Helen Keller: The Life Of Helen Keller's Life

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Helen Keller born on June 27, 1880 in Culver City and had a hard life ahead of her. She was born into the parents Arthur H. Keller and Katherine Adams Keller. She was first born of the two daughters. She also had two stepbrothers. Her dad served in the army during the Civil War. Keller overcame the struggles of being deaf, blind and illiterate. She was diagnosed with an illness and the outcome of her illness was her being deaf and blind. She was only nineteen months when the illness was noticed. It was because of a bad fever called "brain fever". Her mother soon noticed that Keller did not respond when the dinner bell rang, or when someone waved their hand in front of her face. She was only eighteen months old. This was going to be a big struggle for her and her parents. She was speaking at just six months, and walking at age one. Helen had a helper named Ann Sullivan who helps her use her hands to read and write. She pushes through these struggles like it was nothing. Martha Washington and Helen Keller came up with a type of sign language that they could communicate together and figure out what the words meant. By age seven years old, Helen was able to communicate with over sixty different signs. (Stuckey, 2012, pg. 255)

Because Helen Keller was unable to speak with the illness she had, many people came to help her out. She was able to learn to communicate. She was loved by many and taught by many more. Do you know how hard it is to be deaf, blind, and illiterate? I am sure it is very hard and stressful for her and her parents. Without all of her helpers and teachers, she would have never made it through her life in an okay manner. Helen's parents, family and friends knew that when she kicked and screamed, she was angr...

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...ven years old and died of natural causes. However, in 1961 she had a series of strokes and spent the rest of her life in a nursing home in Connecticut. She died in her sleep. She also received many honorary awards. They include as follows: The Theodore Roosevelt Distinguished Metal in 1936, The President Metal of Freedom in 1964, and got elected to The Womans Hall of Fame in 1965. (Sullivan, 2000). Even though she was deaf, blind and illiterate, she was still very smart. I would not say her life was easy at all. Truthfully, her life was very hard. She did not have that life that normal every day people had. She had it much worse. She was very strong and very determined. She made me look at life totally different. She taught me to push through the bad things in life. Helen Keller was smart, beautiful, talented, determine, and many more. She made the best out of life.

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