
Outside Podcast Losing Your Leg and Finding Your Calling, with Paralympian Brenna Huckaby
Feb 4, 2026
Brenna Huckaby, Paralympic snowboarder and cancer survivor who lost her right leg as a teen, shares her journey from amputation to multi-time world champion. She talks about why the Paralympics deserve attention. She recalls reclaiming identity, fighting classification rules to compete, and how snowboarding became a form of liberation and resistance. Practical gear and accessibility hot takes round out the conversation.
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From Teen Amputation To World Champion
- Brenna Huckaby learned to snowboard at 15 during cancer recovery and within a few years became a world champion.
- She moved to Utah full-time, won multiple world titles, and took gold in snowboard cross and bank slalom at Pyeongchang 2018.
Owning The Paralympian Identity
- Brenna reclaimed pride in the label Paralympian after confronting internalized ableism and learning the value of disability identity.
- Social media exposure to other disabled people expanded her view and helped her embrace being a disabled elite athlete.
Gymnastics Trained Obedience Not Voice
- Brenna contrasted gymnastics' rigid, authoritarian culture with snowboarding's freedom and self-expression.
- She says gymnastics trained her to be a robot, and it took therapy to relearn to question coaches and trust herself on a board.
