Quinn Clarke, 11-Year-Old Founder of Kick-It: Kickball for the Cure

This week we are joining with Invacare, the leading manufacturer of home and long-term care products, to spotlight the winners of their Real Life campaign. The campaign, launched in April of 2011, brings to light achievements of those with disabilities. A contest was held to spotlight those who have triumphed over their disability. 4 winners were selected and each received $9000 for them and their charity of choice. Today’s real life hero is Quinn Clarke, an 11-year old cancer survivor.

Quinn Clarke: Cancer survivor and Kick-It kickball tournament founder.

Quinn Clarke was first diagnosed with Rhabdomyosarcoma, a cancerous tumor formed in the soft tissue of muscle, at the tender age of two. After chemotherapy, he went into remission, but 7 years later the cancer returned in the form of another tumor. In an effort to raise awareness of this cancer and hopefully find a cure, the then 9-year old Quinn decided to organize a kickball tournament in his hometown of Cleveland, Ohio. His mother, Allison, had experience with forming a charity organization, having founded Flashes of Hope, a charity that offers free professional portraits for children with cancer. With her help, he organized the first Kick-It kickball tournament in just 5 days. More than 500 people showed up to play in the inaugural tournament and it raised thousands of dollars for cancer research. Over the next few months, Kick-It tournaments popped up all over the country.

Meanwhile, Quinn underwent a 14-hour surgery to remove the tumor from his pelvis and, along with it, his left hip. This left him unable to walk, but it didn’t stop him from continuing his kickball tournaments. He continued to play and promote the tournament from his wheelchair, and then after months of rehab and therapy, Quinn was able to walk unassisted.

To date, 400 games have been played and over $600,000 has been raised for children’s cancer. The charity has even caught the attention of the Cleveland Indians who regularly join the players on the field for kickball games and support Kick-It as sponsors. The money raised from the tournaments goes to a multitude of research centers around the country including the Children’s Tumor Foundation at Harvard Medical College and the Children’s Oncology Group.

Today, Quinn continues to organize and play in tournaments, and serves as an inspiration to others. His motto is “The more kickball games you have, the more kids you save.” Invacare learned about Quinn’s story through a fan, Taylor Johnson, who was so inspired, she made a video tribute to him. Her amazing video is shown below.

If you would like more information on Quinn and Kick-It, visit http://www.kick-it.org.

About Invacare:
Invacare Corporation is the world’s leading manufacturer and distributor of innovative home and long-term care medical products, but the Company is more than just products — it is what those products allow people to do every day. The Invacare tag line is, “Yes, you can.®” and that is more than just a saying; it’s a way of life. Invacare creates solutions that Make Life’s Experiences Possible™ for the people who use its products, from the student finishing their bachelor’s degree with an Invacare® power wheelchair to top athletes using Invacare® handcycles and chairs to compete at the highest level in events like the Boston Marathon, the Iron Man and the Paralympics.

For more information, visit www.invacare.com/RealLife, www.invacare.com/homecare or www.youtube.com/InvacareCorp.

To learn more about Invacare Top End wheelchairs & racing equipment, visit www.topendwheelchair.com or follow them on Facebook

 

About the Author: Lindsey Beacham, from Atlanta, currently serves as Marketing Coordinator for UroMed. She graduated from Auburn University with a B.A. in Criminology and then from Georgia State University with a B.B.A in Marketing. When she’s not doing marketing or getting additional degrees, she enjoys cooking, reading, and spending time with her family.

Why Mike Savicki Is the National Spokesperson for NMEDA

An active member of the wheelchair community, Mike is also the spokesperson for NMEDA's national awareness month.

An active member of the wheelchair community, Mike is also the spokesperson for NMEDA's national awareness month.

Editor’s Note: Mike Savicki, of Cornelius, North Carolina, decided that he wanted to be a Navy fighter pilot. He felt he was strong, smart and brave enough to be among the Navy’s top jet fighter pilots, and he almost made it. Part 5 of a 5 part series.

NMEDA (www.nmeda.com) is the trade association for all the car, van and vehicle adaptive distributors across the country. Its mission is to educate people with disabilities on the many options they have to get out of the house and be active, whether they’re driving vans, being passengers in a van or adapting a vehicle to their specific disabilities.

