From Where I Sit, From Where You Stand: A Roll Through LifeAuthor House, 02/04/2007 - 332 páginas As Marshall, with his wife and family, rolls through life, accompany him. Enjoy the witty and often whimsical episodes that occur. In work, play, travel, community, and worship, ponder the dialogues of opinions, perceptions, events, and realities of being physically challenged. The journey, which includes more than fifty years in a wheelchair, is presented in a topical display in chapters on different arenas of life: The Paradox - Diversities of perceptions and realties. The Good Old Days - Early life on a one-horse farm. Fate Knocked at My Door - The accident. Angels of Mercy - Hospitalization. Letters of Cheer - Student nurses’ letters. Give Me Elbow Grease - Rehabilitation You Can Go Home Again - Summer at home. The Halls of Ivy - Education. Keeping the Faith – Job searching. The Birds and the Bees – Love and passion. Dreams Come True - Marriage and family. Toiling in the Vineyards - Work experiences. No Man is an Island - Community life. On the Road - Travel. God Bless You – God, others, and I. Keeping the Juices Flowing - Adapting Can’t See the Forest for the Trees – Perceptions. Don’t Cry Over Spilled Milk – Realities. The Golden Years - The senior years. The Journey has been one of challenges, physical, mental, and spiritual. It included two years of hospitalization and rehabilitation to prepare him to enter a world not yet ready for the physically challenged. He found himself looking inside with no way in. He boarded airplanes by hand-walking the support rails. He dealt with perceptions: “What can you do? You are handicapped!” His faith and hope were tested: Why me, God? Should I marry? Will any company hire me? Successes came: A lovely wife, two beautiful adopted babies, enjoyable work, friendships, health, and joy.
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... wheelchair. If you took thumbnail sketches of my life at its various stages, without knowing this fact, you would assume that I differ little from others with similar demographic characteristics. Choose a time, say my forties, and tune ...
... wheelchair. I am seen as different. People see the wheelchair. It often clouds their perception of me. I become more inanimate, more of an object of need, sympathy, and curiosity. I am not what I appear to be. Yet I am not different. I ...
... wheelchair: “How do you feel about your Dad being in a wheelchair?” “What is wrong with your Father?” “That is not your Dad, is it?” Many questions are terminated with a statement of sympathy for the one being asked: “It must be ...
... wheelchair forces me to be different. It is a factor in determining what I do and where I go. Many activities do not lend themselves readily to a wheelchair. I don't spend a leisure evening on the golf course, fly hot air balloons, or ...
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Índice
1 | |
25 | |
Letters of Cheer | 47 |
Give Me Elbow Grease | 65 |
You Can Go Home Again | 87 |
Keeping the Faith | 111 |
Dreams Come True | 133 |
Toiling in the Vineyards | 157 |
No Man Is an Island | 185 |
On The Road | 213 |
God Bless You | 233 |
Keeping the Juices Flowing | 253 |
Cant See the Forest for the Trees | 275 |
Dont Cry Over Spilled Milk | 295 |
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From Where I Sit, from Where You Stand: A Roll Through Life Marshall Wall Pré-visualização indisponível - 2007 |