Truly a family affair with Clinton, Iowa’s Patti Rock, and Rock Valley Physical Therapy

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Calling Clinton, Iowa’s Patti Rock feisty, might be the understatement of all time. 

 

Yes, the 4-foot-9 inch, 80-year-old, on-the-go dynamo is spirited, and yes, she is lively, determined, and courageous. 

 

She is tougher than a box of new nails. 

 

Rock is also amazing; a genuine – won’t-back-down-from-a-challenge – 24-karat treasure. She is beyond independent, kind, caring, speaks her mind, follows her own path, and is comfortable in her own skin. 

 

She also has a heart the size of Texas, and to what is an amazing team at Rock Valley Physical Therapy's Clinton Iowa (31 13th Ave. N. Clinton, 563 243-7814) clinic, she is family. 

“Patti is special to all of us here,’’ said Sarah Haines, PTA, who along with Kaylee Camp, PT, DPT, and the rest of the Rock Valley team, have shared the responsibility of bettering Rock’s life. 

 

An immediate neighbor to Rock and her husband, Earle, Haines keeps a close watch when needed, while Rock spoils Haines’ two sons with a bevy of baked treats, and the occasional large bag of M&Ms. Rock has known the gifted and compassionate Camp since she was a child. 

 

“Patti, you will find out, is one-of-a-kind,’’ Haines added with a smile. “And yes, we are lucky enough to benefit from her baking skills.’’ 

 

Known nationally and internationally as an elite career counselor, Rock battles balance issues. Along her path, she has dealt with a number of balance-related falls as well as shoulder (torn rotator cuff) and hip issues. When an issue arises, she turns to Haines and the team at Rock Valley. 

 

“Hey, I won that volleyball game,’’ Rock said of the reason for the rotator cuff problem. “I did well.’’ 

 

If Rock, a 50-year resident of Clinton, had her way, she would walk everywhere, including a daily – and lengthy – jaunt from her home to one of the Clinton-based bridges leading across the Mississippi River into Illinois, and back. 

 

Walking allows her to gather her thoughts, share time with passerby's, all while reaping exercise-related benefits. But balance issues have curtailed her favorite walk, which includes the crossing of a busy thoroughfare and navigating a steep hill. 

 

But Haines, because of Rock’s affinity for walking, continues to find alternate ways to stay moving, albeit in a safer fashion. 

 

“That’s one of her goals,’’ Haines said of Rock’s daily – and lengthy – walk about town. “We have adjusted that to a walk that does not include the big hill and not crossing such a busy street. We are always working to find Patti ways to keep her active but do it safely.’’ 

 

On the life skills side of working through her balance issues, Rock says Haines and the Rock Valley team are vital to her health and life progression, especially when it comes to her passion for baking, for which she is world class. 

 

Neighbors, friends, and a substantial portion of the Clinton community – the Rock Valley team included – have benefitted from Rock’s generosity and baking skills. 

 

Haines has worked at length with Rock to help her navigate her way safely about her oven, her kitchen and with everyday tasks around her home. The process, successful, is ongoing. 

 

“We have placed ankle weights in a box (on a shelf) to simulate Patti pulling out an oven tray,’’ Haines said, sharing some of the functional work done with Rock inside Rock Valley walls. “We have worked with her using a stool to help her learn to put away a casserole dish. We work making sure there are no sudden, bending motions to keep Patti from getting dizzy, and using the front of the oven (rack) so she is not bent over and reaching too far. And when there is a hip issue, we work soft-tissue massage and then work toward her balance issues.’’ 

 

Straight and to the point, Rock says she works through good days and not-so-good days, but says her life is beyond better thanks to a gifted therapist like Haines and the Rock Valley team that thinks so highly – and cares so deeply – about her. 

 

“When I wake up dizzy it’s going to be a bad day,’’ Rock said, gently poking fun and calling herself “height challenged,’’ and added that at her age she has earned the right to never be measured again. 

 

“But I don’t believe I would be around if not for Sarah and Rock Valley,’’ continued Rock, who, with Earle, are adoptive parents, and have opened their home to hundreds of foster children across 38 years. 


“Sarah and everyone else here have saved my life,’’ Rock added. “Sarah is always looking in on me at home, and that means something to me. Therapy is about me getting better, stronger, understanding what I can and cannot do. It's about easier ways to do things – whether it’s in the kitchen – or with everyday tasks. You know I bake, and I give it all away. Something as simple as how to use an oven rack or using a walker when I get out of bed, things I have been taught here make a difference. I don’t take no for an answer, and I am not going gracefully into that night. You can call me chronically challenged, but you cannot call me old. I have fired my share of doctors along the way, but I’m so lucky to have Rock Valley.’’ 

 

It helps that Earle Rock, Patti says, sides with the Rock Valley team when it comes to therapy and at-home instructions. 

 

“The only way I can buy my husband’s approval is if I make him peanut butter cookies,’’ Rock said. “But he still takes Sarah’s side and everyone else’s side (at Rock Valley). When I make him cookies, he asks what I did wrong.’’ 

 

For Haines and the Rock Valley team, the goal is to make life better when Rock struggles are always at the forefront of the relationship. The bonus is that both sides care deeply about each other. 

 

“I live right across the street from her,’’ Haines said of Rock. “I go to help her put away the casserole dish and come home with a full bag of M&Ms for my kids. That’s how she is. You can’t help but love Patti.’’ 

 

 

By: Johnny Marx, Rock Valley Storyteller


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