NMEDA tries to bridge the gap between the vehicle dealers, who are building these individually designed vehicles and developing lift systems, and the clients like myself, who need wheelchair vans or cars with hand controls and lift systems that enable those of us in wheelchairs to get into and out of their vehicles and be active participants in society.

They are also about safety and compliance.  Their Quality Assurance Program ensures that every NMEDA vehicle is inspected, certified and is safe for the recipient.Mobility has been an important part of my life since I first became disabled and I believe in the mission of the National Mobility Equipment Dealers Association (NMEDA) because of their passion to improve the lives of people like me who live with disabilities.

NMEDA tries to educate people who need specially adapted vehicles know that there are a huge variety of options out there. In my case, I drive a mini van with hand controls and a swivel seat but others might prefer something different. It doesn’t matter if it is a car, truck or SUV, there’s a solution out there that fits your needs.

NMEDA (www.nmeda.com) is the trade association for all the car, van and vehicle-adaptive distributors across the country.

NMEDA (www.nmeda.com) is the trade association for all the car, van and vehicle-adaptive distributors across the country.

We all know that vehicles are expensive and anyone who has ever been in the market for an adapted vehicle will tell you that these specially built cars and vans are even more expensive. Sometimes, these types of vehicles may be cost prohibitive, so some people may not be able to afford them.

One of NMEDA’s newest and most innovative programs is called the Local Heroes program. It involves giving away three customized vehicles – a Toyota, a Honda and a Chrysler – that can cost upwards of $60,000. Anyone and everyone can enter to win and to qualify, visit www.mobilityawarenessmonth.com and share your story.

Upload a picture along with your written story or prepare a short video that explains why you need a vehicle like the three being given away and/or why you deserve to win a vehicle, to the NMEDA website.  And then get people to vote for you.

The winners of the three vehicles will be determined through a national voting process and they will be announced this May, as part of the first ever National Mobility Awareness Month.

We plan to share these individual stories nationally to let other people with similar disabilities know that there are transportation options available. You can live a full and active lifestyle and still travel, explore and discover your world. Because other people with disabilities are much like me; they want to stay as active as they can for as long as they can.

The Local Heroes program allows people to enter to win an adaptive vehicle--a Toyota, Honda or Chrysler. This is a Braun Toyota.

The Local Heroes program allows people to enter to win an adaptive vehicle--a Toyota, Honda or Chrysler. This is a Braun Toyota.

As for me, I want to continue participating in sports, continue my writing career and my wife, Sarah, and I hope to have a family. In the 22 years since my accident, I’ve learned a lot about myself, my disability and the world I live in. And giving back has become a central part of my life. I have been helped by many individuals and non-profit organizations and, now, I want to give back and support those organizations so that they can help other people, like they’ve helped me. After all, we are meant to be interconnected and we need each other to live completely.

 

About NMEDA
Mike Savicki is the national spokesperson for the first-ever, National Mobility Awareness Month in May. The National Mobility Equipment Dealers Association (NMEDA) is sponsoring the awareness month.

 

Founded in 1989 as a non-profit trade association, NMEDA supports more than 600 mobility equipment dealers, manufacturers and driver rehabilitation specialists in the U.S. and Canada dedicated to expanding opportunities for people with disabilities. For information on NMEDA, please visit www.nmeda.com, as well as Facebook and Twitter. Visit MobilityAwarenessMonth.com for the national awareness month. For more information about Mike, please visit www.mikesavicki.com

About the Author: For the last 12 years, John E. Phillips of Vestavia, Alabama, has been a professional blogger for major companies, corporations and tourism associations throughout the nation. During his 24 years as Outdoor Editor for “The Birmingham Post-Herald” newspaper, he published more than 7,000 newspaper columns and sold more than 100,000 of his photos to newspapers, magazines and internet sites. He also hosted a radio show that was syndicated at 27 radio stations; created, wrote and sold a syndicated newspaper column that ran in 38 newspapers for more than a decade; and wrote and sold more than 30 books. Learn more at http://www.nighthawkpublications.com

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