Fortune Telling Collection - Fortune-telling birth date - Why did Helen Keller succeed?

Why did Helen Keller succeed?

Helen was a normal baby when she was born. She can watch, listen and babble. However, an illness made her blind and deaf-she was only 19 months old.

The drastic changes in physiology have greatly changed little Helen's temperament. If she is a little unhappy, she will roll on the ground and scream. She is simply a "little tyrant" In desperation, her parents had to send her to a school for the blind in Boston and hired a teacher to take care of her.

Fortunately, little Helen met a great angel of light-Ms. Anne Sullivan. Sullivan is also a woman with an unfortunate experience. 10 years old, she was sent to an orphanage in Massachusetts with her brother. Due to the lack of room, the two brothers and sisters had to live in the morgue where the bodies were placed. Six months later, my brother died in extreme poverty. At the age of 14, she still suffered from eye diseases and was almost blind. Later, she was sent to Perkins School for the Blind and became Helen's tutor.

From then on, Ms. Sullivan's struggle with the girl who suffered triple pain began. Wash your face, comb your hair and eat with a knife and fork. You must fight with her while teaching her. Helen, who was opinionated, rebelled against strict education by crying and screaming. However, in the end, Ms. Sullivan succeeded a month later. How did she successfully communicate with Helen?

The answer is this: Self-success and reshaping destiny are the same tools-self-confidence and love.

About this matter, in the book My Life written by Helen Keller, there is a touching description: a young man with vision, with little "teaching experience", devoted great love and amazing confidence to a deaf-mute girl-first, through subconscious communication and physical contact, built a bridge for their hearts. Thus, self-confidence and self-love emerged in little Helen's heart, freeing her from the painful and lonely hell. Through self-efforts, she has exerted the infinite energy of her subconscious and stepped into the light.

That's it: two people hand in hand, heart to heart, with love and confidence as the "prescription". After a period of inhuman struggle against others, Helen's sleeping consciousness was awakened. When a deaf, dumb and blind girl first experienced the joy of language, the touching scene was really hard to describe with a pen. Helen once wrote: "On the night when I first realized the existence of language, I was lying in bed and excited. That was the first time I had hope for dawn-I don't think anyone else could feel my joy at that time. "

Helen, who is still blind, learned to communicate with the outside world with her sense of touch-fingertips instead of eyes and ears. 10 years old, her name has spread all over the United States and she has become a model for the disabled.

1May 8, 893 is Helen's happiest day and a memorable day for Dr. Bell, the inventor of the telephone. On this day, Dr. Bell, a successful person, established his famous International Foundation for Deaf Education, and the foundation stone was Little Helen of 13.

Little Helen was not complacent after she became famous, and she continued to receive education tirelessly. 1900, this 20-year-old girl has learned fingering grammar, Braille and pronunciation, and gained more knowledge than ordinary people through these means, and entered Radcliffe College of Harvard University. The first thing she said was, "I'm not stupid anymore!" " "Four years later, as the first blind and deaf person in the world to receive university education, she graduated with excellent results.

Helen not only learned to speak. I also learned to write books and manuscripts on a typewriter. Although she is blind, she has read more books than people with normal vision. Moreover, she has written seven books and enjoys music more than "normal people".

Helen has a keen sense of touch, so she can know what the other person is saying by gently putting her finger on his lips. You can put your hands on the wooden parts of the piano and violin to "enjoy" the music. She can distinguish the sound through the vibration of the radio and speaker, and can "listen to the song" by gently touching the other person's throat with her fingers.

If you have shaken hands with Helen Keller, five years later, when you meet again to shake hands, she can recognize you by shaking hands and know that you are beautiful, strong, fragile, interesting, cheerful or full of complaints.

This "creature" who overcame the "insurmountable" disability of ordinary people has aroused shock and appreciation all over the world. When she graduated from college, people set up "Helen Keller Day" at the St. Louis Expo. She is always full of confidence and enthusiasm for life. She likes swimming, boating and riding in the forest. She likes playing chess and telling fortune with playing cards. On rainy days, I kill time by knitting.

Helen Keller, with her firm belief, finally defeated herself and showed her value. She has achieved more than the rich and politicians.

After World War II, she toured Europe, Asia and Africa, which aroused public concern about the physically disabled and was praised by the Encyclopedia Britannica as the most accomplished representative of the disabled in history.

American writer Mark Twain commented: In the19th century, the most notable figures were Napoleon and Helen Keller.