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Number of Posts:35
Registered on:2/28/2014
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quote:

Thanks for sharing your story and keep up the good work. Keep at it and I'm sure others will notice your abilities.


Thanks I hope so.
Yesterday, the chief editor of The Best American Sports Writing series Glenn Stout tweeted a story I wrote about 2 All-American, 3 drafted NFL football players from the University of Alabama who saved my life in the F-5 Tuscaloosa Tornado 4/27/11 then took me to the Green Room at the NFL Draft 4/26/12. Dont’a Hightower, De’Quan Menzie and Nico Johnson guys were college roommates helping me do what I can’t do because I live with the inability to write (dysgraphia), to do arithmetic (dyscalculia), to see or feel fingers (finger agnosia) and to tell left from right (left-right disorientation). If it matters, I wrote this story right now because the Iron Bowl is in 4 days, I'm taking my little brother, and because Homecoming was last week. Prominent writers all tell me to go to graduate school for networking so I can one day be a great writer but I’ve been living hotel to hotel in Nashville and sometimes homeless so there is no way I would risk a student loan for a networking opportunity. It really feels great to be recognized for words by a guy like Mr. Stout who chooses the best sports writing year after year. If you can read and tell me what you think that would be a dream. Hope everyone has a great Thanksgiving.

LINK
Glenn Stout is a Red Sox Historian, an author, and the series editor of The Best American Sports Writing series. Today Mr. Stout tweeted out an article that I wrote on Friday about Dont'a Hightower saving his life and my life in the F-5 Tuscaloosa Tornado 4/27/2011 then taking me with him to the Green Room at the NFL Draft 4/26/2012. Mr. Stout's tweet simply said "Good young writer; fascinating story" with a link but it feels great to be recognized for words by someone like Mr. Stout who chooses the best sports writing year after year and knows a thing or two about it. Anyway, I thought maybe you might want to see the article he thought something of as people on here have encouraged me with my writing and I definitely appreciate all that support. Hope everyone has a great Thanksgiving.

LINK

re: 20's Advice

Posted by MikeAllenWrites on 11/14/14 at 11:13 am to
quote:

Know your limits, bro. If I was born without fingers I wouldn't strive to be a piano player


Okay I completely understand that one but I already wrote and published a book for Rare Disease Day 2014. To publish a book on my own was tough, but totally worth it.

Again, I completely understand why you say what you say about the friendship thing but I prefer to accomplish life goals on my own without the financial assistance of others. Again, I created the post seeking advice about stress. Everyone typically says stuff like "indulge in physical activity" or whatever and I just wanted to see what people would say here.

re: 20's Advice

Posted by MikeAllenWrites on 11/14/14 at 11:02 am to
quote:

It sounds more like an unhealthy obsession with proving yourself. Instead of trying to achieve greatness, just live as normally as possible. You might say you are, but that is just not the case.



So taking on big projects is an unhealthy obsession with proving yourself? Haha okay. The population of people who share one of the four deficits I struggle with is quite large. My aim in what I have done up to this point in life since leaving the University of Alabama revolves around creating a greater understanding of what stops people with the inability to write (dysgraphia), to do arithmetic (dyscalculia), to see or feel fingers (finger agnosia) and/or to tell left from right (left-right disorientation) so we can develop better methods of helping those people through processing deficits. Since writing a book, I have realized that sharing a story about living with rare disease is not the same as knowing how to run an organization that addresses what trips up the brains of those with visual/spatial and numerical processing problems. Armed with that knowledge, I know an organization could develop better ways to help people struggling as I have struggled, and that is something I will see happen. All I asked for was advice with stress on this journey but I appreciate you taking the time to respond with that anyway.

re: 20's Advice

Posted by MikeAllenWrites on 11/14/14 at 2:49 am to
That's an excellent idea about raising $ for high schools. I just want to add real quick that I am not looking for equal outcomes, or to get "large #s of Blacks and Mexicans hired at companies like Google and Twitter."

What I am trying to do is play a part in making sure equal opportunities exist for the smartest and most passionate. My ambition of all those muffins may be unrealistic but we'll see. Silicon Valley is a big place. I'm speaking to more than Google and Twitter.

