I caught up to the procession just as it was entering Landsdowne Park at the heart of the city. Hundreds of tractors filed by, interspersed with farm trucks of every description. The streets were snarled and horns blared— some in support, some in obvious anger—as city dwellers were trapped within the dramatic web being spun around them. People poured out of apartments and stores, shopkeepers and customers alike lined the streets, all curious, all awestruck, most waving and smiling.
One woman pointed at my sign and spoke to the man beside her. They both smiled and waved at me. I nodded with the dignity befitting the occasion. As I approached an intersection, a police officer started to wave me aside until he spotted my sign. With a small grin, he signalled me to continue.
I may have looked tiny and insignificant in my little Mazda, but I was riding as high as any of those in the big machines.
As we crawled along the Queen Elizabeth Driveway, and my clutch foot began to ache, I had plenty of time to pause and reflect upon the moment. Other than the obvious pride I felt, I also harboured a deep regret about the fate of my own family farm. None of us were in a position to take it over, and even if we did, it wasn’t large enough to be financially viable.
Hand in hand with the regret came the memories: my father struggling in the burning sun to fix the baler for the twentieth time . . . my father stooped in the dusk, picking stones with bleeding hands . . . my father shouting and waving his arms at an errant cow in a predawn, rain-soaked field . . . my mother’s straw hat glistening in the sun as she drove the tractor while I loaded the hay . . . my mother allowing a sick baby piglet to be brought in the house to “warm up” . . . my mother’s tears when farm life seemed a little too hard to bear . . . my parent’s delight when their hard work paid off and the money came in.
I also remembered my own rosy dawns when I slipped and slid over silvery-dewed grass to pick up the latest crop of duchess apples that had fallen the night before. I remembered the heartbreakingly sweet smell of fresh cut hay as I drifted off to sleep beneath a fluttering curtain that flirted with a full moon. I remembered delicious evening swims in a sun-warmed lake after hours of struggling with heavy bales in a boiling hayloft.
No, I don’t have a farm, and technically, I’m not a farmer. But I’ve lived the life, and it will never leave me. Even the arthritis that dampens my body and spirits can’t extinguish those bright flames of memory.
That’s why I drove with the farmers on that cold day in March, and that’s why my sign read: “On Behalf of My Parents, Who Farmed all Their Lives.”
Wanda James
Morewood, Ontario
11
MAKING A
DIFFERENCE
I don’t believe for a minute that I am going to save the world, but if we have a few hundred people saying, “I can make a difference,” we will.
David Suzuki
Becoming the Man in Motion
Canadians are people who care about each other and constantly give of themselves. This generous spirit has helped me overcome adversity and chase my dreams. It continues to inspire me, every day, to be determined to make a difference.
Rick Hansen
I thought my life was over. I was alone in a stuffy hospital room hanging face down and strapped to a bed that was flipped over every few hours to relieve the pressure on my spine. I was fifteen years old.
A friend and I had skipped volleyball camp and gone fishing. It was such a perfect summer day; we couldn’t resist the chance to celebrate our freedom exploring the wilderness around Williams Lake. I loved to explore, I loved sports, and I loved fishing.
We hitched a ride home in the back of a pickup truck. It was 1973, and riding without seatbelts in the back of a pickup, or having a few beers—which we later discovered the driver had done, was no big deal. Until the truck swerved and flipped over, catapulting us out the back. I landed against a metal toolbox. Although I realized I couldn’t feel my legs, it didn’t occur to me anything serious had happened.
Later, I learned my spine was shattered, and I would never walk again. After four months in a Vancouver hospital and another three in rehabilitation, reality slowly set in. Then anger. I couldn’t believe this had happened to me, that it wasn’t possible to recover, that I wouldn’t become a famous athlete, that my life as I had known it, was over. I lashed out at my family and friends, at the nurses, doctors and therapists.
Back home in Williams Lake, I learned how hard it was going to be to get around in a wheelchair. One day, I went with my brother and our friends to our favourite swimming hole, but I ended up staying alone in the sweltering truck. Unable to make it down the steep riverbank alone, I was too proud to ask for help. When I finally realized my pride would keep me away from people and experiences I loved, I let my brother piggyback me to the river’s edge. The rushing water soothed my aching heart, and for the first time since the accident, I enjoyed myself.
Allowing others to help was a turning point. I realized my attitude was the biggest barrier I had to face. How could I expect others to see my potential if I didn’t see it myself? What was my potential if couldn’t realize my dream of being an athlete? I couldn’t yet see myself anywhere but on the sidelines, watching.
Then, my high school coach, Bob Redford, asked me to coach the girl’s volleyball team. As I worked with them I became faster and more agile in the chair. Then, Stan Stronge arrived. Stan had been assigned by the BC Paraplegic Association to help me adjust, but when he learned I was an athlete, he encouraged me to move to Vancouver and compete in wheelchair sports. I was already accomplished at table tennis—enough to compete in the 1975 Wheelchair Games in Montreal. The level of competition and the toughness of the players blew me away.
