[Wasagdu] Pole Vaulter

Becky Frankeberger b.butterfly at comcast.net
Tue May 19 15:52:57 UTC 2015


AUSTIN, Texas - For three years, Charlotte Brown has been chasing a medal by
trying to jump over a bar she couldn't see. 

The senior pole vaulte    r cleared that bar Saturday, earning a third-place
finish at the Texas state high school championships. And proudly joining her
on the podium as the bronze medal was draped around her neck - her service
dog Vador. 

Brown is blind, yet that's not stopped her quest to become one of the best
in an event that would seem next to impossible. 

"I finally did it," Brown said. "If I could send a message to anybody, it's
not about pole vaulting and it's not about track. It's about finding
something that makes you happy despite whatever obstacles are in your way." 

Brown had qualified for the state meet each year since 2013 with Emory Rains
High School. She finished eighth as a sophomore and improved to fourth as a
junior. 

At her hotel room Friday night, Stori Brown tried to counsel her daughter
that it was important to remember that she was one of the few to make it
this far, whether she won a medal or not. 

"No," Charlotte replied. "I need to be on that podium." 

Brown was born with normal vision, but developed cataracts when she was 16
weeks old. That led to the first of several operations, including insertion
of artificial lenses. Her vision stabilized until she was about 11 when it
started to worsen. 

By 2013, she still had pinhole vision but couldn't see color or distinguish
shape from shadow. Brown is now blind. While not faced with total darkness,
her mother described what remains as a "jigsaw puzzle" of mixed up shades of
light and dark. 

Despite her disability, Brown takes pride in her fierce spirit of
independence, born out of growing up in a family with two older brothers who
pushed her to help herself in the rural town of Emory, about 76 miles east
of Dallas. 

"If there's a way to do something for yourself, that's a good idea," she
said. "When I need to know if my socks match or not, it's a good time to ask
for help. Can't find Waldo? Probably need to ask for help." 

Run down a track and hurtle herself more than 11 feet into the air? No
problem. 

Brown first took up pole vaulting in seventh grade because she wanted
something a little "dangerous and exciting." She competes with a combination
of fearless abandon and meticulous attention to detail. She counts the seven
steps of her left foot on her approach, listening for the sound of a faint
beeper placed on the mat that tells her when to plant to pole and push up. 

On Saturday, Vador walked her to the warm-up area and stretched out behind
the jumpers as they went through each attempt. 

Brown missed her first attempts at 10-0 and 10-6 but cleared both on her
second try. She cleared 11-0 on her first attempt, then soared over 11-6.
She secured a medal when two other vaulters bowed out at that height,
leaving Brown among the last three in the field. 

She made three attempts at 11-9 but missed each one. She briefly slumped her
shoulders and shook her head after her final attempt, then got to her feet
to acknowledge the standing ovation from several hundred fans she could hear
but not see. 

"She came to win," said her father, Ian Brown. "As parents, we are thrilled
she got on the podium." 

Brown medaled in a talented field. Sydney King, who won gold at a height of
12-3, has signed with Oklahoma to pole vault in college. 

"I don't how many people do could that," King said. "Her story, she's what
keeps me going when things aren't going right for me." 

Brown is headed to Purdue on an academic scholarship and plans to walk on in
track. Her brother Lachlan is a hurdler for the Boilermakers. 

"It took me three years to get on the podium, and I finally did it," Brown
said. "This story . really wasn't about me. It was about everybody that
struggles with something."

 

 

Becky Frankeberger

Butterfly Knitting

-           Ponchos

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360-426-8389

becky at butterflyknitting.com <mailto:becky at butterflyknitting.com> 

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