Chen Yuan, 1, was diagnosed as cerebellar hemiplegia when she was in her teens. Not only did she walk unsteadily, she couldn't speak clearly, and her coordination ability with her hands was poor. 130,000 words of grandma on the cloud, all typed by her finger, word by word, very easy to draft. "I hope more people can face up to and understand cerebral palsy, so that more people like me can live less painfully."
Grandma: "If you don't raise it, I will raise it." Chen Yuan was born in 1983 and grew up to 1 year old. He hasn't learned to walk, he can't talk, and his head, hands and feet are drooping. Chen Yuan's mother said that the doctor told her that the child would stay in bed for the rest of his life. "At that time, I had no choice but to give her away or send her to a welfare home." Chen Yuan's mother said.
But grandma stood at the door and grabbed her granddaughter. "You don't care, I'll keep. As long as I am alive, I will take her away for a day. " Seeing the quarrel between mother-in-law and daughter-in-law, kind neighbors suggested that they take their children to a big hospital for examination. Later, in a third-class first-class hospital in Chengdu, Chen Yuan was diagnosed as cerebellar hemiplegia. The doctor said that although she was limited in movement, she could still walk and talk, and grandma insisted on raising her own, so the mother gave up the idea of sending the child away.
After that, Chen Yuan followed her grandmother and lived near Hongxing Road. Chen Yuan remembers that when she was two or three years old, she could only sit in bed. When I was five or six years old, my cousin was just two or three months old and was put in bed. Chen Yuan, who could hardly walk, held the edge of the bed and moved to my cousin step by step. As a result, my cousin stepped on Chen Yuan's chest, and Chen Yuan sat on the ground and couldn't get up. Grandma is unwilling and doesn't want Chen Yuan to stand up all her life. She found a belt, tied it to Chen Yuan's waist, lifted it again and taught her to walk step by step.
Summary: seeing a doctor everywhere can't afford a wheelchair. Grandma in her fifties takes Chen Yuan by bus every morning. When there were many bumps, Chen Yuan fell to the ground. As soon as he got on the bus, he could only put the child on the ticket counter. When Chen Yuan reaches school age, she can't go to school. Her illiterate grandmother pointed to the billboard on the roadside and taught Chen Yuan to read. The vegetables and peppers she bought are props for Chen Yuan's math study. "For example, three onions and two garlic, what's the total?" Chen Yuan said that in this way, grandma became her first teacher.