An Inspiring & Compassionate Canadian

TerryFoxRun

November is Inspirational Role Models Month (officially in the U.S., but that’s no reason not to observe it elsewhere). While it was still October when we had our Terry Fox Run and our class watched the CTV movie, Terry, if I’m thinking about inspriational Role models, this inspiring Canadian is among the first that comes to mind.

Looking at all that Terry did, there is no doubt that his actions and achievements are awesome; that they inspire awe. But what awes me most (even considering how amazing his efforts and achievements were) is the way his actions embodied compassion.

Terry was able to identify with and understand what other cancer patients were feeling, maybe uniquely able to do so. But it is neither his sympathy nor his empathy that I find so inspiring. Terry not only felt along with those suffering from cancer and their loved ones, he took action to help with that suffering. Beyond that, he not only took action himself, but he created a path and enabled others to join his journey so that everyone could work together and be part of the solution to the problem that he and so many others were facing.

With his compassion, Terry showed everyone how much he cared. His compassion helped him to connect and unite people to work together. I would argue that it was his compassion that made him able to achieve what so many refused to believe was possible. And as we look around at the ways so many people today seem so divided, maybe Terry’s compassion is something for us to look to again for inspiration to think, feel & act with others in mind. If we do, maybe we can find ways to work together to accomplish what right now seems almost impossible.

Who are some of your inspirational role models? What is it about what they say and do that you find so inspiring?

 

Blast from the past

I hope that everyone will be able to make it to our class meeting, even with its move to MONDAY MORNING this week. I am especially looking forward to this meeting because we will be joined by special guest and Dvision 3 alumnus, Roshen Jaswal, who was in grade 6 when he was last a student in our room. Roshen has kindly kept in touch over the years since and has agreed to join us to share some memories and a little of his story of what life has been like for him after surviving Division 3.

As you continue working on various activities (some new and some extending from last week), I also want to draw your attention to a couple of stories that I have come across in the news this week about two of the most notable and most inspiring individuals from our province who set out to bring attention to how we can overcome our own challenges and can help improve the lives of others when we join together.

This year marks the 40th anniversary of Terry Fox’s Marathon of Hope. You may have heard how Addidas, the company who helped sponsor Terry’s run 40 years ago by providing him with shoes (he needed a lot of shoes!) released a special, limited edition shoe last week modelled after the runners Terry wore with all proceeds going to the Terry Fox Foundation. The shoes sold out online in mere minutes. These photos tell the story well, check them out.

Rick Hansen
Rick Hanson is marking the 35th anniversary of his Man in Motion tour (when he travelled all the way around the world in his wheelchair to raise funds and awareness for accessibility and spinal cord injury research) by donating almost 2000 pieces of memorabilia from his tour to the Canadian History Museum. In his interview with CBC’s On the Coast, Rick talks about memories of the tour, his friendship with Terry Fox and their wheelchair basketball games together and how he carried a small statue of Terry with him on his tour to help him maintain his spirits and determination.

As we continue working through our current situation and conquering all our collective and individual obstacles, I hope we might be once again inspired by these individuals, and maybe not just because their challenges and their successes seem so great (which they were and are) but because their determination and ultimately their success came out of the desire to do good for others. We CAN get there faster if we all move together.