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Rating: Summary: Exciting, touching story of a blind mountain climber Review: I saw Erik Weihenmayer on THE TONIGHT SHOW, the blind mountain climber, joking about how he attempted to teach fifth graders who raised their hands whenever he asked a question . . . when that did not work, he told them to call out their responses--and all hell broke loose . . . I decided then and there that this guy had something to teach me, so I got his TOUCH THE TOP OF THE WORLD . . . it is the exciting, touching story of his life, including how he became the first blind man to summit Mount McKinley, scale the rock wall of El Capitan and then Argentina's Aconcagua, the highest peak outside of Asia . . . he was married at 13,000 feet on the Shira Plateau, and he recently scaled Polar Circus, the 30,000-foot vertical ice wall in Alberta, Canada.I was moved by Weihenmayer's many tales of courage . . . also, I frequently laughed at how he managed to find humor in situations that would have gotten down many others . . . get this book if you want to be inspired; I was! There were many memorable passages in the book; among them: "That's ridiculous," I replied, but when I walked down the hallway, I couldn't believe it [that he could locate an open door when walking down an empty hallway]. I stopped in astonishment when the confined sound bouncing back at me, suddenly on my right, changed to open sound. I reached my had out right and felt the open frame of the door. "Don't take no for an answer when you're looking for your system," Carl ended class by saying. "You may have to look beyond the obvious, but you'll find it." And lastly I took a chance and told her that her going blind wasn't her fault; that God wasn't punishing her, because I didn't think God worked like that. I had thought it too, that life was a punishment, made up of only losses. "Yeah, he takes things away," I said into the speaker," but he gives other things back and, in a strange way, those new things can be just as good or even better. I think you just have to look for the new things a little harder." So instead of trying to predict the future, I would rely on two principles which had led me to this point, and one new principle I was just starting to recognize: I would set myself in motion, have faith in my vision, and never lose sight of those precious moments of bliss along the way.
Rating: Summary: A Must-Read! Review: This is a must-read for crowds of all types. Touching, humorous, moving, the story of Erik will inspire many. Being blind myself, I can totally relate to situations Erik describes such as the "shaking" vision, wanting to be accepted among peer groups of any age, and the comical remarks that must be made to lighten up a situation. I especially enjoyed the adventures in dating and picking up women. Blind people too want to know what a person looks like and it was great to hear someone else echo the embarressment of mistaking a voice for a "sexy" woman only to find out it's a "girly" man. Those mistakes are made and have to be laughed off. It's just a feature of life, just like blindness is only a feature of a person, NOT THE WHOLE person. I strongly suggest this book to anyone looking for information or coping on blindness. Read it and you'll never be the same.
Rating: Summary: Just Terrific Review: This is just a terrific book, filled with humor, wisdom, pathos and adventure. The author poignantly describes his childhood descent into blindness, his efforts to ignore it, his initial rebelliousness, and his gradual coming to terms with his handicap. Before long, the reader, like Erik, no longer sees blindness as a handicap, but as one of many hurdles life tosses in our way. It is certainly less of a burden to him than was the sudden, tragic death of his mother, which he movingly addresses and comes to terms with. He finds purpose to his life, he finds love, and he finds friendship and adventure on the mountains that he climbs. Buy this book and give it to any friend who has an inclination toward self-pity, and it may change their life. Read it and be inspired by the resiliency and strength of the human spirit.
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