Carolyn Pioro, on life with quadriplegia and Tecla

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  • čas přidán 28. 08. 2024
  • Meet Carolyn Pioro, a former circus performer who now lives with quadriplegia. She was Tecla's first beta tester. Here is her Tecla story.
    Read Carolyn's full story here: www.chatelaine....
    What is Tecla?
    Tecla is the key to mobile independence.
    Tecla gives people with limited upper-body mobility access to their iOS and Android devices using assistive devices.
    Video credits:
    • iLove Stories of Indep...
    • Me, the iPad and the T...
    Music:
    “Wonder Cycle” (by Chris Zabriskie)

Komentáře • 26

  • @anastasiakorkova9175
    @anastasiakorkova9175 Před 2 lety +3

    I became a paraplegic as a child, and I realized very quickly, i had no right to complain. I’m soooo lucky everything above my belly button works just fine, I really don’t even think about being in a wheelchair anymore and I don’t feel disabled at all, I could very well have ended up a quadriplegic if my spine broke a bit higher. While I was learning how to live from a wheelchair, there were a few people at the same facility, that would have given anything to have the injury I had. I never complained again, and made me very thankful for everything I have. Not a bad lesson

    • @anastasiakorkova9175
      @anastasiakorkova9175 Před 6 měsíci

      @@JulieSondheim It absolutely helped no question. I was 8 years old so I hadn’t lived as an independent adult/ teenager yet, and when the age came when I started gaining some independence, and planning my life, I was already a wheelchair user. During those pre teen/ teenage years when you are kind of figuring out who you are as a person I was a paraplegic so it naturally became a major part of who I am. It wasn’t like I had an identity that was suddenly stripped from me, and all the sudden had to reimagine the rest of my life in a way that was very different from the life I had already imagined. Plus there’s the childhood resiliency factor. You don’t have any burdens as a child, mom and dad magically provide everything, and your only worry is being a kid. Being told as an 8 year old that you are never going to walk again and you will have to use a wheelchair was sad of course, but you don’t have those thousands of thoughts and worries rush through your head like “what about this” and “how am I gonna do that” because that’s not how a kids brain works. It was like “ok my legs don’t work anymore so I’ll just use a wheelchair to get around” by the time I was 14 or 15 I didn’t even think about it. 8 years old to 15 years old is a lifetime in kid years. Think about when you were in 9th grade thinking back to yourself when you were in 3rd grade, it was like a different lifetime. So yea very lucky to have had my accident early on, and very lucky to have a low injury. My story is not even anything to be sad about.

    • @anastasiakorkova9175
      @anastasiakorkova9175 Před 6 měsíci

      @@JulieSondheim I will add, the only down side of a complete spinal chord injury before puberty is my body looks really out of proportion. My upper arms are bigger than my upper thighs, which is kinda freaky looking at first to some people, and I’m maybe a little self conscious about being a 27 year old and weighing 79 pounds and having to by tights and skirts in the child’s section. But it’s not a big deal. ( I’m maybe the only girl in America who ADDS a couple pounds to their weight at the DMV 😂)

    • @anastasiakorkova9175
      @anastasiakorkova9175 Před 6 měsíci

      @@JulieSondheim yea that would be really hard, and honestly being a quadriplegic is so drastically different from being a paraplegic they are almost un comparable. People with lower spinal chord injuries sustained at ANY age, have all pretty much accepted it and moved on within a couple years. Like I said I feel guilty even calling myself “disabled”I mean I still have use of my core muscles, which is HUGE, a lot of paraplegics don’t have that. Aside from the inconveniences of being on wheels rather than feet ,I live my life like any other able bodied adult.

