Dr. King Had a Dream… Dr. Carson is that Dream Come
True!
Dear Conservatives --
Today, America
celebrates the life and legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Almost everyone remembers Dr. King for his immortal 17-minute “I
Have a Dream” speech in Washington, DC in 1963, especially this
line…
“I have a dream that my four little children will one day live
in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin
but by the content of their character.”
But here’s something, as noted in Wikipedia, that most people
probably don’t know about Dr. King…
“King said his father regularly whipped him until he was
fifteen and a neighbor reported hearing the elder King telling his son
‘he would make something of him even if he had to beat him to
death.’”
While most of society today would consider such harsh discipline a
form of child abuse, King’s father surely never, in his own wildest
dreams, could have imagined just how much his son would go on to make
of himself.
The story of Dr. Ben Carson is no less dramatic.
As a boy, Carson did horribly in school. He regularly placed at
the bottom of his class and was ridiculed unmercifully by
classmates.
But his divorced mother, Sonya, was determined that her two sons
would make something of themselves. So neither was allowed to go
outside and play after school until their homework was done and watch
only a limited amount of television and even then, only certain
programs.
Young Ben was also required to read two library books each week and
write a report on them for his mother, who could barely read them. As
biography.com
explains, Sonya “was determined that her sons would have greater
opportunities than she did.”
Although warned that such strict discipline could cause irreparable
harm in her relationship with her sonse, Sonya persisted. Eventually,
Ben came to appreciate reading and then thrived on it.
He began to “see himself differently” and “saw that he could become
the scientist or physician he had dreamed about.”
It was a quintessentially American dream rooted in the wisdom of
Napolean Hill that “Whatever the mind can conceive and believe, it can
achieve.”
Carson went on to excel in high school and “was determined to
achieve his goal” of attending medical school and becoming a
physician. “He knocked on doors looking for summer work and usually,
through persistence, was able to obtain one.”
As we all know now, Carson got into Yale University and later
became a resident at Johns Hopkins University where in 1985 he “became
director of pediatric neurosurgery at the young age of 33.”
Then, “On September 4, 1987, Carson and a team of 70 doctors,
nurses, and support staff joined forces for what would be a 22-hour
surgery… to separate two 7-month-old craniopagus twins from
Germany.”
Carson’s mind conceived performing the operation successfully. He
believed he could do it. And he did.
Dr. King’s mind conceived dramatic improvements in race rations in
American. He believed he could do it. And he did.
As for me…
Immediately after Dr. Carson’s National Prayer Breakfast speech, my
mind conceived of him becoming President of the United States.
I believe with all my heart it’s possible.
And with your continued help, we’ll do it.
Sincerely yours,
John Philip
Sousa IV National Chairman http://www.runbenrun.org/
|
No comments:
Post a Comment