The kindness of a human and the will of a small animal.  What a  story.
 
Gloria P
 
 
In a message dated 12/29/2008 3:33:41 P.M. Central Standard Time,  
literacydog12...@yahoo.com writes:

 
 
 
Hi, PAt! Thanks for ending this on! As a teacher, what a great story to  read 
to my students! Thanks so much!!!

Elizabeth

--- On Mon,  12/29/08, OKreationz™ <_mskitt...@yahoo.msk_ 
(mailto:mskitt...@yahoo.com) >  wrote:

> From: OKreationz™ <_mskitt...@yahoo.msk_ (mailto:mskitt...@yahoo.com) >
>  Subject: [Chihuahuas] *Now this is inspiring - Disabled duck inspires
>  To: "addictionhelp" <_addictionh...@addictionhadd_ 
(mailto:addictionh...@sbcglobal.net) >
>  Date: Monday, December 29, 2008, 4:12 PM
>   
> Disabled duck  inspires
> 
> PORTSMOUTH, R.I. - For more than two years, Laura  Backman
> has cared for a little one with a neurological disorder  -
> feeding her, changing her diapers, helping to teach her to
>  move with a walker.
> 
> Now that baby is getting around with her  own webbed feet.
> 
> Lemon, a Pekin duck, has been physically  disabled since she
> hatched in the kindergarten class Backman used to  teach in
> Portsmouth.
> 
> Backman, 39, has now turned  Lemon's life story into an
> illustrated children's book, "Lemon the  Duck,"
> to teach tolerance and inspire hope in children, disabled  or
> not.
> 
> After Lemon hatched, her balance problems  were immediately
> apparent. She couldn't walk on her own - and she  still
> can't, because of a neurological problem her
>  veterinarian suspects could have been caused by temperature
> or  humidity problems during incubation, or by viruses or
> other infectious  agents getting through the shell.
> 
> The handful of other chicks  hatched in the kindergarten
> class incubator all went to pre-arranged  homes, but Backman
> agreed to take on Lemon and all the tender care she  would
> require.
> 
> 
> "That's one of the things I'm  trying to give
> her, is a ducky life, even though she can't live  outside
> with the ducks," Backman says. "I know it probably
>  sounds like I'm obsessed with her. And I am. But
> it's a good  obsession."
> 
> Backman said she's always loved children's  books
> and thought Lemon's life was worthy of print. Her
>  publisher agreed.
> 
> "We just thought it was a fantastic  inspiration story,
> what she's done with this duck," says Meghan  Nolan,
> editorial director at Lobster Press, a Canadian kids'
>  book publishing company that put Lemon's story in print.
> "The messages  were really nice for kids, about
> acceptance and embracing  difference."
> 
> The book - Backman's first - describes the true  story
> of how children come to understand Lemon's disability
>  and rally around her, devising ways to help and taking turns
> feeding  her.
> 
> 
> By the end of the book, Lemon mucks around in  the grass
> with other ducks thanks to a feeding harness.  Backman's
> character - called Ms. Lake in the book - tells her  students
> Lemon will always need them. 
>  
> "I think  we need her, too," says one student as
> he hugs Lemon.
> 
>  In real life, Lemon is cuddly, sociable and never shy. Her
> disability  is obvious: When Lemon attempts a movement, her
> neck twists around  until the bottom of her beak is facing
> skyward and the tuft of white  feathers on her crown is
> pinned to her breast. Sometimes she gets  herself untangled.
> More often, Backman gently pries loose her  head.
> 
> But Lemon goes right back to eating or pushing  herself
> around in a specially designed walker. The
> "Lemobile"  is about a foot-and-a-half- "Lemo
> contraption made of white PVC  piping, a sling and
> smooth-rolling wheels. Lemon kicks her feet, wags  her
> tailfeathers and propels herself forward or in circles.
>  
> 
> "She's very feisty. She has a real zest for
> life,"  Backman says in an interview as Lemon quacks
> contentedly in the  family's airy, waterfront home in
> Portsmouth.
> 
> Because  Lemon can't control her bodily functions, she
> has to wear diapers that  Backman changes six times a day.
> Backman bathes her every morning and  carts her almost
> everywhere she goes. Lemon has been with Backman to  dentist
> appointments and relative's sonograms.
> 
>  Backman was introduced to ducks by her father, who kept
> them as pets  when she was a child. He developed multiple
> scleroris, and she and her  family had to help him with every
> need.
> 
> "My dad  couldn't do anything for himself, but we
> didn't let that stop him from  having a full life,"
> Backman said.
> 
> In her book,  Backman names one of the kids Richard, after
> her father, who died  about a year before Lemon hatched.
> 
> A couple veterinarians  Backman consulted questioned
> Lemon's quality of life and implied she  might consider
> euthanization. But that was never an option for  Backman, in
> part because she was assured Lemon isn't in pain.
>  
> "She really does spoil and love this duck, and
> she's a happy  little duck," said Kimberly Link,
> president of the Majestic Waterfowl  Sanctuary in
> Connecticut. Link's organization is receiving some  of
> the proceeds from Backman's book, as is the Rhode Island
>  Multiple Sclerosis Society.
> 
> About 10,000 copies of the book  are currently in print. It
> costs $19.95 and can be ordered online  through Lemon's
> website, www.lemontheduck. website, www.lemontheduck.<WBR>com, o
> booksellers.
> 
> Baker Books, in  Dartmouth, Mass., recently hosted Lemon and
> Backman for a book  reading.
> 
> "Lemon is to die for," said Gretchen  Baker-Smith,
> who helps run children's events at the store.
>  "She's very tolerant of kids, and lots of people
> having her, and being  in the middle of pandemonium. 
> 
> Lemon only rarely  quacked, which made kids jump.
> 
> "Kids are used to being at the  local park here,"
> Baker-Smith said. "You can see the ducks and the  geese.
> Some of them are really, really aggressive. I think some  of
> them were thinking that's how she was going to be, but
> she  wasn't."
> 
> Since Pekin ducks can live a decade or longer, Lemon  could
> have more years of book readings - a sequel is in the  works
> - entertaining school kids and having her beak and feet
>  rubbed, which she loves.
> 
> "She's very happy," Backman says.  "Every
> morning she just wants to go, go, go." This is a true
>  story
> huggles
> Pat in OK
> 
> 
> 
>  
> ____________ ________ ________ _

 

**************One site keeps you connected to all your email: AOL Mail, 
Gmail, and Yahoo Mail. Try it now. 
(http://www.aol.com/?optin=new-dp&icid=aolcom40vanity&ncid=emlcntaolcom00000025)

Reply via email to