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Nova Scotia

Stepping into swimming pool helped Halifax burn survivor end 62 years of fear

Burn survivor Deborah Ward stepped into a pool for the first time in 60 years and hopes it will help erase decades of being self-conscious about her body.

Deborah Ward was severely burned as a child

A woman in a black and white two-piece bathing suit with burn scars on her abdomen.
Deborah Ward said the experience of entering a pool in a bathing suit for the first time in 60 years was 'a relief.' (Mary-Catherine McIntosh/CBC)

For most people, a visit to a pool is a familiar part of summer.

But for Nova Scotia woman Deborah Ward, getting into the Sackville Sports Stadiumpool two weeks ago was a momentous step after 62 years of fear.

In 1961, Ward, then seven-years-old, was living in military housing in Dartmouth's Shannon Park.

While trying to reach some sugar to lend to a neighbour, her dress touched the stovetop and caught fire.

Debbie Ward poses with her hands on her hips and a gentle smile while she wears a two piece black and white bathing suit, exposing the scars on her stomach she's hidden for 60 years.
Ward wears a swimsuit in public for the first time in 60 years. The last time, her burn scars led to torment. (Mary-Catherine McIntosh/CBC)

Ward suffered third-degree burns over 70 per cent of her body and spent a year in hospital.

She told CBC Radio's Now or Neverthere was no psychological support offered at the time and she was just treated and released from hospital.

A blurry old colour photo of a woman and a child posing at Niagara Falls.
Deborah Ward is shown with her mother at Niagara Falls about a year after being severely burned. (Submitted by Deborah Ward)

Ward said when she was nine,she put on a bathing suit and went to the neighbourhood pool despite some words of caution from her mother.

As she left the changing room and walked to the pool, Ward said she heard some parents making comments to one another.

Ward said everyone got out of the pool or moved to the other side when she got in.

"With the comments that were being thrown at me, being a little girl, I started to cry and I got out of the pool and went home," she said. "I've never put another bathing suit onin 60 years."

Ward has worked with burn survivors over the years. She said it has helped her emotional healing.

Today, she ispresident of the Nova Scotia Burn Support Group, on the board of directors of theCanadian Burn Survivors Community, and has published her autobiography. She is also a member of international burn survivor groups.

Debbie Ward hasn't worn a bathing suit in public since she was 9-years-old. When she stepped in the water at her local pool, children and their parents ridiculed her and moved to the other side, or just left all together.Two years earlier a terrible accident had left Debbie with scars on 70 per cent of her body.Now, at the age of 69, she's finally ready to try again.

Ward said a friend, also a burn survivor, would meet her at conferences and always bring a bathing suit for her to try on.

Once, at a Calgary conference, she put on one of the bathing suits in the room. But she wouldn't wear it to accompany her friend to the hotel pool.

Fearful of showing her skin

As she prepared to take her first dip in a pool in six decades, Ward said she deprived herself of many things over the years because she was fearful of showing her skin.

She said she has lived in the Upper Sackville area since the pool was built and watched as her children, grandchildren and foster children enjoyed it but never went in herself.

Four women in t-shirts smile at the camera in front of banners that say Phoenix Society
Ward now works with other burn survivors and group, including the Phoenix Society. She is shown here with other burn survivors who call themselves the 'International Girls' at a conference in Anaheim, Calif. (Submitted by Deborah Ward)

After easing herself into the pool and finally enjoying a sensation she hadn't experienced for most of her life, Ward emerged and said her mind was racing in many directions, but she felt good.

Ward said it felt like the beginning of something she wants to continue.

"Iam feeling ... I'm not sure what the expression is ... a relief," she said.

"I overcame a fear that has been inside me for 62 years that I gave it wings to fly away."

With files from Now or Never

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