Resilience is a word that few people know of and even fewer people possess it as a character trait. It means to be able to bounce back from something quickly. It can be developed from a tragic event that happened in one’s life or even a series of events that would break down a normal person. Resilience is a trait possessed by these four people who have definitely encountered and are still living through life changing events. Those four people are Laura Hillenbrand, Louis Zamperini, Russell Phillips, and Fred Garrett. Laura Hillenbrand is becoming a world sensation after writing her bestselling book, Unbroken.
Sure she may seem like she is living the dream life with thousands of people buying her books every day, but what most people do not know about her is that she suffers from Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, a disease that drains all energy from the body and leaves it feeling lifeless and overly tired. The disease keeps her on bed rest for many of her days but she still finds time to write bestselling novels. She is resilient in that because even though she is living with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, she does not let it stop her from living her life and doing what she loves.
She developed the disease while on a road trip with her boyfriend and other friends. They were driving along a highway when a deer began to step into the road. The car barely missed the deer by a few inches. Later that night a meteor came streaking across the sky. She was the only one who saw it. She then became very nauseous. Her boyfriend thought she had food poisoning but he would later learn that she had developed CFS, or Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. Louis Zamperini is a World War Two veteran and the main character of Laura Hillenbrand’s bestselling novel, Unbroken.
The Essay on Living Life 2
To conquer ones fears, one must see past them. To fear is natural; to see past them is heroic. Fear is normal additive to life; symbolizing that there are new, sometimes extraordinary things to come, to face. To be able to see these things before they happen is a sign of wisdom. To see past them is a sign of leadership and boldness. Fear is nothing out of the ordinary.To recognize that one fears ...
Louis was born on January 26, 1917. As a child, he was constantly on the go and causing trouble. It did not matter how many times he was caught, he always went back to wreaking havoc on the streets of Torrance, California, the town where he grew up. By doing so, he developed resilience. When he was a teenager, he ran track for his high school team. He then went to the 1936 Olympics in Berlin, Germany on the United States track team. While in Berlin, a group on opposing runners boxed him in during a meet and cut his legs all to pieces using the pikes on the bottom of their cleats. He never let that stop him. He managed to bounce right back. When he went into the U. S. Air Corps, a plane he was on called, The Green Hornet, crashed into the middle of the Pacific. He and two other men were the only survivors. It was forty-seven days before he saw land again. That did not break him either. He was captured as a prisoner of war in Japan where he was beaten, starved, and he contracted many diseases. He pulled through and returned to his normal state upon arrival back on United States soil.
Russell Phillips was a pilot for crew number eight in the nine-crew 372nd bomb squadron of the 307th bomb group, seventh Air Force. He flew the plane that carried Louis Zamperini. Phillips was born in Greencastle, Indiana, in 1916. When he was a boy, he was a lot like Louis. He was quiet on the outside but inside he had a wild streak. When he was in ROTC, his captain called him the lousiest-looking soldier. He never let that get him down. He proved to be a fine airman. He flew his airmen to through very dangerous bombings and all survived but one.
He survived the crashing of The Green Hornet along with two others. He then survived forty-seven days in a raft floating through the Pacific with Louis and a man named Mac. Like Louis, Phillips survived the prisoner of war camps and took all of the beatings. He would not be broken by the Japanese. He too bounced back from the trauma. A good friend of both Louis and Russell was enrolled as an airman for the United States Air Force. He was an amputee with only one leg. He lost it upon his arrival in a Japanese prisoner of war camp.
The Essay on State Of War Men Hobbes Man
Hobbes gives us his estimation of the nature of mankind by initially showing that all men are generally equal. The strongest man can be beaten by the weakest, if the weaker man uses some other force. When it comes to intelligence Hobbes claims men are even more equal, since all men are of equal experience, which is the only way to gain wisdom. Once Hobbes shows that all men are equals he goes on ...
He injured it and it soon became badly infected. Because of this, a Japanese doctor amputated his leg off at the knee. He was able to show resilience though and recovered rather quickly. He also was a resilient survivor of the prisoner of war camps. Now all of these people are resilient in one way or another. Some were told they would never make it. Another is fighting a disease. One has a physical disability. Others were beaten down further than any human being should be. After all that they have been through, at the end of the day, they remain unbroken.