It is a great achievment for any man to perform extraordinary acts – but it is even more so when this is done despite a terrible disability. This list looks at 10 people who have made a major mark on society through their actions or through succeeding against all odds.
Disability: Amputee
Sudha Chandran was born to family in Chennai, South India. She completed her Masters in Economics from Mumbai. On one of her return trips from Mumbai to Chennai she met with an accident resulting in the amputation of her right leg. She was given an artificial leg and despite this terrible disability, she became one of the most accomplished and acclaimed dancers of the Indian Subcontinent. She has received and still receives invitations to perform all over the world. She has been honored with numerous awards and has performed all over the world. She appears often on Hindi television and in films.
Disability: Blind
At the age of nine, Runyan developed Stargardt’s Disease, which is a form of macular degeneration that left her legally blind. Marla Runyan is a three time national champion in the women’s 5000 meters. She won four gold medals in the 1992 summer Paralympics. In the 1996 Paralympics she won silver in the shot put and gold in the Pentathlon. In 2000 she became the first legally blind paralympian to compete in the Olympic games in Sydney, Australia. She holds various American records such as 20,000 Road (2003), All-female Marathon (2002), 500m (2001) , Heptathlon (1996). In 2001, she co-wrote and published her autobiography ‘No Finish Line: My Life As I See It’
Disability: Mental Illness
Vincent Van Gogh was a Dutch Painter and is regarded as one of the greatest painters the world has ever seen. His paintings have immensely contributed to the foundations of modern art. In his 10 year painting career he produced 900 painting and 1100 drawings. Some of his paintings today are the most expensive: Irises was sold for $53.9 Million and Portrait of Doctor Gachet was sold for $82.5 Million. Vincent Van Gogh suffered depression, and in 1889 was admitted to a psychiatric hospital. His depression worsened over time and on July 27, 1890 at the age of 37 Van Gogh shot himself in the chest. He died two days later. His last words were “the sadness will last forever”.
Disability: Deaf
Beethoven is widely regarded as one of the greatest composers in history. He gave his first public performance as a pianist when he was only 8 years old. He studied in Vienna under the guidance of Mozart. By his mid-twenties he had earned a name for himself as a great pianist known for unpredictable and brilliant improvisations. In the year 1796 Beethoven began losing his hearing. In spite of his illness he immersed himself in his work and created some of the greatest works of music. Beethoven’s finest works are also the finest works of their kind in music history: the 9th Symphony, the 5th Piano Concerto, the Violin Concerto, the Late Quartets, and his Missa Solemnis. And he achieved all this despite being completely deaf for the last 25 years or so of his life.
Disability: Polio
Frida Kahlo was a renowned Mexican painter who created striking paintings, most of them being self-portraits reflecting her pain and sorrow. She painted using vibrant colors that were influenced by the cultures of Mexico. She was the first Mexican artist of 20th century whose work was purchased by an international museum. Kahlo contracted polio at age six, which left her right leg thinner than the left, which Kahlo disguised by wearing long, colorful skirts. It has been conjectured that she also suffered from spina bifida, a congenital disease that could have affected both spinal and leg development. Although she recovered from her injuries and eventually regained her ability to walk, she was plagued by relapses of extreme pain for the remainder of her life. The pain was intense and often left her confined to a hospital or bedridden for months at a time.
Disability: Cerebral Palsy
Christy Brown was an Irish author, painter and poet who had severe cerebral palsy. Born in Crumlin, Dublin to parents Bridget and Paddy, he was one of 13 surviving children (out of 22 born) in a Catholic family. He was disabled by cerebral palsy and was incapable for years of deliberate movement or speech. Doctors considered him to be intellectually disabled as well. However, his mother continued to speak to him, work with him, and try to teach him. One day, he famously snatched a piece of chalk from his sister with his left foot to make a mark on a slate.
