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Racing Towards Inclusion By David Tereshchuk Dick and Rick Hoyt are a father-and-son team from
Massachusetts who together compete just about continuously in marathon
races. And if they’re not in a
marathon they are in a triathlon - that daunting, almost superhuman,
combination of 26.2 miles of running, 112 miles of bicycling, and 2.4 miles
of swimming. Together they have
climbed mountains, and once trekked 3,735 miles across America. It’s a remarkable record of exertion - all
the more so when you consider that Rick can't walk or talk.
For the past twenty-five years or more Dick, who is 65,
has pushed and pulled his son across the country and over hundreds of finish
lines. When Dick runs, Rick is in a
wheelchair that Dick is pushing. When
Dick cycles, Rick is in the seat-pod from his wheelchair, attached to the
front of the bike. When Dick swims, Rick is in a small but heavy, firmly
stabilized boat being pulled by Dick. At Rick’s birth in 1962 the umbilical cord coiled around his
neck and cut off oxygen to his brain.
Dick and his wife, Judy, were told that there would be no hope for
their child’s development. "It’s
been a story of exclusion ever since he was born," Dick told
me. "When he was eight months
old the doctors told us we should just put him away - he’d be a
vegetable all his life, that sort of thing. Well those doctors are not alive
any more, but I would like them to be able to see Rick now." The couple brought their son home determined to raise him as ‘normally’ as possible. Within five years, Rick had two younger brothers, and the Hoyts were convinced Rick was just as intelligent as his siblings. Dick remembers the struggle to get the local school authorities to agree: "Because he couldn’t talk they thought he wouldn’t be able to understand, but that wasn’t true." The dedicated parents taught Rick the alphabet. "We always wanted Rick included in everything," Dick said. "That’s why we wanted to get him into public school."
A group of Tufts University
engineers came to the rescue, once they had seen some clear, empirical
evidence of Rick’s comprehension skills.
"They told him a joke," said Dick. "Rick just
cracked up. They knew then that he could communicate!" The engineers went on to build - using
$5,000 the family managed to raise in 1972 - an interactive computer that
would allow Rick to write out his thoughts using the slight head-movements
that he could manage. Rick came to
call it "my communicator."
A cursor would move across a screen filled with rows of letters, and
when the cursor highlighted a letter that Rick wanted, he would click a
switch with the side of his head. When the computer was
originally brought home, Rick surprised his family with his first ‘spoken’
words. They had expected perhaps ‘Hi, Mom’ or ‘Hi, Dad.’ But on the screen Rick wrote ‘Go
Bruins.’ The Boston Bruins were in
the Stanley Cup finals that season, and his family realized he had been
following the hockey games along with everyone else. "So we learned then that Rick
loved sports," said Dick. In 1975, Rick was finally
admitted into a public school. Two
years later, he told his father he wanted to participate in a five-mile
benefit run for a local lacrosse player who had been paralyzed in an
accident. Dick, far from being a
long-distance runner, agreed to push Rick in his wheelchair. They finished next to last, but they felt
they had achieved a triumph. That
night, Dick remembers, "Rick told us he just didn’t feel handicapped
when we were competing." Rick’s realization turned into
a whole new set of horizons that opened up for him and his family, as ‘Team
Hoyt’ began to compete in more and more events. Rick reflected on the transformation process for me, using his
now-familiar but ever-painstaking technique of picking out letters of the alphabet: " What I mean when I say I feel like I am not
handicapped when competing is that I am just like the other athletes, and I
think most of the athletes feel the same way. In the beginning nobody would come up to me. However, after a few races some athletes
came around and they began to talk to me.
During the early days one runner, Pete Wisnewski had a bet with me at
every race on who would beat whom.
The loser had to hang the winner’s number in his bedroom until the
next race. Now many athletes will come up to me before the race or triathlon
to wish me luck." It is hard to imagine now the
resistance that the Hoyts encountered early on, but attitudes did begin to
change when they entered the Boston Marathon in 1981, and finished in the top
quarter of the field. Dick recalls
the earlier, less tolerant days with more sadness than anger: "Nobody
wanted Rick in a road race. Everybody looked at us, nobody talked to us,
nobody wanted to have anything to do with us. But you can’t really blame them - people often are not
educated, and they’d never seen anyone like us. As time went on, though, they could see he was a person - he
has a great sense of humor, for instance.
