Patient Stories

When we are challenged to the depths of our soul, we sometimes discover something within us that gives us the courage to prevail. Each of the Rancho “graduates” profiled in this series is distinguished by a spirit of hope that could not be defeated merely by the adversity of a disabling condition.

The remarkable individuals profiled here are but a few examples of the miracles that occur at Rancho every day. We stand in awe of their accomplishments as the spirit of their hope burns brightly and inspires us all.





Ana Wilson - Discovering Confidence to Achieve Her Dream

At Rancho Los Amigos National Rehabilitation Center, Ana Wilson found the tools she needed to overcome the ravages of cerebral palsy. And eventually she not only found hope at Rancho — she found love and the fulfillment of her dream of having children.

Ana was born with cerebral palsy, a brain disorder that makes motion increasingly difficult. Ana’s Rancho treatment team spent years providing therapy and support to help her achieve the maximum amount of independence possible. Occupational therapists taught Ana to cook and do daily chores, to move around with a walker and a three-wheel scooter despite her physical limitations. This gave her the all-important confidence to know that she could achieve the important things in her life, such as having children.

Wanting to give something back to the institution that had done so much for her, Ana decided to volunteer at Rancho, in so doing finding more than fulfillment out of volunteer service. Ana found love.

When she met James Wilson, a Rancho laundry employee, there were no immediate sparks, but gradually something grew between them. “I fell in love with his blue-green eyes and his giving and caring attitude,“ she said. A year after they met, they were married. Ana had been well-prepared by Rancho for new roles in life, and soon her dream of having children became a reality. She is now the mother of two beautiful children, Adriana and Anthony. 

Ana returns to Rancho for regular checkups. Each time, she pauses for just a moment to say a special thank you to the place that helped her find love, and gave her the confidence she needed to make her dreams come true.

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Greg Thompson - After Tragedy, Life Begins Anew at Rancho

When Greg Thompson lost the use of his legs in a freak boating accident on the Colorado River, he thought his life was over. Actually, his new life was about to begin. “I was sent to Rancho after my accident, because it was the best place to learn how to make a new life,” said Greg, who has experienced the achievements of Rancho from virtually every possible angle.

He spent four months at Rancho as an inpatient. Since then he has had success first as an athlete, then as a working professional, and now as a husband and father. “When you suffer a major injury, there is an ongoing struggle to maintain your confidence in your ability to live everyday life,” he observed. “The people of Rancho understand not only the physical, but the emotional rehabilitation that is necessary for individuals with disabling conditions or chronic illnesses to make the most of their lives.”

After he accepted that he would never walk again, Greg set out to prove he could be a champion athlete. He soon became one of the world’s elite wheelchair athletes, winning four national tennis titles and competing on several Rancho teams.

He helped develop the Rancho wheelchair sports program and spinal injury games, then decided to build a career based on helping individuals with disabilities and joined the Rancho recreation therapy team. His desire to learn eventually led to his current career as a supervising social worker at Rancho, earning respect as a leader and role model for all staff. Greg also found love at Rancho, marrying fellow Rancho therapist Lilli. Their family is now the center of their lives.

It takes dedication to get up every day, get the kids off to school and come to work,” he said. “But Rancho has taught me that sometimes the things we take for granted are really the sweetest things in life.”

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Jim Knaub - Rancho Los Amigos Inspires the Will to Win

He dreamed of becoming a world-class athlete, but those hopes appeared shattered along with his spinal cord when Jim Knaub was smashed by a car while waiting for a street light to change. He knew he would never walk again, but he didn’t know whether he had what it took to still become a champion. 

Jim was brought to Rancho Los Amigos National Rehabilitation Center, where he underwent the complex spinal surgery and rehabilitation that restored his hope. Achieving his dream wasn’t easy. Jim’s rehabilitation team created a comprehensive program that enabled him to maneuver a wheelchair in record time. Regaining more strength and determination each day, Jim’s Rancho team continued to challenge him to be his best.

