Zhang Haidi 1955 was born in an intellectual family in Wendeng County, Shandong Peninsula. At the age of 5, he was completely unconscious from the chest down because of spinal hemangioma, and he could not take care of himself. However, Zhang Haidi, who was physically disabled and determined, did not give up his life, let alone his life. She fought the disease with strong perseverance and determination, and continued her life with diligent study and work. She not only taught herself all the courses in primary and secondary schools, but also taught herself college English. From 65438 to 0983, Zhang Haidi began to engage in literary creation. He translated The Seaside Clinic, Little Miller's Travels and Rebecca's New School successively, and created works of more than one million words, such as Windows Open to the Sky and Life and Dreams in Wheelchairs. She studied hard and devoted herself to more than a dozen medical books such as human anatomy, internal medicine and acupuncture. She used her medical knowledge and acupuncture technology to treat more than 10 thousand people around her. She also studied radio technology, music, painting, calligraphy and other knowledge and disciplines as the ability to serve the people. Known as "contemporary Paul".
Second, Hawking in a wheelchair.
Hawking, born on 194218 October, graduated from Oxford University and Trinity College of Cambridge University successively, and obtained a doctorate in philosophy from Cambridge University. Professor of the Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics, Cambridge University, England, the most important contemporary general relativity and cosmologist, is one of the great men who enjoy international reputation in this century, and is known as the greatest scientist in the world and the "king of the universe". 1989 was awarded the honorary title of British Jazz. He is a student of the Royal Society and a foreign academician of the American Academy of Sciences. Professor Hawking was diagnosed as muscular dystrophy, that is, motor neuropathy. Hawking, who was predicted by doctors to live for only two years, has supported today with a strong sense of mission and extremely strong will, and has made outstanding achievements. Hawking doesn't want people to regard him as a disabled person, and he himself is downplaying his disability, but he is indeed a disabled person, a severely disabled person. We have to say that his great charm comes from people's disabilities. People look for invisible things in every corner of the earth and endless mysteries in spacecraft. Looking back at the past in a wheelchair, Hawking penetrated the origin of time and the universe, and looking forward to the future, he predicted their destination with great foresight. Hawking's life is a record of human willpower and a miracle created by scientific spirit.
Third, the armless piano prince Wei Liu
Liu Wei 12, the prince of armless piano, played hide-and-seek and fell on a 65438+ million volt high-voltage line, losing his arms. After that, he learned to take care of himself with his feet and joined the disabled swimming team in Beijing. Two years later, Liu Wei won two gold medals and a silver medal in the national swimming championships for the disabled. In senior three, he gave up the college entrance examination and studied music, becoming the first person in the world to play the piano with his feet. Participating in a TV "draft" competition made him famous almost overnight. His experience has made many people only use "shock" to describe their feelings. And his sentence "There are only two ways in my life, either to die quickly or to live brilliantly" inspired many people.
4. Blind singer Yang Guang
Yang Guang, a blind boy from Harbin, China, is a talented player, but his life experience is quite tortuous, which makes people cry. He was blind because of illness when he was eight months old, which means that he walked into a dark world when he was still a baby, and there is no image memory about this world in his mind. Until now, there is no concept of color in his mind. However, his innate musical talent was revealed when he was very young. He has been to Beijing three times, but in the process of going to Beijing three times, he lost three relatives-grandfather, grandmother and father. Now, he can only live with his 60-year-old mother. But others, as the name suggests, have interpreted the world in his heart with music for many years. He looked for colors optimistically and depicted a beautiful life in the notes. Yang Guang, a happy blind man, sang people's hearts, feelings and gifts of life with music on the stage of the Avenue of Stars.
Five, "Thousand Hands Guanyin" Tai Lihua
When Tai Lihua was two years old, she lost her hearing because of a high fever. When she first entered a school for the deaf as a child, a "rhythm class" played a very important role in her later dance career. That day, the teacher knocked on the wooden floor like a foot drum, passing the vibration to the students standing on the floor, and letting the children know what rhythm is.
Xiao Lihua was crawling on the floor when the students were excited by the ever-changing vibration under their feet. She pointed to her chest and said to the teacher, "I like it!" " "She tried to feel different vibrations, and her petite body swayed. She suddenly found that this is a language that belongs to her.
Behind the graceful dance, Tai Lihua has made several times more efforts than ordinary people. One minute on stage, ten years off stage. Her tenacious perseverance touched us and hit our hearts violently. She devoted herself to her dancing career. She turned herself into a spinning top and danced for 24 hours except for the basic time of eating and sleeping. If you can't find the beat, practice again. If the action is wrong, it will be changed again and again. You'll get up, fall down, get up ... Six black scars on your calf. With persistent efforts and talent, 15 years old, Tai Lihua went abroad to perform with China Disabled Art Troupe. She said: "Disability is not a defect, but a feature of human diversity. Disability is not misfortune, but inconvenience. Disabled people also have the value of life. The more incomplete, the better! "