The Gold Coast Bulletin

Sky is the limit for dynamic amputee

- DWAYNE GRANT dwayne.grant@news.com.au

MELISSA Sullivan has had her right leg cut back twice, endured more than 30 surgeries on the limb and only two weeks ago learned she will never walk again.

Instead of curling into a ball, however, the mother of two has set her sights on becoming a surf sports sensation.

“I want to attack it all – the swim, the ski, the board,” the Highland Park woman says of a goal befitting a woman made of grit.

“A ski will have to be adapted, I’m not going to be able to kneel on a board, but that’s OK because I’m not competing against ablebodied athletes. I’m competing against myself.

“Am I going to come last? Absolutely. But just to get out there and show others anything is possible would be amazing.”

Since a seemingly routine ankle break in 2008, Sullivan has racked up a list of physical and emotional hardships that would have buried even the strongest of characters.

That fracture, which occurred

in a Step class, was the first of three breaks in nine months.

“I came out of bandages and kept falling over because my ankle would dislocate,” the 43-year-old real estate trainer recalls.

“The surgeon said he needed to fuse my ankle but when I came out of plaster, he had put my foot five degrees out of place. He essentiall­y apologised and said he’d correct it but ended up putting my foot in exactly the same spot.”

The onset of Complex Regional Pain Syndrome – aka “suicide syndrome” – added to her nightmare.

“I couldn’t even bear to have a sock or sheet on my foot,” she explains. “It was excruciati­ng and it needed to be dealt with so, on 27 July 2011, I had my amputation.

“It was tough. I was 38 and had to go into a nursing home for rehab. I was struggling with phantom pain (from the missing limb) and became quite depressed.”

As well as her own medical crisis, she was a mother to an autistic son who was tube fed until he was eight and a daughter with kidney disease.

“I pretty much had to still do it all – school runs, lunch preps,” she says. “I also put on a lot of weight.”

Over time Melissa also decided to attend a come-andtry day at a canoeing club.

A state rugby player in her youth, she was a natural and soon found herself soaring up the canoeing, kayaking and Va’a outrigging ranks. She moved from Adelaide to the Gold Coast in 2014 to train with the national team and won gold later that year at the Va’a world championsh­ips.

Along the way she also had more of her leg taken.

“I was having major nerve problems in the lower part of my stump and it was also too short for a decent prosthetic fit,” she explains. “The decision was made to have a ‘through-knee’ amputation.”

With one eye on the 2016 Paralympic­s, she paired with legendary kayaker Clint Robinson as her coach but there would be no glory, a shoulder reconstruc­tion putting paid to her Rio dream.

“I’m well and truly over having surgery,” she smiles.

Her most recent operation came a fortnight ago. A previously surgically fitted device that provides constant pain relief from her phantom limb was no longer compatible with wearing a prosthetic.

“I could remove the device and continue to walk or have pain relief – I chose to be comfortabl­e.”

She is now counting down the weeks until her body will allow her to attack her latest goal with the support of Kurrawa Surf Life Saving Club.

“Having my leg amputated was probably the most empowering moment of my life,” she says as former coach and now partner Fred Tanner listens in. “If I went downhill, what life lessons was I giving my children.

“To them I’m just mum but I know I’m more than that.”

 ?? Picture: GLENN HAMPSON ?? Melissa Sullivan has undured multiple surgeries and two amputation­s to her right leg but has reinvented herself as an elite sportswoma­n.
Picture: GLENN HAMPSON Melissa Sullivan has undured multiple surgeries and two amputation­s to her right leg but has reinvented herself as an elite sportswoma­n.

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