Posted on:
By Wes Nakama
Advertiser Staff Writer
No obstacles
get in his way

Ian
Woodward turns 18 today, and will lead Maryknoll in a
volleyball match against Kamehameha.
Gregory
Yamamoto - The Honolulu Advertiser
Today is
But to get
through today, just like every day for the past 11 years, Woodward will have to
prick his finger after every meal or snack and use a meter to check his blood
sugar level, then he'll inject himself with the proper
amount of insulin.
And to get through
his schoolwork, just as he has every day for the past 10 years, Woodward will
need to use his finger to closely track the words and numbers on the page and
read everything at least twice before understanding it fully.
At a modest
5 feet, 9 inches tall, Woodward is Maryknoll's top
outside hitter and one of the best players in the Interscholastic League of
Honolulu. But he's also dyslexic and diabetic.
Perhaps that
is why a sprained ankle this season was not as big an obstacle for Woodward as
it might have been for others.
"He's
shown he doesn't need to be hampered by things," Spartans coach
Gier said Woodward's example has been an inspiration for his team, which
already faces challenges such as Maryknoll's small
enrollment and lack of a gym. To practice, the Spartans either
use sand courts at the beach, borrow gym space at Palama
Settlement and
Still, Maryknoll made history last week by defeating perennial
powerhouse Punahou 15-7, 15-11, 15-8 for its first
ever victory over the Buff and Blue. The Spartans now are fighting for one of
the ILH's two state tournament berths.
"This
year's team has much better chemistry," said Woodward. "No one
fights, and everybody knows their role and gets along."
Woodward
especially understands his personal situation, having been diagnosed with
diabetes at age 4 and classified as dyslexic in the third grade.
When he was
4, Woodward experienced constant stomach pain and was found to be diabetic,
which means his pancreas does not produce enough insulin. Since then, he has
needed three or four injections every day and has been doing all the injections
himself since he was 7.
"My
parents wanted me to learn to do it myself, so I wouldn't have to rely on them
when I was out with my friends," Woodward said.
Without the
injections, if his blood sugar level gets too low, he will start shaking and
break into a cold sweat. Woodward said it rarely happens, but he must carry
packets of sugar and small cans of apple juice around wherever he goes just in
case.
"Playing
sports helps, because it keeps my blood level running around the same," said
Woodward, who also played soccer, baseball and football as a youth in Mililani
and plans to try out for basketball next month.
His father,
Russell, said sports has benefited more than just Ian's physical health.
"Athletics
is probably the one thing that saved him," Russell said. "It helps
his diabetes, but it also develops his self-esteem because he's a good athlete."
The dyslexia
has proven to be a bigger problem, mainly because there are no injections a
dyslexic person can take to make him read faster. Woodward began struggling in
school early, and even repeating the first grade did not help.
Finally, in
the third grade, his parents had him tested by an education specialist who
determined that Woodward had a learning disability.
"I see
letters and numbers backward," Woodward said. "We had no idea what it
was, and it was hard to explain to my friends because I was still little. I
didn't like reading out loud because it was embarrassing."
Pat Edelen-Smith, an associate professor and reading disability
specialist at the
"The
person's (neurological) system is not working the same way as most other
people's, it's not matching things the same way," Edelen-Smith
said.
Once
Woodward's disability was discovered, he transferred from Our Lady of Sorrows
School in
Woodward now
gets " 'Bs' and 'Cs,' " at Maryknoll, although the dyslexia still is a daily struggle.
He said he often takes up to an hour or 90 minutes to read through material his
classmates will complete in half an hour.
"My
teachers will spend extra time with me, and I'll get extra tutoring,"
Woodward said. "On tests, I just do what I can."
That,
Woodward said, is what he would suggest to others with the same challenge.
"I
would tell them to seek extra help and don't give up," Woodward said.
"Just keep going, and don't give up."