Karen Daly (revisited)
June 1999: As a kid in suburban New Jersey, Karen
Daly loved roller skating, jump rope and hopscotch. Her childhood ended
abruptly at age eight, when "growing pains" in her right leg turned out
to be bone cancer. Three years later the leg was amputated. "I have no
memories of that time," says Daly, who plans to walk (on crutches) from
Eugene to Hoboken this summer, to sit on the stoop of the brownstone
she lived in, and consider the missing years. "I'll walk four to six
hours each day," she says. "Then I'll open myself to generous people
who will pick me up." An artificial leg got Daly through her teens and
into a nursing career, but after 19 years she left the leg behind and
started dancing. She discovered Contact Improvisation and moved to
Eugene five years ago, after attending Alito Alessi's DanceAbility
workshop here. She has since danced on stages around the world. "Karen
found that her loss was her gift," says fellow dancer David Koteen.
2018 update: "I didn't end up walking very much,"
says Daly, who completed her cross-country journey mostly by bus, "but
it was a pivotal experience." On her return, she entered a 12-step
program for a 30-year addiction to bulimia; eating and throwing up. "I
needed to come out of hiding," she says, "and own up to what was inside
of me." She took writing classes, and over the course of ten years
wrote a memoir, Joy Ride: My One-Legged Journey to Self-Acceptance,
published in 2017 and available on Amazon. "I focused on the incredible
influence that dance has had," she says. "I'm going to semi-retire from
nursing in December and become a dance gypsy!" Daly will perform with
DanceAbility in the Oregon Bach Festival at the Hult Center in July of
2019.
happening people
photograph and story by Paul Neevel
Eugene Weekly / 21 November 2018
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