I'm very proud to have been able to help this couple. Stephanie and David, thank you so much for allowing me to assist you.
- Greg Luczak, the Platinum Group Realtors
Briargate couple finds renewed hope, faith after accident
December 21, 2016 at 1:04 pm
David Sheffield was facedown in the middle of the road on Ute Pass. His motorcycle helmet held his head a few inches above the pavement, high enough for his peripheral vision to pick out the nurses huddled around him in blue scrubs.
“What hospital do you want to go to?” one of them asked.
“Penrose,” he said. For Sheffield, the next couple of weeks were a blur.
“I have vague memories because I was in a drug-induced coma for about 10
days. I had a lot of hallucinations and some moments where I knew what
was going on,” he said. “In those first 24-48 hours they didn’t think I
was going to make it, but I made it that night and the next day and here
we are.”
Once out of the coma, Sheffield found out he had 17 broken bones, a
punctured lung and had suffered a heart attack either before or after
the accident — the doctors weren’t sure.
“We knew that he might be paralyzed, and not knowing how he’d react if that happened was the worst part for me,” Rhodes said. “Was he going to push me away? That was tough.”They got their answers two weeks later.“Stephanie and I were together when the doctor told us that I had a complete injury,” Sheffield said, “which means that my nerves and spinal cord were severed and I’d never walk again.”Sheffield’s spine was broken at T11, the second-to-lowest of 12 bones that make up the thoracic vertebrae, the middle section of the backbone between the cervical and lumbar vertebrae.
“They said, ‘David’s a Marine, he’s strong and he’ll get through this.’ They were right,” she said, “and now he’s my inspiration.”
Sheffield recalled the day of the accident.“It was Oct. 14, a Friday, and me and the guys at work figured it would be the last 80-degree Friday for a long time, so we rode our bikes to work,” he said.David, his son Sam Sheffield, and a co-worker decided to ride to Crystola for lunch.
The house is ADA compliant, so the couple won’t have to spend an excessive amount to accommodate David’s wheelchair. His employer, CEA Medical Manufacturing, is setting up a home office for him in the new house to allow him to work remotely as he transitions back into the office.“I can’t imagine a company that could do more for me than my company has,” David said. “They’ve had fundraisers and taken care of my insurance, and my friends there are helping out with everything from getting us a moving van to building a ramp. The outpouring of kindness, prayers and generosity from friends, family, co-workers and people I don’t even know has been overwhelming.”
David’s to-do list is short now, but will take some serious work.
“My first priority is getting out of here,” he said with a laugh from his hospital room. “I’ve been in this hospital for eight weeks, and so my goal is to get healthy so I can go home. I’ll be in home health care and then in outpatient therapy, and during that time I’ll take a course to learn how to drive a car. I’m hoping to get one in the next two months and become independent again. My ultimate long-term goal is to become completely independent, and there’s no reason why I shouldn’t be, but right now I still have injuries that I’m trying to heal from.”In addition to physical therapy and learning new skills to regain his independence, David knows there will be a lot of expenses coming his way.“This isn’t something that I can overcome in six months,” he said. “It’s going to be a way of life and there will be expenses associated with it for the rest of my life. We don’t even know what those are yet, so we’re trying to plan for the unknown.”
His family is fundraising at at gofundme.com/david-sheffields-road-to-recovery to raise money that will help offset medical bills, pay for a car adapted for paraplegics and whatever else he needs to become self-sufficient.Despite the challenges, David’s outlook is bright, and he offered this advice for anyone who’s suffering this time of year: “Look for help close to home. I’ve gotten so much support from my friends and family, and this whole ordeal has given me a lot more hope in people. I’ve always been somewhat of a skeptic and thought people were inherently bad, and that they really had to work hard to be good, but the acts of kindness people have shown for me have renewed my spirit for the Lord. I’ve been a Christian for a long time but really haven’t been walking the walk, but the past eight weeks have inspired me to be a better believer. Live life to the fullest and don’t take anything for granted — especially your family.”Rhodes agreed. “It’s easy to lose sight of what’s truly important, especially this time of year with the hustle and bustle of Christmas,” she said, “but live each day like it’s your last and be thankful for what you have because it can be taken away from you in a heartbeat.