At about five years old, only his left foot responded to his will. Using his foot he was able to communicate for the first time. He is most famous for his autobiography My Left Foot, which was later made into an Academy Award-winning film of the same name. The Irish Times reviewer Bernard Share said the book was “…the most important Irish novel since Ulysses”. Like Joyce, Brown employed the stream-of-consciousness technique and captured the Dublin culture in his use of humor, language and unique character description.
Disability: Schizophrenia
John Forbes Nash is an Noble laureate American mathematician whose work in game theory, differential geometry and partial differential equations are considered ground breaking. At a young age he was interested in scientific experiments which he carried out in his room. He studied Chemical engineering, chemistry and mathematics at Carnegie Mellon University. Later he was awarded a Fellowship at Princeton. In 1959 John Nash started showing severe signs of paranoia and started behaving erratically. He believed that there was an organization chasing him. In the same year he was admitted involuntarily to the hospital where he was diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia. After treatment he was again admitted to the hospital this time voluntarily for 9 years were he given shock therapy. After returning from the hospital in 1970 he gradually started recovering. His work was becoming more successful and resulted in various awards and recognition. Prominent among them are John von Neumann Theory Prize in the year 1978 and Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences in the year 1994. An Academy Award winning film named ‘A beautiful Mind’ starring Russell Crowe was made which was loosely based on his biography.
Disability: Locked-in Syndrome
Jean-Do was a well-known French journalist and author and editor of the French fashion magazine ELLE. In 1995 he suffered a massive heart attack causing him to go into a coma for 20 days. After coming out of the coma he found himself with a very rare neurological disorder called Locked-in syndrome, in which the mental state is perfectly normal and stable but the body is paralyzed from Head to Toe. In the case of Jean-Do he was able to move only his left eyelid. Despite his condition, he wrote the book The Diving Bell and the Butterfly by blinking when the correct letter was reached by a person slowly reciting the alphabet over and over again. Bauby had to compose and edit the book entirely in his head, and convey it one letter at a time. To make dictation more efficient, Bauby’s interlocutor, Claude Mendibil, read from a special alphabet which consisted of the letters ordered in accordance with their frequency in the French language. The book was published in France on 7 March 1997. Bauby died just two days after the publication of his book.
Disability: Motor Neuron disease or a variant of ALS (Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis)
Stephen William Hawking is a British theoretical physicist, whose world-renowned scientific career spans over 40 years. His books and public appearances have made him an academic celebrity and he is an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, a lifetime member of the Pontifical Academy of Sciences, and in 2009 was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest civilian award in the United States. Stephen Hawking is severely disabled by motor neuron disease, likely a variant of the disease known as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (or ALS). Symptoms of the disorder first appeared while he was enrolled at Cambridge; he lost his balance and fell down a flight of stairs, hitting his head. Worried that he would lose his genius, he took the Mensa test to verify that his intellectual abilities were intact. The diagnosis of motor neuron disease came when Hawking was 21, shortly before his first marriage, and doctors said he would not survive more than two or three years. Hawking gradually lost the use of his arms, legs, and voice, and as of 2009 was almost completely paralyzed.
Disability: Blind and Deaf
Helen Adams Keller was an American author, political activist and lecturer. She was the first deafblind person to earn a Bachelor of Arts degree. The story of how Keller’s teacher, Annie Sullivan, broke through the isolation imposed by a near complete lack of language, allowing the girl to blossom as she learned to communicate, has become known worldwide through the dramatic depictions of the play and film The Miracle Worker. Sullivan taught Helen to communicate by spelling words into her hand, beginning with d-o-l-l for the doll that she had brought her as a present. A prolific author, Keller was well traveled and was outspoken in her opposition to war. She campaigned for women’s suffrage, workers’ rights, and socialism, as well as many other progressive causes. In 1920, she helped to found the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). Keller and Sullivan traveled to over 39 countries, making several trips to Japan and becoming a favorite of the Japanese people. Keller met every US President from Grover Cleveland to Lyndon B. Johnson and was friends with many famous figures, including Alexander Graham Bell, Charlie Chaplin, and Mark Twain.






























