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	<title>The Auroran</title>
	<link>https://www.newspapers-online.com/auroran</link>
	<description></description>
	<pubDate>Wed Apr 8 12:29:21 2026 / +0000  GMT</pubDate>
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			<title>Unstoppable Tracy proves “anything is possible”</title>
			<link>http://www.newspapers-online.com/auroran/?p=23337</link>
			<pubDate>Wed Apr 8 12:29:21 2026 / +0000  GMT</pubDate>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.newspapers-online.com/auroran/?p=23337</guid>
			<content-encoded><![CDATA[<img width="600" height="397" src="https://www.newspapers-online.com/auroran/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/2019-03-21-02.jpg"/>
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<p><strong>By Brock Weir</strong></p>
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<p>Whether it's tying
your shoe, rising through the ranks to become a World Cup sailor, or climbing
the Himalayas, Tracy Schmitt has dedicated her life to proving anything is
possible. </p>
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<p>The Canadian woman
who was born a four-way amputee has shared her inspiring message alongside the
likes of Jane Fonda and shared her story with Oprah, but Ms. Schmitt got up
close and personal with some of Aurora's youngest residents, speaking before
kids at the Aurora Children's Centre over March Break on Thursday.</p>
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<p>“I was lucky enough
to be born a four-way amputee,” Ms. Schmitt shared with The Auroran ahead of
meeting the kids. “Every time people say, ‘Oh, I don't think you can do that,'
I learned to shut that down. I thought, ‘I can eat with a spoon. Of course, I
can go play on the lawn with those kids.' Everyone was saying, ‘I don't think
you can do that,' or, ‘I'm not sure, it might be hard,' or, ‘You have no hands,
how are you going to use scissors?' I learned that because I was born with no
hands or legs that I had to not listen to those things.</p>
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<p>“If I wanted to do
it, I had to make it happen because everyone around me was going to be loving
and careful and want to set me up for success by avoiding failure, but that
doesn't work because you have to fail to figure it out. A success is just
someone who didn't let failure stop them, someone who just tried one more time.
I was just lucky to be born limb-itless. It gave me an advantage – it gave me a
leg up!”</p>
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<p>Indeed it has – from
the earliest age, Ms. Schmitt has been dedicated to proving the naysayers
wrong. Standing at the head of the gym on her prosthetic legs, she said she
wanted to have some special time with the kids before she began her talk,
conscious, she said, that some kids might be initially afraid of what they saw.</p>
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<p>There didn't
however, seem to be any trepidation in the dozens of young eyes that “the
Unstoppable Tracy” kept transfixed as she told them of taking her first strides
as a young student, defying the expectations of her principal, and going from
strength to strength.</p>
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<p>In some ways, these
early experiences set something of a tone.</p>
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<p>Born with a love for
the sea, Tracy did everything she could to be in the water.</p>
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<p>In addition to
mastering scuba diving and learning how to waterski on a knee board, she had a
particular love of sailing. </p>
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<p>“When I started, I
was always falling out of the boat, but I just kept getting back in,” said Ms.
Schmitt, who was born with legs that stop just above the knee and arms that end
just below the elbow. “It never entered my mind not to be sailing. I knew how
to sail, I just didn't know how to stay in the boat! Once I learned how to
balance, the rest is history.”</p>
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<p>That might be something
of an understatement, as this history is quite a storied one.</p>
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<p>Harbouring a Paralympic dream,
Tracy decided to load up the car and head to Miami. Her goal was to meet
Olympic Gold Medallist <em>Magnus</em>&nbsp;Liljedahl and learn from the master on the
road to the Paralympic Trials. </p>
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<p>At first, Magnus didn't know
what to do with her as, one, sailing was a very male-dominated sport and,
second, she was a four-way amputee. </p>
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<p>“I figure who you surround
yourself with is who you become, so I wanted to surround myself with Gold
Medal-winning able-bodied Olympians and really fantastic sailors,” she said.
“Many of my competitors in the Paralympic world have disabilities, but they
were sailors in the able-bodied world first. Very few of them were born this
way like I am, so I thought if I am going to beat them I have to surround
myself with what's an even further stretch.”</p>
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<p>It was a tough road, however. To
prove to Magnus that she wasn't just a “flash in the pan” she did a lot of the
grunt work associated with the sport, including cleaning the boats, to prove
that she wouldn't be disillusioned.</p>
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<p>“After three months of sleeping
in my car, eventually something came up on the dock and I was ‘Tracy to the
Rescue' and Magnus could finally see I could sail. Because of Magnus' distinction, we ended up touching every single boat in the
Olympics and the Paralympics in London 2012, and Rio 2016. I supported him in
my administrative support in getting Paralympic Sports Club status. We became
Paralympic Sports Club status Team Paradise. We supported all sailors with or
without disabilities for the Olympics and the Paralympics. It wasn't my known journey;
I went out there because I wanted to represent Canada and, instead, I ended up
supporting Magnus and all sailors growing into this Paralympic Sports Club that
was international, and we supported Olympic sailors too. I didn't make it to
the Paralympics. I did make it to London's and Rio's trials and I made it to
World Cup regattas where I sailed against 27 able-bodied men and only three
girls, and I was the only one with no hands and no legs. It was a great
journey, but my journey was bigger. It wasn't ‘Unstoppable Tracy', it was
‘Unstoppable You.'</p>
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<p>“I went down to be
with Magnus and everything blew up massive. I just wanted to be a sailor, but
what I didn't realise is the impact it has on others. It is not inspiration, it
is more than inspiration because it is life-changing, actionable. People
listen, they hear it, they go away and sail the race of their life, but a child
thinks, ‘I can do this! I can tie a shoelace! I can be a ballerina even if I am
super-tall. I can be a basketball player even if I am tiny. It doesn't matter
if I am black or white. It doesn't matter if I am lesbian, gay, bi, trans,
queer, it doesn't matter if I have a disability or not, it doesn't matter if I
am a female in a male-dominated sport.”</p>
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<p>The message is simple: Nobody left behind.</p>
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			<excerpt-encoded><![CDATA[Whether it’s tying your shoe, rising through the ranks to become a World Cup sailor, or climbing the Himalayas, Tracy Schmitt has dedicated her life to proving anything is possible. ]]></excerpt-encoded>
			<wp-post_id>23337</wp-post_id>
			<wp-post_date>2019-03-21 18:38:35</wp-post_date>
			<wp-post_date_gmt>2019-03-21 22:38:35</wp-post_date_gmt>
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