Dont make your statements calling me out, you know nothing of my life and i 
know nothing of yours. I made a statement i believe to be true. You can also 
make a statement you believe. All they are is opinions. I cant take this on 
because people read this on the net and i cant reveal that much info. 
 
Ron
 

________________________________
 From: Aaron Mann <aman...@gmail.com>
To: RONALD L PRACHT <r.pra...@sbcglobal.net> 
Cc: "quad-list@eskimo.com" <quad-list@eskimo.com> 
Sent: Friday, October 25, 2013 6:55 PM
Subject: Re: [QUAD-L] Like him or hate him, he is a role model
  


Ron, I love you man, but that's a very defeatist attitude.  It can be argued 
that ANY successful person got there with the support of others.  But, to say 
the ONLY way a person with a disability can be successful is to be "lucky" 
enough to have supports in place.  It's not luck, it's all a matter of your own 
perception of what you can or cannot do.  This falls in line with what is 
happening to this country where the thought is that you must have your 
entitlements to survive.  It's simply not true.  Yes, many more obstacles are 
added when you have a disability, but it is still up to each and every one of 
us to suck it up, and do the best we can.  If you don't have the support, find 
it, it's there.  As a counselor, I met with hundreds of people with 
disabilities every year.  I spent most of my time convincing them not to sit 
idle trying to live on the government money, but to get the job, get the 
therapy, get the counseling.  All of that apathy
 stems from our poorly structured government aid programs.  None of them have 
anything built into enforce that the people receiving the money are doing 
anything to better themselves.  


I am not ignoring the fact that some of us have more severe disabilities.  
Where without support the slope is much steeper.  But, I believe deeply that as 
long as you are alive, there is a way to contribute.  Each of us has our 
definition of success and independence.  As Quads, we the most powerful tool 
available to us, our brain.  Do everything you can with what you have.

I am a C4-5 quad who cannot transfer, take care of bathroom needs, nor 
transport myself (for the first 15 years).  At 17 I went to college using 
Vocational Rehab programs.  I was responsible for everything in my life except 
the cost of paying for college and attendant care.  I made all of the 
connections needed to survive; friends, attendants.  I had family, but 
purposely went to school in a different city.  Getting away was my biggest step 
toward the independence I wanted.  When graduation came, I swore I'd never take 
SSDI.  I found petty jobs fixing peoples computers until I became employed.  
Did it pay great, no, but it was enough to scrape by; paying for attendants and 
such.  I had many opportunities to run home; sickness, bed wounds, jobless, and 
divorce.  But, I knew that that path would not lead to success.  Now, many 
years later, I educated myself on an ongoing basis. (through both Vocational 
Rehab and Employer Assistance).  Have a
 wonderful family,  I have a good job.  Looking back, I don't consider anything 
I did to be because of "luck".  I relied on the supports I created.  Nor was it 
because I am 1 in a million.  I did what almost all of us can do.  


Sorry for the rant, but I feel very strongly about this topic.  We're not as 
weak as we seem.





Aaron Mann 


On Fri, Oct 25, 2013 at 1:29 PM, RONALD L PRACHT <r.pra...@sbcglobal.net> wrote:

I remember a talk I had with my spinal cord doctor years ago and he told me, 
"no successful quad ever becomes successful on his own". Thats what we all have 
to understand, if you are lucky enough to have support you go far, if you have 
no support you are lucky to survive, then there are most of us in the middle. 
Not everybody can achieve the same things, its simply not a fair fight. You do 
as good as you can personally and then you can sleep at night. 
> 
>Ron 
>
> 
> From: "gah17...@aol.com" <gah17...@aol.com>
>To: quad-list@eskimo.com 
>Sent: Friday, October 25, 2013 11:23 AM
>Subject: [QUAD-L] Like him or hate him, he is a role model
> 
>
>
>Friday night @ 10:00 p.m. on Sean Hannity Show on Fox 
>will be a quad that didn't let his injury stop him. 
>
>
>Glenn Henry
>
>G.A.Henry 
Radio
>100 Mill Street
>Washington Boro, PA 
17582
>
>   

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