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Young man undaunted by developmental disabilities
LONGMONT — Though blue-jean-clad and just 20 years old, Kyle Sanchez talks and acts like a gentleman.
He
criticizes rap music for lyrics that "disrespect women" and holds his
mother's hand in public if she — a 42-year-old widow disabled by
multiple sclerosis — becomes unsteady on her feet.
Sanchez, who
lives with her and his younger brother, Andrew, got a job last year to
help pay the family's bills. But his helpful attitude earned him more
than a paycheck.
Sanchez received the Governor's Summer Job Hunt
Award from 400 nominees statewide in August. In March, he became the
2009 Direct Support Professional of the Year in Colorado - recognition
bestowed by the Virginia-based American Network of Community Options
and Resources, a nonprofit, national trade association.
The kudos mean more given his once-desperate survivor status as a baby born 16 weeks early on May 18, 1988.
His
family waited two months to touch him. Eventually, they dressed him in
Cabbage-Patch-Doll clothing and made tiny diapers with gauze.
Dolores Sanchez, Kyle Sanchez' maternal grandmother, put down her knitting and held up her hand to describe the situation.
"He
fit in the palm of my hand. ... And there wasn't a part of his body
that wasn't attached to something," she said, referring to the
ventilator, monitor wires, intravenous lines and feeding tube. "I
didn't know how God was going to work this miracle, because I didn't
see it happening."
The Children's Hospital in Denver, where
Sanchez lived until age 7 months, gave him a 20 percent chance of
survival and a 10 percent chance of survival without serious disability.
No one except his mother, Maria Sanchez-Trujillo, expected him to live, much less to walk or talk.
Sanchez
survived and received help from age 3 on at the Lafayette-based
Imagine! center for people with developmental disabilities. In 2007, he
graduated from Skyline High School in Longmont.
"But he said it had always been his dream to work," said Heather Hine, his supervisor in the Imagine! Out and About program.
She
hired him last May to work full time during the summer as an assistant
in this recreation therapy program for Imagine! clients. Participants
include people ages 7 to 21 living with developmental disabilities such
as autism, cerebral palsy and Down syndrome.
Sanchez now works part time in the Out and About after-school program.
Hine
remembers him arriving for the interview wearing pressed slacks, a
dress shirt and a tie. After he interviewed well, she offered him the
job.
"You should have seen his face. It was one of shock and just
sheer joy," she said. "He kept saying 'Thank you,' and 'I'm going to
work so hard.'"
Kristen Erby, a career counselor with Workforce Boulder County in Longmont, applauded him for landing a competitive job.
"Nobody
with disabilities wants to be put (to work) in the back of a
warehouse," she said. "He's compassionate and a great role model to the
camp participants because he's overcome his own barriers to employment."
For
instance, Sanchez struggles to understand time. To get to work or to
his desk at Life Strategies University - the St. Vrain Valley School
District's two-year life skills program in Longmont - he stands by the
family's mailbox and waits until his cell phone's digital clock reads
7:59 a.m.
Then, he knows to head for the bus - a service with time-sensitive schedules he worked for years to understand.
His prematurity also affected his fine motor skills. Tying shoes and opening potato chip bags remain a challenge.
But
Sanchez can do nothing more than take medication for the worst
consequence of his early birth — a weak heart. His ticker may fail to
give him the years he wants to work, start a family and enjoy his
surprising life.
"The attitude for me would be, Keep on goin' till you can't no more,'" he said.


