Photo of the week
-- Greg Fry
Having spent my entire adult life thinking that being paralyzed would
be a fate worse than death, I expected the story of Richard Kanzler to do
nothing more than reinforce my fear. Instead, what I found was a story
that truly inspired me, that opened my eyes to the value of friendship
and family, and that illustrated to me that life itself is a gift and
challenges, no matter how great, can be overcome.
Richard talked to me about what it was like being in the hospital for
months, full of drugs that numbed his senses. He spoke of all of the
pains that go along with such a terrible accident. But what he most
wanted to talk about, and what I was most surprised to hear, was how so
many other areas of his life have opened up so positively.
His daughter, Madeline, has probably gotten to know and bond with her
father in ways most parents are never able to know. To her he is not a
guy in a wheelchair, he is her father, and his physical limitations have
done nothing but reinforce that in her and allow her to see him at his
core.
His wife, Jill, seems so proud of his accomplishments, his devotion to
maintaining an active life, and his failure to yield to tragedy. And
above all else, never have I seen a man so enveloped by the love and
support of friends. This group of guys, all successful, all active and
outgoing, have rallied around Richard and devoted much of their time to
help him through the rough spots.
Make no mistake about it: Richard hasn’t given up on life, he has
embraced it. Having the chance to know him has opened up a window
somewhere in me, allowing me to see life a little more clearly.
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