By Michael N. Graff
The
Fayetteville Observer
Copyright 2007 /
Reprinted with permission
Many people forget the
traumatic parts. They freeze and file memories of a car accident
forever.
For whatever reason, Brandi
Underwood remembers everything.
She still sees the oncoming
Z71 Chevy pickup clipping the shoulder on the right side of the
road, the driver whipping the steering wheel back left in panic,
turning his hood into the driver's side tire of her Grand
Am.
She remembers looking down at
her mangled legs, crushed underneath the metal. She remembers her
friend saying help was coming, and the 45 miserable minutes it took
that help to extract her.
She remembers medics
straightening her legs, her bones scattered like a Lego project
gone bad.
And the pain, oh the pain.
She remembers every unexplainable shot.
It wasn't until afterward
that she started forgetting.
She forgot how to extend her
legs.
She forgot how to
walk.
She forgot how to bend
over.
She forgot how to swing a
golf club.
And so started over the life
of this young woman, who has been defined by the things she's
remembered and the things she's forgotten, the physical abilities
she's learned and the physical abilities she'll never
know.
Two-and-a-half years later,
Brandi will be among 38 players at today's U.S. Women's Open
sectional qualifying tournament at Keith Hills Country Club No. 1
in Buies Creek.
For the first time since
before the accident, she has to play 36 holes in one
day.
"I've worked too much to
quit," the 26-year-old Hope Mills native and Campbell University
graduate said. "I will crawl in if I have to."
To understand how crushing it
was for Brandi to have everything ripped from her, we need to go
back.
No, not to the days
immediately prior to the accident, when she earned her Futures Tour
card and could fire a 67 in competitive play.
Go back even further, before
college and high school, before she even grabbed her first club,
back to when she was an infant.
At 13 months old, Brandi
bolted in front of a moving car in her neighborhood. The bumper hit
her forehead. The back of her head hit the concrete, causing nerve
damage.
She hasn't been able to hear
out of her right ear since. She has about 75 percent hearing
capability in her left ear.
She grew up that way, a
hearing-impaired person in classrooms full of kids who didn't
understand.
But Brandi never thought she
was different. She'd never known full hearing. So, she figures,
it's not like she lost anything.
Her parents, Stephanie and
Robert Underwood, made sure she stayed active.
Sports helped her gain
acceptance.
Brandi played basketball at
Fayetteville Academy in high school. But she was at her best on the
golf course.
In college, she helped
Campbell to three NCAA regional tournament appearances.
She earned her Futures Tour
card shortly after graduation, in early November 2004. Two weeks
later, on Nov. 21, she forgot everything.
The turkey was already cooked
for supper. The pumpkin pie was in the oven.
The Underwoods were going to
have their Thanksgiving meal early that year, the Sunday before the
holiday.
Brandi, working at the Legacy
Golf Links in Aberdeen, left early because it was a slow
day.
She turned left onto U.S.
15/501 and headed south. Less than a mile down the road, she saw
the truck. She saw the impact. She saw her legs.
Her thoughts skipped around
during the time it took the medics to pull her from the
wreck.
Will I be able to play golf
again?
Wait, will I be able to walk
again?
What will be my
limitations?
Get me out of this
car!
How are my
parents?
One of Brandi's friends was
driving in front of her. He called her parents.
Stephanie turned off the oven
and grabbed Robert. They were about halfway to the accident scene
when a state highway patrol officer called to tell them they needed
to reroute to Chapel Hill.
"That was when I was really
concerned it was a life-and-death situation," Stephanie Underwood
said. "You have no idea how helpless I felt."
When the Underwoods arrived,
doctors explained Brandi's injuries to them. The explanation took
nearly a half-hour.
Her left foot was broken in
14 places. Her left femur, the longest, strongest bone in the body,
snapped in half. Her right knee was shattered. Her left knee was
broken in two places.
But, there were no internal
injuries.
Doctors put a rod in Brandi's
leg to help her femur heal. They didn't remove it until last
December, more than two years after the accident.
So what's harder: growing up
a kid who's never known full hearing or having to relearn
everything that always came natural?
For Brandi, it's a
gimme.
"I already knew what it was
like to shoot a 67," she says. "But I've never known what it was
like to hear out of my right ear. So coming back from an accident
like that is worse than an accident when I was younger."
Rehabilitation started
slowly, but immediately.
While in the hospital for 17
days, she tried to extend her legs to rebuild her quadriceps
muscles.
She came home and used a
walker for three months. Then crutches.
Off crutches, it took her an
hour to walk 20 feet.
Pool work and home exercises
helped her regain her stride.
Then she tried the golf
course. Her first round, she lasted six holes and went home
exhausted.
She played from the ladies
tees, but not well. She scored in the mid-80s. She drove the ball
only about 215 yards, well below her average of 250, because she
couldn't shift her weight to her left leg properly.
"I wanted to quit, but I just
told myself, every day I'm not fighting, somebody else is," she
said. "I may have a weakness, but I want to be just as competitive
as they are."
In February 2006, she played
her first full 18.
She went to local qualifying
for the U.S. Women's Open that spring and missed the
mark.
Still healing, she's played
in various states' professional golf association tournaments this
year, including the Connecticut Women's Open.
She is working on becoming a
Class A certified instructor.
Then, a few weeks ago in
Florida, she cut the most important notch in her comeback. At the
U.S. Open local qualifier, she shot a 78 to qualify. Not just any
78. A 42 on her first nine and a 36 on her back nine.
"I didn't quit," she
said.
"Even to get there (to the
sectionals) under normal conditions is amazing," said George
Veasey, Brandi's doctor. "But after her injuries, it's
unbelievable."
Today may be her toughest
test. The last time she walked 36 holes, she was playing for
Campbell. That was three years ago.
"If people only knew what
this child has been through in three years," Stephanie Underwood
said. "She will achieve her goal of becoming a professional (LPGA)
golfer. I know it. She's paid her dues."
Brandi believes she can shoot
even-par or better today, which might be good enough to qualify for
the Women's Open, which will be held later this month at Pine
Needles Lodge & Golf Club. Five people are automatic
qualifiers. The four next-best scores will be
alternates.
Qualify or not, she'll keep
working and playing.
After all, she says,
relearning this game has been her way of suppressing moments she'd
rather not remember.
"I love the feeling of a
tournament, going out there and playing well," Brandi said. "You
kind of forget about what happened. ... Playing golf gave me a
reason to get better."
Staff writer Michael N. Graff
can be reached at graffm@fayobserver.com or
486-3591.