Financial Entrepreneur Shawnique Cotton
Shawnique Cotton is pushing through health setbacks to make her first million dollars and help others with disabilities reach financial self-sufficiency. And she’s doing it in memory of her brother, Karsten.
Shawnique Cotton is pushing through health setbacks to make her first million dollars and help others with disabilities reach financial self-sufficiency. And she’s doing it in memory of her brother, Karsten.
With the 2020 Paralympic Games postponed and its future up in the air, threetime U.S. Paralympian Kerri Morgan finds herself at a crossroads. But not for the reason you might expect.
At NASA, Shannon Franks tackles some of our planet’s most difficult scientific questions. He brings that same approach to his personal life: confronting challenges head-on to find solutions.
Besieged by medical problems and a declining quality of life, Keith Smith couldn’t picture a positive future for himself. A fortuitous phone call and an epidural stimulator changed everything.
While the world grapples with the COVID-19 pandemic, Chanelle Wimbish, a T6 paraplegic from College Park, Maryland, works to help find a treatment for another devastating disease.
Brogan Joe Murphy was trained classically as a realist oil painter, but his art was put on hold after back surgery complications made him a paraplegic.
What do the Atlanta Chapter of United Spinal, Atlanta’s quad rugby team, the Spinal Cord Injury USA Facebook group and First-Source Catheters all have in common? They were all founded or co-founded by Clint Cook.
Tucker Cassidy has been interested in politics since the age of 5. In 2016, Cassidy, a C4-5 quadriplegic, rolled into the fray and became, in his words, “the tip of the spear.”
Paul Amadeus Lane is a brand ambassador, accessible gaming consultant, keynote speaker and TV and radio personality who, as a C6 quadriplegic, has climbed the ranks within the broadcasting industry to call his own shots.
Barb Zablotney’s friends call her the Rolling Rainbow because of her positive attitude and the bright colors that adorn her body and chair — but the nickname wouldn’t have worked a few years ago.