
SHORELINE
-- People have underestimated Jeremy Gregory for most of
his life.
Born with spina bifada, doctors told Gregory's parents
that they didn't think he would ever walk.
Gregory proved them wrong.
At 2 and a 1/2 years of age, Gregory started walking.
For the next 13 years, he was so active that he ended up
breaking or wearing out many of his crutches and leg
braces.
"When I was a kid I used to run everywhere," Gregory
said. "I didn't walk. I ran."
Gregory later underwent back surgery to straighten out
his spine in 1995. As a result, he became largely
confined to a wheelchair.
Spina bifida is a birth defect in which the spinal cord
protrudes out of the child's back. Surgery is required
to treat the condition and the location of the opening
determines the extent of an individual's paralysis.
Following his surgery, Gregory decided it was as good a
time as any for him to pursue a lifelong dream of
studying the martial arts.
"I've always wanted to do it ever since I was a little
kid growing up and watching the Ninja Turtles," Gregory
said. "I researched schools and called them to see 'Can
you take me? Do you want to take me?'"
Most of the schools Gregory contacted didn't know if
they would be able to work with a student who was
handicapped. Gregory eventually found one school that
was willing to take him on as a student.
Gregory also had a practical reason for wanting to study
karate. The physical therapy he was undergoing after the
surgery wasn't taking him as far as he wanted to go.
"I just said I'm going to put myself in my chair and go
from there and see what happens," Gregory said.
Cheryl Wieser, the instructor Gregory eventually hooked
up with, was intrigued by the challenge of working with
a student in a wheelchair.
"They pretty much gave him to me to see what we could
do," Wieser said.
The school evaluated Gregory's flexibility and mobility
and determined what he could do in his wheelchair and
what he could do out of it.
"We started developing a program to teach him as close
to everything we teach everybody else with some minor
adaptations," Wieser said.
Six years later, Gregory remains an ardent student of
the martial arts and recently experienced success at the
national level, winning three medals at last month's USA
National Karate-Do Federation National Championships in
San Jose, Calif.
Gregory, who was competing in only the fourth tournament
of his career, won a gold medal in kata (forms), a
silver medal in short weapons (Nunchaku) and a bronze
medal in long weapons (bo or wooden staff). At last
May's Washington State Championships, Gregory captured
three gold medals. The 2000 Shorecrest High School
graduate also has traveled to California to compete in
the Ability First International Specially Challenged
Championships, where he has won a total of six gold
medals in two tournaments.
Nationals was a daunting experience for the 23-year-old
Shoreline resident, whose previous competitions were on
a much smaller scale in gymnasiums with only a few
hundred people.
More than 2,500 athletes competed at nationals before
thousands of spectators at a large convention center.
The enthusiastic crowds had even more to cheer about
after seeing Gregory on the mat for the first time. He
performed some moves that had never been seen before and
left a few observers speechless with amazement.
Most of the handicapped athletes use motorized
wheelchairs and focus their efforts on upper body
movements.
Gregory uses a manual wheelchair and is able to do
various kicks and turns in his wheelchair.
"We make him use the chair," Wieser said. "It's a big
part of who he is. If there's something that we do that
normally involves a kick for any other student, he
kicks. We find ways to make sure he uses the chair as
his feet as much as anybody else would because they are
his feet."
Spectators weren't expecting to see Gregory kick and
were even more surprised when he kicked at a 45-degree
angle and turned as part of his routine.
Hearing the applause from the crowd was an emotional
moment for Gregory.
"It's exciting. It's invigorating," he said. "I'm proud
that I do what I do."
Gregory has a strong upper body because he uses a manual
chair, but he also spends a lot of time working his
lower body.
"With his legs, it's keeping the muscles that he already
has there and not having it atrophy anymore than it
has," Wieser said.
The martial arts has transformed Gregory in many ways.
His posture has improved and he sits up in his chair
better, said Wieser, who added that Gregory is more
confident and outgoing.
"He has had to address those fears of getting in front
of people he doesn't know and performing and performing
at a high level," Wieser said.
Gregory uses the martial arts to master his everyday
life. He has a rod in his back and falling out of his
wheelchair is extremely dangerous.
When he first started, Gregory spent a lot of time
working out of his chair.
"We were teaching him how to fall out of the chair,"
Wieser said. "We found ... the normal falls that we
teach karate students don't really work for him because
of the chair, so we taught him how to protect himself.
"We were teaching him to stabilize his neck and stay
with the chair (as it) went down."
Gregory, who is employed as a clerk at the Treasury
Department in Seattle, faces the possibility that at any
moment he might fall out of his wheelchair.
"It's defense for different daily stuff," Gregory said
of the practical uses of the martial arts. "If I hit a
curb wrong and go flying out of my chair, I can land
without hurting myself."
Gregory's high school senior project delved into how the
martial arts changed his life. Gregory demonstrated how
he was able to safely fall out of his wheelchair.
The teachers were aghast when Wieser dumped Gregory out
of his wheelchair onto the floor. But he immediately
righted the chair and got back into it within a matter
of seconds.
Working with Wieser for the last six years has made a
tremendous difference in Gregory's life, but he isn't
the only one to have profited from the experience.
Wieser has benefited in ways she never anticipated.
"I've actually learned more about the martial arts
working with him," Wieser said.
One of the tenets of the martial arts is that every
movement or technique has a multiple set of
applications. When Wieser is teaching regular students
she really doesn't have to do much thinking in terms of
her lessons.
But because Gregory couldn't do certain things, Wieser
was challenged to figure out how to best teach him
certain moves.
"With Jeremy, it's made me have to go 'This technique
will do this. What else will it do and how can he apply
that?'" Wieser said. "It's made me look deeper into the
arts, which has made me a better martial artist."
Teaching someone to do something new is a big part of
why Wieser enjoys her work.
"I have to think about it and find a way that works,"
she said. "Then when it works, it's a feeling that you
just can't explain."
Wieser recently founded Ability Unlimited of Washington,
a non-profit organization that is dedicated to teaching
the martial arts to students with special challenges.
The organization, in conjunction with the
Shoreline/South County YMCA, will be offering a new
martial arts program for specially challenged students
in September.
For Gregory, the next item on his agenda is testing for
his black belt, most likely in September. He already
holds a brown belt.
Then, like many students of the martial arts, Gregory
wants to give back to the sport that has meant so much
to him.
He wants to teach.
"I like helping others," Gregory said. "When I was in
class I always found myself helping others that needed
help, although I didn't always get approval for that. I
just did it to be nice."
Much like he dispelled people's preconceived notions of
what a handicapped athlete could accomplish, Wieser sees
Gregory breaking the same ground as a martial arts
instructor.
"It's a good thing for other kids in the class to see
him not as disabled but as capable," Wieser said.
As a participant in classes, other students soon found
out that they could spar with Gregory the same as any
other student.
"The big picture is that it's nice to offer up a
barrier-breaking 'Look at me as a person and not at my
disability,'" Wieser said. "Jeremy is certainly that.
You put up a barrier and challenge him and he's going to
go through it."