The Woohoo! Report

Serving Up Good News Daily

Archive for April, 2009

Changing lives one wheelchair at a time

Posted by stephcolin on Apr-26-2009

wheelchairWalking up to the PLUSAA wheelchair factory in Leon, Nicaragua, you wouldn’t think that it is a place that changes lives every day. The floor of the workshop is concrete and peppered with cracks. Dust from the dirt courtyard outside leaves everything covered with a fine coat of brown earth. The walls are mostly bare, except for the tools that hang neatly in their place.

PLUSAA provides custom-made and fitted wheelchairs at little or no cost to people with disabilities. It is one of the few alternatives to the used, donated American wheelchairs that are sent to Nicaragua in huge quantities every year. These used wheelchairs, while donated with the best of intentions, can have negative impacts on the health and psyche of people with disabilities and often end up in wheelchair graveyards, massive areas where hundreds of broken wheelchairs find their final resting place.

Wheelchairs in Nicaragua take a beating. They are baked by the sun and pounded by the rain. They are dragged over curbs that are often 18 inches from the ground and pushed down rocky, dirt roads. Wheelchairs made in the United States, often for hospital or indoor settings, don’t last long under these conditions. They rust, the wheels fall off, the seat cushions deteriorate rapidly. They are usually too large or small for the user, which can cause life threatening pressure sores or spine curvature. The small front wheels catch on uneven surfaces, of which there are many in Nicaragua, and can cause the user to pitch forward out of the chair.

PLUSAA designs its chair with these conditions in mind. The staff of nine makes chairs with thick, bicycle like tires to easily traverse the rough terrain, the chair tilts back so the user doesn’t pitch forward, and, most importantly, each chair is custom made for the individual, taking into account his or her disability and unique conditions.

Although the air in the workshop is heavy with the heat, the mood is light. The technicians laugh and chat, although their hands never stop moving from their task. Several are wheelchair users themselves and they weigh in on the wheelchair design. Tricycle wheelchairs can be hand propelled, allowing the user to cover long distance quickly. A hybrid chair for the elderly has comfortable armrests and can be pushed easily. Cushions are constantly redesigned; each wheelchair is tested to make sure it rolls straight and true.

Although the economic downturn in the U.S. is affecting PLUSAA’s funding, you wouldn’t know it from the smiling faces of the technicians and the beaming faces of the recipients. They have weathered tough times before, and will never give up hope that this small factory will continue to change lives.

To learn more about PLUSAA or to make a donation, please visit: www.poluscenter.org.

[source]

  • Share/Bookmark

Who says one person can’t change the world?

Posted by stephcolin on Apr-24-2009

PD*28216965Less than a week ago, 47-year-old Susan Boyle was unemployed, and pretty much unknown beyond her hometown (in her own words: “a collection of villages”), outside of Edinburgh, Scotland.

As of midnight last night (Dubai time), the video of Boyle’s audition performance for Britain’s Got Talent 2009 has generated worldwide media coverage based on almost six million views, close to 40,000 five-star ratings, and 36,000 comments on YouTube.

Not bad for a beginner.

Backstage on April 11, at Britain’s Got Talent 2009, just before she was about to make her dream come true by singing in front of a large audience, Boyle says, “I’m nearly 48… currently unemployed, but still looking.”

She goes on to say with a smile on her face, and a twinkle in her eye: “At the moment, I live alone with my cat called Pebbles; I’ve never been married, never been kissed,” and then quips: “That’s not an advert!”

Once she’s on stage, judge Simon Cowell, the seemingly heartless American Idol judge that everyone loves to hate (kinda’ like Dubai lol), asks her: “So what’s the dream?”

She answers without hesitation: “I’m trying to be a professional singer.”

He looks incredulous. Members of the audience whisper between themselves and roll their eyes.

Simon counters: “And why hasn’t it worked out so far, Susan?”

“I’ve never been given me the chance before. But here’s hoping it’ll change,” she replies with assurance.

It’s obvious that the hundreds in the hall don’t believe she has a hope in hell, or that the three sitting in the judges’ seats expect anything out of the ordinary from the middle-aged woman who stands before them.

But Susan wows them all with an amazing rendition of “I Dreamed a Dream,” from Les Miserables. She stuns the judges. The audience is on its feet applauding virtually from the moment she opens her mouth. Now she has fan sites springing up all over the Internet, and her story is inspiring people around the world.

And the wonderful, magical irony is that the words she sings (“Now life has killed the dream I dreamed”), are the very words that are now enabling her to make her own dream come to life. The whole thing just fills me with wonder, amazement, joy and hope.

Hope. Just in the nick of time.

Thank you, Universe. Thank you, Susan Boyle.

Susan notes: 12 hours after I posted this story on www.amazingwomenrock.com, YouTube views and comments had climbed to over 10 million and nearly 60,000 respectively.

An ordinary 47-year-old unemployed, unmarried woman who lives alone with her cat inspires millions of people around the world with her dream, a song and the gift of hope.

Who says one person can’t change the world?

See Susan Boyle sing here: www.youtube.com/watch?v=9lp0IWv8QZY

[source]

  • Share/Bookmark