Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Fw: Historic Passage of Christopher and Dana Reeve Paralysis Act

Finally after seven years in his past!


-----Original Message-----
From: Peter T. Wilderotter, Christopher & Dana Reeve Foundation <peter.wilderotter@christopherreeve.org>
Sent: Mar/25/09 2:03 PM
To: Mark Felling (Mark@Felling.US)
Cc:
Subject: Historic Passage of Christopher and Dana Reeve Paralysis Act


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Dear Mark,

Today we applaud the United States House of Representatives for passing the Christopher and Dana Reeve Paralysis Act (CDRPA), included in the Omnibus Public Land Management Act. The legislation was named for the late Christopher Reeve and his wife Dana, whose courage and grace in the face of adversity, coupled with their extraordinary activism, were an inspiration to millions around the world.

The landmark legislation, which enjoyed bi-partisan support and passed in the Senate on January 15, 2009 will promote collaborative research, rehabilitation and quality of life initiatives for millions of Americans living with paralysis and spinal cord injuries.

Today is a day of celebration for the paralysis community and we commend Congress for quickly passing this much needed legislation, which honors the spirit and legacy of Christopher and Dana Reeve. There is no better tribute to their dedicated efforts, and they would be so proud, yet humbled, to see this tremendous achievement. We look forward to the President signing this bill into law.

On behalf of the Reeve Foundation and millions of Americans living with paralysis, I would like to thank Congresswomen Tammy Baldwin (D-WI) and Mary Bono Mack (R-CA) as well as Congressmen Jim Langevin (D-RI) and Gus Bilirakis (R-FL) for initially sponsoring this important health bill and for their tireless efforts.Their extraordinary leadership and dedication was instrumental in passing this historic legislation.

"Passage of this bill today is extremely gratifying," said Congresswoman Tammy Baldwin (D-WI). "We honor the activism of Christopher and Dana Reeve with this bipartisan effort to better treat and, we hope, cure paralysis and other serious motor impairments. Chris and Dana used their visibility to work on behalf of families in all parts of the country who face the challenges of paralysis and impaired mobility. This legislation is part of their legacy," Baldwin said. Ms. Baldwin introduced the bill on January 8, 2009 along with co-sponsors Bono Mack, Langevin and Bilirakis.

The Reeve Foundation is especially grateful to former Congressman Michael Bilirakis (R-FL) who was the bill's original sponsor and first introduced it in 2002. Today his son Gus Bilirakis, who holds the same seat, is carrying out his father's mission and has been vital to the final passage of this landmark legislation.

The Christopher and Dana Reeve Paralysis Act will improve the quality of life for people living with paralysis and mobility impairments from any cause - stroke, ALS, spinal cord injuries and others. It encourages coordination of research to prevent redundancies and hasten discovery of better treatments and cures, as well as to improve the daily lives for those living with paralysis. The Act has three components that support and enhance paralysis research, rehabilitation, and quality of life programs:

  • Paralysis Research - Expands research on paralysis at the National Institutes of Health (NIH). This will encourage collaborative research by connecting scientists conducting similar work to further enhance understanding and speed discovery of better treatments and cures.
  • Paralysis Rehabilitation and Care - Builds on research to enhance daily function for people with paralysis, including a Clinical Trials Network, to measure effectiveness of certain rehabilitation tactics and encouraging shared findings on paralysis to improve rehabilitation.
  • Improving Quality of Life for Persons with Paralysis and Other Physical Disabilities - Works with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to improve the quality of life and long-term health status of persons with paralysis and other physical disabilities.

We cannot thank you, our advocates, enough for all your support during this process.

Peter T. Wilderotter Yours truly,

Peter T. Wilderotter

Peter T. Wilderotter
President and CEO

 


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Monday, March 16, 2009

Accomplishments - Adapted by Mark Felling

Accomplishments

The greatest ideas will be shot down by those with the smallest minds.

Think big anyway.

What you spend years creating could be destroyed overnight.

Create anyway.

Give the best you have and it will never be enough.

Give your best anyway.

Success will win you false friends and genuine enemies.

Succeed anyway.

People are often unreasonable, irrational, and self-centered.