@segues (175): No Kidding!
I’ve had therapists who were like that…
I’ve had nothing but problems since having been to the primary and secondary schools I was in…
But that’s beside the point. The drip you described, is the type of therapist I was unlucky enough to get…
@Casualreader (154):…Either I made a *****up and didn’t post it…
****
wouldn’t that be considered *****ography?
~ ~ ~
tsk tsk ..*****up… tsk tsk
Cyn
@krypto092108 (181): Ah, yes, they seem to abound.
I finally did get a good one, but he limited his practice to seeing patience to a maximum of four visits.
His reasoning? If he couldn’t “cure”you of whatever ailed you, continuing on was a waste of your money and his time. I saw him once. He did, in fact, get to the root of one of my main problems and release me from it. It has not touched my life again, and this was three years ago.
Am I being censored?
The Frida Kahlo section is incredibly wrong…On September 17, 1925, Kahlo was riding in a bus when the vehicle collided with a trolley car. She suffered serious injuries in the accident, including a broken spinal column, a broken collarbone, broken ribs, a broken pelvis, eleven fractures in her right leg, a crushed and dislocated right foot, and a dislocated shoulder, an iron handrail also pierced her abdomen and her uterus…
THIS caused the incredible pain… not the polio!
segues @ 182,
Wow! You have just accused my staid and dignified dictionary – available at every public library over the counter sans nudge, nudge, wink, wink, know what I mean – of *****ography!
Oh deary me. Here we go then:
- Cock-up, n. (typog.). Initial letter much taller than the rest. [see 'cock', 2nd meaning] -
With a plead of innocent as a babe, I rest my case.
Re what should be and yet may be my 186:
Guilty until proven innocent, eh? Who’s in charge here, the Iranian ruling party?
OK. I’m patient, I can wait for the inevitable just verdick.
To save confusion, I meant my earlier (temporarily) censored 186.
It contained the 4-letter c-word, the most vile, filthy combination of letters in both standard, American, and for all I know, all other English. But perhaps not the c-word that description may immediately call to mind.
“See, oh see Kay!”
As somebody once remarked laconically about somewhere,
“I shall return”
Wasn’t Julius Ceasar, was it?
No, that was “Veni, vidi, vinci”, or something.
I’ll make it that too.
segues @ 182: Watch these spaces.
All is forgiven
@casual reader –
you should know by now certain words will kick comments to the curb. good for you i happened by or those comments would still be there. which btw…i do mean happened by. you might not luck out next time. got it? some folks either don’t pay close attention, have the time or the inclination to keep up w/ those kinda chores. so you best self censor accordingly.
would you chill out please?
I’m not sure about the rest of you guys but most people I know are more offended by that other c-word(c*nt),c*ck is really no big deal.
@ 192 & 193,
It’s all there at 193. The female *****-specific c-word has no other meaning. The only word-play available is to disguise it as another similar-ended 4-letter word or Spoonerise it as with the girl group the Cunning Stunts. It is not possible to use it in ‘polite’ or sensitive society, or in front of (most) children.
The male *****-specific c-word has innumerable commonplace and acceptable everyday applications that wouldn’t move a hair of your maiden aunt, the vicar, or the lady in charge of the toddlers’ play school. My dictionary offers about 26 varied basic uses for it alone or hyphenated. The vicar could even quote it from the Bible in his Sunday sermon. Remember something about it crowing thrice when Peter betrayed Jesus? Now pray explain to me how he might introduce the other word (in public) in church.
Imagine a straw poll anywhere on which was the least socially acceptable or more offensive when used insultingly. The result would be predictable and most probably 100%. Would you bet real money against that? And that’s the big problem here, one just uses the dictionary word automatically, without a thought for censorship until, dammit, the Submit fails. So it’s become a standard site pratfall. But fun though.
-a-doodle-doo from chilly me.
“What is it you can’t face?” (in a Yorkshire accent)????
Thoughts about happenis:
Happenis arises in a state of peace, not of tumult.
