Remember the tragic story last year of the young Knightdale woman who was playfully pushed into a friends shallow pool, the last stop after a bridesmaids party just a month before her scheduled June wedding? That push would change Rachelle Friedmans life forever. It caused the then 24-year-old Virginia Beach native to hit her head on the bottom of the pool, breaking the cervical vertebra and left her paralyzed from the chest down. Formerly employed as a program coordinator at Resources for Seniors in Raleigh, as well as a part-time lifeguard at Raleighs Optimist Park pool and a former aerobics and dance instructor, Friedman had to postpone her June marriage to middle school science teacher Chris Chapman. The engaged couple had met years earlier at East Carolina Universtiy where Rachelle majored in recreation management. Chapman has remained her loyal fiancé as well as caregiver.
The rest of the story is really good news. Take Rachelles mobility problem. Confined to a wheelchair, the undaunted young woman makes good use of the Braun Ability conversion van generously loaned by Van Products. All I have to do is roll in using the fold out ramp and lock in, she explains. In fact, Chris recently used it to drive Rachelle and three friends to a Cory Smith concert where they were special guests. When we arrived one of the road managers escorted us through the crowd to a hangout room backstage where we were able to meet Cory Smith and hang out and get photos before he went on stage, Friedman blogs. She will be featured in the April edition of Cosmopolitan magazine.
More glad tidings: After learning Friedmans story, the NBC Today Show and George Oliphant of the networks home improvement program, George to the Rescue, asked the Home Builders Association of Raleigh-Wake County for volunteers from its Remodelers Council to work with Oliphant on a renovation of the couples two-story Knightdale home. The house will be remodeled to accommodate Rachelles physical limitations and make it wheelchair accessible. The remodelers donating their services are John Sperath, Blue Ribbon Residential Construction; Lewis Sadler, Sadler Construction; Steven Lee Hilliard, Hilliard Contracting; Glen White, Complete Construction; Grant Dickens, Rufty Homes; and business partners Deveraux Hamilton and Bill Ahle of Envision Built. Sperath, Sadler and Hilliard hold the CAPS designation (Certified Aging in Place Specialists.) That means they have completed the program that teaches the technical, business management and customer service skills to compete in the aging-in-place market. The other remodelers on the project are in the process of obtaining that certification.





