Thank you for reading Football Across Minnesota (FAM), my weekly column that tours football topics in our state from preps to pros. You can find all the previous FAM columns right here. — Chip
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Ethan Glynn had a conversation with his mom the other day that reinforced so many things that she already knew about her teenage son but still left her in wonderment.
The Bloomington Jefferson freshman who was left paralyzed after a football injury this season is continuing his rehabilitation at a facility near Denver that specializes in spinal cord injuries.
The days are long, the rehab work exhausting, and it’s too early to know the long-term prognosis for regaining muscle function. And yet Ethan told his mom that he wakes up every morning determined to view life as “glass half full.”
“I would rather be positive than negative and be down,” Ethan said during a phone conversation Tuesday evening after his therapy sessions.
Ethan’s unconquerable spirit and fierce determination since his Sept. 2 injury have amazed his parents, Cassidy Durkin and Corey Glynn, and older brother Parker Durkin, a senior wide receiver at Edina and captain of the Hornets football team.
“Ethan told me that he can’t look at what could have been,” said Cassidy, who is with her son in Colorado. “He needs to look at what he can do going forward.”
Ethan suffered a complete spinal cord injury at C4-5 while making a tackle in a game. The injury left him paralyzed from the shoulders down.