The Power of Determination: Glenn Cunningham's
Story
The little country schoolhouse was heated by an old-fashioned, pot-bellied
coal stove. A little boy had the job of coming to school early each day
to start the fire and warm the room before his teacher and his classmates
arrived.
One morning they arrived to find the schoolhouse engulfed in flames.
They dragged the unconscious little boy out of the flaming building more
dead than alive. He had major burns over the lower half of his body and
was taken to a nearby county hospital.
From his bed the dreadfully burned, semi-conscious little boy faintly
heard the doctor talking to his mother. The doctor told his mother that
her son would surely die - which was for the best, really - for the terrible
fire had devastated the lower half of his body.
But the brave boy didn't want to die. He made up his mind that he would
survive. Somehow, to the amazement of the physician, he did survive. When
the mortal danger was past, he again heard the doctor and his mother speaking
quietly. The mother was told that since the fire had destroyed so much
flesh in the lower part of his body, it would almost be better if he had
died, since he was doomed to be a lifetime cripple with no use at all of
his lower limbs.
Once more the brave boy made up his mind. He would not be a cripple.
He would walk. But unfortunately from the waist down, he had no motor ability.
His thin legs just dangled there, all but lifeless.
Ultimately he was released from the hospital. Every day his mother would
massage his little legs, but there was no feeling, no control, nothing.
Yet his determination that he would walk was as strong as ever.
When he wasn't in bed, he was confined to a wheelchair. One sunny day
his mother wheeled him out into the yard to get some fresh air. This day,
instead of sitting there, he threw himself from the chair. He pulled himself
across the grass, dragging his legs behind him.
He worked his way to the white picket fence bordering their lot. With
great effort, he raised himself up on the fence. Then, stake by stake,
he began dragging himself along the fence, resolved that he would walk.
He started to do this every day until he wore a smooth path all around
the yard beside the fence. There was nothing he wanted more than to develop
life in those legs.
Ultimately through his daily massages, his iron persistence and his
resolute determination, he did develop the ability to stand up, then to
walk haltingly, then to walk by himself - and then - to run.
He began to walk to school, then to run to school, to run for the sheer
joy of running. Later in college he made the track team.
Still later in Madison Square Garden this young man who was not expected
to survive, who would surely never walk, who could never hope to run -
this determined young man, Dr. Glenn Cunningham, ran the world's fastest
mile!