McKenzie’s Story
McKenzie was diagnosed at just 19 days old with a condition called Osteogenesis Imperfecta, otherwise known as brittle bone disease. This condition causes Mckenzie’s bone to break easily, and as a result of this diagnosis, doctors said that McKenzie would never walk, never sit upright, never talk, and maybe not even live a very long life. However, McKenzie’s parents were determined to not have their daughter live a life dictated by other people’s expectations.
McKenzie’s journey in the water started with aqua therapy at four years old, and right away she discovered a sense of freedom that she had never felt before. McKenzie’s two brothers joined the swim team around the same time, and she quickly found herself intrigued to graduate aqua therapy in the baby pool and venture into the big kid lap lanes. McKenzie swam for the very first time on her own in order to qualify for swim team, and has never looked back since. She loved (and still do) the feeling of proving others wrong when she rolls up behind the blocks in her wheelchair.
When McKenzie was 8, she discovered the Paralympic Games and started her Paralympic swimming career. For the first time she found herself competing with others who had similar abilities. By the time she was 11, McKenzie qualified for Paralympic Trials as the youngest competitor at the meet. After just missing making the US Paralympic Team for the 2008 Beijing Games, McKenzie vowed to spend the next four years leading up to the next Paralympics giving everything she had to qualify.
Fast forward four years to 2012, making it through every obstacle along the way, McKenzie qualified for 2012 London Games by 0.11 of a second in the 400m freestyle, on her 16th birthday nonetheless! Her Paralympic dreams had finally come true. At her first Paralympic Games, McKenzie made it to finals, leaving with a 6th place finish. Already looking ahead to the next Games, McKenzie vowed yet again to spend the next four years preparing to not only re-qualify, but to make it to the podium for Team USA.
In 2016, McKenzie qualified for five events for the Rio Games. During competition, McKenzie won 3 golds and a silver. McKenzie recalls being on the podium in Rio, thinking back to the very beginning of her journey when her parents were only ever told of all the things she would never be able to accomplish.
McKenzie’s journey captures the very meaning of believing that anything is possible when you put your mind to it. Through every broken bone, every setback, every obstacle, McKenzie never lost hope.
“the only obstacles in life are the ones that you allow to exist”
Accomplishments
Three-time US Paralympian (2012, 2016, 2020)
Six-time Paralympic medalist (four golds and two silvers)
Eight-time World Champion
Current world record holder
Multi-time American record holder