Battling back -- but not alone
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Mike Sciacca
The sweetness in Tawn Pracon’s voice makes it nearly impossible to
think of the personal journey she has traveled in the past three months.
If you know anything about Pracon, it is that exact sweetness,
combined with a personal resolve and much fortitude, that has made this
unexpected journey just part of her life experience.
“When you wake up in the morning, you have two choices,” she
explained. “One, you can either be happy and choose to make people happy,
or you can be miserable and make them miserable. I’ve always been a happy
person, and I choose to continue to live my life being happy.”
Pracon spoke those words from her bed in the HealthSouth Tustin
Rehabilitation Hospital after a morning round of physical therapy last
week. The center has been her home away from home since early July.
A typical weekend
It was a beautiful Memorial Day weekend and the start to the summer of
2001 when Pracon took her 14-year-old son, Kristopher, on an off-road
all-terrain vehicle expedition in the desert near Gorman with a group of
friends.
The trip was typical for Pracon, a trained adult Scout leader for the
Boy Scouts of America who routinely would round up her son and other kids
from the neighborhood for a trip to the beach for a day of fun in the
surf. Or, they’d go hiking or skiing as she took on the role of both
parents. Pracon and Kristopher lost their husband and father, Craig, 42,
to a brain aneurysm nine years ago.
The Huntington Beach resident, a 1976 Edison High School graduate, was
also the “Kool-Aid Mom,” as neighborhood children would call her. She
would arrange Super Bowl Sunday parties for the kids, while the adults
held their own party at a neighboring house.
But this day, May 28, turned out to be different, incredibly
different, from the others.
When nearing the end of that all-terrain vehicle ride, Pracon’s bike
slipped out from underneath her and caused her to tumble down a 50- to
75-foot cliff.
She was airlifted to Henry Mayo Newhall Memorial Hospital, where it
was determined that Pracon had suffered major injuries, including a
ruptured spleen, punctured lung, broken ribs, a crushed hip and severed
spinal cord.
“I remember trying to get around this part of the hill and saying,
‘Please God, let me stop tumbling,”’ she said. “But I have full memory of
falling down that cliff.”
Fighting through surgery
The accident has left Pracon a paraplegic.
“It’s funny, but my first reaction was, ‘Thank you, God,’ that I could
still use my upper body, and that I still had my son,” she said. “I was
widowed eight years ago, and that was devastating enough. You just need
to continue to take charge of your life and keep whatever positives there
are.”
It is that same indomitable spirit that has gotten Pracon through five
surgeries, which included the removal of her spleen and the
reconstruction of her shattered left hip. She endures four physical
therapy bouts per day, two occupational and two physical. She looks
forward to returning home someday soon and even plans on learning how to
ski again, albeit in a new fashion.
“This won’t stop me,” she declared. “I have such an incredible support
system in my faith, family and friends. “If I didn’t have that support
group, things would be different. I don’t see how others who don’t have
that support make it.”
Rallying support
The members of that support system who have rallied around Pracon will
sponsor several benefits in an effort to raise funds needed to make her
home and car wheelchair-friendly. Individuals and companies also are
donating various services and assistance to make her transition as easy
as possible.
today, the Prince of Peace Church in Costa Mesa will stage a Broadway
revue to help raise money for Pracon’s recovery.
The show -- which can be accompanied by dinner -- will take place at 7
p.m. at the church, 2987 Mesa Verde Drive East, and will feature a
20-piece orchestra.
Members of the church also have helped Pracon by widening doorways in
her home to make it more accessible for a wheelchair.
A barbecue on Sunday is being headed by Pracon’s sister, Britta
Presho.
“Everyone was telling my family to do a fund-raising event,” Presho
said. “They all wanted to help out and said that Tawn deserved it. She’s
such a very positive person and her spirits are still high.”
Reflecting Pracon’s personality, everyone -- young and old alike -- is
welcomed to a day that will feature clowns, face painting, crafts,
carnival games and live music. The benefit barbecue will be held from 1
to 5 p.m. at the Newland Barn in the Newland Center, at Adams Avenue and
Beach Boulevard.
“I just think it’s the neatest thing,” Pracon said with a smile in her
voice. “I’m trying to get a release from the hospital so that I can be
there that day. Right now, at this point, though, it’s hard to say if I
will be able to attend.”
But she knows she will go home one day soon. Things will have changed,
but not her outlook on life. No matter what the setback, she has met the
challenge.
“I will be back,” she said. “My life has changed, but it isn’t over.
There’s still plenty left to do.”
FYI
* What: Benefit show for Tawn Pracon
* Where: Prince of Peace Church, 2987 Mesa Verde Drive East, Costa
Mesa
* When: 7 p.m. today
* Cost: $20 for dinner and show; $14 for show only * Call: (714) 624-9370
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