JFIFC    $ &%# #"(-90(*6+"#2D26;=@@@&0FKE>J9?@=C  =)#)==================================================" }!1AQa"q2#BR$3br %&'()*456789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyz w!1AQaq"2B #3Rbr $4%&'()*56789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyz ?NJy kE;ij²fQ)Dž?JQ׊VJWVsM#`␎T6qց)#PҀm¬U`QYFa@FMj94"N0zfI"7LL`EVRV|yv HT'*!`@SI31ҢTE$lt8RYO82{mm BH-ӽ(#@X𧥝 t?JGڱl#7W! A #+UTyyPTQdd&1m|*Eqv׊Ddw?ʥU8Ldڞ=*O6[G& c;MOCV Lh?ݱOGdd.e626j#*?v+Muܤ+/;O8~5Uu;g@'"E\\Ζi3hM5rx5gjY1Gessjp27oijPqT#}*!F5#01l&k `hAnΠH 1ںh8vi}.9ktR;%fgcPdkZ`ʰg,rֵ|#:ٳ&{6R8E5j\$#T(ge%9?m]qԛN  ڔSv*6{֧9WR[y4r.5XOo(b_C^˞=~"SAp[ٗA+*idl,P3X3dI~;})N)doJS:.xDcp)NzP8~բGq7¶O\5Z ,DzT-$0 P=F+HG&ʍlb3Iɭ R3v9#oLxS 1YC:vmq H$m)d;W=8FIK Tn.hx..FTu7AGZ܇WҒė=b.=htk,6sgYQr5SsW=w{%֫$R$XWF8jsB]2 VW2I kLۣmW\'kؒR$35ؤ`&҃J)sId\R1]NLϾ۱+NYR)qОU F2֥W-\q0H>#gvwE'abOjި;!"1Q_L:})ErOrN)dV ҘW֕u+l4URr5^zf=E8&y)8/+W:uMs ěE= תfJy$qְN5Gq#h谂V)tUps.8Gh /``+SiYUڽ-QŃB=YF.?:jȧi`,v3L`Ey%Jƿ^ORFN^4zm4ճ`fmxlsӨLK?)j/a5ꛊv5oJ/5'm,eWmހ֊ T[nCB ha4@3WRkdGp85Cz}iaI9#iZN&-.~qu0WzqqWROKjG1l_ +&rCo,miO#hi[&S<#1>5_Ic46$L#1qf1~?zOlz¤9LuҞ<0{xMInWh\QSE+ȂXU?)F7#> ;C)IR#t}vR[ۢ>MC`UO#8oS)bw܁cqȒA54S߻)Qӥ+MlɛT#@dI+R2)ꂘygúhwS+I wGLzk%"nT!ԍX o"Q Pwk55i(fc8'L[ݪE*|fydC,TLuMy3 qF(vkCx"VyE$Z.vSLW&ܬ9c4O2r;>_UmC TQiYΏl:kU'5Mk&{5fsrd ScФ')+don@ϩ=24HpW uyFA;IHSEr_jMҥ c=h@WqELP )zu?n{UNٞqJb\M":bGAi=j@Z]P"R?o 6FPLMڦ(1>b,֓s۵>zv|HqGҧ9q)6cvӭ!#BWE9LcH9JҚSҦ1қw.DTQRE\u=&ڤO*1KU>`֜ ri@9ҁHC*vCL^NyFNn. KS׽F.F)ǭ*E ӊiZmP) ӚE0Ddd`b`p(?tc0;i@ # ?re my mom works as a nurse. I was pretty groggy but I still remember all the care and attention I received there. Because my dad works in medical services and my mom too, I think I received special treatment, she says with a laugh.<br>Christi had fractured her L2 vertebra and dislocated her L3. Doctors were  cautiously optimistic that she would walk again. A week after doctors affixed a temporary rod-and-screw assembly to Christi s spine, she was moved to Our Lady of Lourdes Rehabilitation Hospital. Her gymnastics coach Joanne Thaw was at her bedside.<br> I knew if anyone was going to make it back from this, it would be Christi, says Joanne.  I don t train kids for the Olympics here. I train them for strength, for conditioning, for flexibility to compete. For Christi, I think some of those benefits she got here--the upper body strength, her competitiveness and her ability to focus--helped her to recover. <br>Her early rehab was stoked with an athlete s desire to push herself and was aided by her excellent physical conditioning and strength.<br> The rehab wasn t that much different from gymnastics, says Christi.  It s a win-or-lose situation. If you don t get first place in a gymnastics meet, you come back and you work harder. Every day in rehab, when I couldn t walk and then when I barely could, I reminded myself that I had to work a little harder. If I hadn t had that attitude, things might have turned out differently. <br>Christi broke her back in June, losing all feeling and function from the waist down. By July she was walking with braces and a walker.  I d regained some feeling, she says.  But I couldn t feel the difference between sharp and dull. My legs tingled and sometimes it felt like they d fallen asleep. It was strange to look at your legs and not feel them. <br>Progress was quick. In August she went back to school and reduced her rehab to only three times a week. In November she switched to a sports rehab center in Wichita, about 30 minutes from Hesston. There she began using more weights and was