In The News
Bowling, bonding
Paralyzed father takes son to hospital event
Rock yMountain News
By Rosa Ramirez
 |
| Ron Gulick, 35, uses an IKAN, a device attached
to his wheelchair, to compete in a bowling tournament.
Gulick scored 100 points as his son, Jack, cheered
him on. |
The weekend before Ron Gulick's truck
rolled over during a hunting trip, he threw a bowling
bash for his son Jack as an early birthday present.
The boy was turning 5 and Gulick wanted to host an activity
they would both enjoy.
On Nov. 10, Jack's birthday, Gulick was
involved in an accident near Kansas City. His truck
rolled three times and ejected him, said Mary Gulick,
Ron's mother. The crash left Gulick, 35, of Independence,
Mo., paralyzed from the neck down.
On Sunday, he and his son had the chance
to bowl once again during Craig Hospital's second annual
Power Wheelchair Bowling tournament at the AMF Belleview
Lanes in Englewood. The tourney was open to the hospital's
current and former quadriplegics and their families.
About 10 people participated.
"My daddy made a strike," Jack
Gulick cheered during a game, as relatives - all wearing
matching gray T-shirts that read "Rally for Ron"
- clapped and cheered.
Bowlers' wheelchairs were fitted with
an IKAN, a metal bowling device. The device is adjusted
to fit the size of the person "so they can have
total control," said Brenda Bertrand, a therapeutic
recreation specialist with Craig Hospital.
A bowling ball is placed on the top of
the device's caddy, allowing the bowler to direct the
ball as they move forward in the bowling lane.
"It's a fun activity," Bertrand
said. "Ron used to bowl with his kid. This is something
that he'll be able to continue to do with his child."
Vincent De La Cruz, 46, won second place
in last year's tournament. "It's a lot of fun.
It also brings normality to your life," De La Cruz
said.
Wendy De La Cruz, his wife, said the tournament
is more than a game. It's an opportunity to educate
others that no matter what the condition of a person
in a wheelchair is, each has the ability to adjust to
his or her surroundings.
"Sometimes we get the empathetic
look. Other times they just ignore you completely,"
she said. "We don't need pity. We need understanding."
For Ron Gulick, seeing his only son roll
a strike was the highlight of the tournament.
"He's doing a great job. He had his
first strike of his life and you know what he said?
'This one's for you, Dad.' "
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