Skip to main content

Student Eyes Paralympic Games, Fencing Success in Tokyo

 


When she hears the words, “On guard. Ready. Fence,” Shelby Jensen isn’t thinking about the potentially deadly stroke that inflicted permanent injury upon her at the tender age of seven. Rather, she’s focused on winning, which she has done consistently in recent years, propelling her to the highest echelons of wheelchair fencing in the world.


Now, Shelby, 20, a student at Salt Lake Community College, is headed to Tokyo for the Paralympic Games that begin Aug. 24. “I’m so overjoyed,” she says. “After all the hard work I put in, it finally paid off.”


The long road to this major accomplishment really began when a normally bubbly second grader at William Penn Elementary started acting tired and confused during her dual immersion Spanish class.


Shelby suddenly told her teacher, “I miss my mommy.” The teacher was concerned. The bus driver to daycare after school sensed something was off with Shelby. “I didn’t want to talk to anyone,” she recalls. Later that day, her parents, Sheri and Jed Jensen, noticed how the right side of her face started to droop, but they thought it might be related to a recent lost tooth. Her mom even joked, “’What did you do, go and have a stroke?’” Shelby says. During homework she tried to write the number 8 but could only muster a 4. “I kept saying to my mother, ‘My memory is going. It’s not there – it’s fuzzy.’” This was no joke. A few worry-filled phone calls later, and they were on the way to the ER.


The short version of what came next is this – many doctors gathered and ultimately stressed the urgency of getting Shelby into surgery right away. Tests showed she had a stroke – an aneurism in her brain – and waiting any longer might have cost Shelby her life. She had a 70 percent chance of surviving the operation to correct the aneurism. Doctors warned she almost certainly would have problems afterward – and she did. Paralyzed on her right side, Shelby spent about three weeks in the hospital before transferring to patient rehab, which turned into months of learning how to walk, talk, swallow, write with her left hand and more.


Now she walked different. She wore a brace – still does – on her right leg. Her right arm was limp and weak. The fingers on her right “helper hand” were closed, and she still can’t grasp things with it. She eventually went back to school. Kids made fun of her. She was bullied. Today Shelby says she has moved past all of that, chalking it up to kids being mean. Her parents put her in sports as soon as they could. Softball. Baseball. Biking. Archery. When she was 15 and volunteering at a sports camp for people with disabilities, someone told her to try wheelchair fencing. That was the spark she needed. “I absolutely fell in love with it,” she says.



Her sport does not require Shelby to be a wheelchair user. Her disability, however, does allow her to compete in wheelchair fencing. The athletes sit in a wheelchair, which is then attached to a frame to keep the chair stationary during competition. Points are scored through an electronic sensor at the tip of each weapon – the saber, foil and epee. “I get in the zone when I’m competing,” Shelby says. “With the saber, it’s aggressive and go, go, go. In foil and epee, I’m more relaxed and strategic.”


Shelby started winning. When her classmates at Olympus High were in school, she studied overseas during breaks in competition – Poland, Japan, Dubai, Italy, Brazil, Netherlands, South Korea, Hungary, to name a few. “Wheelchair fencing has opened more doors than I think would have if I was able bodied,” she says, noting the silver lining to it all. “Doing a sport means everything to me, along with being with like-minded individuals with other disabilities. Being able to see what we, what they can do – it’s amazing.”


Although she’s already planning on competing in the next two Paralympics in Italy in 2024 and then Los Angeles in 2028 – she’s currently the youngest Paralympic athlete in her category – Shelby is looking beyond sport. After she graduated from Olympus in 2019, she began taking classes at SLCC that fall. The college’s online offerings fit in with Shelby’s busy schedule that balances training, travel, work and competition. She expects to graduate from SLCC in the spring of 2022, and then pursue a bachelor’s degree, probably in nutrition.


Image courtesy of Shelby Jensen.


Shelby’s dream job is to be a sports nutritionist for athletes, maybe Olympians or Paralympians. She’s also interested in being a recreational therapist, which would be a continuation of her current job working for Salt Lake County Parks & Recreation in their adaptive sports program.


When the Games begin Aug. 24, Shelby’s parents will be glued to the TV at a facility in Colorado set up for friends and family – because of the pandemic, fans are not allowed to watch athletes in person.


Shelby’s parents have a lot emotionally invested in their only child. Jed loves gushing about his daughter. He also invented a new type of chair/frame combo that he hopes Paralympic officials will consider using.


Standing next to each other, Jed suddenly points to the arc of a scar still visible in a shaved portion of Shelby’s head from when doctors operated on her 13 years ago. He wants to talk about that painful time in their lives, but he can’t find the words. He steps back several feet, fighting back tears. All he can manage to say is, “It still gets to me.” Shelby gives him a hug.


Jed Jensen helps his daughter Shelby with her glove.

More on Shelby

Before qualifying for the Paralympics, Shelby was ranked 15th in the world in saber, 18th in epee and 22nd in foil. She will compete in two individual competitions and two team competitions in Tokyo next month. Shelby is expected to compete in USA Fencing's July Challenge and Parafencing National Championships July 22-25 at The Salt Palace Convention Center in Salt Lake City. For more information, click here.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

SLCC Automotive Repairs

Click to enlarge. Attention: SLCC Students, staff and faculty! Many SLCC automotive programs need vehicles to work on in these areas: 30 point inspections Oil changes Tire rotation Engine repair Brake systems repair Automatic and transmission repairs Air conditioning repair Electrical troubleshooting & repair Suspension & steering system repair Auto-body repair and painting (on a very limited basis) Please be advised that any repairs are done at the discretion of the instructors due to the subject areas they are teaching.  Because we are using your vehicles for training purposes, we offer members of the College discounts on parts and labor. Parts are at our cost plus 15% and the service fee is $20 per hour based on industry time standards (if the industry assigns an hour for a repair, that's all you're charged for, regardless of how much time it takes the student). We can also offer these services to non-college personnel on a limited basis with...

SLCC All Access

Did you know you can access SLCC lab software for free from your own computing device?   Come learn how SLCC is supporting BYOD (Bring Your Own Device) with All Access. The goal of All Access is to provide any time, any place, and any device access to college computing and lab software SLCC students, faculty and staff.  All Access works on almost any device from a PC or Mac, to tablets and smart phones.  With All Access you can use programs like Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Publisher, AutoCAD, MatLab, Mathematica, MyITLab, NetBeans, and online Library Databases.  We also provide you with online storage space so you can save your files in the cloud and have access to them wherever you are.  Anyone is welcome to this session where we will cover the basics of All Access, give you some tips and tricks for getting the most out the system, and we’ll also have some people there to help get your computer set up.  When and where: ...

SLCC Alumnus and U.S. Diplomat to Speak at 2025 Commencement

Salt Lake Community College’s 2025 Commencement speaker Branigan Knowlton will share his perspectives drawn from a 12-year career as a Foreign Service Officer with the U.S. Department of State. In serving his country, Knowlton has honed his foreign relations and diplomacy skills in Hong Kong, Mexico, Colombia and Italy. Knowlton is also a proud Salt Lake Community College (SLCC) alumnus (2002).     Knowlton currently serves at the U.S. Embassy in Rome. Before reporting to the embassy, he was detailed to the Italian Ministry of Infrastructure and Transport as part of the Transatlantic Diplomatic Fellowship program. In Bogotá, Knowlton worked for the Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement, and in Hermosillo, Mexico, he worked for the Bureau of Consular Affairs. His first assignment abroad was in Hong Kong, where he worked for the Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affairs.     "I've actively sought opportunities that push me into the unfamiliar, even when ...