By Daniel VanceRecently,
I was able to reach Mike Utley over the telephone while he was in
Dallas awaiting a flight to Miami. At one time, Utley was a great
Detroit Lions offensive lineman, until an NFL game on Nov. 17, 1991,
against the Rams, when a hard hit caused a severe spinal cord injury.
He became a wheelchair-using Paraplegic.
Now he heads the Mike Utley Foundation, which is
working hard for a cure for spinal cord injuries by selectively funding
promising research, Rehabilitation, and education programs.
"The
Foundation started in 1992, just shortly after I got hurt," said
42-year-old Utley. "At the time, I wasn't able to transfer or feed
myself, and didn't have feeling in my hands. I had to have someone run
(the Foundation) for me."
It took about six years of intensive
therapy, but in April 1998 Utley finally was able to begin living
independently back home in Washington state. In 2002, he took over
control of the Foundation, which today has no paid employees, only
volunteers.
The Foundation has two great projects in the works.
"For
one, we have spent $110,000 to design and create a 'Mike Utley Terrain
Park' at Craig Hospital in Colorado," he said. The terrain park, which
opens this summer, will give spinal cord injury paraplegics or
high-functioning quadriplegics a safe place to physically learn how to
negotiate around and over various real-world movement barriers.
Utley
said, "Once you learn the basics of surviving with spinal cord injury,
you can then get out in the world and live independently."
Other
Foundation funding will open the Mike Utley Human Performance Center at
the Rehabilitation Institute of Michigan. "It will be for people with
spinal cord injury, and will include physical training, weightlifting,
and Occupational Therapy," he said. "People there will be able to do
everything Mike Utley does."
As for life and work, he said, "Am
I satisfied where I am? No. I'm happy, but not satisfied. I'm working
hard every day towards a cure. I run the Foundation with the same
philosophy as when I played football. I'm accountable (for my actions)
and I help get everyone on the same page."
The Foundation
raises most of its funds through its Thumbs Up Bike Tour, held in
Washington this year in September. For it, Utley has had more than 800
able-bodied bikers and 50 hand cyclists.