
What I do understand is what life is like for Hawking. His situation is worse than paraplegia. After a head-on collision, I was a partial paraplegic, paralyzed from the waist down. It took me -- wow -- a long time, money, prayers, a lot of doctors, 125 exercises twice-a-day for two years, and every ounce of will power to keep at it, to regain normal bladder and bowel control ... standing ... walking, and yes, re-learning basic ballet, and finally dancing.
Well, next to Stephen Hawking, what I did was "easy as pie."
He was born in 1942. He's 68. Exceptionally smart, always interested in math and science, he got a B.A. degree at Oxford in 1962. He planned to stay there and study astronomy, but impulsively, left for Cambridge (their observatory had better equipment), and got involved with theoretical astronomy and cosmology.
At Cambridge (around age 22), he started developing symptoms of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (Lou Gehrig's disease), a type of disease which cost Hawking almost all neuromuscular control. Even so, despite almost overwhelming limitations, he began working on his PhD.
Today Hawking, one of the world's most famous, important, theoretical physicists, is almost completely paralyzed from ALS. He needs an electronic voice synthesizer, in order to communicate.

Like Newton, and Einstein, this man has been opening the world's eyes. Today, Stephen Hawking is on the Discovery Channel. He's created and recorded a ten-part series for them, that you can also download and see whenever you're in the mood. In his series of films entitled "The Story of Everything," Hawking explores time, travel, and the origins of the universe.
It's a huge project, one that an ambitious, young movie-maker might have spent years on researching and coordinating.
Like a mind-reader, asking questions about things we wonder about -- for instance, are there aliens, what is a black hole, what's ahead for our planet, Hawking -- with clear sentences and marvelous music, photos, and filmed visions of the universe, enlightens us, and entertains all of us, oldsters and youngsters.
Gehrig started losing his strength at 36; was diagnosed at 39, died at age 42, calling himself "The luckiest man on the Face of the Earth."
Lucky, lucky us -- we still have an alert, 68-year-old Stephen Hawking observing the world, and excitedly sharing with us, thrilling us with what he's still learning.
1 comment:
He is lucky to have lived for so long. Remember Woody Guthrie?
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