Kelowna man wants people to help him learn to walk again after recent amputation - Action News
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British Columbia

Kelowna man wants people to help him learn to walk again after recent amputation

Kelowna man Ralph Zaiser is inviting people to come walk with him this Saturday as he learns how again after his right leg was amputated below the knee.

Ralph Zaiser lost his right leg below the knee in December 2018 due to complications from blood clots

Ralph Zaiser is gaining his mobility back with a prosthetic leg and sometimes crutches after doctors amputated his right leg below the knee. (Brady Strachan / CBC)

Ralph Zaiserfirst noticed something wasn't right with his leg last year, when it becamered and inflamed and it hurt to walk.

The 50-year-old from Kelowna, B.C., went to see doctors and learned he had several blood clots in arteries and veins in his upper and lower right leg.

Initial surgery to remove the clots and restore circulation was unsuccessful, according to Zaiser and four days laterhe underwent surgery that amputated his leg below the knee.

"You're shattered," he said."You have so many emotions that go through your mind, like, 'why me?,' denial and utter disbelief."

Ralph Zaiser is learning how to be mobile on his new prosthetic leg and is now able to run errands around the city and cut his front lawn. (Brady Strachan/CBC)

After two months of healing, Zaiser started to use a series of prosthetics, along with crutches.

He spent afternoons at the local shopping centrewalking and resting as he learned to use a prosthetic leg and that's when the idea hit him.

"Why don't I get a bunch of people to join me in this walk?" he said.

On Saturday, Zaiser plans to walk for an hour around the corridors of the Orchard Park Shopping Centre and is inviting the community to join him.

"Iwant to create some awareness, and [a]good way to do that might be to create a spectacle of some sort, because if you do that, all of a sudden people will be like, 'What is this all about?' and maybe they will start asking some questions."

Zaiser chose a date in April to coincide with Limb Loss Awareness month and started sharing his story through videos posted to social media about being a recent amputee and the challenges and triumphs he's experienced as he learns to accept his disability and work towardgreater mobility.

That experience has been very rewarding, and eye-opening, he said.

"There are so many disabled people in this town that I've started taking note ofand before I was a lot like everybody else and didn't notice these people."

He is inviting both physically disabled people and the able-bodied to join him in his awareness walk.

A positive attitude and a support network

Steve Ziehr, president of theAmputee Coalition of B.C. Society applauded Zaiser's effortseeking out people to help him on his journey back to mobility.

Mostamputees go through a grieving process when they lose a limb, Ziehr said, adding it can be a difficult road for them toreach acceptance.

"The more positivity you have and the more people you have around you to help,it sounds trite but it's so true, the easier it's going to be on you," Ziehr said.

Zaiser is asking anyone interested in participating to meet him at the shopping centrefood court thisSaturday at 10 a.m.