Studying, recovering, but mostly just enjoying life: that’s
how a very grateful Boston Marathon survivor Mery Daniel plans to spend her
summer.
Yesterday, during a celebration in New York City’s Central
Park, she moved closer to at least two of those goals, by appearing at the
Achilles International 11th annual Hope & Possibility Race.
“It’s to raise awareness of people with disabilities and
grave injuries and let them know that life goes on,” said Daniel, 31, whose
dream of becoming a doctor was temporarily put on hold when she lost her left
leg, and much of her right calf, when the first of the two Boston Marathon
bombs erupted on April 15.
Before she can care for sick kids, she needs to learn how to
balance on her new prosthetic leg.
“I was at finish line,” Daniel told the Herald yesterday,
“but I don’t remember much. Even after I got to the hospital, I don’t remember
anything. I may have lost consciousness.”
She spent many weeks at Massachusetts General and Spaulding
Rehabilitation hospitals, where her 5-year-old daughter came to visit.
“She knew about the bombs. She had seen it on television,”
Daniel said.
When Daniel, a medical school graduate who hoped to start
her residency this fall, returned to her Mattapan apartment, she found that the
stairs were too steep to safely navigate.
Now living in the Boston’s South End, she said she’s cheered
by her new neighbors.
“They recognize me from the television and newspapers,” she
said. “They’ve been really kind.”
Still, the experience has changed this fiercely independent
woman who arrived in the United States from her native Haiti as a teenager with
limited English.
“I’ve learned a lot about myself,” she said. “Getting up
from a chair, walking, running, you don’t realize how important these things
are until you can’t do them.
“I can’t do a lot of the things I used to take for granted,”
she said.
“I need so much help, just with things like getting in and
out of the shower,” she said. “You learn to appreciate things more.”
This weekend, she took that sense of appreciation to New
York, where she celebrated with other amputees who are determined to live
active lives.
“It was great to meet everyone,” she said about the Achilles
International gathering. “I got a medal and an award.”
To contribute to Daniel’s recovery, go to
www.gofundme.com/merydaniel.
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