In six short weeks, Jim Knaub built his own bridge to independence at Rancho, pushing hard to achieve his vision of being a champion wheelchair racer. He worked tirelessly to build the upper body strength and the will to win essential to achieving that vision. And he demonstrated the fortitude of a champion as he began his racing career, learning with every race, until suddenly he was the man to beat.

Jim didn’t stop working until he was the undisputed world wheelchair road-racing champion, winning an amazing 21 championships. Jim was at the pinnacle. He next began designing and selling wheelchairs and launched his own wheelchair manufacturing company. As a wheelchair expert and an elite wheelchair athlete, he has traveled throughout the world. 

Although he has come a long way on the road of life, he remembers how Rancho helped him build the bridge to independence that turned his life from tragedy into triumph.

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Jim Hankla - Rancho Los Amigos Enables Him to Walk the Walk

When five-year-old Kentucky boy Jim Hankla was diagnosed with polio, his parents decided to fight instead of accepting the local wisdom that their son would forever lose his ability to walk.

Extensive research led them to the premier facility in polio rehabilitation —Rancho Los Amigos in Downey. Thus the Hankla family pulled up stakes and moved to California to help their son recover. 

After he arrived at Rancho, Jim was eventually placed in the care of a treatment team headed by Jacquelin Perry, MD, who was developing a series of innovative techniques for the management of polio. “Rancho’s aggressive treatment enabled me to go through life without crutches,” says Jim, explaining what to him was indeed a miracle.

Jim’s experience at Rancho instilled in him an attitude of self-determination which was destined to assist him in reaching his dream of becoming a civic leader. He earned a masters degree in public administration, and worked his way through numerous leadership positions to become the City Manager of Long Beach.

Today he is CEO for the Alameda Corridor Transportation Authority, a massive street and rail project which will someday connect Southern California’s ports to downtown Los Angeles.

Recently, Jim began experiencing fatigue, and returned to Rancho’s renowned Post-Polio Center, which was established by Dr. Perry, and has been working with therapists to control his symptoms.

“Life isn’t about the rough spots — you have to find a way to work through those,” Jim says. “You’ve got to think about the positive. Lots of people didn’t walk away from this disease, but I did because I was lucky enough to come to Rancho.”

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Manuel Andrade - He Saves Himself with the Help of Rancho Team

Manuel Andrade took the final step of his life into a South-Central Los Angeles fast food restaurant. At that moment, four bullets from an unseen attacker slammed into his body, one lodging in his spinal cord, rendering his legs useless for the rest of his life.

It would have been easy to give up on himself. But Manuel is not a quitter. His Rancho Los Amigos treatment team harnessed his positive attitude and prepared him for Rancho’s world-renowned wheelchair sports program. Now the top-rated wheelchair hockey goalie in the world, Manny is making the saves for Rancho. “When I discovered I could never walk again, I chose to stay positive,” Manny said.

Manny is one of many Rancho athletes who have improved dramatically as a result of the wheelchair sports program. Funded by Las Floristas, the program includes competitive basketball, football, tennis, baseball, soccer and hockey. Manny is a star in them all. “He is incredibly strong, and is a leader for our teams,” said Rancho Sports Director Lisa Hilborn. “He is always positive and never lets anything stop him from doing his best.”

That positive attitude and his amazing strength have been key as Manny has helped propel Rancho to the top of the world wheelchair sports ratings. He is also an outstanding role model for his teammates, both on and off the athletic field. In addition to his excellence in sports, he is currently enrolled in college, working toward a career in computer-aided drafting.

“None of these good things would have happened without Rancho,” Manny says. “I get emotional and physical strength, but most of all, I feel like I’m part of a wonderful family.”

