The Iron Lung Warrior: Paul Alexander's Inspirational Legacy. Paul Alexander, known as the Iron Lung Warrior, faced a life-changing diagnosis of polio at just six years old. Confined to an iron lung for most of his life, Paul's spirit remained unbroken as he found solace in books, music, and the support of loved ones. Despite the challenges of daily life within the iron lung, Paul pursued education, advocated for disability rights, and found joy in life's simple pleasures. His resilience and determination inspired all who knew him, leaving a lasting legacy of strength and perseverance. Paul's story serves as a timeless reminder of the human spirit's ability to overcome adversity with courage and gratitude. This is his amazing story The Iron …show more content…
This marked the beginning of Paul's challenging journey, as he was diagnosed with polio and spent the majority of his life confined to an iron lung. Despite his adversity, Paul displayed remarkable resilience and determination to embrace life to the fullest. The Diagnosis and Life in the Iron Lung: The news of Paul's polio diagnosis came as a shock to his family. The iron lung became his vital support, ensuring his survival by assisting with his breathing. While confined within the walls of the iron lung for years, Paul's spirit remained unbroken. He found comfort in books, music, and the occasional visits from loved ones. Despite the limitations imposed by his condition, Paul never gave up hope and always maintained a positive outlook. Overcoming Challenges and Discovering Happiness: Living in the iron lung presented countless obstacles for Paul. Simple tasks that others took for granted, like moving freely or breathing unassisted, were beyond his reach. Nevertheless, Paul refused to let his disability define him. He pursued an education, earning a literature degree through correspondence courses. He advocated for the rights and accessibility of people with disabilities. Paul found joy in
The way I can use his example to inspire me is by doing things even though my first thoughts are “no” or “don’t”. I need to step up my game. Although doing physical training outside of work isn’t something I do often nor is it something I’m completely afraid of I need to step it up. I want to hang with the big boys and by that I mean lift what my body build should be able to life. I am afraid of lifting something to heavy or with the wrong form. To show my personal courage I need to face my fear with just education. Some of the medics wouldn’t mind putting me under their wing and helping me with my form and I would be able to improve in that area of physical training.
Peter Alexander was born in 1965 in Melbourne, Australia. He attended school at Mount Scopus Memorial College and was voted as the least likely to succeed by schoolmates. Alexander's teacher suggested he leave and go to TAFE but he was stubborn and decided to stay at school and successfully completed Year 12. Nowadays, Alexander states that the confidence and self-belief was derived from his school life and he was able to set high goals and achieve them independently. He wishes that he’d done a business course before starting his own business to jump start the benefits and profits in the sleepwear business.
Have you heard of a man named Alexander the Great, the famous historical figure? There are many amazing stories about him explaining the courageous things he had accomplished. However, if you learn more about him and his accomplishments you will soon realized the real person Alexander was. Alexander the Great, ruler of his empire was in fact not great as his title states. The definition of great is a person who shows concern for others, has leadership and shows intelligence. Alexander didn’t show any of these characteristics therefore he doesn’t deserve the title of “great”.
By reading Delights and Shadows we get see another method of poems writing that is filled with imagery that comes in poetry format but a more like short story. In this poem “At the Cancer Clinic” like so many others, Ted Kooser wrote in point of view of some that were watching this happening. The poem talks to how weak to walk on her own beside her she has two people accompany her to the examination room on each side to This poem tries to capture the feeling of wonder that people often get when they realize that someone who is engaging against unconceivable physical weakness is fraught to persevere with the little strength they have. The Cancer Clinic invites readers to reflect on the strength of the woman and not to dwell on the illness that has emaciated her but her willingness to live and a more uplifting experience than and the title first tells The book Kooser shares these stories know that he is not just the only one that goes through this thing like breath of a loved one that was sick.
Until Beisser contracted polio, he led a “normal” life. He won a national tennis championship and had already completed his basic medical training by the age of 24. As a member of the National Reserve, he was called upon to fight in the Korean War. While he was determined physically fit to serve, he fell ill on his way to Navy training. His diagnosis was non-paralytic polio. Within a few hours he was paralyzed from the neck down. He spent a year and a half in an iron lung and remained in the hospital for three years total. He was paralyzed for the rest of his life.
The Polio Journals: Lessons from My Mother, by Anne K. Gross, is the heartbreaking and emotional version of one woman’s life as a polio survivor. Carol Greenfeld Rosenstiel, the author’s mother, contracted polio in 1927 at the young age of two. From then until her death from lung cancer in 1985, Carol Rosenstiel was a paraplegic, suffering paralysis below the waist. She did successfully marry, raise children, and enjoy a profession as a concert musician while confined to a wheelchair. She kept journals that Anne Gross used, after her mother’s death, to reminisce her mother’s life. She was encouraged by her courageous and pitiless efforts to attain recognition in the world of the non-disabled.
This book (the last lecture), is filled with awe-inspiring circumstances. Of course life can come with some hurdles or challenges, but the tendency for Randy to handle his medical situation with phenomenal valor, is an outstanding qualities that shows leadership and focus on what matters to him, his family, and vision before he moved on to the next realm.
So, regardless of how her husband viewed her illness, she knew she had to look beyond her husband’s constraints and continue looking toward her goal of healing. She continues to seek self-worth. Desperately, she seeks answers. “The force of character is cumulative.”
