Los Angeles Times

Hawking wasn’t ‘chained’ by ALS

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Re “How erasing a disability can erase a part of identity,” March 17

Jessica Roy’s article on viewing Stephen Hawking’s disability as a positive aspect of his life is to be commended.

My mother had a stroke at the age of 39 that left her paralyzed along the left side of her body, making it necessary for her to use a cane the rest of her life. Prior to the stroke she had been working a mindnumbin­g assembly line job at a factory, but after the stroke she decided to pursue a college degree.

After graduating, she taught Spanish to high school students for 25 years, taking groups of students and their families on European tours. She and my father took road trips around the country, and for their 50th anniversar­y they traveled to Ireland.

My mother never saw herself as “chained” by her disability, and I often wondered if she would have remained at the factory job until retirement if she hadn’t had a stroke. Thank you, Ms. Roy, for informing your readers that a person with a disability is still a whole person. Rosa Cesaretti

South Pasadena

My contractin­g polio in 1952 caused me to walk with crutches for 50 years; later, I transition­ed to wheelchair­s.

I benefited from a number of rehabilita­tion programs early on that enabled me to adapt to my physical constraint­s. This ultimately led to a rewarding career in our local aerospace engineerin­g sector. I grew from entrylevel assignment­s to take the lead of teams of everincrea­sing size and moved onward to manage substantia­l projects. I traveled extensivel­y.

When I retired, one person memorably told me, “I never ever thought of you on crutches.” It was gratifying to be recognized for what I was and not what I looked like. Today, as I move around in my wheelchair, I experience the same.

Disability is in the eye of the beholder. John McElrath

Whittier

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