Posted on 11/29/2014 4:39:07 AM PST by RoosterRedux
Earlier this month, ESPNs E: 60 series brought you the inspirational story of Kayla Montgomery, a North Carolina teenager living with multiple sclerosis; an incurable disease where the bodys immune system attacks its own nerve cells.
She grew up loving the game of soccer, but was forced to stop upon her diagnosis. She lost feeling in her legs for eight months, but with the help of medication; she was able to recover. After that, she decided to take up running. Knowing the window of opportunity for running could be short, Kayla wanted to make the most of it, which is precisely what she told her coach, Patrick Cromwell, who admitted she was very average in the beginning; varsity hopeful by her senior year is how he put it.
But, with Kaylas hard work and Cromwells coaching abilities (he pushed her hard), she has become one of the best distance runners in the country for her age group. But it comes with a cost.
Heat triggers multiple sclerosis attacks. She admits feeling a tingling, numbing sensation in her feet, which then travels up her legs.
Kayla admitted that in the beginning, it was difficult to pace herself because she felt no pain and couldnt tell how fast she was going. She has since adapted.
Yet, by the time her race is over, she no longer feels anything from the waist down and collapses, but Coach Cromwell is there to catch her.
(Excerpt) Read more at townhall.com ...
A truly admirable young lady.
A truly admirable young lady.
A courageous young lady, a supportive family, and a great coach.
I wish her all the best.
What a wonderful story.
Certainly brought tears to my eyes.
I don’t get it, how can she run if she can’t feel anything, why wouldn’t she collapse as soon as her legs go numb, why can’t she slow down at the finish?
I can’t believe that she is doing this with any support/approval from medical personnel. I know a few people with MS and someone close to me died from it; the things that she’s doing are almost exactly the things that will aggravate the condition.
“When her body temperature returns to normal, she regains full use of her legsand the attacks cause no permanent damage.”
According to what I know about this...bull.
My wife was diagnosed with MS 20 years ago. She has been a step aerobics instructor, spinning instructor, has run 5k races, and can out-bike most men cross country.
God bless her. She’s an inspiration.
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