Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.

Calgary grandson, grandfather share incredible connection over artificial limbs

WATCH: For some families, overcoming adversity and loss together can bring them closer. That's certainly the case for a Calgary family who have forged an unbreakable bond. As Jill Croteau reports, a grandfather and his grandson have a connection that can only be explained as fate. – Jul 3, 2023

Calgarian Xander Ricketts is a 10-year-old wonder who lives with a condition that required him to wear a prosthetic from the day he was born.

Story continues below advertisement

“I have lots of friends and they like my prosthetic a lot. They don’t think it’s weird,” Ricketts said.

Xander and his mom, Ashley Warren. Courtesy: Ashley Warren

His mother, Ashley Warren, was always ready to help him embrace his difference.

“He was born with a condition called proximal femoral focal deficiency,” explained Warren. “His right femur is 50 per cent shorter.

Xander Ricketts. Jill Croteau/Global News

“We were told he will never live a normal life.”

Story continues below advertisement

But he persevered and overcame so much.

“He’s going to ride a bike, but differently. He’s going to run, but differently. He’s going to play sports, but differently,” Warren said.

The daily email you need for Calgary's top news stories.

“Sometimes I wish I didn’t have it, but lots of times I wish I did have it,” said Ricketts.

He embraced his prosthetic even more because of an incident that happened, not to him but to a beloved family member, when he was about two-and-a-half years old. His grandfather, Don Armstrong of Calgary, was hurt in a workplace accident.

Don Armstrong. Jill Croteau/Global News

“I was working the night shift. I stepped down you couldn’t see there was a piece of broken pallet wedged,” said Armstrong of his ordeal. “I stepped on and I rolled off that and my face and head were heading for the dock plate system so I did the $6 million dollar man move and everything snapped in my ankle.”

Story continues below advertisement

His leg was so damaged that, despite multiple surgeries, it couldn’t be saved and it needed to be amputated.

Don before one of his surgeries. Courtesy: Ashley Warren

“In order for me to have a stable life, that’s what I had to do,” Armstrong said. “It’s a change, but we just keep fighting forward.”

It brought grandfather and grandson even closer together. The pair now both have prosthetics and are mirror images of one another.

Story continues below advertisement
Xander and his Don out for a walk together. Jill Croteau/Global News

“If he didn’t have that I would kind of feel alone in the family. But since he does have it I don’t feel alone,” Ricketts said.

“He can come to me at any time, we bond well together,” Armstrong said.

Warren is very moved by the relationship between them.

The two love to play Hot Wheels together. Jill Croteau/Global Calgary

“He is grandpa’s boy. They are inseparable,” Warren said. “It was already made in the stars, it was meant to be.”

Story continues below advertisement

“When he saw grandpa’s leg for the first time, he understood grandpa is the same as me,” Warren said.

The grandfather and grandson have plans in place to camp together this summer.

Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article