Carrying the torch
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Deirdre Newman
Janie Walker has suffered two severe injuries and rebounded from both
of them.
Walker’s resilience landed her a historic spot on the first-ever
global Olympic Torch Relay. She will join other torchbearers selected
by Coca-Cola, who will walk or run through the streets of Los
Angeles, St. Louis, Atlanta and New York City from June 16 to 19.
Walker was nominated because she is an inspiration to others and
has a positive effect on other people’s lives.
“I think she’s probably one of the most incredible and
inspirational people that I’ve ever met,” David Walker, said of his
wife, Janie. “That’s why I nominated her. She doesn’t let any problem
stop her from fulfilling her obligations, no matter what it is.”
Janie Walker, a former Costa Mesa police officer, suffered two
severe injuries in the past 12 years. She was hit by a drunk driver
while on patrol in 1992. The collision caused a severe concussion,
which caused problems with speech, memory and cognitive abilities.
The 49-year-old participated in speech therapy and cognitive
rehabilitation, enabling her to retrain her brain.
Then, five years later, taking care of horses up in the Tulare
mountains, she was thrown from a horse as she was trying to prevent
an American flag she was holding from touching the ground. Her spinal
cord was smashed, she broke four vertebrae and shattered another one.
“It was a pretty serious injury,” she said. “I’m not Catholic, but
they read me my last rites twice. That was a little scary.”
The doctor told her family that she might not be able to walk
again, but knowing Janie Walker, they didn’t buy it.
“My daughter ... every day in the hospital, she kept saying,
‘don’t listen to the doctors, they don’t know what they’re talking
about. You’re going to walk again and you’re going to ride Duster
again,’” Janie Walker said. “I remember crying.”
After going through aqua therapy, she was able to regain the use
of her legs and now coaches softball at Liberty Christian High School
in Huntington Beach. She also volunteers as an advisor for the Coast
Mesa Police Explorers program.
While her husband submitted the torchbearer nomination, her
daughter, Jamie, helped him write it, Janie Walker said. She said she
is honored to be a torchbearer.
“Hopefully, I can be an inspiration to other people that might
have either suffered injury or some type of adversity in their life
-- just don’t give up,” she said. “I’m so excited and [am] such an
incredibly patriotic person.”
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