The rhythmic thumping of the bass vibrated entirely through the gymnasium floor, sending a steady, physical hum straight up into the wheels of my chair. It was senior prom night, an evening that every high schooler builds up in their mind as an unforgettable milestone. I had arrived with absolutely zero expectations, fully anticipating that I would merely be an invisible face in a sea of flashing cameras and elegant evening gowns. I had been confined to a wheelchair since the age of ten, which was the exact year my entire world shattered into pieces. My parents and I were involved in a catastrophic, head on car crash on a dark, isolated road. I don’t remember much from that defining nightmare, just brief flashes of blinding headlights, the screeching crunch of metal, and later waking up in a sterile hospital bed with my grandmother tightly holding my hands. My parents didn’t survive.
From that tragic moment onward, it was just Grandma Ruth and me. She raised me with a fierce, unwavering love and absolutely refused to treat me as if I were a fragile, broken glass doll despite my complete inability to walk. Because of her strength, I consciously chose never to drown in self-pity or complain about the severe hand life had dealt me. When senior year arrived, I decided I wanted to attend prom, not because I expected a magical movie moment, but simply because I didn’t want to spend the night sitting at home, wondering what it would have felt like to be there. Grandma Ruth took me dress shopping, proudly pushing me through the crowded boutique aisles as if it were a high-stakes mission, insisting I find a navy dress that made me feel completely like myself.