Paralyzed by Shooting, Man Works to Help People with Disabilities Find Happiness Despite Adversity
There are some things you can’t just pick yourself up or bounce back from. There are some paths in life that break you down — almost completely — before you start building yourself up again.
Wesley Hamilton knows this better than most. In 2012, he got into an argument with a stranger that ended with him being shot twice in the abdomen.
Hamilton was sure he was dying — but in those moments, he had a revelation.
“I laid on that ground taking my last breaths, having regrets about life,” he told CNN, “because it wasn’t until that moment that I realized I had never lived.”
He lived, but there was more pain to come. Paralyzed from the waist down, and referring to himself as “a single father in a wheelchair,” Hamilton also experienced a terrible ulcer on his tailbone that required multiple surgeries and two years of bed rest.
“I felt hopeless and useless,” he said. “It defeated me.”
He was only in his 20s when he was shot, but he did have something in life that gave him the courage to continue on: his daughter, Navaeh.
“I was determined to be a better person and a better father,” Hamilton explained.
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“My love for her is greater than she’ll ever know. And that love inspired me to … take control of my life.”
Hamilton started to make some important changes. He started eating better, took a nutrition course at his local community college and started exercising more.
He lost weight, started living better and became an award-winning athlete. His interest in nutrition and fitness grew into the nonprofit “Disabled But Not Really,” where he gets to pair his passions with his experiences and help coach others in similar situations to attain goals they never thought they could.
DBNR’s mission, as stated on its website, is “[t]o instill in the underserved ‘disabled’ community, a physically limitless mindset that breeds courage, confidence, and competence.”
“People deserve to know they are more than their circumstances,” Hamilton said. “My purpose is to inspire. And it’s to show people what happiness really looks like despite the adversity that you have to face.”
COVID has presented some difficulties, so he’s pivoted to offering private training sessions and is launching a mobile gym. Some day, he’d love to provide a fitness center strictly for people with disabilities.
In the meantime, he’s raising awareness, educating, coaching and keeping fit — enjoying life in a way that he once thought was impossible and inspiring others to have a similar outlook.
This article appeared originally on The Western Journal.