MURFREESBORO — Hunter
Garstin was once a wrestler at Independence High School in Franklin, Tennessee,
but now he is grappling with his toughest opponent to date.
Garstin is preparing to start classes Aug. 28 as a freshman
psychology major at MTSU as he continues physical therapy due to an accident he
sustained as a high school freshman.
At a 2013 tournament in Huntsville, Garstin sustained a
spinal cord injury only about 20 seconds into a wrestling match, resulting in
paralysis from the neck down. He expects to use a wheelchair for the rest of
his life.
“I think if I keep going and hitting it hard that maybe one
day I’ll be walking on a walker or across the room or something, which I would
be perfectly OK with,” said Garstin.
The road to high school commencement was interrupted by his
injury. Garstin underwent surgery to fuse two vertebrae in his neck and spent a
week in the hospital intensive care unit, followed by four months of inpatient
and outpatient therapy. He worked at his rehabilitation for eight hours a day
with intermittent breaks.
Garstin missed several weeks of school in his sophomore
year. He describes his junior year as “two weeks on, two weeks off.” He even
went to Switzerland three times for stem-cell therapy. In his senior year, he
started driving, which was key to his physical and psychological freedom.
Finally, in May of this year, Hunter Garstin walked across
the stage at Independence High and received his diploma. His next challenge
will be to obtain his college degree from MTSU.
“It was the smartest choice at the time, and I really liked
the campus after going to orientation and seeing everything MTSU had to offer,”
said Garstin.
A cousin, a friend and a fourth roommate to be determined
will share an off-campus apartment with Garstin as he becomes adjusted to
university life. But one thing he won’t be doing is watching wrestling on
television.
“Not only is it not really interesting to watch anymore, but
it just kind of brings up memories, both good and bad,” he said.
One good memory is the night Garstin was presented with the
Kaia Jergenson Courage Award at the Tennessean Sports Awards June 6 at the
Tennessee Performing Arts Center in Nashville.
The award is named for a former Lipscomb University
basketball player who nearly lost her life to meningitis.
Garstin can use most of his upper body with some limited
mobility in his fingers, and he has some feeling in his legs. As he continues
with physical therapy, he hopes to improve further and perhaps walk at his
college commencement.
“There really is no true prognosis,” he said. “It’s what you
make of it and what you put into it.”
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