Michigan (WXYZ) -- Itโs been five months since I first sat down with survivors of the mass shooting at the Rochester Hills splash pad last June, and Iโm happy to share the remarkable progress theyโve made and highlight the help coming in from all over the world.
โI feel happy in how good Iโve been doing. Sort of maybe a little bit proud,โ said Janek Bebout.
At just 8 years old, Janek has overcome so much.
The survivor of the shooting last summer, heโs navigating his way through life after a gunshot wound took away his eyesight.
Janekโs parents Joshua and Johanna invited me to their home to show me the steps Janek is now taking to learn echolocation.
Itโs a way of processing whatโs around him by measuring sound coming back through clicks; he calls it โclick training.โ
Janekโs teachers are both living without their vision. Juan and Daniel traveled by plane from Vienna and Australia after they saw his story.
โWhen I contacted Juan, I sent them the story and it gave them the whole picture. That really connected us. The story helped big time not only in this but in different ways,โ said Johanna.
โIโm really happy and excited because Iโm going to learn click training and itโs going to be really cool,โ said Janek.
He said, โEverything sounds different. You need to learn what things sound like. If you click in front of the fridge, it would sound different than if you clicked in front of the stove.โ
I asked him what are some of the things he is doing now that he couldnโt before.
โAt the very beginning I couldnโt walk, now I can walk,โ said Janek.
โI like to go outside and play in the snow when it snows,โ he said. โIโm doing really good at my cane. Iโm doing really good at braille and stuff.โ
Emotions of the past few months have run the gambit, from sadness to joy,
Johanna tells me sheโs never been more proud of her youngest Julen and Janek for not letting a horrific experience define them.
โHe moves around the house as if nothing ever happened. He used the bathroom. Feeds himself. Goes upstairs with his brother in the playroom. They play independently without me,โ said Johanna.
Daniel and Juan echoed that message as they let us follow along both inside.
And outside their home, Janek is beginning to feel out and identify trees, mailboxes and trash bins along his own street, all with his hearing ability.
With each click, another glimpse of freedom and independence.
โIโm learning how to do it. Itโs not a thing you can do immediately but you need to learn it,โ said Janek.
He added, โyou can ride your bike and go hiking in the mountains, when you click you can know whatโs in front of you.โ
Josh said itโs been a whirlwind.
โChanging of thoughts and how we live our life, how we organize our life and set up a successful pathway,โ he said.
Supporting one another, this family is sharing their sense of feeling empowered now with optimism for whatโs ahead.
โEcholocation is like seeing but using sound instead of light,โ said Daniel. โIt completely transforms peopleโs confidence, sense of surroundings, peopleโs ability to navigate comfortably.โ
Planning a future centered around being free from fear or limitations is a goal trainers Daniel and Juan say Janek is already starting to achieve.
โIt gives you a perceptual radius much wider than your cane does. Essentially, you are able to detect objects as much as 300 meters away, like a building or something like that,โ said Juan.
He added, โas a blind person you have to be a problem solver.โ
โHeโs highly, highly adaptable. Creative, ingenious and a pleasure to work with,โ said Daniel.
Since the splash pad shooting, Joshua also says Janek has learned just how much the community has rallied around him and his family.
โPeople reach out, send cards, ask to bring over food. โCan I help in any way?โโ said Johanna.
Josh said, โitโs so nice to have you now in our home, talking about such a position development in this story. Iโm so happy to have this day with everybody here.โ
Janekโs appearance is also different since we first spoke, another major milestone thatโs part of recovery.
โHe had to wear the helmet you saw on the last interview and he had that removed Dec. 5th. The bone flap removed from the side of his skull has been replaced,โ said Josh.
He added, โthat is completely healed and his hair grows back, you wonโt even see the scar any longer. No matter what life throws at him, he goes through it with a grace. Iโm not sure where he gets it.โ
Daniel said, โitโs not about what we see, itโs about who we are, how we feel and what we do.โ
Along with his immense courage and profound strength, Janek recognizes recovery is a long road. He believes additional research will lead to the ability to repair his optic nerves one day.
โOne thing that I want to be able to do and I know itโs going to happen, is that Iโm going to be able to see again,โ said Janek.
When asked what helps him be strong, he said: โI have so many people that love me and I get supported.โ
Josh adds, โhe is such a positive person. Even this shooting, tragedy and loss of eyesight, and yet heโs laughing. Itโs like it doesnโt bother him sometimes.โ
Both his younger brother Julen and Johanna are also healing from their own gunshot wounds.
This familyโs path forward, a shining symbol of overcoming unthinkable adversity.
โThat day back in June took more than his vision, it stole some of his freedom. He was thrown into a world he wasnโt familiar with. Now, with Daniel and Juan, heโs getting tools he can use to be a successful person,โ said Josh. โTo take your child who was robbed of his vision, and have a tool to give him some freedom over his own life, and to be able to navigate through the world as a non-sighted person is remarkable.โ
Janekโs parents tell me heโs scheduled to undergo surgery again to regain control of his eyelid, part of a journey that continues to showcase his strength.