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Stories about the perseverance of disabled people

1. Beethoven Beethoven is a world-famous musician and one with the worst fate.

In his childhood, Beethoven grew up soaked in tears.

His family was poor and his parents were at odds, which resulted in Beethoven's character being serious, withdrawn, stubborn and independent. He had strong and deep feelings in his heart.

He began composing music at the age of 12. At the age of 14, he participated in an orchestra performance and received wages to support his family.

When he was 17 years old, his mother died of illness, leaving only two younger brothers, a younger sister and a corrupt father in the family.

Soon, Beethoven contracted typhoid fever and smallpox and almost died.

Beethoven has simply become a symbol of suffering, and his misfortune is unbearable for a child.

Still, Beethoven got through it.

He loves music so much that he can't live without it.

In his works, there are shadows of his life, which are full of noble thoughts and reveal his pursuit and yearning for beautiful things in the world.

He has endless feelings for the beautiful nature.

To say that Beethoven had a bad fate not only refers to his miserable childhood. In fact, his greatest misfortune was his deafness at the age of 28.

First, the ears were ringing day and night, and then the hearing was getting weaker and weaker.

He went for a walk in the fields and could no longer hear the farmer's flute.

From then on, he lived a lonely life as a deaf person, devoting all his energy to fighting the deafness.

Beethoven lived in the world, but there were too few people who could understand him, and the only thing that could give him comfort was music.

When he was composing music, he often bit a thin wooden stick in his mouth to feel the vibration of the piano. He used a voice that he could not hear to express his love for nature, his pursuit of truth, and his longing for the future.

His famous "Symphony of Destiny" was created in a state of complete loss of hearing. It is Beethoven's most outstanding work. Its theme reflects the struggle between human beings and fate and their ultimate victory over fate.

This is also a portrayal of his own life.

This is a heavy and powerful note that appears continuously in the first movement.

Beethoven said: "This is how fate knocks on the door." He firmly believed that "music can make the human spirit burst into flames."

"Fight tenaciously and win through struggle." This idea runs through Beethoven's works.

On March 26, 1827, on a thunderstorm night, the musical giant passed away. He was only 57 years old at that time.

Beethoven's life was miserable. The world never gave him joy, but he created joy for mankind.

Beethoven was physically weak, but he was truly strong.

2. Hawking Hawking made up his mind to engage in research in physics and astronomy when he was thirteen or fourteen years old.

At the age of seventeen, he received a scholarship in natural sciences and successfully entered Oxford University.

After graduating with a bachelor's degree, he transferred to Cambridge University to study for a doctorate in cosmology.

He soon discovered that he had Lou Gehrig's disease, which causes muscle wasting.

Because the doctors were helpless about the disease, he initially planned to give up his ideal of doing research. However, later the deterioration of the disease slowed down, and he regained his mood, overcome all difficulties, stood up from the setback, and faced this misfortune bravely.

Continue your research.

In the 1970s, he and Penrose proved the famous singularity theorem and won the Wolf Prize in Physics together in 1988.

He also proved that the area of ??a black hole does not decrease with time.

In 1973, he discovered that the temperature of black hole radiation is inversely proportional to its mass, that is, the black hole will become smaller due to radiation, but the temperature will increase, and eventually it will explode and disappear.

In the 1980s, he began to study quantum cosmology.

At this time, he already had problems with his mobility. Later, he underwent tracheal surgery due to pneumonia, which made him unable to speak again.

Now he is paralyzed and relies on an electric wheelchair to replace his legs. He also relies on computers and speech synthesizers to speak and write.

Although everyone thinks he is very unfortunate, his scientific achievements were achieved after he became ill.

With his perseverance and unyielding will, he defeated the disease, created a miracle, and proved that disability is not an obstacle to success.

His love for life and enthusiasm for scientific research are worth learning from the younger generation.

3. Helen Keller Helen Adams Keller (June 27, 1880 - June 1, 1968) was an American educator with disabilities.

She was born in Alabama, USA. Her father, Arthur, was a Confederate veteran.

She became blind and deaf due to a high fever when she was 19 months old.

Later, with the efforts of her mentor, Anne Sullivan, a teacher at the Perkins School for the Blind in Boston, she learned to speak and began to communicate with other people.

In 1898, Helen Keller was admitted to the Cambridge School for Girls affiliated with Harvard University.

In the autumn of 1900, he was admitted to Radcliffe College of Harvard University. For a blind and deaf person, this was incredible.

Finally, in 1904, Helen Keller successfully obtained a Bachelor of Arts degree with excellent results.

Teacher Sullivan has stayed with Helen Keller for so many years, and written the textbooks and class contents on Helen Keller's palm so that Keller could understand the contents. It can be said that she has never left Helen Keller.

Never give up, so Helen Keller was very grateful to her throughout her life.