Have you ever thought or realized how many goals Helen Keller has achieved in her lifetime? Helen Keller has been admired by people all over the world. She was confident and didn't let her condition stop her from being able to do what she imagined to. She herself said “Optimism is the faith that leads to achievement. Nothing can be done without hope and confidence.” Helen Keller is an extraordinary person who deserves everything she accomplished because of her determination to strive through the hard times and make a better path for herself.
Helen Keller, although later on, she was able to communicate she struggled with social skills. In order to understand her hardships, we must look at her childhood. Helen Keller's age emphasizes how awful the situation was:
“In her nineteenth month, she suffered a high fever (never properly diagnosed) that left her deaf and blind. Until she was seven years old, Keller had no formal instruction. She did not speak, read, or write. She devised a number of manual signs to communicate with her family and developed a large repertoire of antisocial behaviors.” ("Helen Adams Keller." Dictionary of American Biography, 1) in other words, Helen Keller had a pretty rough childhood. She had no control over her situation, and no one really understood her. She didn't know how to ask for what she needed or how to get attention. The only way she knew was to misbehave. “... her behavior was described as angry, wild, and animal-like. She struck out at
Helen Keller has taught the entire nation that it is possible to overcome obstacles and obtain goals. At the age of nineteen months, she was stricken by an illness called “brain fever”, that left her blind and deaf. It is evident that Keller lived a strenuous life, but along the way she managed to establish the American Civil Liberties Union and received many honors in recognition of her accomplishments. The fact that a blind and deaf woman accomplished so many achievements over the course of her lifetime and is known as one of the most memorable women alive, simply amazes me. Although our lives do not necessarily alline, I hope to be as successful as Helen Keller was and overcome any obstacles that come my way.
Do you think you could live being blind and deaf? Well, Helen Keller managed to live her very interesting life with those two problems. At the age of 2, she had a brain fever, and it caused her to go blind, deaf, and mute. She changed an impact on everyone who had disorders like her and let them know that they had a chance at the things that were difficult for them. Helen’s life as a child was confusing and even more difficult for her because she was just learning how to live with her disabilities.
First off Helen Keller obstacles were being deaf and blind “Miss Sullivan had tried to impress it upon me that ‘m-u-g’ is mug and that ‘w-a-t-e-r’ is water, but I persisted in confounding the two. this quote shows that she kept combining the two. That it was very difficult to figure out which was which even though the teacher and showed her what is
On June 27,1880 in Alabama, In a little town named Tuscumbia, a little girl named Helen Keller was born. Helen Keller was a remarkable woman who helped a lot of people. Helen Keller was very healthy until keller obtained an extreme illness named “Brain Fever”. That fever produces a high body temperature that can kill you. When she got better, Keller’s mother named Katherine Adams Keller, noticed that her little girl couldn't see her mother. Keller had lost her sight and hearing when she was just 19 months old. Later when Keller grew up her parents made signs to communicate with keller. However, Keller became very wild because she would get angry and scream because she was frustrated.
Helen Keller was born with the ability to see and hear. At 19 months she had an illness that the doctors thought was Scarlet Fever, this resulted in Helen becoming deaf and blind. Five years later, her parents had hired a teacher, Anne Mansfield Sullivan. Keller learned to understand and communicate to the world around her. Helen Keller stood up against
Annie Sullivan was more than just a teacher to Helen Keller. Annie was Helen's eyes an ears. Without Annie, Helen never would have learned that things have names, or been able to communicate with the outside world. Some people say that teaching Helen was impossible, as none had ever done it before. Annie was a very good teacher for Helen, as Annie was once blind herself, so she understands what it is like not being able to see. Annie uses three things to teach Helen how to communicate with everyone else. Annie has youth, persuasion, and patience.