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Ann Ruth - Flying High with Endless Courage and Rancho

As a toddler, Ann Ruth was a fireball, performing the most difficult athletic feats with the greatest of ease. But when she was only five, her life would change forever. Executing a somersault on a balance beam, she slipped and landed on her neck, suffering a spinal cord injury that left her paralyzed from the neck down.

Annie was brought to Rancho Los Amigos where a team of highly specialized physicians and therapists worked together to teach her to live as independent and full a life as possible.

Annie learned a special technique that allows her to breathe during the day without a ventilator. After spinal fusion surgery at Rancho, she was able to operate an electric wheelchair with her chin, and learned to use a computer with a custom-designed mouth-stick, an invaluable tool developed at Rancho and now being used across the nation. 

A torch bearer during the 1984 Olympics, today Annie is a computer consultant, and award-winning artist. She holds a bachelor’s degree in communications from USC and recently completed her master’s in business administration at Pepperdine University. 

If you ask Annie, she’d say none of this would have been possible without the caring guidance of Rancho’s staff. “They didn’t bring out the violin. They helped me realize my injury didn’t have to get in the way of my life.”

For three decades, Rancho staff have been a second family to Annie. Over all those years, her courage has inspired hundreds of other individuals with disabilities to get on with their lives. 

Today, Annie’s irrepressible spirit sends her off regularly on thrill-seeking adventures such as parasailing, hang-gliding and skydiving. And why not? Because for Annie, the sky’s the limit! 

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Irma Resendez - Rancho Inspired Her to Walk; Now She Inspires Others

Irma Resendez awoke 10 years ago to her biggest nightmare — she was paralyzed from the waist down. After several days in a hospital, she was diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis and told she would never walk again.

When she came to Rancho, her life changed forever. Her treatment team, headed by David Saperia, MD, believed they could teach Irma to walk again. And after four months of hard work, she did. Today, she is still working hard, spending much of her time helping fellow Hispanic scope with the challenges of Multiple Sclerosis.

As she joined support groups to deal with the challenges of her illness, Irma soon realized that they were all conducted in English, leaving Spanish-speaking MS patients with nowhere to turn for support.

Thus, Irma founded Familia Unida, a bilingual support group serving MS patients throughout the nation. “I realized it was my calling to help others, so I started as a volunteer at Rancho’s Multiple Sclerosis Clinic,” she said. “Dr. Saperia and my other friends at Rancho encouraged me to begin Familia Unida, and even provided space and support for our new group.”

Each month, more than 50 individuals with MS attend meetings designed to provide critical information about MS to the Spanish-speaking population. The program has been so successful that Irma is now helping to establish chapters of Familia Unida across the country.

“I have always believed that one person could make a difference,” Irma said. “But Rancho inspired me to be that person.”

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Jan Berry - Rancho Leads Him Back From “Dead Man’s Curve”

His song warns: “You don’t come back from “Dead Man’s Curve.” But Jan Berry, half of the legendary rock group Jan & Dean, did just that!

The duo’s hits included “Surf City U.S.A.,” “The Little Old Lady from Pasadena” and “Dead Man’s Curve”. They and the Beach Boys defined the west coast surfer sound of the 1960s.

Jan’s career was moving fast — too fast. While driving his Corvette Stingray through Beverly Hills at more than90 m.p.h., he rounded “Dead Man’s Curve,” slammed into a parked gardener’s truck, destroyed his car, and nearly destroyed himself. 

He lay in a deep coma for more than a month, his medical team not knowing whether he would survive the traumatic brain injury he sustained in that horrific accident. Emerging from the coma, Jan still suffered from memory loss and aphasia, a condition which prevented his body from understanding commands from his brain.

Arriving at Rancho in 1969, his right side was paralyzed and he could barely speak. But he had a dream — to get back onstage. Robert Waters, MD, the head of Jan’s treatment team and today Rancho’s Chief Medical Officer, recalls that Jan had an enormous mountain to climb. “He had to re-learn how to do everything, including such everyday activities as speaking, let alone reading and remembering music,” Dr. Waters said.

