'You can achieve anything': Life-long B.C. athlete keeps competing after sudden vision loss
For as long as he can recall, James Kwinecki has loved athletics.
“It’s hard-wired in my body,” James smiles. “I don’t think I could go a few days without moving.”
When he was a kid, he played on every team he could. After graduating, he got a job that would support his pastime.
“I could make some money,” James says. “And then I could do my fitness and sports on the side.”
His life couldn’t have been better, until his vision suddenly got worse. He went to the doctor after the vision in one eye was “sort of getting fuzzy.”
“And then they sent me to the ER,” James says. “That was a bit of a curveball.”
The then 21-year-old was diagnosed with a rare eye disease, Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy. Six months later, James was almost completely blind in both eyes.
“It was terrible,” James says. He suddenly couldn’t drive, couldn’t see his phone to connect with the world, and couldn’t play sports. “I had no idea what I was going to do.”
All the activities that James used to do – which defined him, fuelled him, and provided him with community – he now couldn’t do.
But then James heard about blind baseball. Seeing as he had nothing else to do, he tried it.
“It was so much fun,” James says, explaining how all the players are blindfolded before attempting to hit a ball that emits sounds, and running towards bases that do the same. “It kind of propelled me into getting into other sports.”
It inspired James to go to university and join the varsity rowing team.
“It was tough. It was hard,” James admits, before smiling. “Some of those days, I spent much more time in the water than the boat.”
But James persevered. And did so well that he earned an opportunity to join the national Paralympic rowing team.
“The momentum sparked more motivation,” James says.
It also gave James the confidence to look for a sport that would provide him with some of the autonomy he’d lost. He found that in running.
“I can just go run,” James says. “Nothing's going to stop me.”
After finding closed tracks and public routes that were safe, and often wearing a vest that says ‘blind runner,’ James runs by himself almost daily.
He’s now part of a community of runners. And with the help of a guide, James has also completed more than few marathons, and is training for more.
“You’re on top of the world,” James describes the feeling of running.
Although nothing compares to the feeling of proposing to your partner and her saying ‘yes.’
James and his fiancée Sydney are planning their wedding, while he’s also starting a new job at the Canadian National Institute for the Blind to support youth with vision loss.
“It does get better,” the now 29-year-old says. “It does get easier.”
And although life does take unexpected turns, James says if you commit to forging your own path, you just might find you couldn’t be happier with the direction you’re headed.
“Once you achieve that,” James smiles. “You can achieve anything!”
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Serial sexual offender linked to unsolved 1970s homicides of four Calgary girls, women
An investigation into unsolved historical homicides from the 1970s has linked the deaths of two girls and two young women in and around Calgary to a now-deceased serial offender.
Woman with liver failure rejected for a transplant after medical review highlights alcohol use
For nearly three months, Amanda Huska has been in an Ontario hospital, part of it on life support, because of severe liver failure. Her history of alcohol use is getting in the way of her only potential treatment: a liver transplant.
$500K-worth of elvers seized at Toronto airport
Fishery and border service officers seized more than 100 kilograms of unauthorized elvers at the Toronto Pearson International Airport on Wednesday.
Toronto eliminated from PWHL playoffs
Toronto has been eliminated from the PWHL playoffs.
Information commissioner faces $700K funding shortfall, says system is 'overwhelmed'
Canada's information commissioner says her office is facing a $700,000 funding shortfall that could impact its ability to investigate complaints about government transparency and accountability.
B.C. man 'attacked suddenly' by adult grizzly near Alberta boundary: RCMP
A B.C. man is recovering from multiple injuries after he was "attacked suddenly" by an adult grizzly bear near Elkford Thursday afternoon.
Backlash over NFL player Harrison Butker's commencement speech has reached a new level
The NFL is distancing itself from controversial comments by Kansas City Chiefs kicker Harrison Butker during a recent commencement address.
Dabney Coleman, actor who specialized in curmudgeons, dies at 92
Dabney Coleman, the mustachioed character actor who specialized in smarmy villains like the chauvinist boss in '9 to 5' and the nasty TV director in 'Tootsie,' has died. He was 92.
Craig Berube named as next head coach of Toronto Maple Leafs
The Toronto Maple Leafs have named Craig Berube as their new head coach.