From Deseret News archives:
West Mountain man takes life in stride
It's easy to guess which path the 64-year-old West Mountain man took. Since the July 2005 amputation, he's competed in every Freedom Run of America's Freedom Festival at Provo, joined one of the few disabled bobsled teams in the world and often speaks to youth groups about how choices shape one's life. Tough though his life may be since that life-altering surgery, Napierski is determined not to drown in self pity.
"It isn't easy," he said. "But you don't want to be a whiner."
Napierski opted for amputation after 40 years of dealing with an injury he suffered while "doing stupid things" as an 18-year-old. He and some friends were celebrating Labor Day up at a cabin near Lake Tahoe. They came across a large log wedged up on some rocks. They'd been drinking earlier that day and thought it'd be a good idea to move the log.
They rocked it back and forth a few times, and the log suddenly rolled. Napierski couldn't move quickly enough, and his leg was sandwiched between the log and some rocks, crushing the ankle.
The bone shards eventually fused together, but his joint had zero motion.
"I gave up drinking," he chuckled.
He moved on and raised a family of eight children with his wife, Sandi, but the effects of the accident lingered. Circulation to his foot was impaired, the blood flow restricted. Napierski required skin grafts every 10 years. After 40 years, doctors feared gangrene would set in. They started to talk amputation.
Napierski said he didn't worry about the physical consequences of the surgery. He was no stranger to pain. He'd endured oozing sores and intense, cutting pain when he bumped his leg against a table. But amputation horror stories of post-surgery depression and phantom limb pains unsettled him. The Napierskis also worried about how they would adjust.
"It's quite a catastrophic change," Sandi said.
They decided to go through with the surgery. Surprisingly, Napierski felt relatively little pain, though it hurt his grown children to see their father missing a limb.
"You see your parents as invincible," said 28-year-old daughter Whitney Woydziak. "It was my first real insight that children start to take care of their parents at some point."
All the children pitched in to ease the transition period for their parents, but with her medical background, Woydziak knew getting their father out and moving was critical.
"After that type of an injury, if people don't start moving soon, they typically don't," she said.
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Anonymous | Oct. 22, 2009 at 2:55 p.m.
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