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UPDATED: September-1-2008  
Guo Yandong: Reborning for the Paralympics
Guo's wheelchair basketball story is a testimony that destiny is not a matter of chance but choice
 

For the 20-year-old Guo Yandong, life seemed to end where it has just begun when he lost both legs in a fall-off accident two years ago. But his later wheelchair basketball story was a testimony that destiny is not a matter of chance but choice.

Guo, who used to be a migrant worker in Beijing, is competing with the Chinese national wheelchair basketball team in a test event for the Beijing Paralympic Olympic Games.

"I cannot live without basketball. I want to see how much I can do in the sport," said a suntanned Guo.

"When the team takes a holiday, I can't help thinking about coming back to see my teammates and to play again."

Guo, who started to play wheelchair basketball with a Beijing team, came in spotlight by leading the team all the way to the top at last year's National Games for People with Disabilities, in which he averaged about 20 points.

Guo's amazing skills earned him a call-up to the national team which is shaping up for the Paralympics. On the day an official notice reached him, Guo was so excited that he didn't sleep a wink that night.

"Basketball is a consolation, which helps me forget my tragedy and the lawsuit I am fighting," he said.

A farmer from Suqian in eastern China's Jiangsu province, Guo quitted middle school and moved to Beijing in 2005 to "seek a fortune", as he put it. He landed a job as a painter on a building site.

Fortune, however, did not smile on him. A fatal ninth-story fall drove him to the abyss of despair. It was a miracle he did not die, doctors said later.

Languishing in the hospital ward, the then 17-year-old was thinking about ending his own life.

"I don't feel anything below my chest. I'm going to spend the rest of my life in a wheelchair. I don't think I can make it, and I don't want to live anymore," Guo recalls.

His suicide attempt was stopped by his father.

It was in the China Rehabilitation Research Center where he started to open his mind. Like the hospital, the center could do nothing to his legs, but the rehab programs turned him into one of the most upbeat and positive patients there.

"I don't want to be a miserable whiner and I just want my life back," he said.

The contractor had paid for his surgeries worth of 100,000 yuan($13,870) but refused to pay more for the rehabs.

After being discharged from the center for failing to pay the bill, Guo filed a lawsuit against the contractor, who was ordered by the court to provide 240,000 yuan ($33,300) as compensation.

But last December the contractor closed up its business and disappeared.

"It's never been easy for a kid who plays basketball and fights a legal battle at the same time," said Yu Yuansheng, head coach of the Chinese wheelchair basketball team.

"He is only 20, but he's been through a lot," added the coach.

As an optimist, Guo has found the most unusual joy in playing basketball.

"Although Guo was not physically strong, his agility, speed and shooting precision are what we need," Yu said, adding that he will plan more strategies for the quick winger.

"I never feel pressure. I feel excited to compete with strong players. I want to score some nice shots," Guo stated.

(Xinhua News Agency January 26, 2008)

 


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