I am finally doing it!  I am finally answering my e-mails from my  posting 
of my spinal cord injury July 10.
 
I find that I can not pronounce a simple word, "no."  I got myself  into a 
few time-consuming projects and I said to myself today, "self, answer  your 
e-mails before everyone thinks you died and went to heaven."
 
Okay, a few of you ask for some history.
 
I live on the banks of the Susquehanna River and spent a lot of my time  
fishing, hunting and swimming in the river.  The weather prior to July 10,  
1966 was very hot and we had a storm on Thursday.  My mother did not feel  
safe with me boating in the river as it was possible to hit a submerged log or  
other debris.  Instead she said that we could go to the local public pool,  
a safe choice.  That was a decision that she had to live with for the rest  
of her life.
 
Someone jumped on my back as I was swimming, the lifeguard's girlfriend who 
 was sitting on the lifeguard stand because her boyfriend went home.  She  
was as qualified as my dog.
 
Two teenagers that just completed a Red Cross course pulled me out.  I  was 
not breathing and for all intents and purposes, dead.
 
They rolled me around on the concrete, beat the back of my neck to clear my 
 airway, my partial denture dislodged and I started to breathe.
 
Fast-forward to 1969, I had spent the last 2 1/2 years in a state hospital  
for crippled children.  Due to the fact we could not prove what happened at 
 the pool, we received $7,500 settlement and my hospital bill was paid.  Of 
 course there was no charge for the state institution that I was a resident 
for 2  1/2 years.
 
In the 1960s there was no regiment of treatment for spinal cord  injury.  
The only thing positive that came out of the Vietnam War was that  the 
government put gobs of money into the paralyzed vets.
 
My parents finally had enough of their bull and sign me out of the hospital 
 December 1969.  The charge nurse took my father aside, told him to take me 
 home, buying me a television, and wait for me to die.
 
She is now dead, I have gone through 12 or more televisions, and I'm not  
finished yet.  Do I buy a 32 inch, 37 inch, or 42 inch flat screen  TV?  My, 
my, I hate to make such big decisions.
 
Soon after I came home I started selling homemade fishing lures from my  
parents garage.  I expanded somewhat into other fishing and hunting  
equipment.  In ninth grade, one year before my injury, I took electronics  101 
and 
loved it.  I got caught up in the CB radio craze, started tinkering  and soon 
knew what I wanted to do.  I tried to get a grant from vocational  
rehabilitation for a home correspondence course, but no go.  Their opinion  was 
I 
could not physically work on equipment.  I took the money that I made  selling 
hunting and fishing equipment along with money people would send me in  
cards and started to take a home correspondence course.  After I was three  
quarters of the way through it, they realized I was serious.
 
In 1973 I received my associate degree in electronics.  The CB radio  craze 
was still escalating and I took over my parents garage and devoted it  
entirely to CB radios.  I hired a part time student to help work on CB  radios 
and with in 18 months had two full-time technicians.  The room was  getting 
quite cramped.
 
In 1975 I purchased a building lot across the street and built, with the  
help of my father and brother, a ranch-style building that I used entirely 
for  electronics.  From CB radios I branched into other consumer electronics 
and  into the commercial radio field.
 
In 1981 I married, instant father of three children, and life went  on.  My 
wife was an executive secretary and was able to quit her job and  work in 
the business around 1985.  With in the next two years our  advertising of 
fire equipment service was in two national magazines as well as a  magazine 
targeted at Pennsylvania.  We sent semiannual mailers to fire  departments in 
13 states.  I had a niche, firemen want their equipment  repaired yesterday, 
so our advertising and our service focused on three to five  days turnaround 
unless repaired parts were needed.
 
In the early 1990s my wife needed a hip replacement, a fairly common  
procedure, but the surgeon was going through a divorce and drinking heavily and 
 
taking drugs.  He did everything wrong he could do wrong.  The two  
follow-up surgeries to try and correct his mistakes ended with my wife having a 
 
stroke during recovery because no one was monitoring the oxygen level to the  
brain.
 
She is now permanently disabled, uses a crutch, and has short term memory  
problems.  Yes, we did sue the doctor, received a fair settlement, only to  
be taken by the attorney and the state of Pennsylvania.
 
My wife was my only caregiver, so all the savings when to my care and to  
pay her hospital bills.  It was either close the business for sell  it.  
Unfortunately the sale of the business was to someone who was not  business 
minded.  I worked for him for six years, rented him the building,  but had to 
throw him out for stealing.  With in two years he was  bankrupt.
 
At that point it was necessary for me to go back on disability, my wife was 
 only two years from being able to collect Social Security, so we kept a 
small  portion of the business, sold our mountain property and now am semi  
retired.
 
I worked too many hours with the local historical society, with a new  
college on archaeological digs, in our church, worked with kids at a second  
church, do some mentoring with handicapped people, and with the help of two  
teenage farm boys, landscaping my property.  I started the landscaping in  
2002 and have taken a small area on my back lot and made a wilderness picnic  
area.  I purchased landscaping stones at the end of the season to be used  
the following season.  I now have six, no seven different brick  patios.  Each 
one of different style block, but I am going for the rustic  look.  (I like 
to brag on it)
 
If I would give anyone advice, don't listen to others when you know in your 
 heart that you can do something.  My father did not want me to build "the  
shop" and go into debt, but I did.  I believe with all my heart that this  
is what God wanted me to do and I believe he has rewarded me.
 
Remember, it takes a lifetime to build up respect, but only a few seconds  
to ruin it.
 
Go for it!
 
Glenn Henry

G.A.Henry Radio
100  Mill Street
Washington Boro, PA 17582
 
PS: in the 1970s electronics was the way of the future.  In 2009, the  
computer is the way of the future.  As true today as it was then, knowledge  is 
the key.  There are so many more possibilities today then when I had my  
accident in 1966.  I have a ninth-grade education, my grammar stinks, at  least 
that is what my wife tells me, and I don't read well.  Knowledge is  your 
key, the lock is in front of you.  Open  it.
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