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experiencelifemag.com
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Back on Her Feet
After a devastating car accident, Hillary Hopkins was told she’d never walk
again. With the help of her trainers, she hopes to prove doctors wrong.
By Erin Peterson |
April 2008 |
Revised Expectations
The Right Routine
The Road Ahead
Success Summary
Hillary Hopkins doesn’t remember much about the
accident. She was just 16 years old on that early September morning in 1992 when
she and her older sister, Bethany, were headed to a church function near their
home in Rome, Ga. It was still dark outside, and Bethany didn’t see the
semi-truck as she pulled onto the highway. In the ICU weeks later, Hopkins,
now 31, learned that their car had hit the unlit semitrailer from the side and
passed all the way underneath, losing its roof in the process. Her sister didn’t
survive the accident. Hopkins was critically injured — her neck, arm and many of
the bones in her face were broken. “They tell me I never lost
consciousness,” she says, ”but I don’t remember the first three weeks. I don’t
think our bodies let us remember things like that.” During the months that
followed, Hopkins suffered immeasurable pain, grief, frustration and confusion.
As she mourned the loss of her sister, she also had to come to terms with her
own dramatically altered life. Doctors told her that even though she still had
some feeling in her arms and legs, she was technically quadriplegic and would
likely spend the rest of her life in a wheelchair. “I had so much stuff to deal
with,” she recalls. “I was in survival mode.” As time passed, though, her
shock gradually turned to determination — she refused to accept that she’d never
walk again. And in the 15 years since, Hopkins has pushed herself to prove her
doctors wrong, attending hundreds of physical therapy sessions, exercising
regularly and, most recently, seeking outside expert help. Her persistence
is paying off: With only stabilizing support, she’s now standing on her own two
feet again and making strides every day toward walking.
Revised Expectations
Before the accident, Hopkins was active and driven. At 5
feet 10 inches tall, she played forward on her high school basketball team and
spent every spare moment going to camps and practicing her skills. “Basketball
was my life,” she says. “I wanted to go to college and play ball.” The
accident forced her to change her expectations. Upon leaving the ICU a month
after the accident, Hopkins underwent four months of intense therapy at a
spinal-cord-injury clinic in Atlanta, where she relearned basic tasks, like how
to shower, get dressed, and transfer in and out of a car. Though she was able to
move her arms and hands, she’d regained only slight movement in her right leg
and foot, and none in her left. Within a year, she had learned to maneuver
herself into a standing position using her upper-body strength. But improvements
stalled. Still, she was unwilling to let her condition define her or leave her
dependent on others, and in 1994 she left home to attend Brigham Young
University in Provo, Utah. By 1998, Hopkins was accustomed to her situation,
even if she wasn’t entirely at peace with it. Physical therapy was just
another item to check off her to-do list. But when her roommate began
complaining about weight problems, Hopkins found herself rankled. “It
bothered me that she complained about something without doing anything to
improve it,” she recalls. “And then I realized I was doing the same thing. I
decided then that I would get a gym membership and start working out more than I
had been.” With occasional assistance from trainers, she began doing
upper-body strength training and cardio workouts, like swimming and handcycling.
Even though she didn’t experience any significant improvements in her mobility,
she enjoyed exercising hard enough to work up a sweat. “Losing certain abilities
made me appreciate what I do have and also the importance of being healthy,
being in shape and working out,” she says.
The Right Routine
In
May 2007, Hopkins met Steve Toms and John Cottrell, team members at the Life
Time Fitness in South Valley, Utah. Impressed with Hopkins’s determination, they
had ideas about a different approach to exercise that they believed could truly
make a difference in her mobility. They began asking questions, and after
listening to her story, they developed customized, complementary regimens that
would relax tensed muscles, activate those that hadn’t been used in years and
build strength. Cottrell, a yoga instructor and coordinator of the club’s
LifeStudio, taught Hopkins breathing exercises that helped open her chest. He
also introduced her to back arches and adapted yoga positions, which improved
her flexibility, strengthened her core and improved her posture. Meanwhile,
Toms, the personal-training department head at the time, began doing massage
work that relaxed the muscles in Hopkins’s glutes and legs, as well as the
reciprocal muscles linked to those areas. Once those muscles were relaxed,
Hopkins could concentrate on flexing and unflexing her long-dormant muscles.