But Jan never gave up, and his Rancho team never gave up on him. And after years of hard work, Jan began singing again. Now, almost miraculously, Jan & Dean are touring again to sold-out concert halls. 

“Rancho kept me focused on reaching my dream,” he said. “Without Rancho and Dr. Waters, I never could have done it.”

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Alex Beanum - Getting Back on Track at Rancho Los Amigos

He was the electronic Master of the Highways, the man who headed the Caltrans traffic management division in Los Angeles and Ventura Counties. But that didn’t prepare Alex Beanum for what he would face when his car went out of control on the winding tramway road in Palm Springs. When the smoke cleared, Alex was paralyzed, never to walk again.

Transferred to Rancho to begin his rehabilitation, Alex spent the next six months learning how to make the most of his new life. “They taught me how to embark on a whole new lifestyle,” Alex said. “I am a very fortunate man to have gone through a life-threatening experience that could have ruined my business and political careers.”

Alex learned first-hand what it means to “build bridges to independence” at Rancho Los Amigos. “Thanks to Rancho, I was able to resume my business endeavors, continue my term as vice mayor of the City of Cerritos and raise a very beautiful family with my wife Victoria.”

The word “integrity” has always defined Alex Beanum. After his personal experience with a catastrophic accident, Alex fought for a better life for others, using his public visibility as a platform.

In addition to becoming mayor of the City of Cerritos and serving another four-year term on the Cerritos City Council, Alex has worked tirelessly as an advocate for the rights of individuals with disabilities. 

Today Alex is retired from Caltrans, but is still working to help others. He is a distinguished member of Los Angeles County’s Commission on Disabilities, and also serves as a Charter Member of Rancho’s Community Advisory Council.

“I’m excited about serving individuals with disabilities,” he said. “Although we have accomplished a lot, there is still much to do, and I believe much of that work will happen at Rancho.”

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Bobbi Jean Tanberg - Shooting for the Paralympic Games in Sydney

Bobbi Jean Tanberg came to Rancho as a therapist with a disability. But although she had completed her physical rehabilitation, her adjustment to disability had not yet occurred.

“Rancho helped me understand why my experiences in society would be different just because I was using a wheelchair,” she said. “I had just as much and maybe even more to offer sitting down as I did standing up, and yet society was making me feel the opposite.”

Bobbi began working with Greg Thompson, then a Rancho recreation therapist. “He exposed me to the world of wheelchair sports, which I saw at the time as a way to increase my fitness level, have fun and meet some people,” Bobbi said.

As she gained experience and confidence in the Rancho rehabilitation sports program, Bobbi realized she could express herself through athletics. “My dream was to become good enough in basketball to make the USA Women’s Wheelchair Basketball team,” Bobbi remembered. “It was an outrageous goal, but why not try?”

Greg was very supportive, helping me see that by my actions of pursuing my dreams and doing the things I want to do, it makes me the same as others who do not have disabling conditions. And my example would help others understand that we are more the same than we are different.”

Now, several years later, Bobbi’s hard work and determination have paid off. She has not only become a member of the USA Women’s Wheelchair Basketball team, but is expected to be the starting forward on the team that will travel to the Paralympic Games in Sydney, Australia in October 2000.

“Greg and Rancho gave me the hope to make my dream come true,” she said. “Now I am trying to provide the same insight to clients I work with so that they can also realize the power of their dreams.”

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Steve Clay - Artist Overcomes His Brush with Stroke

His art wasn’t just his job, it was his world. Steve Clay’s paintings hung in the Smithsonian Institute, the Pentagon and even the Baseball Hall of Fame. So when he suffered a stroke, the core of his world crumbled. “I went through so many stages of depression, I had no idea where my life was going to lead,” Steve said.