Alexander the Great is hailed, by most historians, as “The Great Conqueror” of the world in the days of ancient Mesopotamia. “Alexander III of Macedon, better known as Alexander the Great, single-handedly changed the nature of the ancient world in little more than a decade. Alexander was born in Pella, the ancient capital of Macedonia in July 356 BCE. His parents were Philip II of Macedon and his wife Olympias. Philip was assassinated in 336 BCE and Alexander inherited a powerful yet volatile kingdom. He quickly dealt with his enemies at home and reasserted Macedonian power within Greece. He then set out to conquer the massive Persian Empire” (Web, BBC History). It is important to note, which will maybe explain his brutal actions, that Alexander was only twenty years old when he became the king of Macedonia. “When he was 13, Philip hired the Greek philosopher Aristotle to be Alexander’s personal tutor. During the next three years Aristotle gave Alexander training in rhetoric and literature and stimulated his interest in science, medicine, and philosophy, all of which became of importance in Alexander’s later life” (Web, Project of History of Macedonia). “In, 340, when Philip assembled a large Macedonian army and invaded Thrace, he left his 16 years old son with the power to rule Macedonia in his absence as regent, but as the Macedonian army advanced deep into Thrace, the Thracian tribe of Maedi bordering north-eastern Macedonia rebelled and posed a danger to the country. Alexander assembled an army, led it against the rebels, and with swift action defeated the Maedi, captured their stronghold, and renamed it after himself to Alexandropolis. Two years later in 338 BC, Philip gave his son a commanding post among the senior gener...
Alexander the Great was most likely the greatest leader ever. His tactics and reasoning are still studied all over the world even after 2,000 years ago. Being a teenager from a divorced family and forced to rule at such a young age intensely impacted Alexander’s Life. According to records, he was said to be a heavy drinker and because of his mother’s excessive praise, believed himself to be a god. His loyalty, ego, and ambitions are a few of his life struggles that are still scrutinized today.
Alexander the great is known as one of the most ruthless and greatest leaders the world has ever seen. In less than ten years, Alexander conquered cities from Greece all the way to modern day India. Not only did he defeat and conquer cities throughout the known world, but Alexander would also leave his mark spreading and influencing Greek society wherever he went. His leadership and conquests united the East and the West as a whole like no one up to that point had done before. His impact on culture and society when meshing his Greek background with his conquered cities became something truly unique. In 323 B.C. when Alexander passed away, he not only left behind a vast thriving empire, but also a legacy that would be remembered throughout history.
What’s in a name? If it is a name like Alexander the Great, then a lot. Alexander the Great is still synonymous with great achievement, and rightfully so. Alexander is the greatest military leader of all time, worshipped as a god by the Greeks, the Macedonians, and the Egyptians (Cartledge). One reason for that is that people taught him from a young age how to be a good king and leader. The man who gave him most of these teachings was his father, Philip II. Not only did he groom him into the man that he became, he helped him in other ways. The biggest of these was likely the army that Alexander inherited from his father. Philip revolutionized the army of Macedonia (Worthington). Alexander put that army to use across Asia and Africa. Alexander was tutored by Aristotle, a philosopher who is widely regarded as one of the finest minds of all time (Cartledge). Another influential man in Alexander’s early life was Leonidas, his first tutor. Leonidas taught him to be industrious and military
Surprisingly, from such a high-ranked and honoured neurosurgeon to suddenly falling to a position of being someone who needed help rather than providing it is unbelievable. Paul’s emotions of regret, fear, frustration, and denial of his state resonated with me and got me questioning myself “where do my values lie at this very moment of my life?” This was a thought that constantly entered my mind. Similar to the writer, I am guilty of questioning why we have this concept of life and death, but as living in a fast-paced generation full of technological advances, we do not have time to think about what is most important to us. As a teenager born in this generation, my friends and I are incredibly oblivious to how fragile our lives can be. Living in the 21st century, we are given many privileges such as access to medical care, warm shelters, and nutritious food, yet we consistently get distracted by the appeal of our wants rather than our
Having a therapeutic environment for the patients that are boarding in the emergency room is a crucial topic in nursing that needs to be researched and changed. The article written by Donald, Duff, Lee, Kroschel, and Kulkarni discuss the importance of the environment that the patient is in on the way he or she perceives his or her care to be. The theory that is related to this article and the topic of a therapeutic environment for the psychiatric patients that are boarding in the emergency room is comfort theory. This theory discusses the importance of the patient’s comfort in an environment on his or her healing process, this is vital in the pscyharitic patients environment because sometimes these patients are staying multiple days in the
Have you ever wondered why Alexander from Macedonia is called Alexander the Great. According to history, it is because he is the most glorious general in the history who conquered Persia, Greece, Egypt and Babylon in a very inexperienced age. He became the commander of Macedonian armies at age eighteen and the king of Macedonia at age twenty. After six years of preparation, he conquered the great Persian empire. Unfortunately, he died at age thirty-three. He would have conquered many lands if he hadn’t died at a such young age. He was a legend and an icon for great kings like Charlemagne, Julius Caesar, and Pompey. World’s most famous generals tried to compete with him but they couldn’t accomplish. After years, his tomb