“Cameron, oh my gosh,” she said, “we really need to shoot.”
At the end of their first session, he told her he understood if she didn’t have the time to coach him.
“She goes, ‘Oh no, Cameron, you’re mine,’” Peyton said. “She’s a mama bear, and I feel like I’m one of Lia’s cubs. She’s been there for me in times when no one else would.”
Once, Peyton’s truck wouldn’t start during a brutal cold snap. Driving 45 minutes to help, she took Peyton to a hardware store and then drove another 30 to drop him off before heading home.
Coryell relates to those feeling deserted and abandoned, surrounded by people yet entirely on their own. At competitions, she scans the field for unfamiliar faces, and at a meet in Arizona in 2019, she saw Emma Rose Ravish.
It was Ravish’s first national meet, and Coryell spotted her sitting by herself.
What Ravish needed, at a competition in Arizona in 2019, was companionship. Heading over, Coryell started asking questions: Who are you? How are you? What got you interested?
“You know, I never thought obstacles would stand in my way — I was raised to overcome these things,” Ravish said. “But it was just a whole different world. Lia’s like, ‘You’re not the only one and you never have to feel alone.’ She could have said, ‘There are others like you,’ but she didn’t. She said, ‘You’re never alone,’ and that hit me so hard.”
Ravish has since hunted opportunities to reciprocate, and one came in March, at a competition in Mexico. Coryell noticed a girl who, like Ravish, has no legs, tracking Ravish’s every move. Catching her eye during the medal ceremony, Coryell summoned an interpreter and introduced her to Ravish. The girl told Ravish she had never met anyone with the same birth challenges. She said Ravish was her hero.