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Padgett said.There was no time to mull over a future in baseball, however. For the next week following the accident, Padgett was trapped in bed. Constantly sedated, unable to watch television or walk around, he struggled with the first part of rehabilitation. Friends and roommates gathered to watch the Super Bowl while Padgett lay in his box spring prison."It was probably two months before I could do anything 'strenuous' is what they called it," Padgett said. "After that I got to work out on the elliptical machine. I still couldn't lift weights. Then probably three months after it happened, I could lift weights again."Springtime came and another visit to the eye doctor yielded another "no" to playing baseball. Padgett had been through enough already, so giving up didn't seem like an option."I didn't want to believe him, so I decided to get a second opinion," Padgett said. "So I went to Duke Eye Center. They told me they couldn't do anything to help me. I asked if I could have surgery or if there was anything they could do. They put ink in my system and watched it flow through my eye. They said there was nothing they could do to help my vision, so it's just going to be this way forever. They didn't tell me that I couldn't play. They told me that if I was going to play that I had to use protective eyewear."Finally a breakthrough happened. Padgett's vision was returning although not entirely. His pupil remains misshapen and dilated more than normal. A scar that will never go away took its place in the center of his eye.Perpetual blurriness in his right eye will haunt him for the rest of his