Ann Radcliffe
The pursuit of happenis is a most ridiculous phrase; if you pursue happenis you’ll never find it.
C. P. Snow
A lifetime of happenis! No man alive could bear it: it would be hell on earth.
George Bernard Shaw
To be stupid, selfish, and have good health are three requirements for happenis.
Gustave Flaubert
The foolish man seeks happenis in the distance, the wise grows it under his feet.
James Oppenheim
Seek not happenis too greedily, and be not fearful of happenis.
Lao-tzu
I’ve decided that the key to happenis is low expectations.
Laura Moncur
One of the keys to happenis is a bad memory.
Rita Mae Brown
Happenis makes up in height for what it lacks in length.
Robert Frost
@astraya (195): I’m usually pretty good at putting on accents (you had to be to survive in my family!), but I could get through your
““What is it you can’t face?” (in a Yorkshire accent)????” without bursting into bouts of uncontrollable laughter…at 1:13 a.m.!
@Casualreader (190): @Casualreader (190): As somebody once remarked laconically about somewhere, “I shall return”
****
Is that a promise?
segues @ 198
“In statements (and exclamations):
- shall is used after I or we to indicate future time;
- will is used after I or we to indicate determination, intention, a promise, an assurance and the like; …”
It has always struck me that while grammatically correct and an impeccable forecast, MacArthur chose the wrong word for that historic moment. To really convince the Philippines inhabitants and scare ***** out of the Japanese Imperial High Command there and then, he ought to have employed the emphatic “will”.
Churchill’s “We shall fight them on the beaches …”, on the other hand, was immaculately correct (as you might expect) because although no less full of determination, intention, promise and assurance, it was overridingly conditional and dependent. Churchill had no intention that future events would reach that stage, and nor did they!
NB In contrast “Veni, vidi, vici” signifies you’ve done it all and don’t need to return except to repress with utter savage brutality any attempted uprisings by the natives. Q.E.D.
PS to @ 190. Leonardo da occasionally does get mixed up with J.C.’s “vici”, even in the best of circles. Sorry.
@astraya (196): Thoughts about happenis
You forgot:
Happenis is a Warm Gun
John Lennon
No, I didn’t “forget”. It wasn’t on the list of quotations I found on the internet, and I don’t otherwise know it. I was thinking about adding, but I didn’t, the Peanuts “Happenis is a warm puppy”, though.
astraya @ 196
One might point out a phallusy or two among your happenis quotations, but that would surely be a bit hard on you.
I am slightly prone to mild depressive tendencies, and happenis is sometimes very hard for me to come by.
astraya @ 203
If I chill out (see 192), will you soften up, you big stiff?
If you chill out, I’ll have to ass out!
wow…..grt8 list!!! hawkings should be 1st!!!
Thou shalt not covet thy neighbour’s … wife, … nor his ass …
If this appears, at least I don’t have the disability of not being able to have my say … as looked possible.
Ahhhhhhhhhh, back on air! It was obviously something to do with the household’s other p.c.
Out of interest @ 206:
What are your grounds for considering hawkings should be placed ahead of kellers, or even nashs? (Or should that be gnashes?)
I think Beethoven or Van Gogh deseve first place…
awww. heartwarming list.
You forgot one very big one:
Django Reinhardt.
One of the best guitar players ever. When he was 18 years old, a big part of his body and 3 of his 5 fingers on his left hand were badly injured and disabled in a fire. Doctors thought he would never be able to play guitar again.
Deafness is not a "disability", sorry. If you have ever been exposed to the Deaf community, you know they are not diabled. Their lives are not hindered or halted because they cannot hear. They live normal lives. Depression is not a disability either, so I can hardly say that it can be on this list. And for anybody who said Helen Keller was mute is incorrect. She could easily make vocal sounds, she didn't have a problem. Being Deaf doesn't make you "mute". Mute just means you cannot speak. Being Deaf means you cannot hear, and you CAN make sounds when you are Deaf. I am a Deaf person and find some of this incorrect to the max.
heartwarming, really. Thirteen – Van Gogh was nuts with depression. He killed himself at 37, chopped off his own ear, and as well as this was thought little of in his time. He was disabled, and nash was schizophrenic.