He was in a wheelchair, his right side paralyzed, when he arrived at Rancho Los Amigos in 1995. He had lost feeling in his painting hand and arm as well as his right leg. Rancho team physical, occupational and recreation therapists worked with Steve hour after hour, helping him build the bridge to his dream of painting again.

“In the beginning, I was so frustrated that I would storm out of sessions,” he remembers. “But my vision to paint again and Rancho’s persistent therapists brought me back each time to try again. “Even in the depths of depression, there was a part of my soul that would not let go of being an artist,” he said. One Sunday, he got the first glimpse of his future possibilities as he was able to draw an image with his left hand.

“I still have the gift the Lord gave me,” he thought. As his therapy progressed, Steve was able to leave the wheelchair behind, and slowly regained the use of his right arm. He gradually began to use both hands to capture images on canvas, using his left hand for broad strokes and his right hand for detail work. Steve’s post-stroke paintings are featured at galleries throughout America, as well as at Rancho’s annual Very Special Art Exhibition, which showcases the creative work of Rancho graduates.

“I know I’m very fortunate to have a second chance in life,” he said. “I’m thankful to Rancho forgiving me back my dream.”

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Yuri Espino - Creating Futures at Rancho Los Amigos

Yuri Espino was not yet four years old when she was hit by a car traveling 60 miles per hour. Sixteen days later, she awoke from a coma to a world that was very different. She had suffered a traumatic brain injury, and doctors told her parents she would be lucky to survive.

Yuri was sent to Rancho Los Amigos to begin the therapy that would determine her future. Her parents hoped that one day she would return to school, but it seemed impossible when they looked at their frail little girl.

With Yuri’s treatment team tapping into her courage, the power of her dreams and the unwavering love of her family, she began to make slow but steady progress. Her treatment team literally took her through “baby steps” until she gradually gained the ability to walk with a walker, and to speak. 

Today, Yuri attends a special education center with other children, which was considered all but impossible before she came to Rancho. At Rancho, we know love and hope play important roles in the remarkable achievements of our patients. 

This photo of Yuri and her parents shows more than words ever could how the power of their love helped turn Yuri’s tragedy into a future filled with possibilities.

Rancho continues to be the clinical and emotional support system for Yuri and her family. Rancho’s treatment team will remain alongside Yuri as she envisions her own dreams, and makes them a reality.

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Jacquelin Perry, M.D. - Enriching Rancho’s Tradition of Excellence

As we enter the 21st Century, Rancho Los Amigos National Rehabilitation Center celebrates its unmatched heritage of medical rehabilitation excellence and looks to the future for even greater accomplishments. This blending of leadership and hope is symbolized by the images of Jacquelin Perry, MD, and the millennium baby.

Although many individuals have contributed to Rancho’s rich tradition, Jacquelin Perry, MD holds a special place in the history of Rancho and rehabilitation medicine.

During more than 45 years at Rancho, Dr. Perry has been the driving force behind many of the most daring and innovative discoveries in rehabilitation and human performance assessment. Her early work with respiratory polio patients requiring surgery led to previously unconsidered procedures to straighten spines and thereby improve breathing function — allowing hundreds to lead more productive lives.

Dr. Perry founded the first laboratory to quantitatively assess human performance. She also pioneered the assessment of human gait — a field in which she has led Rancho to world leadership.

Dr. Perry has also been drawn back into the field of polio as polio survivors are experiencing post-polio symptoms. She has instituted research and new clinical programs to provide answers. And as always, she is leading and inspiring a new generation of colleagues. In the spirit of Dr. Perry, Rancho is taking its initial bold step into the new century, the planned Institute for Wellness and Fitness.

This will be the world’s premier facility of its kind for individuals with disabilities, building upon the tradition of courage, creativity and leadership that helped Dr. Perry and other great leaders make Rancho the world’s rehabilitation Mecca. We thank Dr. Perry for her many contributions and rededicate ourselves to building on the power of her dreams.

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Page last updated March 3, 2006
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