This article originally appeared in the Motlow State Community College News
Motlow Employee Participates in MS Event with More Purpose than Others
LYNCHBURG — November 8, 2011
Stephen Ray’s first day of work as a watchkeeper for Motlow College was in the fall of 2007. It happened to be the day of the ‘MS Ride to Jack and Back’ event. Ray said, “Before that day I had never heard of the bicycling event and I really did not know what ‘MS’ was.” He added, “Actually I was a little nervous about so many visitors on campus while I was supposed to be learning my new job.” Two years later he would realize the irony of his first day and he would learn firsthand about MS (multiple sclerosis).
The next fall he and his fiancée, Rose, were planning their wedding. Stephen, who normally weighed in the 180 pound range, had been an athlete all of his life. Growing up in Manchester, he played football and baseball and had always managed to stay in shape. He began noticing his muscle tone was fading and he was losing weight. Feeling very tired, he attributed his physical changes to stress. He and Rose continued with their wedding plans. By the time they married in January of 2009, Stephen’s weight had fallen to 119 pounds. He knew something was wrong.
After the wedding he was determined to figure out what was happening to his body and started going to different doctors. In July of that year a doctor in Murfreesboro gave Stephen the shocking diagnosis of multiple sclerosis. He was told the progression of the disease is different for all patients. Stephen soon found himself walking with the aid of a cane and was told he was wheelchair bound.
After numerous doctor visits, a debilitating prognosis and an array of medications, Stephen decided he could not take this diagnosis sitting down. He began to fight back. He made extreme adjustments to his diet and exercise and began a training regimen that involved bicycling; a huge undertaking for someone that had to walk with a cane. He strapped his cane to the bike and in the beginning didn’t have the energy and muscle tone to make it up and down his driveway.
Every day he tried to go a little further. He built up to half the distance of a football field, then the whole field. Eventually he was measuring his progress in miles. Stephen’s hard work and determination were beginning to pay off and his body was obviously getting stronger. He began speaking at MS Society functions and started entering cycling events.
Today, even though his doctor says he is in remission from the disease, he lives with the pain. Because of damage to his nervous system, he measures at least a four (on a scale of ten) daily on the pain scale. Stephen’s training involves stretching, yoga and cycling and he is working with three different coaches.
Stephen participates in a cycling event about once a month. He explained, “There are other cyclists, diagnosed with MS, who ride in specific heats with special bikes. The MS Society says I am only the fifth person to ride on [a regular] bike, the full length of a race.”
He said with a smile, “I recently participated in the ‘2011 MS Ride to Jack and Back’ and for me, it was like coming full circle. It was here on the Motlow campus that I first heard of the event and with everything that has happened since then, I was thrilled to finish third out of the 1,000 riders.”
Stephen summed up his determination to fight MS, “No one knows what the future has in store for us. I train five hours a day, try to keep a smile on my face and as long as I can ride, I’m going to ride.”
Visit the website
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For more information, contact:
Public Information Coordinator, Bonnie Lewis, 931-393-1675, bhlewis@mscc.edu
Motlow State Community College • Dept. 140 • P.O. Box 8500 • Lynchburg, TN 37352
Stephen, you give alot of us inspiration to get up, go outside, and get on the bike. Thank you for your fight, your honesty, and your friendship. I have forwarded this article to most of my email list, and told them proudly…I get ride bikes with this guy!
Stephen I thank you for telling your story and allowing us into your private struggle. You are a vibrant reminder that the human spirit is our most powerful asset. You might be one of the younger members but I look up to you for an example of someone who will never quit. Keep hammering those pedals!
It is you guys that make me fight! Knowing that I have not only riding friends but real life friends to lean on is the greatest thing. The “pain clinic” always pushes me and coaches me in not only my cycling but in my life as well. It really does mean alot to have them see something in me and to help me with my journey. Alot of you have helped me in my journey and growth has a cyclist and for that I say thank you. As one of the youngest faces of the H.R. Cycle Club I am greatly honored to be the future of H.R. Cycling. Thank you all.