The something horrible that went wrong during birth was probably cerebral palsy. My daughter has it. She sometimes uses a walker although hers is much nicer than that. I think if I ever heard someone say something like that I would seriously have to restrian myself from hurting them.
Agreed. A puzzle on an examination table. Sometimes, the patient can be a complicated puzzle to the doctor. Pieces are missing, the picture is unlear. Despite the dictors best efforts, he cannot help the patient, and he gives up, folding the examination table. Years later, the patient remains, still broken, waiting for someone to make him whole again.
Oh...My...GOD! What a SHOT! You just can't make stuff like that up. If I had seen that in person, I would have taken a photo as well, but it wouldn't have come out nearly as well. It does resemble a skull, but I'd never actually think it was a skull. Please sell this as a print! The blue hues in the b/r really compliment the object.
Kahuna69- Your ignorance does not even deserve a response, but I can't let it go. This state school was basically a specialized hospital. I see nothing unusual about having stretchers in a hospital.
I have a friend from highschool who used something like this. Mentally, she was normal, but something had gone horribly wrong during her birth. In middle school, the kids would start singing the jingle "CREE-E-EPY CRAWLER!" when she was going down the hall in her walker. SO cruel! I think I roughed up a younger kid for doing that one time.
I greatly admire and appreciate Mr. Motts' ethical stand (as well as legal respect) for the documents left behind in such places. I remember how facinated I was when I began legal medical research pre-graduate school--but, it can become quite monotonous. Not that it is boring, but medical charts are curious things. I just cannot justify removing anything from these sites.