The money I made from my book is not life changing money, and that's completely fine because I did not write and publish a book to become a big name author. I am not the first person, or the last person, to go through a tough time in life. I only wanted others to share advice of what they did during a tough time in their life. Many here have shared great advice. Friends and family do help me out, of course, but I don't take handouts. Again, all I wanted was experience on how to deal with stress and uncertainty. Thanks.

re: 20's Advice

Posted by MikeAllenWrites on 11/14/14 at 1:28 am to
I appreciate all the support lsu480. I'm certainly not here to stage a debate, but I believe we cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them. I believe that for everything. Thanks for the advice everyone.

re: 20's Advice

Posted by MikeAllenWrites on 11/14/14 at 1:05 am to
Hotel to hotel off Hotwire.com 4 days at a time out a suitcase when I can afford a hotel room isn't the same thing as consistently staying in the same room of a place. Think what you want. Asking is better then wondering but not saying anything anyway.

re: 20's Advice

Posted by MikeAllenWrites on 11/14/14 at 12:50 am to
I've been hotel to hotel with a job. I'm not sure what your problem is with my post. Other people have been real helpful and you continually keep coming at me. If it's not helping then why post it?

re: 20's Advice

Posted by MikeAllenWrites on 11/14/14 at 12:42 am to
Haha that made me laugh ShermaTxTiger. I do not need to be on disability, but I appreciate the advice.

re: 20's Advice

Posted by MikeAllenWrites on 11/14/14 at 12:31 am to
My goal is to become a contributing member to a community, to better society, and to feel a sense of pride for what I have done and overcome. I don't take handouts and I don't accept anything personally that I haven't earned.

re: 20's Advice

Posted by MikeAllenWrites on 11/14/14 at 12:16 am to
I don't think everyone wants a muffin haha if that dream of the muffin thing working out ever actually happened then I would donate the rest of the muffins and the money not used for the muffins to food banks and shelters.

re: 20's Advice

Posted by MikeAllenWrites on 11/14/14 at 12:13 am to
I don't know how to YouTube but I can write

re: 20's Advice

Posted by MikeAllenWrites on 11/14/14 at 12:09 am to
The population of Palo Alto is 66,642 and the population of Menlo Park is 33,071 so one muffin for every person would be 99,713 muffins and that would be Silicon Valley or what I know Silicon Valley to be.

re: 20's Advice

Posted by MikeAllenWrites on 11/14/14 at 12:07 am to
It's only tragic if I don't try to use my experience for something good

re: 20's Advice

Posted by MikeAllenWrites on 11/13/14 at 11:55 pm to
I'm not sure what the sink joke meant ?

re: 20's Advice

Posted by MikeAllenWrites on 11/13/14 at 11:52 pm to
Whatever burden that falls on me from a question asked here is what it is. I knew people would have some insight. Thanks to everyone who does. To the person suggesting a ghost writer: I have already written a book on Amazon for Rare Disease Day 2014. I did my best and I'm proud of it.

20's Advice

Posted by MikeAllenWrites on 11/13/14 at 11:33 pm
A little advice would be appreciated. I am living with the inability to write (dysgraphia), to do arithmetic (dyscalculia), to see or feel fingers (finger agnosia) and to tell left from right (left-right disorientation). The name for this is Gerstmann Syndrome, a brain disease people acquire after bleeding in the brain during a stroke or traumatic head injury. Doctors are surprised to see I was born with Gerstmann Syndrome, and no one knows why.

I left home for college with dreams of law school after pouring everything into tutoring, physical therapy, occupational therapy and class from inside special education classrooms. My parents thought hard work, and a college degree could get me to my goals and beyond every time. So in high school, I applied. When I got in, I became roommates with three guys who ended up making it to the NFL. They helped me do what I could not do because of disability, and one of them tucked me beneath a bathroom sink and saved my life in a F-5 tornado. The road with PTSD and Gerstmann Syndrome has been a rocky one. Blue collar jobs are tough when you can't use your hands. White collar jobs are tough when you're bad at math. I've tried writing books. I've tried advocating for rare disease. My dream is to bring 99,713 muffins to Silicon Valley and throw a big milk and muffin party raising awareness for Silicon Valley’s tech diversity problem, but that's a long shot.

This hasn't been my year. I've spent most of it hotel to hotel and sometimes homeless. I just want to know how people deal with stress. I know you don't have to have it all figured out to keep moving forward, but what are the ways you deal with stress and uncertainty in life on the journey?