Twenty-six-year-old Zack Ruhl was born with brittle leg
bones and missing thigh bones so doctors amputated both over the course
of his life. That is as far as his disabilities go. Not only can he do
pull ups from his wheelchair, he also has his own gym where he offers
free classes to other amputees.
Zack, from Houston, Texas: “Anybody who has ever told me I couldn’t do
something - I proved them wrong. “When I am at the gym working out
that’s when life’s the best. The one word you cannot use in my gym is
‘can’t.’ That word is out of your vocabulary as soon as you come in
here.”
His mother, Cheryl Corbello, was instrumental in moulding Zack into the
man he is today, she didn't treat him differently and made him realise
he was no different from the able-bodied.
Cheryl said: “At just seven-months-old I would never just give him his baby bottle, he’d have to crawl in his body cast to get it.
Cheryl said: “At just seven-months-old I would never just give him his baby bottle, he’d have to crawl in his body cast to get it.
“He used to ask me to leave stuff down on the cabinets for him so he didn’t have to reach up and I told him no - I am not going to be here forever you have to learn to do things yourself.
“I told him he could be anything he wanted and I didn’t
care when people told him no, we were going to find another way to tell
him yes.”
Zack started playing sports and lifting weights in junior high school but his coaches were reluctant tolet him play.
He said: “They didn’t want me to play because they thought I would get hurt.
“I am the most competitive guy I know and in high school they had a chart on the wall where they posted the highest bench press.
“I am the most competitive guy I know and in high school they had a chart on the wall where they posted the highest bench press.
“I couldn’t squat or deadlift but I could bench and I
wanted to be number one - in freshman year I was third place and I
stayed on top until I graduated.”
Zack decided to take his knowledge and strength into his own gym where he could teach other adaptive people how to work out.
“I feel like I’m a pretty tough teacher. I just don’t like excuses at all.
“Helping other people with disabilities is by far the best accomplishment I can get.
“The classes are free for adaptive athletes because I know how hard it is not knowing what to do and a lot of people in wheelchairs feel like there is no hope.
“The classes are free for adaptive athletes because I know how hard it is not knowing what to do and a lot of people in wheelchairs feel like there is no hope.
“My message for amputees or any disability would be: don’t let anybody tell you you can’t do something.
Source: Barcroft.TV
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