Forgive them anyway.

Those most in need of help may attack viciously when it is offered.

Help them anyway.

If you are kind people may accuse you of selfish, ulterior motives.

Be kind anyway.

The good you do today, will often be forgotten tomorrow.

Do good anyway.

Honesty and sincerity make you vulnerable to deceptive people.

Be honest and sincere anyway.

If you find happiness, other's jealousy and envy will soon follow.

Be happy anyway.

 

Adapted by Mark Felling from the version found written on the wall in Mother Teresa's home for children in Calcutta which was adapted from "The Paradoxical Commandments" by Dr. Kent M. Keith written in 1968 as part of a booklet for student leaders.

Fw: Giving appreciation and HONOR to entrepreneurs

I received this e-mail below yesterday about entrepreneurs. Even though it was written for marketing purposes from Perry Marshall, a marketing guru to sell his consulting services, it is very nice and touches home to many truths! I thought it was worth sharing for all those entrepreneurs and self-employed small business people upon whose back the great American economy is borne!

- Mark Felling

--------------------------------------------

Mark,

    I just came home from a seminar by Paul Manwaring called "A Culture of Honor." As he spoke about how carelessly people criticize each other on TV and in daily life - and how uplifting it is to receive words of affirmation - I was struck by how little appreciation most entrepreneurs get from... well, anybody.

    The evening news is no celebration of business people, that's for sure.

    The government ain't doing much to make your job easier.

    So... why would you risk everything, endure multiple bankruptcies, work 17 hours a day for weeks and months at a time, to be the first to be taxed and the last to get paid in a game that offers no guarantee of success whatsoever?

    It takes a very special kind of person.

    It takes a person who is driven from the inside by passion and vision and a bit of eccentricity. It requires you to be so dissatisfied with the status quo that you feel like you can endure anything so long as it's not the present mediocrity.

    You're one of those people who just can't stand following the car ahead of you on the expressway to some cubicle for the rest of your life.

    Or maybe you have this idea for a product or a way of doing something and you're convicted to your very soul that the world needs to see things *your* way for once.

    In any case, I doubt it's because you're just some greedy, money-grubbing over-achiever who needs to take a chill pill. No, that popular depiction is deeply misleading.

    I just want to say... Wherever you are in your journey, I'm proud of you, I HONOR you, and I cheer you on in your effort. Any honest business is a noble and honorable thing.

    I'll never forget my 2nd trip to Africa. I'm somewhere southwest of Nairobi Kenya, visiting George Karanga and his wife Jane, two very special people who run a foster program for AIDS orphans. 

    I'm meeting a woman whose husband is dying of AIDS, he's down to 66 pounds... all kinds of kids who've lost both parents to HIV and now live with aunts, uncles or grandparents... people who are deathly sick for lack of $1.00 for a bus ticket to go to a medical clinic... a woman who's 8 years a paraplegic, living under a tin roof in a dark mud hut, her sole entertainment her radio, her cat, and her kind neighbors who look after her.

    Not a cheery scene.
 
    But the epiphany occurs when I meet a fellow named Paul Mungai, who runs a cobbler shop.  Paul, ironically, is crippled, but he knows how to make and fix shoes.  And he knows how to run a business. 

    He started with just $50.00 of seed money and now has, by Kenyan standards, a sound business.  He's feeding his family, he's paying his rent, his kids have uniforms to wear to school, and everyone in his care has enough to live on. 

    There's a gleam in his eye. We exchange a few words and share our mutual understanding:  There is one and only one path out of poverty.  The one and only path out of poverty is entrepreneurship and business success.
 
    It ain't government.  It's not social programs.  It's not charity.  It's not even jobs or technology.   It's entrepreneurship.
 
    The message was loud and clear: What you and I do may be daring, crazy, irrational and largely misunderstood.  Condescending do-gooders may tell you you're greedy or too successful.  Your brother-in-law may think you've got your head stuffed in a cloud. 

    The government may think it has the right to confiscate your profits and give them to "education" or other well-intentioned social programs.  You might cater to some strange market, doing something that most people consider frivolous.
 
