Every once in a while, a story reaches out and inexplicably grabs a
hold of you. I was surfing the 2008 mountain bike models at Giant's
site I came across a link called Heart of a Champion. I followed the link and it led me to a blog detailing the great recovery efforts that
Tara Llanes is making against spinal cord injuries she sustained during the Jeep King of the Mountain series on September 1st, 2007.
Editor's note: "On Saturday September 1, 2007, Tara had a
horrible crash at the Jeep King of the Mountain series finale in Beaver
Creek Colorado. During a semi-final heat with the eventual race winner,
Jill Kintner, Tara entered the second to last straight on the course
and hit an obstacle that sent her over the handlebars, coming down hard
on her head then back. She was rushed to Vail Valley Medical Center,
and then airlifted to Denver Health Medical Center where a specialty
spinal cord team worked on her for seven hours over Saturday night.
Tara's crash caused a fracture to the C7 and L1 vertebra and damaged
her spinal cord, resulting in a below-the-waist paralysis, a condition
her surgeons say is most likely permanent." As reported on The Giant Bicycles Website, story attributed to James Herrara
Those who follow the (downhill) circuit know that Tara is a fierce
competitor. She's fast, she's aggressive, and she flies. During her
career, spanning a decade, she has ridden for Haro, Rotec, Specialized,
and Yeti/Pearl Izumi. But for the last five years, she's been grabbing
victories for the Giant/Pearl Izumi team. Tara makes a habit out of
gracing the podium, collecting accolades and generating excitement
wherever she races. A national champion in all three gravity
disciplines, she has won both gold and silver at the Winter X-Games.
Tara has been a multi-time US Mountain Bike Worlds team member and
multi-time World Cup podium finisher vying for a spot on the US BMX
Olympic Team for Beijing in 2008. She has graced the pages of too many
bike rags to list and she has even done a glamour shoot for Maxim.
She's a huge inspiration to female athletes worldwide, proving that
women can ride just as hard as the men. Since her injury, Tara has been
focusing all of her energies on her recovery. Paralyzed below the
waist, and pronounced "complete" by medical experts, she defied all the
informed opinions when, on November 12th while in the rehab pool, she
moved her left leg.
PPO: You seem so positive to me and so gung ho. What drives you? Is it just in you?
Tara: I think it just all
has to do with me wanting to walk again. When this happened I was
completely devastated. I mean, this has been my life since I was
11-years-old. This is what I know and it's what I love. It's what I
absolutely, without a doubt love. I mean, not being able to ride my
bike again for the rest of my life... It would crush me. And so for me,
I can't have a negative thought in my mind. I can't because you know
doctors can come in, and they can walk in... and say, "you're never
going to walk again." But, you know what, to me so much of it is mind
over matter. They do a test the first week that you're here in Craig
and in the test they deemed me "complete". What complete means is that
basically you're not going to walk again. You know what? My legs have
started to move again, especially my left leg. One of my doctors was
like, "holy shit!". I said, "you can take your 'complete' and shove
it!" Not to her of course...
PPO: One of the things that struck me right off the bat was that
you obviously have a great friend and fan base. People have been
sending you positive vibes and I was wondering how does that affect
your drive during therapy. All these people that you've probably never
met are sending you messages like, "Keep going, you're doing a great
job." Does that drive you during your therapy sessions?
Tara: Well definitely, it definitely
helps. I mean as it is, I'm completely driven. I've got all the drive
and determination. But, there are days that... there are days that are
better than others. I mean there are some days here that are just
really, really hard. So, when I get things from those people... The
cards from people that I don't even know, they are just so
inspirational... If it just happens to come on one of those days... I
can't really explain what it means to me. Especially people that I've
never met... I'm sort of dumbfounded by that a lot of times.
What sticks with you about Tara is her tenacity. She's working her butt
off against what many would deem insurmountable odds, but she never
hesitates to let her sense of humor fly or to flash that killer smile.
From her persona, one can imagine that she lives her life by the, "if
you're not laughing, you're not living" rule of thumb.
Coach Herrara: Being a close friend to Tara and her coach for
the past two years, I can't even begin to express just how incredible
this girl is. As an athlete, she is a coach's dream; a fierce
competitor, dedicated, motivated, and upbeat in every way. Having to
pull back the reins on how long or hard she would train was my biggest
chore. I can quite honestly say I've met very few people in my life
that are even remotely this driven. But her athleticism and competitive
spirit are only a small part of what makes Tara the person she is. She
is compassionate, grateful, and helpful to every person she comes
across, always placing the well-being of others before her own. On more
than one occasion, her actions, the way she lives her life, became my
example to follow."
PPO: How about your sponsors. Have your sponsors been supportive through the whole thing?
Tara: Yea, I mean my sponsors have been
fantastic! Giant renewed my contract, even though I obviously won't be
racing this upcoming year. But, I will be working for Giant for women
again. I've been a part of that family now for 5 years and Giant has
been good to me. Same with Michelin, Michelin has been amazing. They've
done so much, and they keep calling and saying, "What else can we do?"
Same with Shimano, Shimano has re-upped my contract. Fox Shocks has
donated numerous shocks to give away at fundraisers... Obviously that's
thousands of dollars. Smith has been a part of a ton of fundraisers
that have gone on, and they have written out a check for my foundation.
