Be Inspired

Inspirational Video Clips

My most inspiring day of the year is the annual Pole Pedal Paddle race in Bend. PPP is a 6 leg relay that includes alpine and Nordic skiing on Mt. Bachelor, a 22 mile bike or handcycle leg into Bend, a 5 mile run, 2 mile paddle on the Deschutes River, with a half-mile "sprint" to the finish.  Since 2012 Oregon Adaptive Sports has sponsored teams of adaptive athletes and I can't help but be inspired by this group of folks. 

Below you will find my collection of videos that inspire and encourage me to move forward and improve each day! 


Onward and No Boundaries in the 2012 Pole Pedal Paddle

In the spring of 2014, the High Fives Foundation gave a Winter Empowerment grant to provide the team with the tools and travel necessary for Tony Schmiesing to accomplish “The Edge of Impossible” trip to Points North Heli-Adventures in Cordova, Alaska!

In the summer of 2015 we took a road trip from San Francisco to Boston in order to write a wheelchair-accessible travel guide to the United States.

Thanks to Oregon Adaptive Sports & Mt Bachelor! Ravi goes full throttle all the time on snow and this video shows my day of trying to keep up with him . . . .Produced only for viewing pleasure by Jim Sanco 2010.

Shot for the amazing non profit: Healing Reins Therapeutic Riding Center in Central Oregon. Here are just a few stories from behind their barn doors. Jack is a 7 year old with Cerebral Palsy. David was an active high tech consultant who was in a head on collision with a driver who was texting. Moses is a teenager with a difficult past. Aseir, Hannah May, and Hope are just three horses that happen to be helping their riders heal.
www.jackcreekproductions.com

Continue is 28 sports in 28 minutes. Individuals with spinal cord injury play in Utah, Idaho, California, and Belize. This high definition project shows the specialized equipment that removes any barriers to participation after paralysis. Beautiful scenes and an original soundtrack help change the focus from disability to endless opportunity. Continue intends to leave its viewers with many questions and a desire to get them answered.

Inspiration Profiles

Susan Zimmerman

by Jake Stein

Susan (right) in standard Bend, Oregon adventure run attire.

In November 2013, Susan Zimmerman was diagnosed with advanced breast cancer. At the age of 44, she began the standard regime of Western medicine — chemo, surgery (mastectomy), and radiation, in that order. She also began seeing an acupuncturist and a naturopath. But according to Susan, by far the most important healer in the fight was herself. She read everything she could find about alternative therapies, spirituality, and theories of cancer, in addition to speaking with survivors and learning about their healing journeys.

“Everyone always said, ‘you have to be your own advocate,” Susan explains, “and now I know it’s the truth.”

 Susan currently trail runs, hikes and rides motorcycles with her husband, including an off-road Baja California Sur tour this past Thanksgiving.

“Cancer jump-started a hundred ‘just do it’ goals I had in my life that I was probably never going to do,” says Susan. “My fight is my lifestyle.” But instead of a fight, Susan likes to think of it as “optimizing health.” She is focusing on loving the self that she neglected in the past. She sticks to her supplement regime like religion. “Fruits and veggies are the name of the game now.”

“In keeping myself healthy and cancer-free, there were radical changes I made to my lifestyle, like practicing gratitude… slowing down and refusing to stress about anything… and taking care of important relationships with others.”

Susan describes herself during that initial shockwave after her diagnosis as “gripped with fear.” She was stunned. And how could you not be? But with a support system of friends and loved ones, and her self-driving optimism, she made it through. “In a wonderful email message, [Geoff Babb] reminded my husband and I that this is “our next great adventure.”

“Cancer as an adventure?” Susan thought? “Yes, it made all the sense in the world to me.”

And Susan has tackled cancer with such a perspective ever since. She remembers driving to early morning winter appointments for chemotherapy with friend Yvonne Babb, “packed to the gills with healthy food for the long day ahead. She remembers her family gathering around her via phone, email, and visiting during various stages of treatment. She remembers her girlfriend from Ohio flying to stay with her during radiation for two weeks, and her mother-in-law and energy healer, giving her countless long-distance treatments. And she remembers these days not as dark, but full of active friendship and love. “I felt my whole world gather around me in countless ways.”

A life-long runner, Susan is planning to make this year her best running year yet by participating in all of Bend, Oregon’s major runs — the Horse Butte 10-miler, the Pole Pedal Paddle (with Team Onward!), the Happy Girls Half Marathon, the Dirty Half Marathon, the Haulin’ Aspen Half, and the High Alpine Half. Not surprisingly, Susan describes herself and her husband as “pretty crazy about getting outside for adventure whenever [they] can.”

As if all that wasn’t enough, Susan is deciding if full marathons are good for her or not.
When Susan was first diagnosed, she was stunned with fear for a few months. “But knowledge and acceptance set me free.” Susan changed her perspective from “fight” to “adventure,” and it seems to have made all the difference.

“Cancer as a wake-up call and blessing?” she says. “Indeed!”

Kerry Vanderbom

by Jake Stein

Kerry and her husband, Derek.

Kerri Vanderbom is a Post-Doctoral Fellow at University of Alabama at Birmingham, where she works at Lakeshore Foundation. She gets to watch Paralympic national and international sports teams practice in her spare time, and she stays active by playing on the Lakeshore basketball team with her husband, Derek.

But before life in academia, Kerri was a world champion adapted water-skier. And Kerri was born with spina bifida. She was always active as a kid. Whether it was climbing trees or pushing around on a skateboard (always faster than her wheelchair), physical activity and sports were very important to her. When she graduated high school and started competing in waterskiing, it not only bolstered her confidence and independence, but shaped her career path. Competitive water-skiing opened up a new lifestyle of activity and world travel, where Kerri met lifelong friends, and eventually her husband — also a water-skier.

It’s no wonder Kerri earned her PhD in Exercise Sports Science -Movement Studies in Disability from Oregon State University. Kerri believes she owes much of her physical determination to her upbringing; her family was never overprotective, never treating her as “special.” She had the same support, and same expectations put upon her, as her able-bodied peers. “I think that’s really important for any kid with a disability,” Kerri says. “They should be pushed to be as independent as possible, and [to] set goals for their future.” “Part of my way of dealing with it is allowing myself to feel the frustration and be upset, but not for too long,” Kerri explains.

When a problem comes up related to her spina bifida, Kerri goes to the doctor, she takes care of it, and she moves on. Buildings and parking lots being inaccessible and out of compliance with the ADA are a daily frustration, but Kerri points out: “I can’t be too upset that I have trouble getting my chair out of my car on a hill, because I’m lucky I can afford to have a car.”

In her own words, “Having a disability is just one of the human experiences.” There are refugees of war, or those living in poverty. “We all have our thing.” For Kerri, as for the rest of us, perhaps, it’s all about positive attitude, a sense of humor, and staying active. Kerri realized the benefits of an active lifestyle — social and physical — from her experience as an active child and a competitive water-skier, and knew she wanted to study it. And if Kerri had never started on her path of exercise — both studying and participating in sports — she may never have met her husband while competing in water-skiing tournaments in Australia, where she happened to be studying one fateful year.

Now she remains active with her husband on the Lakeshore basketball team. “Other than that,” Kerri says, “it’s just the usual. Work, Netflix, etc.” She retains her sense of humor, her down-to-earth perspective. Her go-getter attitude is clear in her pursuit of what she loves — be it wheelchair basketball, sports science research, or her days as an adapted water-skier. Sure, “we all have our thing,” but not all of us can say we are world champion PhD’s in Baddassery (ok, sports science)!