Andres “Jay” Molina

Jay, a Dominican man with a goatee and glasses perched on his bald head, sits in a wheelchair outside on a sunny day in front of a river. He wears a light blue T-shirt and looks straight to camera.

Andres "Jay'' Molina left the Dominican Republic in his late teens for New York's Lower East Side. In 2014, Jay developed a rare lung condition that attacked his vital organs and left him paralyzed. A former baseball player and truck driver, today Jay is nourishing a passion for film-making and animation, and being of service and advocate for people living with disabilities. He is co-directing the feature-length documentary film, Fire Through Dry Grass, about the group’s survival and activism during the pandemic from inside an NYC nursing home. His poetry and writings have been published in NYU’s Literacy Review, The Wire, and Wheeling & Healing: A Poetry Anthology Edited by OPEN DOORS Reality Poets. He’s a recipient of the NYC Mayor’s Office Safe In The City Grant and the AXS Film Fund.

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Andres "Jay" Molina

Growing up, I was athletic, in great shape. I played baseball and touch football with my friends, and every summer we went to Candlewood Lake. We swam and jumped into the lake from high rocks. I learned to conquer my fear.

I was wounded, but not by a gun. In 2014, I developed a rare lung condition that attacked my vital organs and left me paralyzed.

People here at the hospital try to amp you up. They say you can do anything. And that’s how I feel after I fell in love with motion graphics and making films. I study hard. I can’t remember your phone number, but I remember how to put a 3D camera into Z space. The body gets older, but we still have that little kid in us. Here in OPEN DOORS, I’m pretty much excited about stuff all the time. That’s the way to be: learning and pushing ahead.

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