One Extreme Lady
Mainstream fun is great, but it isn’t for Amber Ryan Marcy, a 31-year-old C6-7 quad and extreme sports junkie, from Saugatuck, Mich. She broke her neck at age 15 during a family camping trip when their van came to an abrupt halt, but she didn’t let herself fret over the usual SCI-worries.
“I wondered things like where I would be going camping with the ‘gang’ next summer,” she says. “I really didn’t think about what was not possible after my accident.” And she credits her family and friends for this. “I never felt left behind. My friends always found ways to include me, even if it meant carrying me up or down several stairs or hills or dunes to get from point A to point B.”
Her passion for all things extreme began when she went skydiving with friends in Mexico, post-injury. “It was the most freeing feeling I’ve ever experienced,” she says. She has been on six jumps to date. While enjoying the outdoors with nondisabled friends was fun, it took Marcy 10 years to discover adaptive extreme sports. “For years I was missing out on a whole other world. I really beat myself up for that now.” Marcy loved skydiving so much that when she was Miss Wheelchair Michigan in 2008, she organized a group skydiving event for fellow Miss Wheelchair America contestants.
Marcy also gets her adrenaline rush being one of the members of the Grand Rapids Thunder quad rugby team. “I couldn’t imagine playing tennis or basketball. I’ve always been a risk-taker and needed something more intense.” Other than rugby providing great exercise, she loves the camaraderie of it. “I think that’s my favorite part ... that and being one of the only girls on the court!”
Visit her site: www.mychairdoesnotdefine.me.
The Way He Rolls
Do you have fond memories of getting kicked out of rehab too soon? Did you have physical therapists who were robotic, and whose instructions seemed like they were from a too-old textbook? This very thing happened to Jacob Sharff, a 30-year-old paraplegic from West Palm Beach, Fla., and that is why he decided to start his website — How I Roll — to make sure no other newbie has to go through that experience again
His site has a rich-in-information blog written from his own perspective on how to do to everything as a paraplegic, including how to ride an escalator, how to get accessible seating at specific concert venues, how to transfer from the wheelchair to the ground, travel tips, buying your first wheelchair, even how to get a better night’s sleep by using a body blow.
Read more of his tips at howiroll.com.
Must-Have Reacher
Check out your new must-have item: the Telestik. Dubbed the lightest reacher ever made, this retractable reacher extends 3 feet and has both a washable adhesive and magnet end that does the grabbing for you — and can even fit in a purse. The Telestik can lift items up to 1 pound.
You can see it at www.telestik.com.