Baltimore, MD - July 5, 2025 - A week before her wedding, imadi received a call from a bride. 

She said she’d always dreamed of dancing at her wedding - but after years of battling a significant medical condition, her lower body had weakened to the point that dancing felt impossible. The childhood dream of a little girl had faded, and she wanted to know if there was anything we could do.

A small fleet of our most talented high school and young-adult volunteers, got to work. With only 7 days to create something revolutionary, the imadi boys stayed up night after night, sketching, testing, prototyping, 3D-printing. They even enlisted the support of community friend and local tailor Mr. Kim at Park Tailoring on Clarks Lane to help create a harness they designed. Within days, they created a custom-built contraption we call it “GlideZilla” —a sleek, adaptive mobility design that would let a resilient bride stand tall and dance with pride.

It wasn’t simply a harness. Not something clunky or clinical. GlideZilla was designed by imadi volunteers to disappear under her wedding gown and bring dignity, not distraction. To allow her to move with grace but not steal her spotlight.

And boy, did she ever. She danced. She glided. And there wasn’t a dry eye in the hall. 

When people ask us what is imadi, this is what we tell them. This is imadi. If someone tells us something is not possible? We get to work - and create a new reality where it is. 

Because at imadi, the impossible is just the beginning of imagination.