Personality is the sum or total of one’s physical attributes which include among others his attitudes, behaviour, value system, intellectual ability and communication skills.
People succeed not solely because of their intelligence, but more so because of their determination, diligence, hard work and strong belief in oneself.
Dick and Rick Hoyt are unbelievably amazing sports enthusiasts whose determination to succeed as athletes is beyond imaginable.
At Rick’s birth in 1962, the umbilical cord coiled around his neck and cut off oxygen to his brain. The doctors told Dick and his wife that their child, Rick, would be vegetable for life.
Yet, Dick and his wife never believed it; instead they tried hard to raise their child Rick as normally as possible. In 1972, Dick wished to enrol Rick in a public school; however, he was refused admittance. Until a group of Tufts University engineers came to the rescue. Sensing that Rick shows comprehension skills, the engineers went on to build — using $5,000 the family managed to raise in 1972 - an interactive computer that would allow Rick to write out his thoughts using the slight head-movements that he could manage. Rick came to call it "my communicator." A cursor would move across a screen filled with rows of letters, and when the cursor highlighted a letter that Rick wanted, he would click a switch with the side of his head.
When the computer was originally brought home, Rick surprised his family with his first "spoken" words. Rick wrote "Go Bruins" on the screen. The Boston Bruins were in the Stanley Cup finals that season, and his family realized he had been following the hockey games along with everyone else. At that moment, Dick realized that Rick loved sports.
In 1975, Rick was finally admitted into a public school. Two years later, he told his father he wanted to participate in a five-mile benefit run for a local lacrosse player who had been paralyzed in an accident. Dick, far from being a long-distance runner, agreed to push Rick in his wheelchair. They finished next to last, but they felt they had achieved a triumph.
It’s not only marathon that the Hoyt team participated in, they had also joined in two other sports – swimming and bicycling, which make up a triathlon. At first, they always finished either last or second to the last, but later on, their finished time improved until such time they finished in the top quarter of the filed in Boston Marathon in 1981.
“For the past twenty five years or more Dick, who is 65, has pushed and pulled his son across the country and over hundreds of finish lines. When Dick runs, Rick is in a wheelchair that Dick is pushing. When Dick cycles, Rick is in the seat-pod from his wheelchair, attached to the front of the bike. When Dick swims, Rick is in a small but heavy, firmly stabilized boat being pulled by Dick.”
It’s not only success in athletic competitions that Rick has been known for, he also graduated at Boston University in 1993 with a degree in special education.
Rick now works at Boston College’s computer laboratory helping to develop a system codenamed "Eagle Eyes," through which mechanical aids (like for instance a powered wheelchair) could be controlled by a paralyzed person’s eye-movements, when linked-up to a computer.