I've got to say companies that I never would have even thought of, have
blown my mind. When I first got hurt, Specialized wrote out a check for
$10,000 dollars. I haven't ridden for Specialized for years. I was just
so surprised. I was like, Jesus! I didn't even know Mike Sinyard (CEO
and owner of Specialized) would remember me. I immediately called him
and talked to him, he was just such a great guy to talk to.

Yea, I've been really lucky in that sense. I feel so thankful
to every single one of those companies for standing behind me and
believing in me and knowing that I can still work with their product
and help."
My original article was a short piece on how I came across Tara's story
and how it truly affected me. I've never really followed the
professional MTB circuit and I'd still be hard pressed to tell you the
exact difference between the gravity events without consulting Google.
But Tara's tale is so much bigger than her sport. Tara's story is about
being a Champion not only on the circuit but more importantly in Life.
It's about
desire
with a capital "D", the desire to win, the desire to train, to push
your limits, to beat the odds and to be simply the best that you can
be. It's about working hard and never, ever giving up.
PPO: So as far as therapy and things like that, as an athlete
you're used to pushing your limits and pushing your body. Obviously I'm
sure some of that has transferred into your drive during therapy. Have
you used any of your riding skills or have any of your riding skills
been beneficial during therapy? The fact that you're so used to
training? Do you think that has helped out?
Tara: Well the training for sure. I
mean coming into the injury, being in really good shape has helped a
ton... I'm able to do things a lot quicker and move on to the next
step. And as far as my training, that's just been built into my head
for years so I've pretty much taken my therapy sessions and turned them
into my training. That is my training, to get better. That is
my training, to walk again. I take it very seriously. Anytime they ask
me to do something, I'll do it ten times over. And that's half the
problem here. They're like, 'you need to stop pushing it so hard' you
know?
PPO: I think I saw your mom at one point say, "part of the problem is just holding her back".
Tara: (Laughs) Sometimes that's a
problem. But for me, if I think I can squeeze out ten more of something
I'm gonna' do it, because if not, I don't feel like I'm working hard
enough. I don't feel like I'm doing everything I can possibly do to
walk and I would never ever want that to happen. But as far as my bike
skills I would have to say that the only thing that my bike skills have
really, sort of, crossed over to is being in the wheelchair.
PPO: Really?
Tara: Yes, and not being afraid. There
is a long checklist of things that you've got to be able to do before
you leave here. You've got to be able to get up a 4, 5, 6 inch curb by
yourself, going at it forward. Or going down a flight of 6 or 7 stairs
by yourself, or wheeling down a hill and wheeling back up the hill.
There's a lot of things that initially when I got here, I just looked
at the list and I was like "Are you guys insane? That just seems almost
impossible! How am I going to get down a flight of stairs by myself?".
But you know what? I do it. I do it and I get stronger every day. In
the beginning there was no way I could do it because my back hurt so
badly and I was still in the brace. But now I can lean so far forward
in the chair and that helps. So that's been a big deal as far as
getting through those skills. I've gotten through them fairly quickly.
PPO: Correct me if I'm wrong about this but did I read somewhere
that you are actually looking into possibly starting a foundation to
help injured riders?
Tara: Yes, it's very true. The
Foundation, I would like it to be for extreme female athletes in any
sport. Hopefully raise enough money to be able to provide grants if
they can't afford a wheelchair or this or that. Basically, we designed
spur of the moment t-shirts and we've been selling them and we're out
and we've had to buy another thousand of them. Which is great because
so many people have been asking for them in bulk. They've been having
fundraisers so they're like we need 40 shirts and I was like woah...
alright!
When I was able to talk to my coach and Polly about it, I said
I want to turn this into a clothing line. I want it to be everything
from hoodies and beanies to jeans and everything else. X amount of the
proceeds from the sale of those clothes goes to the foundation. 50%,
80%. Who knows? So we're going to start working on designs and what not
when I get home. Being here is just, I have zero time to myself and I
have zero time to get anything done. So, that's pretty much the plan.
Not a whole lot of people know that.
And then she did
Some of the toughest questions we have to answer yield the biggest
surprises as a result. My editor, approached me and said, "ask Tara for
an interview". I vehemently said, "No, no way! I'm too shy, not gonna
happen. No!" This was followed by, "I don't want to be a pest, I'm not
asking and she won't do it anyway". But rather than appearing negative
to my editor, I convinced myself that there was no harm in asking. I
reasoned that Tara is a National Champion Downhill Racer. People line
up at Interbike just to get her autograph and they turn out in droves
to watch her ride. I was convinced with everything that Tara has going
on right now there is no way she was going to say yes to an interview
with me. And then she did.
Just like her doctors telling her that she was "complete", in
her spinal evaluation. She was given almost no chance of walking again.
And then she did...
Editor's Note: On
January 9, 2008 Tara was able to walk with the assistance of braces and parallel bars. She continues to get stronger with each passing day.
Click here
Click Here to make a donation to the Tara Llanes Recovery Fund.
To buy a Road to Recovery T-shirt:
Send a check for $25 (this includes shipping) made out to Tara Llanes and PLEASE put the shirt size on the check.
Mail to :
Road to Recovery
4068 Green Ave.
Los Alamitos, CA. 90720