As high school ended, I wondered what to do. My goal of being a phys ed teacher seemed no longer possible. Bob urged me to apply to the University of British Columbia, anyway. When I was rejected, he asked me to choose between defeat and challenge. I convinced the faculty to let me try, and, four years later, was the first person with a disability to graduate with a degree in physical education.
While at UBC, I met Tim Frick, who coached me in wheelchair track and marathon. With his help and friendship, I began marathon training, and resultantly won nineteen international wheelchair marathons, many track medals and competed for Canada in the 1984 Olympics.
Shortly before the Olympics, I crashed, dislocating my left shoulder. But Amanda, my physiotherapist, took such good care of me, I managed to qualify, and was able to compete. That injury was a wake-up call, as I tried to picture my life without being an athlete. I knew I wanted to travel, and do something to make a difference in the world.
Once I was late for class at UBC. I was speeding up a hill and noticed a girl jogging behind me. She sped to catch up and was gasping when she reached me. “Can I help push you up the hill?” she sputtered. “Well, actually, you’re the one who’s out of breath,” I laughed. “Maybe you’d like to sit on my lap, and I’ll give you a ride.” This is just one small example of what people with disabilities faced, every day. Whenever I encountered a limiting attitude I thought, “I’ll show them . . . somehow.”
When I was first in rehab, I daydreamed about wheeling around the world, but I didn’t think it was actually possible. But as I became stronger, the idea took hold. Then I met Terry Fox. Someone told me about this kid who had just lost a leg to cancer. So I called him and invited him to come out and play wheelchair basketball. We became roommates, good friends, and trained together. When Terry ran across Canada, I was in awe of how people responded to his courage—and how public perception changed as a result.
I realized my dream of wheeling around the world could make a difference for others. And so the Man in Motion Tour was born.
On March 21, 1985, I left Vancouver accompanied by my friend Don Alder, Tim Frick and my cousin Lee Gibson. Wheeling south across the border to Washington, the world lay ahead. We had romantic notions of the adventures we’d have and no idea of the enormous
challenges in store. It took everything I had every day just to keep going . . . over mountains, through scorching deserts, freezing snow, and torrential rains. After two years, two months and two days, we had crossed thirty-four countries, four continents and I had wheeled 40,000 kilometres, doing the equivalent of two marathons a day, seven days a week.
Mostly, people either thought we were crazy or they were apathetic. During one difficult phase, Amanda came out to assist with her skills as a physiotherapist. When I felt like quitting, she pulled me through with her grit and strength, and her love.
When we landed back in Canada at Cape Spear, Newfoundland, Canadians rallied. As we made our way back home to British Columbia, the whole country became ignited. We were overwhelmed by the support and enthusiasm of the people who came out, by the thousands, to cheer us on, to give money and to volunteer in countless ways.
Our arrival in Vancouver was beyond anything I had ever dreamed possible. I thought my heart would burst. The streets were lined with wildly cheering people, all reaching out to me. BC Place Stadium was filled to capacity with people welcoming me home. As I wheeled onto the podium, I saw a banner proclaiming: “The End is Just the Beginning”. My heart lurched, as I realized, despite the unspeakable hardships we had just overcome to reach the end of this journey, it was true.
When we began, we hoped to raise $1 million. By the time we arrived back in Canada, we set a new goal of $10 million. The total was a stunning $24 million, enabling me to start a foundation. We’d been tremendously successful in raising awareness of the potential of people with disabilities, to show that anything was possible if you put your mind to it.
To date, we have provided more than $130 million to spinal cord injury research, rehabilitation, injury prevention and wheelchair sport programs. Now we’re about to embark on a new journey . . . to accelerate the discovery of a cure for spinal cord injury. Research has advanced so rapidly in the last ten years scientists believe, for the first time in history, a cure is possible. It’s an amazing thought.
When I think back to when I was first injured, I remember my despair, and how I mourned the loss of all life’s possibilities. But, today, I truly feel it was meant to happen. I wouldn’t trade the life I have created, for the use of my legs. I feel so lucky. That accident began a journey to accomplishments beyond my dreams—as an athlete, a husband (yes, Amanda and I married), a father to three beautiful daughters, a business leader and an ambassador for what happens when you dream big dreams. My life was far from over . . . it had actually just begun. And, I believe, my best work is yet to come.
Rick Hansen
Vancouver, British Columbia
An Unlikely Hero
You see things and you say, “Why?” But I dream things that never were; And I say, “Why not?”
George Bernard Shaw
Fred hated school. Having grown up on a farm near Alliston, Ontario, Fred was a good worker but felt uncomfortable and unaccepted in a town school. Although he tried hard, he was not a good student. In order to graduate, he had to repeat some of his exams. An academic career just did not seem to be in the cards for Fred, but he had a persistent streak.
After graduation, he began studies to become a minister. When that did not go well, he changed his goal to medicine, working strenuously to become an orthopaedic surgeon. World War I arrived, and the great need for field medics facilitated the early graduation of many doctors, including Fred.
