Chicago Sun-Times

Long journey to graduation almost over

- SUE ONTIVEROS Follow Sue Ontiveros on Twitter: @sueontiver­os Email: sueontiver­os.cst@gmail.com

When Amanda Quisenberr­y receives her bachelor’s degree next month from Loyola University, her time as a student will end.

That’s going to take some getting used to, for Quisenberr­y has long considered herself a student, although some of the toughest lessons have taken place far from a classroom.

Graduating from college at 35 wasn’t the original plan. On that Veterans Day in 1997, the 17- yearold already had decided to leave Decatur to attend college and study journalism. And then everything changed. Quisenberr­y and two volleyball teammates were driving back from delivering a gift to their coach. A change in the road’s pavement triggered an accident. The two others suffered abrasions, but although Quisenberr­y didn’t have a scratch, she physically could not unhook her seat belt.

She was paralyzed from the chest down.

Despite surgeries and complicati­ons, the honor roll student wasn’t going to give up on education. Tutors and teachers helped Quisenberr­y finish high school on time.

But the next few years were rough, admits mom Sarah, a former school psychologi­st who “stopped everything that night” to see to her daughter’s needs.

“Our family’s very good at rallying together,” says the younger Quisenberr­y, who also credits big time her mom’s loyal circle of friends.

Quisenberr­y’s love of learning continued despite not being able to figure out — initially — how to do college. She took acting classes and read voraciousl­y. Mom is a film buff and while movies were good entertainm­ent, they became more than that for Quisenberr­y. She started observing them from a critical standpoint, seeing them as a subject to write about and evaluate.

By 2005, mother ( now divorced) and daughter had moved to Chicago. There’d be access to good medical care, and mom thought finding employment that let her work from home was doable. ( She’s now a real estate broker.)

The move to an Edgewater high- rise “rejuvenate­d my spirit,” says Quisenberr­y, and college “just seemed possible.”

She began taking classes at City Colleges of Chicago, Truman primarily.

Quisenberr­y — who must have a personal assistant with her at all times — could attend school only part time, so what most complete in two years, she did in four. No matter. She kept going. She transferre­d to Loyola, eager to learn more about journalism. Again, being a quadripleg­ic meant Quisenberr­y had to do things a different way. Initially, anything she’d want to write had to be dictated to someone else. ( Now, Dragon speech recognitio­n software allows her to do her own dictation.)

John Slania, associate dean of Loyola’s School of Communicat­ion, has had Quisenberr­y in a couple classes and considers himself “a big fan of hers.” Despite the slow process Quisenberr­y must go through to write papers, Slania has been impressed by how well- written and clearly thought out they are.

Still, it hasn’t been easy. The van she’d used for years finally conked out for good, and now she must rely on costly accessible car service. ( Loyola has free shuttle bus service for students, but it’s not an option for Quisenberr­y.)

Her junior and senior “years” took five in actuality, but she continued, completing three internship­s and starting a blog that’s been her “refuge,” Esse ( https://purpleaq.com/).

Finally, on May 12, Quisenberr­y will graduate — magna cum laude — and while she won’t be a student anymore, Quisenberr­y looks forward to taking on a new title: writer. Oh, and one more thing: attending graduation.

“I’m going to be putting on a cap and gown for the first time in my life.”

 ?? | JORDAN LOUDEN MATTS ?? Amanda Quisenberr­y will graduate from Loyola University, magna cum laude, on May 12.
| JORDAN LOUDEN MATTS Amanda Quisenberr­y will graduate from Loyola University, magna cum laude, on May 12.
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