    But the fact remains: What you and I do is profoundly important.  You and I pave the road that leads from poverty to success.  We create the ingenuity and jobs and wealth that makes good medical care possible. 

    We create the world that has enough to eat, the world where even welfare kids in housing projects get three square meals a day.  
 
    So don't ever apologize to anyone for doing what you do.  If it wasn't for you, me and the rest of us entrepreneurs, "they" would still be sleeping on dirt floors.
 
    That conversation with Paul in Kenya sparkled with the mutual awareness of what I just described to you. 

    And as George took me to see other recipients of Micro-Enterprise seed funding - a lady selling sardines and tomatoes on a nailed-together stand on the side of the road, several women selling fruits and vegetables in the local markets, I thought of the entrepreneurs I meet in the US, Canada and Australia. 

    I thought of those rah-rah Amway rallies I was going to years ago, and the easily-exploited naivet? that's so characteristic of the "Biz Op" market as it's sometimes called.
 
    And like it or not, it's that raw enthusiasm and independent spirit that drives the prosperity of the West.  
 
    Where that drive, imagination and ingenuity are lacking, people starve - literally.

    So yes, some business people are too greedy.  Some entrepreneurs don't care about their fellow man.  Some people do make their money by dishonest means.  But remember, the character quotient is no better on the poor side of the fence. 
   
    So if you're prospering by means of an honest enterprise - or if you're struggling to put one together - then you are a hero.  The bards and minstrels may not sing songs about you, and your handsome face may never appear on The Apprentice, but what you do every day when you get out of bed is a worthwhile and indeed necessary thing.  
 
    Don't ever forget it. What you do matters. A lot. It's worth celebrating and it's HONORABLE.

    Perry Marshall

Friday, March 13, 2009

DONATION FOR THE WORK OF GOD. From me to you.

DONATION FOR THE LORD
From: Mrs. Monica Tema
 
 
PLEASE ENDEAVOUR TO USE IT FOR THE CHILDREN OF GOD.I am the above name person from Sierra-Leone. I am married to Dr Ebenezer Tema who worked with Sierra Leonian Embassy in South Africa for nine years before he died in the year 2001. We were married for eleven years without a child. He died after a brief illness that lasted for only four days. Before his death we were both born again Christians and we lived happilly. Since his death, I decided not to re-marry.
 
When my late husband was alive he secured $15Million (Fifteen Million U.S. Dollars) with financial institution here in Cote D'Ivoire. Presently, this money is still with the financial institution. Recently, my Doctor told me that from all the test conducted on my health, I am not going to last long, expecially, due to my cancer and stroke. But what disturbs me most now is stroke.
 
Having known my condition, I decided to donate this fund to churches or Christian individual that will utilize this money the way I am going to instruct. I want a church or individual that will use this money to fund churches, Orphanages and Widows. Also, the propagation of the work of God, building and maintaining the house of God through this money, is very important.
 
The Bible made us to understand that Blessed is the hand that giveth. I took this decision because I don't have any child that will inherit this money and my husband relatives are not Christians. I don?t want my husband's hard earned money to be misused by unbelievers, for their own selfish interest and in an ungodly manner. I am not afraid of death hence I know where I am going. I know that I am going to be in the bossom of the Lord. Exodus 14 VS 14 says that the lord will fight my case and I shall hold my peace.
 
I don't need any telephone communication in this regard because of my health, and because of the presence of my husband's relatives around me sometimes. I don't want them to know about this development, but I know that With God all things are possible.
 
As soon as I receive your reply I shall give you the contact of the Financial institution in Ivory coast. I will also give you all information regarding the deposit of this money. I will also issue you a letter of authority that will empower you as the original- beneficiary of this fund. I want you and your church to always pray for me because God work in misterious ways. My happiness is that I lived a life of a worthy Christian. Who ever that wants to serve the Lord must serve him in spirit and truth. Please always be prayerful all through your life.
 
Any delay in your reply will give me room in sourcing for a church or christian individual for this same purpose. Please assure me that you will act accordingly as I stated herein. Hoping to hear from you soon.
 
Remain blessed in the name of the Lord.
 
Yours in Christ,
Mrs Monica Tema