From spinal surgery to half marathon

After recovering from spinal surgery, Dunedin runner Bradley Stringer plans to run in this...
After recovering from spinal surgery, Dunedin runner Bradley Stringer plans to run in this weekend’s Queenstown Marathon. PHOTO: GERARD O’BRIEN
Looking back, Bradley Stringer reckons he may have been a little too ambitious when he deadlifted 120kg at the gym.

It left the young athlete with a serious back injury, years of pain, and the inability to do any major exercise.

"It was in 2014 — I was only 16 and about 60kg. I was pretty into the training back then, but I had poor technique at the time.

"Over the following years, I had quite a few injuries in the same area.

"I ended up at the physio in a lot of pain, but the treatment wasn’t helping.

"They kept saying to me that it was just a back sprain."

It was not until 2018 that his back was finally X-rayed and he was found to have a fractured vertebra and prolapsed disc.

Once properly diagnosed, he had surgery in 2019 to fuse some of his vertebrae.

"There was never any question about whether I would walk again.

"They just said there was only an 85% chance that the operation would work, and if it didn’t work, I would still have all the pain and the tingling in my legs."

Fortunately, the operation was a success and since then, he has been undergoing physiotherapy to get him moving and walking again.

He said the walking soon turned into running, and he was feeling "99% back to normal".

Now the 26-year-old is about to run the half marathon at the New Zealand Sotheby's International Realty Queenstown Marathon this weekend.

"I feel pretty lucky — a lot of other people with this injury still have a lot of ongoing problems.

"I never really thought I would be able to get back to this level of activity."

While some may say he was being overly ambitious again, trying to run a half marathon, Mr Stringer said he had no plans to win it — just run it.

He hoped his participation in the marathon would help to inspire others to give it a go and strive to push themselves harder.

"My journey has been a very physical and mentally challenging time, but it has helped me realise that no matter what, I need to keep my head up, keep on fighting and keep on smiling.

"I do hope someone else can benefit from what I’m doing in one way or another."

john.lewis@odt.co.nz

 

 

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