At first, she could only activate the muscles immediately after the massage,
but she could soon do it on her own at home. Within weeks, she began standing up
(with Toms’s assistance) and doing a few 90-degree squats. Just two months
into training, Hopkins could get out of her chair and do 40 squats with only
stabilizing assistance. “I would never have thought that I would see results
this quickly, but I improved more working with John and Steve than I ever did on
my own or with other trainers,” she says. Hopkins’s progress has been
gratifying for Toms, too. “There’s no one who’s inspired me more than Hillary,”
he says. “Getting her out of her chair is a life-changing thing.”
The Road Ahead
Hopkins knows that it will take more than daily workouts to
achieve her dream of one day returning to the basketball court, but she wants to
be prepared for whatever happens next. “It might take a personal
miracle, or it might take a cure for spinal-cord injuries,” she says. “All I
know is that I’m not going to stop. I can only keep doing what I’m doing.” If
the progress she’s made in the last year alone is any indication, Hopkins is
just getting started. Erin Peterson is a freelance writer in Minneapolis.
Success Summary
Meet: Hillary Hopkins, 31, administrative assistant in Sandy, Utah. Big
achievement: Regaining the use of many muscles she hasn’t been able to use
since a devastating car accident in high school. Big inspiration: Getting
back on the basketball court. “If there’s ever a point where there is a cure for
spinal-cord injuries, I know I’ll be that much more ahead of the game because
I’ve been working out. I’ve seen amazing changes in my body.” What worked:
Appreciating small changes. “I’m not running around, but my legs are working
better, my balance has gotten better, and I’m much stronger. It’s hard work,
but I know it’s not in vain.” What didn’t: Relying on only herself. “I used
to try to do workouts on my own, but I didn’t have the knowledge to do what was
most beneficial for me.” Words of Wisdom: Look forward, not backward. “I try
not to ask why this happened to me, because I know I can’t change it. All I can
do is ask myself: Did I do better today than I did yesterday?”
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Back on Her Feet
After a devastating car accident, Hillary Hopkins was told she’d never walk
again. With the help of her trainers, she hopes to prove doctors wrong.
By Erin Peterson | Success Stories Department, April 2008 |
Revised Expectations
The Right Routine
The Road Ahead
Success Summary
Hillary Hopkins doesn’t remember much about the
accident. She was just 16 years old on that early September morning in 1992 when
she and her older sister, Bethany, were headed to a church function near their
home in Rome, Ga. It was still dark outside, and Bethany didn’t see the
semi-truck as she pulled onto the highway. In the ICU weeks later, Hopkins,
now 31, learned that their car had hit the unlit semitrailer from the side and
passed all the way underneath, losing its roof in the process. Her sister didn’t
survive the accident. Hopkins was critically injured — her neck, arm and many of
the bones in her face were broken. “They tell me I never lost
consciousness,” she says, ”but I don’t remember the first three weeks. I don’t
think our bodies let us remember things like that.” During the months that
followed, Hopkins suffered immeasurable pain, grief, frustration and confusion.
As she mourned the loss of her sister, she also had to come to terms with her
own dramatically altered life. Doctors told her that even though she still had
some feeling in her arms and legs, she was technically quadriplegic and would
likely spend the rest of her life in a wheelchair. “I had so much stuff to deal
with,” she recalls. “I was in survival mode.” As time passed, though, her
shock gradually turned to determination — she refused to accept that she’d never
walk again. And in the 15 years since, Hopkins has pushed herself to prove her
doctors wrong, attending hundreds of physical therapy sessions, exercising
regularly and, most recently, seeking outside expert help. Her persistence
is paying off: With only stabilizing support, she’s now standing on her own two
feet again and making strides every day toward walking.
