Don,   Jennifer Addis, lives in Steven's Point and a quad for  more than 15 
years.  She's a model when she needs to be and an advocate for  so many in 
the Cheddar Head Country.  She was also Miss Wheelchair too. She  is also 
involved in Quad Sking with a State Program.  I'm guessing you  haven't met 
her, as you would have stayed  (smiling)
Best Wishes
 
 
In a message dated 12/18/2014 4:11:43 P.M. Central Standard Time,  
[email protected] writes:

 
A year after my injury, in  Wisconsin, I went off to college at the 
University of WI - Stevens Point,  which is about dead center of the state. I 
knew 
nothing about my spinal cord  injury except that I was cold all the time and 
missed a lot of classes because  I didn't want to leave my hot chocolate 
and warm dorm room. I, too, fired up  my blow dryer quite often and it makes 
me happy to know I'm not the only one  who did that.


It was the end of December and  I had one of the latest final exams of 
anyone I knew. The campus was deserted  because everybody was done with exams 
and had headed home for Christmas break.  The sky was crystal clear and sunny, 
but that didn't reflect the  bone-chilling, -15 degree windchill that 
blasted my face as I rolled about a  half mile from Steiner Hall to the 
classroom 
building where the exam was  administered. 


I could hear the crunch of  snow as I rolled over a few areas that hadn't 
been shoveled too well. The  rubber of my tires made strange creaking sounds 
as if they were about to crack  in their brittle condition and I had a 
difficult time rolling in a straight  line because of the bulkiness of my 
mittens 
around the wooden dowel joystick I  used back then. My trek was a bit 
longer than the other students as the only  accessible entrance to the building 
was in the rear, behind the dumpsters and  next to the delivery ramp.


As I neared the back entrance  my chair began to slow noticeably and 
respond in a sluggish manner. I  immediately glanced at my battery level. Had 
my 
caregiver forgotten to plug in  the charger last night?! Nope; the battery 
level looked fine. Then I realized  it --the water in my batteries (liquid 
batteries back then) must be freezing  up! I looked around me--no one in sight; 
campus was a ghost town. Luckily, I  was nearing the back door and knew 
that warmth was only a minute or two away.  My chair was creeping now, barely 
able to climb the last bit of ramp that led  behind the dumpsters and to the 
door. Almost there now... whew, made it!


I hit the electric door opener  button, as I'd done so many times that 
semester, only this time nothing  happened. I pushed it again. Nothing. Again 
and again I pressed the door  opener, but no telltale click or whirring sound 
answered my frantic stabs. I  inched forward, tried to slip my mittened hand 
into the door handle--no go,  too bulky and slippery. With my teeth I 
pulled the mitten from my hand and  looped my curved fingers through the 
icy-cold 
handle. Pull!..... Oh damn,....  it's locked! Are you f%$#ing kidding me?! 
I'm cold to the bone, my chair is  crapping out, nobody is around and I'm 
about to freeze to death trying to go  to a goddamn final exam?! This is not 
how I wanted my life to end!


Keep in mind, this was before  cell phones. I had no way to call for help 
except for my yells, and so that's  what I did--HELP! HELP! HELLLLPPP! I 
screamed. I pounded on the door, yelled  for help and started to think about my 
family learning that I had frozen to  death because somebody had locked a 
back door. At 15 below zero I knew I  wouldn't last too long. 


I was getting seriously  panicked and bordering hypothermic when a student 
heard my pounding and came  to see what the noise was. I was so thankful to 
see her that I think I cried a  bit. I don't remember anything about that 
exam or how long it took me to warm  up in front of the register, but I do 
remember that lightbulb going on in my  head: "I have to get out of this cold 
climate!"


A year and a half later it was  112 degrees when I moved into the dorm at 
Arizona State University. And, I  loved every single one of those degrees.


Don.






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