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How Coming To Terms With My Condition Has Freed Me

The Importance of Celebrating Awareness

October 6, 2017, is Cerebral palsy awareness day. March is Cerebral Palsy awareness month. I used to dread these dates. It took 20 years to accept the courage to start speaking about such a profound part of my life. Why should I put praise on something that makes me so different than everyone else when it is important to fit in and do the same things as everyone else?

For 20 years I was hiding who I truly was. I even hid my emotions while pursuing my first college degree. I received my first degree in Social and Behavioral Sciences because I believed society wanted me to be a counselor because they believed I was not capable of the career I wanted. I wanted to help others find their potential, but I didn’t know how. How could I help others if I wasn’t true to myself? I now believe my calling is to share my story through writing about my daily life and overcoming obstacles.

Sometimes it takes a best friend and a tattoo to open your eyes to the actual reason you were put on this earth. The motto behind Cerebral Palsy is to have hope in every situation. I didn’t really understand the meaning behind hope until my best friend told me how much of a difference I can make in my life and those around me when I share pieces of my story.

I have had to have hope for my entire life. It was just often hidden from people, even form me. People would often think that I wasn’t capable of breathing on my own, caring for myself, being independent or going to a mainstream school. I want to do everything everyone else can. I do, it just may take longer or have to be done differently. I am independent, I go to college, and I even drive, but it isn’t easy.

I’ve had to have hope my entire life because how can I be sure that I can do the same things that everyone else can if my brain is damaged and my feet lost the connection on how to move independently because of that damage? Hope is the answer. Hope has made me define odds and do many things that others thought I couldn’t. As long as I ( and you) believe in my precious heart that I can do something, it will happen. Remember that best friends, hope and faith can get you through anything. You were put on this earth to stand out, be different and tell a story that no one else can.

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See the world through the eyes of someone with a disability (Cerebral Palsy).

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Aly Brown

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How Coming To Terms With My Condition Has Freed Me

October 6, 2017, is Cerebral palsy awareness day. March is Cerebral Palsy awareness month. I used to dread these dates. It took 20 years t
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