Teen with one leg and no hands finds freedom in pole dancing

Teen with one leg and no hands finds freedom in pole dancing

Francesca Cesarini, 15, recently won the gold medal in a virtual International Pole Sports Federation championship.

Francesca Cesarini was recently awarded the gold medal in the disability category of a pole and aerial championship. (Reuters pic)

MAGIONE (Italy): Fifteen-year-old Francesca Cesarini was born with no hands and with only one leg. So her mother was more than a bit surprised when her daughter told her she wanted to be an acrobatic pole dancer.

“I don’t know if maybe I saw it on social media first, or I dreamt it … I just know that I woke up and went to her and said that I wanted to do pole dance,” Cesarini said.

This year, three years later, she competed in the International Pole Sports Federation’s virtual world pole and aerial championship.

Because of the pandemic, pole dancers from around the world submitted videos of their performances and were judged virtually. She was the only athlete to compete in the disability category and was awarded the gold medal.

Like many girls her age, Francesca wears braces on her teeth and a black plastic choker necklace. She likes to go to McDonalds, sings the latest pop song while walking with her best friend, and loves all things “Harry Potter”.

But she chose an increasingly popular sport that anyone would find difficult.

“It makes me feel free,” she said in her family’s apartment near Perugia in central Italy, where she practises at home and trains with her coach, Elena Imbrogno, in a local gym.

Like many girls her age, Francesca wears braces, likes McDonalds, and loves all things ‘Harry Potter’. (Reuters pic)

At a recent training session, as she hung upside down and twirled, Imbrogno told her to try it again but with her head just a bit straighter.

“There are some difficult elements (like) when you have to contort yourself or you have to hold on with just an arm, a leg, or a foot. That’s the difficult thing,” Francesca said.

She has one prosthetic leg but when she was about eight years old, she decided to stop using artificial forearms because she found them inhibiting.

“She still doesn’t want them,” said her mother, Valeria, 47.

“Francesca is a girl who knows what she wants. She wants to achieve certain goals,” her father Marco, 57, added.

“Francesca is like this, this is it. She has never had that limb, or hands, and so she does everything with what she has.”

And, he might have added, she did it without any help from Harry Potter’s wand.

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