wet. Her foot slipped. She ended up on her knees, back pressed against the neighbor’s house and a rod that stuck out from my chair just a couple of inches from going through her head. She, amazingly, had managed to keep the chair from completely falling over and crushing me as we slid down the ramp. It became so scary to go in and out that I just avoided it.”
She wanted to push her physical limits, seeking to regain what motion she could in her head, neck and shoulders. “People think I can’t do much, but they don’t know. I’ve learned that it’s all about balance, quite literally, and what it can achieve of us.” So, in order to further Heather’s drive for independence, the couple decided to rehab an 1862 “pile of rubble.” Heather used her prior experience gained in UC architecture courses (which she took as a non-matriculated student before the accident) to redesign the first floor of the home to be “user friendly” for a woman in a wheelchair: light switches are lowered and outlets are higher than usual; remote control blinds; electric door openers and lock releases as well as lowered cabinets, counters, sinks and oven.
One morning incident in the van did, temporarily, throw Heather off balance as she was heading for UC: “I was driving up Clifton Ave. when a car behind me pulled out, swerved to the right of me, accelerated ahead of me and then came from my right to do a u-turn right in front of me. It was horrifying for me. When the driver ran that stop sign in April 2000 and hit me, I was hit from the right. Now, I could see this Clifton driver swinging around on my right out of the corner of my eye. All I could think of was how I’d struggled so hard to regain my independence, and suddenly, it was all going to be taken away again.” Heather got to DAAP and parked her van in front of the college. “It had been such an intense fear and shock. I sat there crying and literally shaking for an hour. I was a real mess,” she admits. After a time though, Heather managed to regain her composure, go into the building and attend classes. “Really,” she admits, “It’s something anyone else would have done. People who haven’t been injured look at me and give me more praise than I deserve. They imagine they couldn’t succeed if they were in my place, but that’s not true. No one ever knows what they can really do unless they are put in a position where they have to. We’re all just doing what we have to do.”
For more UC news, go to www.uc.edu/news/
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