[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 68 (Friday, May 7, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Page S3406]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
RECOVERY OF SNOWBOARDER KEVIN PEARCE
Mr. LEAHY. Mr. President, Kevin Pearce has been recognized as one of
the best athletes that Vermont has produced. Like all Vermonters,
Marcelle and I hold him in our prayers and thoughts after a devastating
snowboarding accident while preparing for the 2010 Winter Olympics.
We have heard reports from his parents, Simon and Pia, about his
recovery and like all Vermonters, and so many other Americans, we are
so thankful he is back home and progressing every day in his recovery.
I watched Kevin's interview with Tom Brokaw on ``The Today Show'' and
he discussed how well he was doing with Tom. I also wanted my fellow
Senators to see the article about him in The New York Times and ask
unanimous consent to have printed in the Record that article at the
completion of my remarks. I can only image how much Kevin enjoys being
home with his parents and his brothers and how much we all appreciate
his tremendous courage and abilities.
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
[From the New York Times, May 3, 2010]
``No Place Like This for Soothing Care''
(By John Branch)
Norwich, VT.--The renovated barn next to the family house
was always one of Kevin Pearce's favorite places. There is a
skateboard ramp out back and a giant recreation room inside,
with three loftlike bedrooms above.
But Pearce, 22, did not move into the barn until he was a
teenager, and soon he was off to snowboarding schools and
then on the worldwide circuit. Home, and his room in the
barn, became just somewhere to get away for a day or two.
Now it is the ultimate destination.
More than four months after sustaining a traumatic brain
injury during a training accident, after missing the Olympics
and living in hospitals in Utah and Colorado, Pearce has
returned, indefinitely.
``It's the best thing ever,'' Pearce said Monday, sitting
on a living room sofa while holding hands with his mother,
Pia. Handwritten ``welcome home'' posters, balloons and
streamers hung about the house. ``There's nothing I could
think of that's any better than coming back home.''
And for a moment or two, it was easy to imagine that
nothing extraordinary had happened to Kevin Pearce at all. He
laughed with his family. He talked about snowboarding. He
discussed the Olympics. He smiled, big as ever.
``Things feel very normal to me,'' Pearce said.
The past few months, much of which Pearce does not
remember, have been anything but normal. On Dec. 31, Pearce,
a rising rival to Shaun White who was expected to make the
United States Olympic halfpipe team and compete for a medal,
fell and hit his head (he was wearing a helmet) while
practicing a trick in Park City, Utah.
A helicopter flew Pearce, unconscious, to the University of
Utah Hospital in nearby Salt Lake City. The front half of his
shoulder-length hair was shaved so the recesses of his brain
could be drained of fluid. His family was summoned
immediately. Painful questions about whether he would live
slowly gave way to uneasy ones about how his life would be.
This is how, for now. Pearce walks without assistance, a
little gingerly but sturdily enough to navigate the stairs to
the familiar bedroom in the barn. He looks a little different
now, too. His hair, after being shaved to one length, has
grown back to the top of his ears. He wears bold, dark-rimmed
Oakley Frogskin frames with prismlike lenses. The vision in
each eye is fine, but the eyes themselves are a bit out of
sync, not quite tracking together.
``My eyes are a little sketchy,'' he said. ``But they're
better than they used to be. They used to be scary blurry.''
Pearce says he does not remember the accident. He does not
remember much from the weeks before the injury, including
Christmas at home. He remembers nothing after the injury
until the first week of February, when he was flown from Utah
to Craig Hospital, a brain and spinal cord rehabilitation
center near Denver.
He does remember watching White win the Olympic gold medal.
Scotty Lago, a good friend of Pearce's who had had far less
big-event success, won bronze. It was tough, Pearce admitted.
But there is no memory of the moment when he learned just
how severe his injury was.
``I never felt sorry for myself,'' Pearce said. ``This is
kind of what I signed up for when I started snowboarding.''
He vows that he will snowboard again.
``Obviously, I won't be doing all the things I was doing,''
Pearce said. ``Hopefully, I can still do some of the
tricks.''
Pearce's promising comeback has not included a
recalculation of his long-range ambitions. His family is
consciously keeping him concentrated on the here and now.
``There is little use thinking about the past, what could
have been, or what may be in the future,'' Simon Pearce, his
father, said. ``He has stayed focused on the present moment.
And it feels like it is working.''
For months, Pearce has undergone rehabilitation and
therapy, both mental and physical, often for six or more
hours a day. More recently, he went to a Denver-area gym,
too, riding stationary bikes and playing basketball. He left
only after making at least 7 of 10 free throws. That sort of
therapy will continue at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center
in nearby Lebanon, N.H., and at a local athletic club.
Pearce's rehabilitation continues to focus on vision, balance
and memory.
Pearce cannot fully appreciate how far he has come, however
often he watches videos that his family shot of him in the
hospital in January. But his parents and three older
brothers--Andrew (28), Adam (25) and David (24)--are still
amazed.
That hit home when the traveling party--Kevin, Adam, their
parents and their snowboarding friend Jack Mitrani--arrived
at the airport in Boston. Pearce walked through the airport
and carried his own bag.
They arrived at the family home about 9 p.m. Saturday.
About 30 friends and family members greeted them with cheers,
hugs and a few tears.
On Sunday, after a short hike up Gile Mountain, the family
gathered for supper. It was a rare reunion. Simon and Pia
generally alternated trips out West. Andrew, a manager for
the glass-blowing company founded by Simon Pearce, went back
and forth, too. Adam left his job as a snowboarding
instructor in Utah and has barely left Kevin's side, even
moving back to the barn. (Among other things, Adam provided
updates on a get-well Facebook page for more than 48,000
fans.) David, who has Down syndrome and has long provided
perspective and inspiration, mostly stayed in Vermont and
worked for the family business.
But one horrific accident, and one celebratory homecoming,
brought them together again.
``Sitting at the table, for me, was a big thing,'' Pia
Pearce said. `` `Wow, here we are, back at our round table,
sitting together.' ''
On Monday afternoon, everything seemed normal. Kevin
Pearce, after taking a nap in his old bedroom in the barn,
was sitting in the grass out front with the snowboarder
Ellery Hollingsworth. The sun was shining. Pearce was
smiling.
Yes, it was good to be home. Awfully good.
____________________