Costa Mesa High senior will walk at graduation after being hospitalized for nearly 2 months from motorcycle crash
When Costa Mesa High School senior Miguel Elias was 18, he became hospitalized for nearly two months, all the while thinking, âI wonât be able to graduate. Iâm not going to graduate.â
Last November, he collided with two cars while riding his motorcycle on the way home from working at a Costa Mesa tire shop. The incident left him in a Santa Ana hospital with internal bleeding. His femur had snapped in half, his knee cap shattered, face shifted, lungs collapsed.
But despite his numerous surgeries and weeks of physical therapy, Elias, now 19, was able to make it back to Mesa in plenty of time for prom, final exams and â what he wanted most â Thursdayâs graduation.
His older sister, Yesenia Elias, 27, calls his return a miracle, especially considering that right before the accident, he told her he didnât want to continue going to school. He just wanted to work and see where he would go next.
âI probably wouldnât have even graduated if it hadnât been for the accident,â Elias said. âI knew I needed to keep going to school because I couldnât run around the tire shop anymore. I needed to change.â
He suffered no permanent damage from the collisions, though his left leg canât bend as easily as it used to.
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Elias has been working and earning his own money since he was 16, first as a busboy at a Japanese restaurant. He then later moved on to carrying, replacing and fixing tires.
But when he was younger, his sister said he wanted something a little different.
âGrowing up, he always told us he wanted to be a businessman and he even did a school project where he said thatâs what he wanted to be,â Yesenia said. âThen when he started working, he thought, âIâm making money. Iâm pulling through.â But that canât be all your life.â
To Elias, working meant having his own cash to pay for things, including his motorcycle.
On the night of Eliasâ accident last winter, the teen remembers finishing his shift at the tire shop, then pulling out of the parking lot on his bike. Thatâs it.
The next thing he can recall is waking up two weeks later, looking at the hospital ceiling above him. He had been sedated and in a coma.
âHis face, his body, everything was just swollen,â said Yesenia, who had recently gotten a new job at the time of the accident. She moved around her work schedule to be with her brother at the hospital nearly every day. âI donât even know how to describe how heartbreaking it was.â
With his lungs collapsed, his nose broken and his mouth wired shut, for weeks the teen used a feeding tube in his abdominal area to eat and a trach tube â inserted into an opening in his neck â to breathe.
While in the hospital, he underwent several procedures. One was implanting titanium plates into his face to bring back its structure; another involved inserting a rod into his left leg to keep his snapped femur in place.
After he transferred to a rehabilitation center in Tustin, he spent three weeks there completing speech and physical therapy. He came home in January to take online classes that Mesa counselor Jeff Gall helped him enroll in. The courses helped make up the work he missed while away from school.
âMy mission was to finish all my online classes before the start of second semester,â Elias said.
He completed everything in less than a month.
We put everything in place for him ... but it was his internal drive that helped him.
— Jeff Gall, Costa Mesa High School counselor
Elias came back to school in time for second semester in February, first in a wheelchair, then a walker. Later he used a cane and then, once again, on his own two feet.
Gall, who has known Elias since his freshman year, said that once graduating became important to Elias it became important for Mesa staff and faculty to help get him there.
âEveryone from the admin to teachers, career specialists and college specialists accommodated,â Gall said.
Teachers let him out of class early to avoid the crowds during passing time. Friends carried his notebooks.
âWe put everything in place for him ⌠but it was his internal drive that helped him,â Gall said.
While Gall said heâs excited to see Elias walk in Mesaâs graduation Thursday, Elias said heâs just happy to walk in general.
âAll throughout the hospital, I worried about not graduating,â he said. âBefore that, I didnât even want to go to school. But then I noticed I needed to change, besides just working my whole life.â
In the fall, Elias will attend Golden West College in Huntington Beach to study something he first considered long ago â business.
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Alex Chan, [email protected]
Twitter: @AlexandraChan10
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