
This is what Angels look like: Julian, Major Sujith, and Wenson George are three of the four men who worked together to save my life.
Hi Everyone!
Sorry I’ve been so slow in posting updates. We’ve all been busy, though, so I’ve got a lot of news!
Thanks to the hard work of Haiti Partners, the crew back in Haiti, and the Zyman family foundation, construction of the Cabois Community School is well underway! We have enough money to build the school, and supply it with solar panels, batteries, and satellite internet. I got to put my engineering degree to good use by designing a rainwater harvesting system for the school. The XO laptop group also donated many laptops to the kids in the Cabois Community School, and a number of other schools in the area. Some of our students just graduated from their first eight week training session using the new laptops, so it’s pretty exciting that they’ll have internet access soon too! Also, the USA womens ice hockey team raised a bunch of money that we’ll use to cover operating costs for the school. We’ll pay 17 teachers their $80 per month salary, and give all the teachers and students lunch every day. This is the only reliable meal many of these kids get right now, and it costs 52 cents.
The photo above shows the Cabois Community School right after it was completed for the first time. The next photo shows the school immediately after the earthquake- nothing survived. To the left is a photo of the school right now, under construction. It will be a bigger and nicer facility, and notice the strength of the steel frame. Below is a photo of the home that Gerald, my motorcycle driving savior, built for his family with help from Julians church group in Philadelphia. Look at the half height cement walls- this is a home designed to be earthquake safe.
We’re still struggling with documentation and paperwork for Wenson, so if you’ve got any ideas on how to facilitate that process I’d love to hear from you. Once we get him to the US though, my parents have set up a fantastic program for him back in Anchorage, and there is also a school near DC that has offered to take him in. The sooner he can come, the better, because he’ll have more time to get settled in the US before jumping into a challenging academic life.
I’m doing quite well now too. I took my first steps with only one crutch instead of two at Gimps on Ice- and one of my friends there had the presence of mind to pull out a videocamera.
I got the stitches from the last surgery out in early April, and as soon as I was allowed to walk again, my prosthetist Mike made me what I’m calling my “tween” leg. The first leg I had was nice soft squishy plastic, and was not designed to take my full weight. That was the “baby leg” that I went ice climbing with. The tween leg was hard thermoplastic, with a fiberglass cover just like casts you get for a broken arm. I ran around with that one for a few weeks, while we adjusted the shape and the fit, to make sure it was all perfect. It was a huge step up from the baby leg, so the day I got my tween leg, I made my roommate take me to the drugstore to buy a cane, and haven’t used my crutches since. About a week later, I put my cane away for good too.
On May 12th, Mike made me my first carbon fiber socket, and now I can do anything! (almost). I’ll keep this teenage leg as long as I can, but my calf muscles are still atrophying. They will probably continue to do so for the first year, and every time they shrink up too much, my leg stops fitting and I need a new one. Mike and I have our fingers crossed that the teenage leg lasts me through the summer, but you never really know what a teen is going to do.
Just yesterday, I tried running for the first time. It wasn’t very fun, and kind of hurt, but I did run 200 meters without stopping and about half a mile total. I only have to do that fifty two times in a row and it’ll be a marathon.
Mike and I also collaborated on a custom made climbing foot that I can switch out with my regular walking foot when I go rock climbing. It’s pretty awesome- we had to calibrate the flexibility of the foot with how much I weigh and the amount of force I’m planning on putting on it. Amazingly, we got it pretty close to right on our second try.
I’ve been climbing enough now that I’m pretty comfortable with the new foot. I keep thinking that climbing with a prosthetic foot should make things a lot harder, but I’m not sure that’s true. There are moments up on the rock when I want to turn my ankle or stand on my tip toes to reach just a little higher and I can’t, but most of the time it doesn’t bother me. I’m also climbing things that are almost as hard as the things I was climbing a year ago, so it must not be holding me back. Mal, the fearless leader of Gimps on Ice, says that feet are overrated, and I’m starting to believe him.
At this point, I am ready to re-learn all the things I want to do. It seems to take me a day or two of figuring things out, and then I’m pretty much set. I learned to drive my manual car without any adaptations in about a week, I’m climbing pretty well, walking pretty well, and managing stairs and slopes without too much awkwardness. My next project is figuring out how to ride my bike.
I gave the commencement address at Simons Rock College of Bard in mid May, where I got my first undergraduate degree from. It was a lot of fun to go back and see the beautiful campus, and my speech was pretty well received. Below is some video that my dad took while I was speaking.