Helen's achievements were achieved only through her obstacles that she went through while learning. Helen Keller got a teacher, Annie Sullivan, who taught her many things. Annie, Helen's teacher, came to Tuscumbia on March 3, 1887 (Feeny). After six months of working together, Helen had learned the manual alphabet, could read brittle and raised type, and was writing letters (Feeny). Within six months Helen learned many things from Annie and they continue to work together throughout their lifetimes. Helen went to college and became a writer. She went to Radcliffe college because Harvard did not accept women. She was the first deaf-blind person who went through college (Feeny). Annie Sullivan was always by her side except when she took the tests (Feeny). Helen Keller finished college with the help of Annie. Helen was accused of plagiarism. She was accused because she wrote a book just like a book that was read to her three years prior (Feeny). After that, sometimes people often wondered if she was just restating things that she heard over the years (Feeny). At 11 years old Helen Keller was accused of plagiarism because she wrote a similar story that was read to before. Even though Helen Keller had many amazing accomplishments, she also had many obstacles she had to overcome in order to accomplish
She was curious about everything around her. It was very painful to be both deaf and blind before two year old. Helen Keller spent her time in the silent and dark world. She never gave up her life and tried to do everything that she thought possible. Learned sign language was very difficult to her.
Helen Keller was a woman who impacted American history. She was known for many quotes, books, and speeches. Many people have heard of the illness she had but many people also know that the illness did not stop her from doing anything. Helen could not hear or see. Helen once said “The only thing worse than being blind is having sight without a vision.” Helen sure had a vison but no sight, she lead out her vison until she died.
She is best known for being able to understand the sign language for W-A-T-E-R meant something while having her hand under running water from a pump. She became a college graduate, teacher, advocate for the disabled – specifically for the blind and a motivational model for all. 3. When thinking of Helen Keller, there are three qualities that comes to mind. Persistence, courageous and inspiring.
Helen Keller created hope for lots of people who had a disability of some sort and showed them that you do not have to be held back just because of that disability. Like how Anne Sullivan kept trying with Helen to help her understand, even though after multiple attempts, she didn't. After lots of determination, Helen finally understood. Then after that it felt as if nothing could stop her and she began
Helen Keller continued to encourage people through her speeches and appearances, while giving numerous people inspiration. One of her great appearances was when she spoke out before Congress about improving the welfare of blind people. She was extremely brave to speak up to millions of people even though she had poorer communication skills compared to an average person. Even though she struggled severely to build up her social skills with the help of her educator, Anne Sullivan, she had the courage to share her progress with the whole world. Helen Keller had also wanted to make sure that the disadvantaged would get the help they needed showing her devotion towards helping people that are in her same
When both Annie and Helen had moved back into the original Keller household everything that Annie taught all went away. Such as eating with a fork or spoon, to folding her napkin, and in general having discipline. When out of nowhere here comes the miracle everybody was waiting for Helen the behaved “ … a change in Helen’s face, some light coming into it we have never seen there, some struggle in the depths behind it; and her lips tremble, trying to remember something the muscle around them once knew…” (118). It out of nowhere clicks to Helen and she understands what a word is. It had seemed to click at that exact moment because she had seemed to be so familiar with the word water throughout the play. Also that she realized that water had a purpose and figured out that it wasn’t as much of a finger game as it once was. Annie then after teaches Helen other words and she now has the ability to learn other words and get communicate without her disadvantages in the
It cannot be possible for us to comprehend how difficult her circumstances were, even with the descriptions written in her book. However, even with all of these hardships, she overcame them and lived her life to the fullest. At first, she did not know that she was different from other children, but quickly understood that she was deaf and blind. Because she could not hear herself talk, she lost the ability to speak and at first, did not understand why people moved their lips. Communicating with others was hard and she only used hand gestures and signs to say her feelings. Learning school subjects or anything as a blind and deaf child was very difficult, especially for people in her era. Even with all these roadblocks, Helen Keller did not stop learning, but excelled in all of her subjects, even math her least favorite subject. She went above and beyond by learning how to speak, even though she didn’t know what it was. It was hard, but through her determination, she began to be able to speak like the rest of
Her main advantage in becoming successful was her eagerness to learn. When she first started to learn she says, “I began my studies with eagerness. Before me I saw a new world opening in beauty and light, and I felt within me the capacity to know all things.” (Keller, pg. 72) She had a positive persona that enabled her to learn.