Florida youth football player with a broken neck.
DJ Myers has shown incredible perseverance in the wake of suffering a catastrophic injury on the football field in 2017 that rendered him wheelchair-dependent and paralyzed. Currently, he is a well-known local musician who uses his songs to inspire and uplift others. DJ comes with his mother Rhonda, which is evidence of his unwavering willpower.
DJ Myers is a local musician who overcame a significant adolescent struggle. In 2017, he suffered a severe injury on a football pitch.
Despite being confined to a wheelchair and left crippled, Myers has persevered over the years.
He is now on a quest to inspire people through music.
“I recall that I was motionless on the ground, unable to move even an inch.”
my body, I hardly had words. I normally get harmed, so they kept asking me to get up, but I just keep getting back up,” Myers remarked.
He didn’t, though, that one time. The 22-year-old’s life completely changed six years ago.
Myers remarked, “I kept saying I can’t move, I can’t move.”
Groveland native, 16, had been a football player in multiple Pop Warner divisions since he was 7 years old.
It was during his junior year of high school that he truly began to excel in athletics.
He began participating in football camps, where he was a defensive and offensive whiz.
Myers was playing as a free safety during his most recent camp when a teammate collided with him, resulting in a hit to the head’s side.
Myers remained still on the football field as a result.
“I don’t feel nothing from here all the way down I couldn’t feel nothing couldn’t move nothing felt like my body was just shutting down,” Myers stated.
“He said, ‘You need to come here, DJ, because there was an accident.’ I thought, ‘Well, what’s the problem, a broken leg? Rhonda Dhaiti, Myers’ mother, remarked, “Cramps?
After being flown to Orlando Regional Medical Center by helicopter, Myers had a ten-hour surgical procedure.
“When they first showed me the x-ray of his neck and told me it was completely broken, I fainted for two seconds and went blank, and then it was like mom mode kicked in,” Dhaiti recalled.
The football the star ended up in a wheelchair, paralyzed from the waist down.
“I was miserable and thought I was unworthy. Meaningless,” Myers murmured.
He chose to channel his suffering into ardor.
“I want to express myself without resorting to sobbing, screaming, or melancholy. Through my songs, I convey myself,” Myers remarked.
With perseverance, love, and a pen and paper, Myers now creates music that is streamed on multiple platforms. He also does performances in Orlando’s neighborhood nightclubs.
Morgan Parrish of FOX 35 questioned Myers about the message he wants listeners to get from his music.
“I want them to comprehend.” I don’t rap about my life like all the other rappers around. I have some music. Wheelchair, I have an entire album heartbreak and it’s all my suffering from all I’ve seen, experienced, and heard in all of my songs,” Myers remarked.
He refuses to let his wounds define who he is. “I thank God for everything he brought me through that because if didn’t get through that I don’t know where I’d be today.”