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- 28 May 2006
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howdy whiskers1. I don't say that elephants and cows get more attention than humans. How on earth did you arrive at a ridiculous assertion like that and what has that got to do with anything?
2. I purposely did not and will not elaborate on my disability, because that is not important for the discussion. I, like many disabled try to lead as normal a life as possible and go about our lives without making any issue of it.
3. As I see it there was no issue with this thread, until woodchips aired his toxic thoughts, then woodchips attitude became the issue.
4. I trust you are not being disrespectful, but I find your later posts somewhat clouded in ambiguity.
5. What is the point you are trying to make with your and worth?
1. you didn't say it - I introduced the idea of elephants for you to comment on . (It was all I could find searching ABC for keyword "prosthetic" lol).
Because your cat was a triped (?) I assumed you might be minus a leg as well. No biggie, and I'll unreservedly take anything that caused insult back.
2. yep agreed. as normal a life as poss - good on you.
3. agreed - btw - just a guess, but I think Woodchips would say it differently if he realised others would take such offence. : 2 twocents
4. not being disrespectful - respecting you by treating you as full bodied and/or no-disability etc.
5. my attitude on using icons? - For instance, pretty common in chatrooms - suppose you're playing backgammon, and your opp rolls 6+6, then you can either say
a) "nice roll" - but he might take the attitude that you are pissed off and accusing him of winning by luck (which might be true lol, but a good sportsman wouldn't rub it in , yes? agreed?) - his reply would almost always be aggressive "you think I'm winnig by luck!",
b) alternatively "nice roll " which - assuming he has a sense of humour, he might come back with a friendly reply - and concede it was lucky.
PS Hopefully no ambiguity in the fact that I posted a video from special olympics - also a couple of young men with disabilities of a different type - will find it hard to find a partner etc - equally a disability yes ? Then again blind people achieve the greatest heights (literally) . I posted something on "Anthony Mundine" thread a couple of weeks ago. https://www.aussiestockforums.com/forums/showthread.php?p=188845&highlight=traveller#post188845
Whiskers, I'd like to strongly recommend to you or anyone else a book I'm reading . ... "A sense of the World - How A Blind Man (James Holman) became history's Greatest Traveller" typical review "One of the best and most life - affirming biographies I've ever read .." - by Jason Roberts
then in the first chapter he walks to the edge of the Vesuvius volcano .In an era when the blind were routinely warehoused in asylums, Holman could be found studying medicine in Edinburgh, fighting the slave trade in Africa (where the Holman river is named in his honour) etc ...
In "The Voyage of the Beagle", Charles Darwin cites him as an authority on the fauna of the Indian Ocean ...
James Holman was justly hailed as "one of the greatest wonders of the world he so sagaciously explored" . But astonishing as his exploits were , a further astonishment is how quickly he was forgotten. The public's embrace, driven more by novelty than genuine respect, did not endure. Critics dismissed his literacy and scientific ambitions as "something incongruous and approaching the absurd". One bitter enemy , another professional adventurer whose expedition was eclipsed by Holman's, levelled a charge that took root in public perception - "His sightlessness made genuine insight impossible"
"He might have BEEN to Zanzibar, but how could the Blind Traveller claim to KNOW Zanzibar. ? ....
The fame diminished, and curdled into ridicule, but Holman didn't slow down in the slightest. Impoverished, increasingly threadbare, and still in debilitating health, he kept to his solo travels ... friends lost track of him ,... died in London. ...
James Holman was a whirlwind of incongruities: an intrepid invalid ( at times simultaneously incapable of standing up and standing still), a poet turned warrior turned wanderer, a solitary man who remained deeply engaged with humanity. .....His adventures were either acts of machismo nor self-aggrandizing stunts - they were as he put it a means "to enter into the business of life... communion with the world and its multiplying delights".
Here's a few extra lines that I scribbled on the back of a Qantas boarding pass whilst reading this chapter.........
It was a triumph... Vesuvius was at its slmost violent in living memory, yet he was able to march to the very precipice, accompanied but at his own pace, under his own power. ... It was the only thing keeping him alive.
Two years earlier Holman had been a bedridden invalid, slowly retreating from life ...
Unable to cure either his blindness or the wracking pain that made an agony of motion, his physicians suggested he find some attendants and go to warmer climate - acting out of poverty, pride, and sheer self destructiveness, he did nothing of the sort. Instead he hobbled aboard a ferry bound for France quite alone , etc
..
Instead of lingering, he'd chosen to keep moving, to cling to the road like a lifeline
....
after reaching the volcano's edge... (after he was talked out of trying to go on - it was well after dark, but what did he care lol) ...... monk kept a visitor's book ... A quill was dipped in ink and placed in his hand, then gently guided to the page. Holman, a poet long before he was an officer (or blind) thought for a moment, then made what he hoped was a legible approximation of writing "
"Some difficulties meet, full many
I find them not , nor seek for any "
He handed back the book and quill , not realising he had just composed his lifetime's motto.
"Some difficulties meet, full many
I find them not , nor seek for any "
volcano edge not seen with brain
and smelt and felt and seen by cane
… the cards I’m dealt, ignore the pain.
excitedly he cried "the heat !
I see the lava with my feet !"
let's move on higher !! UP and on !!"
........
"but sire it's hours since sun has shone".
Needless to say it is one hell of a read. It includes for instance the prejudice he received and ignored. And he travelled more than any other rfree traveller else in the 1800's ! amazing bloke.