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Bent but not broken : Tina Basich-Haller raises scoliosis awareness through art

Special to Prospector Tina Basich-Haller is inspired by her daughter Addison s scoliosis diagnosis and said her daughter is so brave. Photo by Jennifer Nobles Tina Basich-Haller has been an artist all her life. When she wasn’t creating works of art she was touring the world as a professional snowboarder, earning many accolades for her sport and competing in such events as the X-Games. There was little that scared her. However Basich-Haller met her greatest challenge three years ago when her then ten-year-old daughter Addison was diagnosed with scoliosis, a sideways curvature of the spine. Basich-Haller used her daughter s original MRI image to create a powerful image. The strongest animal I could imagine was an elephant, so I made the elephant pushing on her spine. I did that piece as a visualization for her. And every night I’d say, Addy just imagine that elephant pushing it straight.

Photo Gallery: A Look Back at an Unforgettable 2020

Twitter Facebook When 2020 began, no one could have imagined it would end with a world turned upside down by a virus no one had ever heard of, a virus that has now claimed the lives of close to two million people, more than 300,000 in the United States alone. Social distancing, mask wearing, and hand sanitizing took on a new urgency. Here at BU, COVID-19 forced the University to quickly adapt to a remote learning model immediately following spring break in March. A massive testing and contact tracing system implemented by the University this summer allowed students to return to campus for the fall semester for a combination of in-person and remote learning, dubbed Learn

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