Giving up Nothing
keeps
Jorge Acevedo did not die.
His tragic story has become well-known to Glendale residents. Nine years ago, on the evening of Christmas Day, 1999 unknown gunmen attempted to carjack Acevedo’s new Lincoln Town Car as he drove to his home in the Mt. Washington area of Los Angeles. He was shot three times: twice in his left leg and, critically, in the head at the base of his spine. He drove a few blocks more, lost consciousness and crashed into a parked car. He was in a coma for more than a month, but Jorge Acevedo did not die. For him, giving up was not an option. The crime remains unsolved. Acevedo spent two years working his way back through intense physical therapy and
is not an option —
Jorge Acevedo down
cognitive rehabilitation and he can now stand, walk with a walker and speak with some impairment. Even in his darkest hours he didn’t anticipate such outcomes. But he looks at it stoically “I believe we are put here for a reason,” says Acevedo. “I’m still the same person that I was before I was shot, just much stronger.” Acevedo, now 43, is just getting started. He uses a wheelchair to get around faster; he’s a busy man and he doesn’t let anything slow him down – not disabilities and certainly not self-pity. “Why complain?” he asks rhetorically. “There are others who have it worse. You still have to go on regardless of the situation.” Acevedo’s talent is to recognize a lack or a need and come up with a solution. He is a
— by Jane Pojawa
Jorge Acevedo was shot three times and left to die after a Christmas carjacking. A strong work ethic and a sense of purpose have taken him from strength to strength.
Photo by Jessica Bourse
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Spring 2009 | the insider
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