Transitioning from a Canadian biker riding more than twenty thousand miles a season to an American amputee was not exactly on my vision board. Not even close.
In 2010, I sat behind a motorcycle handlebar for the first time. The moment the engine started vibrating beneath me, something shifted. The road was suddenly not just pavement. It was possibility. The horizon was no longer a place you looked at. It was a place you chased. I knew the risks. Riding is expensive. Maintenance never stops. Trips take time, planning, and a willingness to disappear for days. But the freedom that comes with it makes all of that irrelevant. Riding was not a hobby for me. It was not something I did on weekends. It was who I was.
By 2014, the road had already become a permanent part of my identity. During a solo trip that summer, my ride ended abruptly when a driver rear ended me. Instead of watching the sunset from the saddle, I ended up in a hospital bed. My left shoulder had to be rebuilt. Beginning of January 2015, surgeons removed three bones from my right wrist. Bike number one was declared a total loss. For most people, that kind of accident would have been enough to slow down or even stop completely. For me, it was simply another chapter in a story that was not finished yet. I could not imagine a life without riding, and I was not ready to give it up.
Later in 2015, while I was riding across the Virginia-Tennessee border into the United States of America, during another trip, somewhere along that stretch of road, I remember feeling something very clear. It was not a loud realization or a dramatic moment. It was quieter than that. I looked around at the hills and the openness of the landscape and I knew it, I felt it: One day I will live here. At the time, it felt like a distant idea, more of a feeling than a plan. Soon after, it turned into something real.
In 2016, I met Felix. By 2018, after Felix proposed, we had hired a lawyer and started the immigration process. In July 2019, I officially moved to the USA. We got married soon after and settled in Tennessee where we bought the house where we still live today.
And then August 2020 happened, a distracted driver hit us, and just like that, the plan was gone.
In one second, the life I knew changed direction completely. The injuries were severe, and the damage to my leg could not be repaired. I became a left below the knee amputee. The first months were filled with surgeries, recovery, and learning how to exist in a body that suddenly felt unfamiliar. A skin graft was needed to help the healing process. When I finally began standing and walking a little with a prosthetic, the pain remained constant. Eventually my doctors reached a difficult conclusion. The trauma was more severe than they thought and my limb couldn’t heal properly so a second amputation was necessary.
This time it would be through the knee.
Another operation. Another skin graft. Another moment where the future had to be rewritten.
Accepting that I had to lose everything in order to gain something else was brutal. Like unreal to me. And when I say everything, I do not mean objects or possessions. I mean the pieces of identity that had defined me for years. Freedom. Independence. And bike number two.
That motorcycle was never just metal and rubber. It’s a replica of my first one I crashed in 2014. Riding had always felt as natural to me as walking or breathing. It was the way I explored the east side of the USA and some places in Canada. One trip alone explains it perfectly. Felix and I rode from Montreal to New Orleans in ten days, covering almost 5,000 miles along the way. And that distance included three full days where we stopped riding just to visit friends and explore the cities we passed through. That was our life. Movement. Curiosity. Adventure.
Then suddenly, something as natural as walking became the biggest challenge of my life.
Grieving the version of me that existed before the accident was not graceful or inspirational. It was messy. I was angry. I was sad. I was confused. Some days, frustration climbed higher than the tallest building roof and kept going. I missed the wind hitting my face. I missed the deep “roar” of my pipes. I even missed something as simple as walking and talking at the same time. Since I am able to walk again, my focus has to stay on every single step. Felix jokes that I cannot walk and chew bubble gum at the same time. I laugh when he says it because it is actually true.
But somewhere in the middle of all that frustration, something else began to grow.
I discovered a level of inner strength that I did not know existed. Confidence had to be rebuilt from the ground up. Victories that would have seemed small before suddenly felt enormous. Standing longer than the day before. Climbing stairs one step at a time. Falling and getting back up without panic. Each one of those moments became proof that progress was still possible.
I also discovered something unexpected. I love talking about my entire story. Not just the accident, but the journey that followed. The fall and the rise. The way life forces you to move forward even when the road looks completely different than the one you planned.
For me, sharing the story means helping someone else feel less alone. Advice that comes from scars carries a different weight than advice that comes from theory. Everything I talk about comes from experience, not from a textbook. And sometimes that experience includes appreciating a simple shower bench like it is a luxury spa experience. When life changes suddenly, even small upgrades feel like victories.
Adapting was hard. Accepting took time. And I still have some moments where I wish things had unfolded differently. But faith carried me then and it continues to carry me now. Not the kind of faith that promises everything will go back to the way it was, but the kind that keeps you moving when you cannot see very far ahead. The kind that slowly brings you back to yourself. Today I wake up and I feel whole again, even if my body is not the same as it used to be.
At first, the accident felt like pure darkness but with time and distance, I see it differently. Over time, I began to see it less as an ending and more as a reset. A difficult reminder that life had more waiting for me than simply chasing the next motorcycle ride. A lesson that freedom is not limited to two wheels. And proof that identity can survive even when circumstances change dramatically.
Today I still travel. I still explore. I still chase sunsets. The vehicle might be different, but the spirit behind the journey has not changed.
What comes next is still unfolding. I have projects, ideas, and dreams waiting their turn like puzzle pieces on a table. One by one they are falling into place because the part of me that loves movement and adventure never disappeared.
I lost half a leg, but I did not lose my fire. I lost two motorcycles, but I did not lose who I am. The road simply changed shape. And now I move forward the same way I learned to walk again, one steady step at a time.