Another monumental shift came when she started running in college. After looking into getting a running blade—a prosthesis designed to provide the energy return and alignment necessary for running—she was denied coverage and discovered that it would cost up to $20,000 out of pocket. As a result, Nicole was forced to run on a walking prosthesis, which led to sacral torsion, intense back and hip pain, sores on her stump, and weekly physical therapy sessions. As her frustrations grew, Nicole started asking, “What is it really that makes me disabled? Is it the fact that I am missing my foot, or is it the fact that these discriminatory policies keep me from living an active life?” She ultimately found that digging into the systemic injustices and understanding exterior constraints helped her reframe her mindset: “[I] realized that this whole time it was never me. It was something much bigger than that.”
As she continued to run and live an active life, her confidence and passion for advocacy continued to grow. “Four years ago when we did our 1,500 mile trek down the coast, that was something to me that was incredibly confidence building, and allowed me to finally come out of my shell as a person with a disability because ultimately, and for a long time, up until that point, I really was ashamed of my disability and tried to keep it hidden from others. So yeah, it took a decade and a half really to finally process all the emotions that came with the amputation,” Nicole shares.
The 1,500 mile trek Nicole is referring to is an ultra-triathlon called Forrest Stump. She started it as an awareness campaign to shed light on the low standard of care for amputees nationwide. After nearly two decades of Nicole being denied coverage for a running prosthesis, she put her standard prosthesis on the line to see if it could survive the 1,500 mile journey. Insurance expects a standard prosthesis to last five years, manufacturers expect them to last three, and in under one year, Nicole had worn her prosthesis down to an almost unusable level.
When she received a running blade only after doing a 1,500 mile triathlon, she made it her mission to build a network of support and fight for the rights of amputees. “No one should ever have to go to this length to get access to something so basic and fundamental to our way of life.”
Working with ROMP
The Range of Motion Project (ROMP) is a nonprofit, for-impact healthcare organization dedicated to providing prosthetic care to those without access in the US, Ecuador, and Guatemala. In 2018, Nicole first joined ROMP with a team of 14 amputees to climb the 19,347ft volcano, Cotopaxi, to campaign for disability rights. For Nicole, reaching the summit was life changing. When she had the chance to go to a ROMP clinic and witness their work first-hand, she knew she needed to help power their mission. Nicole now serves as a ROMP ambassador where she volunteers, fundraises, and helps to share ROMP’s message globally in an effort to get amputees the access and care that they deserve.
When asked why this was such an important fight for her to be a part of, Nicole explains,“I one hundred percent believe that physical activity is a basic human right…I mean, it’s fundamental to everything that we do to be healthy, to be able to move around, to be able to be independent, to have the freedom to do what we want to in life.” That basic right to independence is ultimately what propelled Nicole to start raising others up along with her.