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By GREG SUKIENNIK, Associated Press Associated Press
BOSTON — The paintings in Travis Roy's apartment pop
off the walls with their bright, colorful
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Yarmouth native Travis
Roy, who was paralyzed from an injury in his first college
hockey game in October 1995, sits in his Boston apartment last
month with his Christmas card paintings. |
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hues. The newest addition in a series of four
still lifes features dark-green pine needles, holly leaves and clusters of
bright-red berries, their precise details in sharp contrast against a
white background.
All the more startling is that Roy - living with
paralysis for the past eight years since a college hockey accident -
painted them with a brush clenched in his teeth.
"I'm a far better painter than I was before," he said.
"When I painted with my hand, I always wanted perfect straight lines. . .
. When you paint with your mouth, there's no such thing as a straight
line. There aren't any straight lines in nature."
Nor are there straight lines in life - as Roy learned
when his life took an unexpected turn on Oct. 20, 1995.
Eleven seconds into his first shift on the Boston
University hockey team, he crashed head-first into the boards, causing a
spinal cord injury that left him without feeling below his shoulders. It
seemed a cruel fate for a young hockey star with dreams of a pro career.
But Roy, who grew up in Yarmouth, Maine, was not
beaten. After months of rehabilitation, he returned to BU the next school
year, continuing his studies with a voice-activated computer and the help
of health aides and classroom notetakers.
In 1998 he wrote a book with Sports Illustrated writer
E.M. Swift about his injury and rehabilitation. "Eleven Seconds" recounted
the accident and the uphill fight that followed.
After he graduated with a communications degree in
2000, Roy struggled to find a place in the working world, and to find
enjoyment in a life threatened by physical isolation.
Now he lives in near-independence in Boston's Back Bay
neighborhood. He has a motivational speaking career and works with the
foundation bearing his name to help people with spinal cord injuries.
Starting Jan. 17, he'll be an in-studio college hockey
analyst for
WMTW-TV, Channel 8 in Auburn, for three University of Maine
home hockey games.
"I've never done it before, so I'm a little worried, a
little afraid. But I believe in throwing yourself into something," said
Roy, 28. "I'd love to open this door and see what opportunity might come
from it, see if it's something I really do enjoy."
The latest opportunity arose when WMTW picked up four
telecasts of UMaine hockey games from WABI-TV in Bangor. The Black Bears
are the state's biggest sports obsession, and WMTW wanted an articulate
co-host with Maine ties and hockey knowledge for locally produced segments
between periods.
Not only did Roy fit the bill, he was enthusiastic
about giving TV a try, according to station sports director Norm Karkos.
"Everyone knows Travis and his story, and how
courageous he is and what a source of inspiration he is," Karkos said. "To
be sitting next to him is a tremendous honor for me and this station."
Roy's friend Ed Carpenter, director of the Boston
University sports information department where Roy worked as a student
intern, said Roy has the understanding and passion for the game and the
work ethic to succeed.
"Whatever he chooses to do he's going to be successful
because of his competitive drive," Carpenter said. "He's also the kind of
person who doesn't want to give in. If he wants to do broadcasting, he'll
find a way to do it."
Roy has built his speaking career to about 30
appearances a year, mostly at schools. He also works with the Travis Roy
Foundation, which in the past six years has given more than $1 million for
spinal cord research and grants to people with spinal cord injuries. The
grants are used to pay for items like wheelchairs and home modifications -
"simple things to make people's lives and the families' lives easier," he
said.
Roy also is involved in the New England Spinal Cord
Initiative, a movement to found a first-class spinal injury research and
rehabilitation center in the region. In May, he testified before the
Massachusetts Legislature in favor of a bill to encourage stem cell
research.
He has help from home health aides, but he gets around
his apartment, and much of Boston, on his own, controlling a
joystick-operated wheelchair with the limited movement he has in his right
arm.
"He's certainly become more independent, not relying on
mom and dad to run his life - not that he ever did," says his mother,
Brenda Roy of Yarmouth. "I think he's proud of the fact he can be
independent."
In his leisure time, Roy has dinners for friends at his
apartment and around Boston, spends summer months with his family in
Colchester, Vt., and paints.
For a person who describes himself as "goal-oriented,"
art is a way to let go. He doesn't see it as a potential business, at
least not yet.
"My mother is protective of my artwork," he explains,
leaving open the possibility he'll sell prints some day.
Roy works in acrylics. To reach the canvas he uses a
longer brush, which makes precise work a little more difficult. It takes
10 to 12 hours total, in three or four sessions, to finish a painting.
"If I start a piece I like, it's kind of fun, I can't
wait to get through it," he said. "Some days you feel good and other days
you don't know what you're doing.
"I'm trying to find ways to express myself, entertain
myself. . . . Some turn out better than others."
His artwork is also a matter of family pride, adorning
the Roys' Christmas cards for the past few years.
"I don't think he really discovered what he's using
today until after his accident," Brenda Roy said. "I think that's
something that's new. And I think it's a nice sense of accomplishment for
him."
Roy says he makes it a point to do things to enrich his
life, and he urges others to do the same.
"A lot of things I enjoyed have been taken from me, so
the things I really enjoy, I do on a regular basis," he said.
And he says he has no time for regret: "I spend very
little time on that. It just doesn't do much for me."
Indeed, he remains confident that medical research will
some day allow people like him to walk again.
"I live with the ongoing belief my life will change.
There's no doubt about that," he said. "It's clear it's a more difficult
challenge than I once thought, but I have not given up hope a cure will be
found." |