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The Engine of the Heart: How I Found My Power on the Pitch

The Engine of the Heart: How I Found My Power on the Pitch

Growing up, the word “no” was the loudest sound in my life. Because I was born with one arm, the world seemed determined to wrap me in bubble wrap. People—well-meaning as they were—spent more time listing my limitations than asking about my dreams.

“Baseball is too difficult for your balance,” they said. “Contact sports are a risk you shouldn’t take.” For a long time, I let those voices build a fence around my potential. I looked in the mirror and saw a missing piece instead of a whole person. But then, I found the soccer pitch, and the fence came crashing down.

The Realization of Power

The first time I kicked a ball, I realized something profound: the grass didn’t care about my arms. The net didn’t ask how I balanced. In soccer, my legs were my tools, my lungs were my endurance, and my heart was the engine that drove it all.

On the field, the “disability” people saw in the classroom vanished. I wasn’t the “one-armed kid”; I was the midfielder with the lightning-fast footwork and the vision to see a play three steps ahead of the defense.

“I realized my legs were my power and my heart was my engine. Today, I am a decorated player, proving that ‘disabled’ is just a word, not a destiny.”


Redefining the Term “Disabled”

We often treat the word “disabled” as a synonym for “unable.” But my journey has taught me that everyone has a different set of mechanics. Resilience is simply the act of finding the mechanics that work for you.

  • The Shift in Focus: Stop looking at what is absent and start mastering what is present.

  • The Mental Game: Realizing that the biggest obstacle isn’t a physical limb—it’s the internal belief that you are less than.

  • The Victory: Every goal scored is a message to every kid sitting on the sidelines: the world is yours to play in.


From the Sidelines to the Podium

Becoming a decorated player didn’t happen overnight. It took thousands of hours of falling and getting back up, of learning how to use my body’s unique center of gravity to out-maneuver opponents.

What They Said What I Did
“You’ll have no balance.” Mastered core strength and agility.
“It’s too risky.” Became one of the most aggressive players on the field.
“You can’t compete.” Earned MVP honors and led my team to the championships.

Your Destiny is Not a Diagnosis

If you’ve been told that your “limitations” define your future, I’m here to tell you they are lying. Your destiny isn’t written in a medical chart or decided by the whispers of skeptics. It is written in the dirt of the pitch, the sweat of the gym, and the refusal to let a label hold you back.

I am a soccer player. I am a teammate. I am a champion. And I just happen to have one arm.


🏆 True strength isn’t about being perfect; it’s about being relentless. Brandon’s story is a powerful reminder that our only real limits are the ones we accept.