Rebounding, to race again

June 23, 2009|By Michael Vitez, Inquirer Staff Writer
Image 1 of 6
  • Matt Miller hugs Emily Privette after his recovery from a cycling crash. "It is not possible to exaggerate the importance of family and friends," he said.
  • Matt Miller hugs Emily Privette after his recovery from a cycling crash. "It is not possible to exaggerate the importance of family and friends," he said. (Tony Fitts)
  • Matt Miller gets a kiss from his girlfriend, Emily Privette, before riding his bike in a time trial. For protection, Matt wears a special helmet of the type worn by downhill mountain-bike racers, who often crash face-first. (Tony Fitts)
  • Matt Miller (center) surprised anesthesiologist Mark Harris and his wife, Mary Ann, by visiting them weeks after the doctor saved his life on the Blue Ridge Parkway. His jaw wired, Matt gave Mark Harris a hug and said, Thank you. (Tony Fitts)
  • Back in action: Matt Miller (wearing sunglasses) competing in a half-marathon in Charlottesville, Va. He finished eighth out of 400 men. (Tony Fitts)
  • Matt with swimming coach Mark Bernardino, who urged Matt back into the pool once the hole in his airway had healed. (Tony Fitts)
  • With every one of his teeth lost, broken, or damaged, Matt Miller faces years of dental work, including bone grafts, gum surgery, and implants. On June 10, he looked into a mirror at temporary dentures. (Tony Fitts)

Last of three parts.

Matt Miller was determined to resume his life where he'd left off - even completing his fall semester as a junior at the University of Virginia.

Matt left the hospital Nov. 26, sooner than anyone had expected, and a few days later scheduled a physics midterm for Dec. 8.

The 20-year-old from St. Davids, training for a triathlon, had broken every bone in his face and suffered brain injury on Nov. 2, when he lost control of his bike and smashed, face-first, into a car going 40 miles an hour.

Three days before the physics test, Matt had a follow-up appointment with J. Forrest Calland, the trauma surgeon in charge of his care at the University of Virginia Medical Center.

"By definition, there's no way Matt can have 100 percent of his mental capacity back," Calland told Matt and his father. "My gut's telling me this is not a good idea."

Matt still had a tracheostomy in his throat and his jaw was wired shut. He desperately wanted to argue his case but couldn't speak.

His father, Mike Miller, was vehemently against his taking the test. Matt was premed, with all A's in sciences. Why rush? Why risk a bad grade?

Matt took his Physics 201 midterm - 20 problems on harmonic motion, waves and sound, fluids, and thermodynamics.

The decision did not surprise his longtime girlfriend from Radnor High, Emily Privette.

"He seems to single-mindedly pursue his goals with the belief that he is in control of his own destiny. And, to achieve them, all that is required is that he always give his best," she said.

A few days later, his professor, Hung Q. Pham, sent this e-mail:

"Matt, your midterm grade is 19/20. Congratulations."

Three students out of 184 in the class had scored higher.

"For him to do that well after the accident . . . blew my mind," Pham said.

"Surviving brain injury, getting out of the hospital rapidly, that's one thing," said Calland, hearing the score. "But actually learning physics while recovering from brain injury, this part dumbfounds me."

 

A thank-you visit

On Saturday, Dec. 13, Mike Miller wanted to visit the man who had saved his son on the Blue Ridge Parkway.

Matt had been training for a triathlon, on an 85-mile ride, at the time of the accident.

A passing motorist just happened to be Mark Harris, an anesthesiologist who'd graduated from Temple University Medical School and knew how to get Matt breathing again.

Mike Miller had called to thank him. Now he wanted to do so in person.

"I'm in," said Matt's mother.

"I want to go," wrote Matt.

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