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Jacksonian

Miracle Buckley


Deborah Raji

by Maha Mohamed
July 23, 2008

“I would say there is a testimony to my name because somebody in my condition is not supposed to be here,” 19-year-old Miracle Buckley says.

Buckley was born with sacral agenesis, a rare condition that causes the spine to deform while the baby is still in the mother’s womb. She was born missing five vertebrae from her back and three rows of ribs, and doctors did not know what was wrong. They did not expect her to live, so they offered her the only advice they could give: Live every day like it is your last.

But Buckley did not die. Instead, when she was only seven, doctors decided to amputate her legs.

“It is a memory that has stayed with me,” Buckley says. “It was a really dramatic and intense point in my life because I was not sure that I would live through the surgery; it never had been performed before.”

After the surgery she began to use a wheelchair. Her parents, however, were determined to treat her just like any other child. Surprisingly, they did not have to worry; their daughter was tougher than they thought.

“It did not faze me, because technically I am walking—just on my hands,” she says.

Buckley says that by the time she was 13 or 14, she stopped listening to what the doctors said.

“God still has me here because he has something that he wants me to do, and it’s not something that the doctors can explain,” she says.

Fortunately, being indoors gave Buckley the opportunity to find the gift of music. Two years after her surgery, Buckley became restless. In an attempt to relieve her boredom, her mother bought her a small keyboard. One day while she was playing, her mother rushed to her daughter and said: “You did not play that. You did not just play that.”

Her mother wasted no time and took her to see pianist Lannie Spann McBride at their church. After hearing her play, McBride nodded her head and said, “You need to get her some piano lessons.”

Buckley took the pianist’s advice. Today, she is a sophomore at Mississippi College studying to become a concert pianist. Over the years, she has picked up many musical awards and recognitions, such as second and fourth place at competitions held at Mississippi Valley State University.

Buckley believes she can use her music to show that anyone can do anything they wish, even with a physical or mental disability.

“The only thing I can do when someone says, ‘you can’t’ is to prove them wrong,” she says. “I just want everybody to see that there isn’t a word ‘can’t.Ҕ

 
posted by on 07/23/08 at 05:42 PM. [printer-friendly version]   

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:: recentcomments
Aug 27, 2008 | 06:51 PM
[Kamikaze] The Media Fix Is In
J.T.: Amen to pushing a positive Jackson. And, yes, it is a movement. And, it is moving.
Aug 27, 2008 | 06:17 PM
Ban the Paddle?
ladd: A lot of kids in all our schools are "scary smart." Many just haven't had the chance to prove it, yet. On the not-know-how-to-ask-a-str anger-a-question point -- how many strangers are completely ...
Aug 27, 2008 | 05:33 PM
Ban the Paddle?
Tom Head: The kids I've met from the Jim Hill Civil Liberties Club are SCARY smart (they're not just the future; they're ready and able to get out and do stuff now), and the idea that anyone would consider ...
Aug 27, 2008 | 05:15 PM
Ban the Paddle?
ladd: you mentioned people should try to find out what is really going on with this generation. Damn right I did. And any given day, you will find up to 20 young people in their teens and 20s in my offices, ...
Aug 27, 2008 | 05:12 PM
Ban the Paddle?
ladd: Baquan, it's simple really: You generalized about all young people with statements like these: Discipline does not work any more on kids, whether it is beating them or putting them in time out. Young ...
Aug 27, 2008 | 04:49 PM
Ban the Paddle?
baquan2000: To Tom Head - lets just agree to disagree. You put yours in time out for stealing or cussing, while with mine, they will just have to meet their maker when they attempt to try it!? Sorry - I will ...
Aug 27, 2008 | 04:41 PM
Ban the Paddle?
baquan2000: Donna you did a good article a while back on this generation, where I think you mentioned people should try to find out what is really going on with this generation. Maybe what I said, was to ...
Aug 27, 2008 | 04:28 PM
Ban the Paddle?
Tom Head: Or for selling bad weed. Or for sleeping with your girlfriend. Or... Right. We teach the same pro-violence message with the Iraq War and the death penalty, too, not to mention when leaders go around ...
Aug 27, 2008 | 04:04 PM
Ban the Paddle?
ladd: That is a vast generalization about young people, baquan, and extremely offensive. I'm more impressed with young people today in their teens, and even tweens, than I ever have been. And the numbers bear ...
Aug 27, 2008 | 03:39 PM
Ban the Paddle?
baquan2000: after reading all the posts above; whatever it is we are doing; it is not working? Discipline does not work any more on kids, whether it is beating them or putting them in time out. Young men do ...
 

 

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