Terry Fox should have made it on this list instead of the Indian dancer. He is a legend and his cause raises millions a year.
nice post …. its not a spam though.. but plz visit my site once. http://chillopedia.com/
super list they are really extraodinary &they deserves in the top 10 list
Rreally they are good
Wow, i was expecting Leonard Euler as number 1.
Love that people can’t believe Hawkings isn’t number one.
People fail to understand what an accomplishment it is to teach a blind and deaf young girl how to communicate.
You’re all sad people.
To all the ‘depression isn’t a disability’ people, I’d just like to ask how many times you have considered or attempted suicide? Feeling slightly down about something for a few days or weeks is something every human gets. However years of pain and thoughts convincing yourself that the world would be a better place without you in it is NOT something that any sane human would consider.
You can distract yourself or manage depression with drugs and counseling, but the telltale sign of clinical depression is its inevitable return, an aspect of the disease that only serves to compound the hopeless mood.
If you think that living every hour of your existence with the thoughts that you’ll never be loved by a partner, or have an emotionally stable life, or be a success in your professional life and financially secure is something you can just snap out of then you have simply do not nor have ever had depression.
I hear people say they wouldn’t wish it on anyone, I’m not so generous. I would love anyone speaking out about how it is attention seeking or an excuse to experience it. If i wasnt so paranoid I might even hint at taking a few of you with me when I go.
i really enjoyed reading you blog because it is really inspiring and gives great examples of things you can achieve with or without a disability.
verry good
when there is awill there is a way
what a great people
really inspiring and interesting! i think u should nick vujicic to your list. At birth itself, he was limbless, missing both arms at shoulder level, as well as legless. His feet were toeless except for two toes on one foot. He is a preacher and a motivational speaker. Vujicic graduated from Griffith University at the age of 21 with a double major in Accounting and Financial Planning. He has also acted in a film. HE IS AWESOME!
It would be worth it to read about him in wikipedia.
I think that hawking is no.1 because mnd(ALS) is such type of disease that make a person paralyze.but he has fight with that disease and also he is an exceptional case of that disease,As mnd patient do not alive more than 2-5 years.
Nice list…In this list all are Awesome but I think that hawking is no.1 because mnd(ALS) is such type of disease that make a person paralyze.but he has fight with that disease and also he is an exceptional case of that disease,As mnd patient do not alive more than 2-5 years.
It just shows you what can be done with a positive attitude.
http://www.deafmuteorblinddate.blogspot.com
The fact that Terry Fox is not on this list is a travesty. The man ran halfway across Canada with only one leg (and a prosthheetic). John Nash? really? He was a brilliant mathematician, but having schizophrenia did not diminish his mathematics skills. He was mathematician who just happened to have schizophrenia. Terry Fox’s disability affected his ability to run across the second largest country in the world. And he did it anyway.
I think you also missed a Mother ( parent)
How about Mile Stojkoski that runs thousands of miles of marathons for charity?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mile_Stojkoski
You’re missing Katie Lieb the girl from Pittsburgh who was selected over Steven Hawking for the first Dynavox Courage Award! She has cerebral palsy and doctors tried to shut off her life support at birth and allow her to die. Today she is a member of the Screen Actors Guild and has been on television, billboards, radio etc….A truly remarkable young lady and an inspiration to many people.
awesum article….
i hv been motivated to enlarge my abilities.
visit at http://www.getsumfun.com for more such inspirational thoughts…..
Its such as you learn my mind! You appear to grasp a lot approximately this, such as you wrote the book in it or something. I believe that you could do with a few p.c. to force the message home a bit, however other than that, this is wonderful blog. An excellent read. I’ll definitely be back.
me parece una bna pagina muy muy interesante apredi muchisimo los felicito!!