Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Cupcake Hero #1: Helen Keller



"The best and most beautiful things in the world cannot be seen or even touched - they must be felt with the heart. "
~Helen Keller

Helen Keller was born in 1880 in Alabama. Before she was two years old she had lost her sight and her hearing to scarlett fever. With this barrier to all communication and learning, Keller became a wild little creature who terrorized her home until 1887, when Anne Sullivan, a teacher from the Perkins School for the Blind, arrived on the scene and changed Keller's life.
Most of us hear the story in elementary school of how Anne Sullivan finally broke through to Helen by writing on her hand while holding it under running well water. It is ironic to me is that those first years that Helen was so wild, she was just a child with an incredible capacity for learning who was frustrated by her limitations! Once she learned to communicate, she learned not only words and sentences, but to read and to write braille, even to write with a ruler and pencil.

What I find the most amazing about this woman was not only her incredible curiosity about life and her thirst for knowledge, but her constant desire and determination to take it to the next level. She learned to speak, went to college (Radcliffe, of all places-the women's version of Harvard), rode horseback, could communicate in French, German & Latin, and played chess. (I can't do most of these...LOL) And although braille books were not terribly prevelant at the time, she didn't let that stop her, Anne Sullivan just "spoke" them into Helen's hand.

She also knew Alexander Graham Bell and Mark Twain, met Henry Ford and the Rockefellers. She was a Suffragist in the early 1900s. Among many other writings, Helen wrote her very own autobiography at the age of 21, The Story of My Life, which was the first book I read on my Cupcake Reading List.

Helen was certainly blessed to have been born into a family that could afford to provide her with all of these opportunites to improve her life -- but even with those privileges, how many of us would consider our lives 'a daring adventure' if we could not see or hear?

This is a pretty impressive list for someone who has no disabilities...it is an inspiration knowing that the woman who accomplished all these things was deaf and blind, living in a world of darkness that I cannot even imagine. In those moments when I think my life is too hard or my dreams are too difficult to attempt I will try to remember this beautiful soul who never lost her enthusiasm for living and for learning:

"Security is mostly a superstition. It does not exist in nature, nor do the children of men as a whole experience it. Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. Life is either a daring adventure, or nothing. " ~Helen Keller




[Biographical information obtained from the American Foundation for the Blind]




Saturday, August 13, 2011

4. Watch all of Audrey Hepburn's films



"My career is a complete mystery to me. It's been a total surprise since the first day. I never thought I was going to be an actress, I thought I was going to be in movies, I never thought it would all happen the way it did." ~Audrey Hepburn

Audrey Hepburn has always fascinated me. She was such a graceful, childlike personality. But for all I knew about her in a fringe-like way through mentions in books and pictures, and of course owning Breakfast at Tiffany's, I found I knew very little substantive information about her, not to mention having seen almost none of her famous films.

Hepburn was born in 1929 in Belgium and wanted to be a ballerina. She survived World War II, however it left her malnourished, with anemia and asthma, which crushed her chances of becoming a prima ballerina. She turned to modeling and dancing in cabaret shows and chorus lines. In 1951, Audrey was cast in bit parts in five films, and was discovered by the famous writer Collette, who insisted that Audrey was the perfect Gigi, which was to be produced on Broadway. Gigi brought Audrey to New York, where the play's success landed her her first major role as Princess Anne in Roman Holiday, released in 1953. Roman Holiday won her an Oscar for Best Actress. And the rest was history...

  • 1953 Roman Holiday

  • 1954 Sabrina

  • 1956 War and Peace

  • 1957 Funny Face

  • 1959 Green Mansions

  • 1959 The Nun's Story

  • 1960 The Unforgiven

  • 1961 Breakfast at Tiffany's

  • 1961 The Children's Hour

  • 1963 Charade

  • 1964 Paris When It Sizzles

  • 1964 My Fair Lady

  • 1966 How to Steal a Million

  • 1967 Two for the Road

  • 1967 Wait Until Dark

  • 1976 Robin and Marian

  • 1979 Bloodline

  • 1981 They All Laughed

  • 1989 Always

...but her real legacy was all of the work she did throughout her life, but especially at the end of her career, for UNICEF. In 1988 she accepted the role as International Goodwill Ambassador for UNICEF and travelled to over 20 countries witnessing and reporting to the United Nations on the condition of children worldwide who were struggling for survival. Her official website is dedicated to continuing to help children all around the world.



Monday, August 1, 2011

Here's the thing...

The internet connection at our house has been slow & unsteady for the last few months. And doing anything...and I do mean ANYthing (checking email, doing a Google search, looking up movie times, etc.) takes about 5x as long as it should. And that is IF you can keep the signal long enough to make things go thru.

We finally found out that our internet speed was only working at 6 mega-whatzits, instead of the 12-18 we have been paying for (yay!) and supposedly this is being fixed by the internet/cable people....you probably know about how fast that happens. In the meantime, it takes me so very long to blog any post that I am about out of patience for the entire week (if not more) by the time it is done. IF i can get it put together. (Big IF.) Therefore, not too many blog posts will be forthcoming until this is repaired...boo!