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- Path: sparky!uunet!know!mips2!news.bbn.com!olivea!bunker!sheldev.shel.isc-br.com!wtm
- From: knyal@ils.nwu.edu (Jarrett Knyal)
- Newsgroups: misc.handicap
- Subject: Re: New Amputee - Intro letr
- Message-ID: <25683@handicap.news>
- Date: 16 Nov 92 22:17:06 GMT
- References: <25611@handicap.news>
- Sender: news@bunker.shel.isc-br.com
- Reply-To: knyal@ils.nwu.edu (Jarrett Knyal)
- Organization: Institute for the Learning Sciences
- Lines: 85
- Approved: wtm@hnews.fidonet.org
- X-Fidonet: Amputee Conference
- Originator: wtm@sheldev.shel.isc-br.com
-
- Index Number: 25683
-
- In article <25611@handicap.news> Bill.Scrivner@f202.n285.z1.fidonet.org (Bill
- Scrivner) writes:
- >Index Number: 25611
- >
- >Hello to ANY and EVERY one!
- >
- > This is sort of an introductory note and I hope it generates at
- >least some response - I feel pretty trapped at the moment and this
- >is my way out.
-
- <lots of personal account stuff deleted>
-
- > Guess I've cried about long enough to everyone for now. Hope to
- >hear back from some of you soon.
- > Thanks everyone for the shoulder - I needed it.
- >
-
- No problem Bill. One good thing about being in a rehab hospital
- for four months was that it was pretty hard to feel sorry for
- yourself amidst some of the other situations that you find yourself
- surrounded with. After a while I guess I stopped comparing because
- someone might be worse off than you in one way but better off in
- another. Besides, comparing really gets you nowhere fast. I do
- believe that there can be some consolotion derived from an exchange
- of "war stories" so here, briefly, is what happened to me 7 (wow!)
- years ago:
-
- I was on a roof when the 2 X 4 I was holding came in contact with a
- power line. The current went up the wood and in my left hand,
- burning it badly, along with my right hand and legs. I then
- proceeded to fall off the roof and break my back at the T4 (mid
- chest) level and was paralyzed. It was not one of my better days,
- let me tell ya! I was 21 years old. I was flown to a Spinal Cord
- Injury center here in Chicago where I spent 6 mo. The account of
- that might make a good book someday but I won't go into it now.
- Anyhoo, they tried to save my left hand but they couldn't due to
- the extensive burns. I lost it ten days after the accident.
- Now,for anyone, losing a hand would be a big deal. For a
- paraplegic, losing a hand is much worse. For a paraplegic who was
- a left-handed art major, it was even worse! I'm like, "Great, what
- am I going to do now." Well, I decided to make art on the computer
- by programming because you don't really have to have manual
- dexterity for that. Well that was seven years ago and today I
- actually make a living creating art on a computer, although I'm
- not a programmer. My right hand has about 95% of the ability my
- left hand did and today the drawings I do (with traditional media)
- look as good or better than the ones I used to do with my left hand.
-
- I've done very well since my accident in terms of getting my life
- together, thanks to the support of many people. In some ways,
- strangely enough, it was the best thing that ever happened to me.
- It taught me what is really important in life and what isn't. If
- someone asked me if I wished this never happened to me, of course
- I'd say yes but what I really wish is that I could be made whole
- again, having gone through the experience.
-
- You're right when you said a wheelchair is cumbersome. I use one
- to get around all the time. But, at least to me, being able to get
- around is more important than not being able to get around at all.
- You've got to look at what you have, not what you don't have.
- O.K., your wife is divorcing you, that's a shitty situation. As a
- child who went through the divorce of my parents I know, but at
- least you've got three kids, at least one of whom still cares about
- you. I don't know if I'll EVER get married, let alone have any
- kids. I'm not lamenting, I'm just trying to help you see how much
- you've got left even though your foot is gone.
-
- I believe the bottom line is this: If you act like a pathetic
- amputee, that's how you'll be treated. If you pick yourself up and
- look to the future with hope and determination, people will treat
- you with respect and dignity, instead of with pity.
-
- Don't get me wrong, I think being a paraplegic amputee (God, what a
- title!) SUCKS! I get down sometimes. You'd have to be a robot not
- to. But don't wallow in self-pity, letting it squash your life.
- It doesn't sound like you're letting it. You're working at home
- and looking forward to returning to work. I'm sure things will get
- better for you.
-
- The whole time when I was in rehab, during the worst of times, I
- kept in mind that things would get better, that I would smile and
- laugh again. Well, I have and I'm really glad I'm here to do it.
- Take care and consider this shoulder open any time.
-