Revised Expectations (Back to Top)
Before the accident, Hopkins was active and driven. At 5
feet 10 inches tall, she played forward on her high school basketball team and
spent every spare moment going to camps and practicing her skills. “Basketball
was my life,” she says. “I wanted to go to college and play ball.” The
accident forced her to change her expectations. Upon leaving the ICU a month
after the accident, Hopkins underwent four months of intense therapy at a
spinal-cord-injury clinic in Atlanta, where she relearned basic tasks, like how
to shower, get dressed, and transfer in and out of a car. Though she was able to
move her arms and hands, she’d regained only slight movement in her right leg
and foot, and none in her left. Within a year, she had learned to maneuver
herself into a standing position using her upper-body strength. But improvements
stalled. Still, she was unwilling to let her condition define her or leave her
dependent on others, and in 1994 she left home to attend Brigham Young
University in Provo, Utah. By 1998, Hopkins was accustomed to her situation,
even if she wasn’t entirely at peace with it. Physical therapy was just
another item to check off her to-do list. But when her roommate began
complaining about weight problems, Hopkins found herself rankled. “It
bothered me that she complained about something without doing anything to
improve it,” she recalls. “And then I realized I was doing the same thing. I
decided then that I would get a gym membership and start working out more than I
had been.” With occasional assistance from trainers, she began doing
upper-body strength training and cardio workouts, like swimming and handcycling.
Even though she didn’t experience any significant improvements in her mobility,
she enjoyed exercising hard enough to work up a sweat. “Losing certain abilities
made me appreciate what I do have and also the importance of being healthy,
being in shape and working out,” she says.
The Right Routine (Back to Top)
In
May 2007, Hopkins met Steve Toms and John Cottrell, team members at the Life
Time Fitness in South Valley, Utah. Impressed with Hopkins’s determination, they
had ideas about a different approach to exercise that they believed could truly
make a difference in her mobility. They began asking questions, and after
listening to her story, they developed customized, complementary regimens that
would relax tensed muscles, activate those that hadn’t been used in years and
build strength. Cottrell, a yoga instructor and coordinator of the club’s
LifeStudio, taught Hopkins breathing exercises that helped open her chest. He
also introduced her to back arches and adapted yoga positions, which improved
her flexibility, strengthened her core and improved her posture. Meanwhile,
Toms, the personal-training department head at the time, began doing massage
work that relaxed the muscles in Hopkins’s glutes and legs, as well as the
reciprocal muscles linked to those areas. Once those muscles were relaxed,
Hopkins could concentrate on flexing and unflexing her long-dormant muscles.
At first, she could only activate the muscles immediately after the massage,
but she could soon do it on her own at home. Within weeks, she began standing up
(with Toms’s assistance) and doing a few 90-degree squats. Just two months
into training, Hopkins could get out of her chair and do 40 squats with only
stabilizing assistance. “I would never have thought that I would see results
this quickly, but I improved more working with John and Steve than I ever did on
my own or with other trainers,” she says. Hopkins’s progress has been
gratifying for Toms, too. “There’s no one who’s inspired me more than Hillary,”
he says. “Getting her out of her chair is a life-changing thing.”
The Road Ahead (Back to Top)
Hopkins knows that it will take more than daily workouts to
achieve her dream of one day returning to the basketball court, but she wants to
be prepared for whatever happens next. “It might take a personal
miracle, or it might take a cure for spinal-cord injuries,” she says. “All I
know is that I’m not going to stop. I can only keep doing what I’m doing.” If
the progress she’s made in the last year alone is any indication, Hopkins is
just getting started. Erin Peterson is a freelance writer in Minneapolis.
Success Summary (Back to Top)
Meet: Hillary Hopkins, 31, administrative assistant in Sandy, Utah. Big
achievement: Regaining the use of many muscles she hasn’t been able to use
since a devastating car accident in high school. Big inspiration: Getting
back on the basketball court. “If there’s ever a point where there is a cure for
spinal-cord injuries, I know I’ll be that much more ahead of the game because
I’ve been working out. I’ve seen amazing changes in my body.” What worked:
Appreciating small changes. “I’m not running around, but my legs are working
better, my balance has gotten better, and I’m much stronger. It’s hard work,
but I know it’s not in vain.” What didn’t: Relying on only herself. “I used
to try to do workouts on my own, but I didn’t have the knowledge to do what was
most beneficial for me.” Words of Wisdom: Look forward, not backward. “I try
not to ask why this happened to me, because I know I can’t change it. All I can
do is ask myself: Did I do better today than I did yesterday?”
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