Olivia Maccoux left an adapted soccer game last fall to vomit even though she was not ill.
Maccoux, a junior at Park Center, cried on the way home from an adapted softball game last week, tears shed not for an awful performance but because of acute pain.
Since being born 11 weeks premature, Maccoux has battled a condition called Hydrocephalus, in which excess fluid in the brain can cause potentially fatal pressure levels.
She has endured more than 100 surgeries seeking to correct the condition or ease the complications. The procedures ranged from placing titanium mesh and artificial bone behind her forehead 14 years ago to make more room for her brain to the recent removal of a port from her chest just in time for prom.
The norms of teenage life are not attainable for Maccoux, 17, without her willingness to accept extraordinary circumstances. That is why she deals with the pain before, during and after games with the Park Center/Osseo/Maple Grove physically impaired adapted sports teams and makes the adjustments necessary to get her through a school day.
"If I didn't have schools and sports, I don't know what else I'd be doing," Maccoux said.
The relentless Maccoux stands out, coach Al Chuba said, on a team full of kids displaying the courage to play sports despite their challenges.
"I call her 'Iron Woman,' " Chuba said. "Her resiliency is amazing."