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Kit was born into an Army family
at Ft Carson, Colorado March 26, 1970. He spent his early years
traveling with his family as they moved throughout the USA and
the Middle East. The Callahan’s moved to Burke, VA in 1983
where Kit's Dad, Rick, retired from the U.S. Army. They stayed in the
area until 2008 when Rick retired from his job with Battelle
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. His Mom, Kim, was an
active volunteer with Brain Injury Services and the Northern
Virginia Brain Injury Association following Kit’s Traumatic
Brain Injury in 1993 . Kit has an older sister, Laura Elkin,
brother-in-law Clyde Elkin, two nephews, Connor and Mason Elkin,
a niece, Addison Elkin, and a younger brother, Sean.
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Kit enjoyed each place he lived. But, by the time
he was 13 and in 8th grade he was ready to stay put. He joined the
local youth soccer league in Burke where he made some of his life
long friends. He began 8th grade at J.W. Robinson Secondary School
in Fairfax, Virginia in the fall of 1983, and graduated in 1988. He
then went on to Virginia Tech where he joined Kappa Sigma
fraternity. His degree from VT was in Finance and he was ready to
take on the world.
After living at home for a year while he
considered his options, he moved to Chicago to join some of his VT
friends who were working on the Chicago Commodities Exchange. Kit
joined them at Refco and started working as a "runner" on the
Chicago Mercantile Exchange in August 1993. On October 23, 1993, the
nightmare began, when he was found unresponsive behind a building
not far from his apartment. No one knows what happened, but the
doctors said he received a blow to the back of the head, which
resulted in a brain stem injury. We almost lost him, but defying
terrible odds, and the doctor's dire prediction; he gradually
emerged from his coma.
The journey back from near death to where he is
today took tremendous courage and fortitude. He was in the hospital
in Chicago for 4 months before he could be air evacuated closer to
his family in Virginia. The staff at National Rehabilitation
Hospital in Washington, DC had many reservations about taking on
such a low-level patient, but they did. While there, Kit learned to
think and talk again, sit up and stand, and had begun to take a few
steps with the help of leg braces and a walker by the time he was
moved again in August 1994. The next stop for Kit was Learning
Services in Manassas, Virginia. There his therapy continued, but not
on such an intense level as it was at NRH. He did some volunteer
data entry work for the Manassas Sheriffs Department before he came
home in March 1995.
The next challenge was to find something
meaningful for Kit to do that would take into account his background
and his acquired physical and cognitive disabilities. He struggled
with some volunteer jobs, again doing data entry while his therapies
continued on an outpatient basis. Eventually, through a friend, he
found an internship with Dean Witter Reynolds, which brought him
back into the world of finance. He found that in order to work in
the competitive environment of the finance world, he needed more
background and structure to his day. This time he went down to
Woodrow Wilson Rehabilitation Center in Fishersville, Virginia. He
was there for 18 long months where he pushed himself to finish
quickly and get to come home again and look for "a real job". From
Woodrow Wilson, the next stop was Winchester, Virginia where he
lived in a group home with others with disabilities. He worked at
Northwestern Workshop and spent his free time trying to find another
job which was more challenging. Finally, after a year on his own in
Winchester, in May 1999 he interviewed for a position with Logicon
Information Systems here in Fairfax County. A fraternity brother,
from Kappa Sigma knew of the position and after talking to Kit and
his family, submitted Kit's resume. Kit moved back home, and began
working as a clerk in the Accounting department. He held various
jobs after that, and learned that the consequences of his brain
injury kept him from moving up and realizing the dreams and goals
he had prior to his injury.
Since the last Miracle Mile, things have
continued to get better for Kit. He and his Case Manager at BIS
worked hard to apply for an accessible apartment and Kit was one of
the first to move in to Coppermine Place in Herndon. He loved his
new home, and with his new "bike" had the freedom to get himself to
the local gym and shopping center. Once he knew that his Dad was
going to retire again, and his parents’ dream of moving to Colorado
started to become a reality, he and his Case Manager from BIS spent
the next 6 months researching the Fort Collins area looking for
supports for Kit out there. They were very successful! In
September 2008 – just 2 years after moving into Coppermine Place,
Kit moved into another independent living apartment building in Fort
Collins, CO. He and his family are finding the brain injury
community out there and are working to keep Kit active and involved
in his new community. Brain Injury Services taught his family how
to be case managers and search for the right supports for Kit and
for them in their new community. Brain Injury Services has been and
will always be the support we all needed to move forward after Kit’s
traumatic injury. We are all grateful! Then in January
2010, Kit moved into another accessible apartment in Ft. Collins
with a 24/7/365 day staff that is wonderful! He really loves
being on his own so to speak but still very much enjoys seeing his
family each week and weekend.
The long road back from his initial injury has
taught us all not to take our good health for granted. It has also
shown us how powerful the desire to recover is and what tremendous
courage it takes. Every day is still a challenge, but Kit wakes up
every day saying that "it's another great day to be alive!"
Please join us for the Seventh Annual Kit
Callahan's Miracle Mile on Sunday, September 26, 2010. We all
look forward to seeing you there!
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