    • @anastasiakorkova9175
      @anastasiakorkova9175 Před 6 měsíci

      @@JulieSondheim by the way, what is your injury level and degree of function? I know with quads there is a very wide range of function. There are quads that could easily be mistaken for a para.
      Im an L1 complete (ASIA A) btw

  • @billbayh5179
    @billbayh5179 Před 6 lety +5

    I enjoy the fact, Carolyn, that you've been blessed with technology that makes you feel 'in touch' again. I love your pick-up and get on attitude...not all of us can make sense of things after such an injury. I was paralyzed in 1980; c4,5,6 due to 'another' motorcycle accident. You're just getting started with it all, Carolyn, now go show the World how courageous you truly are for this old quad!

  • @TheOmlink
    @TheOmlink Před 8 lety +4

    Congrat's Tecla team! What an extraordinary way to make a mark on this planet. Thousands of people could thrive with your help. Hopefully you are getting massive funding for the development of new programs and technologies.

  • @yourfuturebright
    @yourfuturebright Před 3 lety

    She seems so nice and bubbly, I hope she is doing okay and coping with her injury!

  • @candicebennett8312
    @candicebennett8312 Před 7 lety +7

    The Tecla technology looks so great!! This video and a couple of Facebook videos about Carolyn I have seen recently, really have me wanting to get this technology. I have been a quadriplegic for 4 1/2 years now and after finding the Tecla information and how it works, this finally looks like it could drastically improve the amount of independence I am capable of. +Get Tecla I need this :-)
    Carolyn, I would love to know more about all the assistive technology you use!

    • @GetTecla
      @GetTecla  Před 7 lety +1

      Awesome to hear, Candice! Let us know if you have any questions here: gettecla.com/pages/contact
      And you can reach Carolyn here: twitter.com/piorocar

  • @valeriemccrumb
    @valeriemccrumb Před 8 lety +3

    What a wonderful woman!! Love her!

  • @DJcyberslash
    @DJcyberslash Před rokem +1

    You guys are doing gods work

  • @jhonjhonleite9960
    @jhonjhonleite9960 Před 2 lety +2

    Bom dia

  • @DavidSelover
    @DavidSelover Před 8 lety +4

    Awesome job!! Love the tesla too it's great!

  • @jhonjhonleite9960
    @jhonjhonleite9960 Před 2 lety +1

    Que Deus abençoe todos nós 😍😍

  • @frankierepalda
    @frankierepalda Před 7 lety +1

    This is innovative

  • @ssvnrs
    @ssvnrs Před 2 lety +1

    Who is that photographer??

  • @BlueHeron654
    @BlueHeron654 Před 5 lety +1

    I would like to know more about tecla and the doro phone. Where can I go in Toronto?

    • @GetTecla
      @GetTecla  Před 5 lety

      Hello there! The Doro phone can be found at Bell. However, to learn more about the tecla-e and demo the device, you can visit our office. Please email: info@gettecla.com to schedule a time that works best for you :)

  • @morgancalvi6675
    @morgancalvi6675 Před 4 lety +1

    Yea, but how much? It's sad to see how everything is so outrageously expensive for the disabled. I think it's because companies think insurance will kick in.

  • @woodychadwick9834
    @woodychadwick9834 Před 6 lety +2

    Ok, very cool. I want a cure for spinal cord injuries. This is going to come about shortly.

  • @jhonjhonleite9960
    @jhonjhonleite9960 Před 2 lety

    Bom dia gente sou brasileiro

  • @stephjuhler999
    @stephjuhler999 Před 8 lety +1

    Didn't the circus have a safety net??

    • @GetTecla
      @GetTecla  Před 8 lety +3

      There was a safety net, but it was more about how Carolyn landed. Here is what she says in the article she wrote for Chatelaine: "I hit the safety net in such a way that my neck was the first thing to make impact." The whole article can be found here: www.chatelaine.com/living/real-life-stories/carolyn-pioro-on-life-after-a-devastating-spinal-cord-accident/

  • @SuperNovaJinckUFO
    @SuperNovaJinckUFO Před 4 lety

    Isn't this the same idea stephen hawking used