That made a big difference." After 4 years of marathons,
Team Hoyt attempted their first triathlon - and for this Dick had to learn to
swim. "I sank like a stone at
first" Dick recalled with a laugh "and I hadn’t been on a
bike since I was six years old."
With a newly built bike (adapted to carry Rick in front) and a boat
tied to Dick’s waist as he swam, the Hoyts came in second-to-last in the
competition held on Father’s Day 1985.
"We
chuckle to think about that as my Father’s Day present from Rick, "
said Dick. They have been competing ever since, at home and increasingly abroad. Generally they manage to improve their finishing times. "Rick is the one who inspires and motivates me, the way he just loves sports and competing," Dick said. And the business of inspiring evidently works as a two-way street. Rick typed out this testimony: "Dad is one of my role models. Once he sets out to do something, Dad sticks to it whatever it is, until it is done. For example once we decided to really get into triathlons, dad worked out, up to five hours a day, five times a week, even when he was working." The Hoyts’ mutual inspiration
for each other seems to embrace others too - many spectators and
fellow-competitors have adopted Team Hoyt as a powerful example of
determination. "It’s been
funny," said Dick "Some people have turned out, some in good
shape, some really out of shape, and they say ‘we want to thank you, because
we’re here because of you’." Rick too has taken full note
of their effect on fellow-competitors while racing: "Whenever we are
passed (usually on the bike) the athlete will say "Go for it!" or
"Rick, help your Dad!" When
we pass people (usually on the run) they’ll say "Go Team Hoyt!" or
"If not for you, we would not be out here doing this."
Most of all, perhaps, the
Hoyts can see an impact from their efforts in the area of the handicapped,
and on public attitudes toward the physically and mentally challenged. "That’s the big thing,"
said Dick. "People just need
to be educated. Rick is helping many
other families coping with disabilities in their struggle to be included."
That is not to say that all obstacles are now overcome for the Hoyts. Dick is "still bothered," he says, by people who are discomforted because Rick cannot fully control his tongue while eating. "In restaurants - and it’s only older people mostly - they’ll see Rick’s food being pushed out of his mouth and they’ll leave, or change their table. But I have to say that kind of intolerance is gradually being defeated." Rick’s own accomplishments, quite apart from the duo’s continuing athletic success, have included his moving on from high school to Boston University, where he graduated in 1993 with a degree in special education. That was followed a few weeks later by another entry in the Boston Marathon. As he fondly pictured it: "On the day of the marathon from Hopkinton to Boston people all over the course were wishing me luck, and they had signs up which read `congratulations on your graduation!’" Rick now works at Boston College’s computer laboratory helping to develop a system code-named ‘Eagle Eyes,’ through which mechanical aids (like for instance a powered wheelchair) could be controlled by a paralyzed person’s eye-movements, when linked-up to a computer.
Together the Hoyts don’t only compete athletically; they also go on motivational speaking tours, spreading the Hoyt brand of inspiration to all kinds of audiences, sporting and non-sporting, across the country. Rick himself is confident that his visibility - and his father’s dedication - performs a forceful, valuable purpose in a world that is too often divisive and exclusionary. He typed a simple parting thought: “The message of Team Hoyt is that everybody should be included in everyday life." __________________________________________________________________________ Copyright © David Tereshchuk.
Tereshchuk is a documentary television producer. He currently works for the United Nations. Rick Hoyt has his own apartment (he gets home care) and
works in Boston. He was born in 1962
as a spastic quadriplegic, cerebral palsy, non-speaking person. The ability of his mind and person has
always been strong, and his family have been hearty supporters of his quest
for independence and inclusion in community activities, sports, school, and
the workplace. Rick is a graduate of
Boston University. Dick Hoyt has recently retired as a lieutenant colonel in the air nation guard and lives in Holland, Mass.
He has served his country for over thirty-five years. Dick is a friend of the ‘President’s Council
on Fitness.’ They give speeches around the country and compete in
some back-breaking race every weekend. For more information about
the Hoyts, go to their web site at: http://www.teamhoyt.com/ Watch their video at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ryCTIigaloQ |
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