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May 2020

    An Unsung Hero

    An American hero died yesterday. Her last name may be familiar, as that of the first American to orbit the Earth and the first astronaut turned Senator, but she was known as Annie Glenn.

    As the wife of the other hero, she lived in the spotlight, with media always nearby in search of a story, but hers was hard to tell. If you don’t know, Annie Glenn stuttered.

    Her story is briefly told in today’s New York Times. A life-long stammerer, she plumbed the depths of the mind with her will and learned to excel in an era before handicaps were at least nominally accepted. Her accomplishments and contributions are many, but overcoming her handicap ranks, to me, with those of her husband, John.

    It’s hard to fully comprehend what some must overcome to live in a world we take for granted without walking at least a few steps in their shoes. With that in mind, I wrote this piece some time ago. This is in Annie’s honor, whose name belong among those mentioned.

    Making Light

    Beethoven put joy to music though we know he was

    deaf to that symphony we hold in awe

    Monet painted his lilies from memory

    in the dying of the light with his own sight fading

    Da Vinci wrote in reverse because he was dyslectic

    a word I can’t spell in either direction

    Milton wrote Paradise Lost while blind and penniless 

    selling it for five pounds and left to explain why it did not rhyme

    Yogi was wise beyond simplicity

    a philosopher with pith in the subtlest of games

    Edison first great invention was the phonograph

    though I doubt you knew he was near deaf since childhood

    James Earl Jones – the voice of God himself – and

    Marilyn Monroe – Helen incarnate – both stuttered

    Albert Einstein too was dyslectic and

    Then there was Stephen Hawking 

    The list is as endless

    as their achievements humbling

    No one it seems is perfect

    but my the beauty of that spark within

  • Four Dead in Ohio

    Today marks fifty years since the National Guard fired on students protesting at Kent State, killing four and further polarizing sides in the Vietnam War debate. The New York Times has a thoughtful piece on the…

  • Monsters Under the Sea

    The first modern print report of a sighting of the Loch Ness monster was published on this day in 1933 in the Inverness Courier. The creature had long been a local legend, dating back as far…

The Last Word

After all is said and done, more is said than done.

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