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In a message dated 07/07/2007 07:45:36 GMT Standard Time,  [log in to unmask]
writes:

Friday,  July 6, 2007
Christopher Reeve wasn't Superman
Far from flying, he  probably knew he would never walk again.
Reeve, who died at 52 of a heart  attack, was one of Hollywood's best-known
actors when a 1995 equestrian  accident rendered him a quadriplegic. With
eloquence and determination, he  became a spokesman for the optimism that can
transform the lives of people  with spinal column injuries.

But that transformation is of a limited  sort. Optimism has its limits.
Here's what it can and can't  do.

Optimism can help organize people, money and resources to seek  new
treatments. And Reeve did. He created foundations, raised  awareness,
addressed Congress. Thanks to him, more people became aware of  spinal cord
injuries, and more scientists studied them.

Optimism can  help injured people take control of their post-injury lives. In
those very  different lives, these people can teach themselves ways to
endure, to  thrive, to own every new second. Optimism can light the hard road
to  healing, on which each step is a triumph of the human will.

Reeve was  the ultimate symbol of such triumphs. In films, commercials,
television  shows, he was active in more ways, in more venues, than ever
before. He was  a leading, and damaging, critic of curbs on federal funds for
stem-cell  research. He reminded those with spinal cord injuries that they
can live  lives with passion and impact.

But optimism cannot cure. We are nowhere  near a cure for what happened to
him, nor are we likely to be for many  years. Reeve often spoke as though he
expected to walk again, but he  probably knew he wouldn't. Survivability
rather than recovery is the word.  We are far from the operation or the drug
that can reverse paralysis; we  don't know enough.

It would be terrible to mislead anyone, especially  the 250,000 to 400,000
people a year who are paralyzed by spinal cord  trauma, 30 new cases each
day. It would be irresponsible to hold out a hope  that does not exist.

Scientists have begun to make strides, especially  in animal-based research.
But what our children's generation will see, is a  mix of therapies, each
aimed at increasing function a certain amount.  Perhaps this mix of therapies
will make heartening differences for  thousands of people. That is wonderful,
but that is far as anyone's  prediction should go.

Too often it takes a Christopher Reeve or a  Michael J. Fox, some stricken
celebrity to put a medical condition on the  map, to attract attention and
dollars. Such is the paralysis of a  health-care system in which the dollar
speaks louder for some conditions  than for others.

People can't fly. They are bound to their bodies and  their world. Yet even
when they cannot deny their limitations, they can  defy them. When they do,
as Reeve did, they fly high indeed. That's the  superhero in us all.

Rayilyn Brown
Board Member AZNPF
Arizona  Chapter National Parkinson's  Foundation
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There's a saying which so far I've found true -
"Any multi-faceted problem has more than one solution"
            we'll  find 'em, keep pushing, folks !









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