HERSHEY, Pa. — Bill Hoffman careens down the run, the solitary blade of his sit-ski spraying a cloud of ice crystals as he and John Williams bank toward the chairlift for another go.
All around Bill and Williams, an instructor with Two Top Mountains Adaptive Sports Foundation, man-made powder cascades in troughs down the slopes of Whitetail Ski Resort in Mercersburg. It’s fodder for an epic snapshot, the kind his wife Beverly is capturing with her iPhone at the base of the mountain each time Bill speeds past.
A few years ago, such a picture would have been impossible. Now, instead of facing obstacles big as mountains, Bill is sliding down them.
The couple has made the one and a half hours trek from Lebanon to Whitetail for Adaptive Ski Day. The annual event is a partnership of the resort, Two Top, Penn State Health Rehabilitation Hospital, Penn State Health Milton S. Hershey Medical Center’s Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation and Ability Ottobock.care. People who wouldn’t ordinarily have a shot at skiing in the classic sense ― standing on two planks and slipping downhill on purpose ― get their chance on Adaptive Ski Day.
Bill is making his runs without using his legs. He lost the use of them 11 years ago in a landscaping accident, and they’re propped on a footrest in front of him.
His reason is the same lure that coaxes him and Beverly into riding bicycles through Central Park in New York City, teaching Bill to drive again and ― his favorite ― putting on scuba gear and slipping underwater. If there’s a hobby, a sport or an electronic gadget that strikes his fancy, Bill tries it.
“He decided he wasn’t going to say no to anything anymore,” Beverly said.
An accident robbed Bill of his farm, his job and any feeling or movement from the chest down. But trying new things, whether it’s events like Adaptive Ski Day or the technology assistance he provides his Penn State Health support group, has helped Bill find something bigger.
A purpose.
‘A life-altering injury’
Beverly joins a throng of Penn State Health therapists and recreational specialists cheering on the skiers. The previous day, the Hoffmans traveled more than 400 miles in the opposite direction to make another attempt at sit-skiing at a resort in Plantsville, Connecticut. There, Bill took a spill attempting to get on the chairlift.
“I got a picture,” Beverly said with a snicker. Her sardonic humor helps them both through rough patches.
They met in college.
“He was the guy with a toolbox who could fix anything,” she said. She’d been in the National Guard and recruited him. Eventually, he took a job as a civilian military consultant and spent time in Iraq and Afghanistan.
On April 13, 2013, he was cutting down a tree on their farm in Lebanon County when a falling limb took the ladder out from under him. He landed on his back, blacked out and has no memory of the hours before and after the fall. Emergency paramedics flew him to Milton S. Hershey Medical Center, where he would spend weeks before heading off for a months-long stint at a rehabilitation hospital in Philadelphia.
“They told us pretty early on it was going to be a life-altering injury,” Beverly said. “But you don’t understand what that means until down the road.”
Bill couldn’t return to work. Eventually, the family gave up their farm. And then three years later, Bill was diagnosed with kidney cancer. He slipped into depression.
Night and day
Fast-forward to Feb. 1, 2024. Bill is zipping down a slope, a team of Penn State Health employees are joining his wife in shouting his name, and a grin is plastered on his wind-pinkened face. Bill is mastering the sit-ski, a device that looks a little like a divan balanced on a single blade. Some sit-skis offer mono-skis or balance on a pair of runners to change the center of gravity.