By Don McNay
McNay's Musings“Superman or Green Lantern ain’t got nothing on me”
— Donovan
2008 has been a year marred by injuries to horses and people riding them.
When I see a rider go down, it reminds me of the accident that paralyzed and ultimately killed Christopher Reeve.
Like
Rock Hudson for AIDS and Lou Gehrig for ALS, Reeve put a famous and
courageous face on an ailment. Because of Reeve, money and resources
have been devoted to possible cures for spinal cord injuries.
I work
with lesser-known people who benefited from the attention that
Christopher Reeve brought to spinal injuries. These aren’t famous
movie stars. They are people hit by a truck or who fell on a slippery
floor.
Like Reeve, their lives changed in one second.
Christopher Reeve allowed the world to have an insight into his injuries. He was a famous, good-looking guy with resources.
Few
people with a spinal cord injuries have that kind of money and support.
They also don’t have the ability to command public attention they
way that Reeve did.
It would have been easy for Reeve to suffer in silence. He chose to be an advocate instead.
An
injury can bring out the best or worst in an injured person’s
family. I’ve seen families show love and support that seems super
human.
I’ve also seen family members be insensitive and cruel.
I
saw the wife of a quadriplegic say, in front of her husband, that she
was tired of taking care of a cripple in a wheelchair. Tears started
running down her husband’s face and he could not move his hands
to wipe them away.
Friends of the injured person often drift away. They go on with their lives and forget about their friend who is struggling.
An
injured man told me that his goal was to someday drive to each of his
old friends’ houses and honk the horn so that they knew he was
still alive.
Love has a tremendous power to make sick people better.
I’ve seen family members help their loved ones improve physically
and emotionally.
Government benefits for injured people aren’t
as good as they should be. Many government agencies have started
outsourcing benefit programs to big companies. The companies make
injured people fill out reams after reams of needless forms. Sometimes,
they cut off an injured person’s benefits just because they
didn’t fill the paperwork out quickly enough.
I helped a
quadriplegic man get some government benefits he deserved. When I
finished, he asked his wife to hug me because he couldn’t.
It is hard not to root for a guy like that.
Christopher
Reeve was able to bring in dollars for research for spinal cord
injuries. There may be a day that my friend can hug me himself. Reeve
focused attention on scientific solutions and let the world know that
injured people need help and support.
Christopher Reeve’s
injury changed and shortened his life, but it was a path that allowed
him to make a great impact on the world. He was a pretty good actor,
but few actors make the mark on society that Christopher Reeve did.
I’m
hoping the run of horse-related injuries has ended. I’m also
hoping that people with spinal cord injuries will some day be able to
fully recover.
Reeve played a super hero in the movies. Real super
heroes are not actors. Real super heroes are injured people and their
families who deal with life-changing injuries with love, courage and
compassion.
Superman and Green Lantern ain’t got nothing on them.
Don
McNay is the chairman of the board for McNay Settlement Group in
Richmond, Ky. You can write to him at don@mcnay.com or read his
award-winning column at www.donmcnay.com. McNay is the treasurer for
the National Society of Newspaper Columnists.
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