Hi Kris,
 
A great Web Site.  I'm glad you've done so much after such a devastating SCI.  I too believe it is those of us living with a SCI to show the world that being on wheels doesn't mean we are disabled.  We must prove by example that 'wills' trump 'wheels' in our lives.  Stay strong.
 

With Love,

CtrlAltDel aka Dave
C4/5 Complete - 29 Years Post
Texas, USA

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Nicely said, Dave.
 
The fatalist perspective is one that has held countless people with SCI back from challenging what others deem our limitations. Without the hope that our lives are ours to control and direct, even after SCI, we force ourselves to endure a misery of our own making.
 
I'd like to invite everyone to visit my web site at www.krisannpiazza.com . My life after a cervical [C5] break was Hellish, especially after my nurse dropped me off my Stryker bed and dislodged my initial fusion. In essence, I broke my neck twice when I was only 12 years old. BUT I believed that there was still a way to build a good life for myself, and no one was going to convince me that I was predestined to lie in a sick bed for the rest of my life, which in 1980, people believed.  
 
I salute you Dave!
 
:)
 
Kris Ann

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