At 25 years old, and halfway through medical school, Dinesh Palipana was just getting started.
After spending his early years in Sri Lanka in "simple surroundings" living through a war and eventually calling Australia home, Dinesh, was well on his way to achieving his dream of working in medicine and giving back to the community and the country he says welcomed him so warmly.
But on a wet night in January 2010, Dinesh’s world was turned upside down when his car hit a slippery patch of road, causing him to lose control.
"When the car finally stopped rolling it was upright," Dinesh tells Mamamia over the phone, now 14 years on. "I tried to get out of the car and my fingers weren't working, and then I realised that actually, nothing below the chest was working," Dinesh shares, while on his way to work at the Gold Coast Hospital Emergency Department.
After learning he had a spinal cord injury, and would be facing a new life with quadriplegia, Dinesh was staring down a gruelling eight months in hospital followed by nearly four years of adjusting to his new life at home.
Dinesh recalls having to relearn everything, "Learning to sit upright without fainting, how to get in and out of bed again, how to get in and out of a wheelchair, how to get in and out of a car, figuring out how to shower; how to do all those physical things," he lists as just the start of the trial that stood in front of him. "The physical recovery was painstaking, but the physical aspect of it's just one thing — then there's the emotional and social effects of such a trauma."
Speaking to Dinesh now, the gratitude he has for everything he’s been given is palpable. But a new battle lay ahead once he was ready to return to medical school and continue down the path he always knew he was destined for.