After the war, the young Canadian doctor returned home to set up his practice. To his dismay, business was slow to nonexistent. He waited a whole month before treating his first patient, and his payment was the grand sum of four dollars! Fred had so much time on his hands as he waited for patients to materialize that he whiled away the hours reading medical journals. He began to focus on articles on diabetes, a disease that had claimed the life of a neighbour’s child.
Realizing that research might solve the problem of this disease, Fred decided he needed a laboratory. He approached Dr. J. J. R. Macleod at the University of Toronto. Dr. Macleod was initially uninterested—he believed Fred knew nothing about research and refused to waste laboratory facilities on him. But Fred stubbornly persisted and eventually convinced Dr. Macleod to support him. In 1920, Fred happily entered a poorly equipped laboratory and was given a young assistant named Charles Best.
In those days, there was no support in the medical and scientific communities for an unknown surgeon’s research. Fred and his assistant were given lab animals left over from other scientists’ studies. But they dedicated themselves to working long hours without pay, and Fred even sold his car to finance the needed experiments. Dr. Macleod soon grew more interested in the team’s work, and he eventually became involved in the research.
Fred and Charles worked day and night, but early results in producing the hormone preparation they called insulin were discouraging. Many of the animals they treated died, but finally one animal survived for several weeks. The team appeared to be finally getting somewhere, and it was time to move on to human subjects. Before treating human patients, however, Fred and Charles tested the safety of their insulin on each other. Their tests were a resounding success.
The first patient to be treated with Fred and Charles’s insulin formulation was a fourteen-year-old boy named Leonard. The year was 1921. For two years, Leonard had been on the “Allen diet”—a starvation diet for diabetics that allowed only 450 calories a day. The poor boy weighed only seventy-five pounds, and he was barely alive. But the new insulin treatment administered by Fred and Charles was a great success. Leonard gained weight, and his health dramatically improved. History shows that Leonard, the very first insulin patient, actually lived to adulthood.
By now, interest in insulin was growing rapidly. Charles Best developed methods for quick, large-scale production, and by the end of 1922, diabetics from all over the world were coming to Toronto for treatment. It had been only two short years from the first, rudimentary insulin experiments with animals to the successful widespread treatment of diabetics.
In 1923, the Nobel Prize in medicine was awarded jointly to Canadian doctors Frederick Banting and J. J. R. Macleod. In keeping with his character, Fred gave half of his $20,000 prize money to his assistant and friend, Charles Best. Fred then put his share of the money right back into research, establishing the Banting Research Foundation and the Banting Institute at the University of Toronto.
Fred could have made himself a millionaire with his discovery. Instead, he sold his patent for the production of insulin to the University of Toronto—for one dollar—so that the drug could be marketed cheaply and thousands of lives could be saved and improved.
Since 1922, millions of lives worldwide have been saved by insulin, and because of Fred, diabetics are able to live normal lives where before it was impossible.
Fred—Dr. Frederick Banting—was just an ordinary man in many respects, but he was a man with a vision and the stubborn will to pursue his goal. He had the heart of a true Canadian hero.
Mary Turner
Victoria, British Columbia
The Will to Survive
Hope is ever ready to arise.
James De Mille, 1888
Joe Spring was packing his car. His parents, Tim and Teresa, as well as his siblings, had tried their best to persuade him to take the bus for the 700-hundred-mile trip from their home in Aldergrove, near Vancouver, to Prince Rupert. Joe, however, wanted to drive. He was planning a stopover with friends in Quesnel before going on to Prince Rupert for a long-time friend’s graduation party.
“The bus would probably be cheaper,” his parents said. “It’s a long trip, and you might have car troubles.” In the back of their minds, Tim and Teresa tried to push away the very real fear that was starting to develop. “At least wait until tomorrow morning, after you’ve had a good night’s sleep,” they pleaded.
Joe loved driving his bright red sporty car, however, and he was convinced that he would be fine. At 11:00 that Monday evening, he
walked into his parents’ room with a broad grin and said, “Well, this is the last time you might see me!”
Unimpressed by his bravado, Teresa declared, “You had better make sure I see you again!” His dad was silent, fighting back a feeling of dread. His parents knew they had given it their best shot, but they also realized that in the final analysis, it was Joe’s life and Joe’s decision. They hugged him good-bye, and off he went.
Several days later Tim and Teresa Spring were becoming increasingly alarmed because their son had not called home. At first the Springs thought he had simply driven a hitchhiker to his destination or decided to tour another area. But as time passed, and no one had heard from Joe, the Springs’ alarm took on a desperate tone. They contacted the police, who opened a missing person’s file. The local TV station, BCTV/Global, aired Joe’s picture and story, and the Vancouver Sun ran a front-page photo and coverage. Friends uploaded Joe’s image to the Internet and drove up and down highways and back roads, searching. People all across British Columbia now knew about Joe’s disappearance and began to keep their eyes peeled for his red car.
In Kamloops, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police air detachment was informed about the missing nineteen-year-old. At the time, its search helicopter was in pieces, undergoing a major safety inspection; it couldn’t be flown. Pilot Jodeen Cassidy was frustrated in her desire to join in the search.