
About John Glenn In 1962, at the height of the Cold War, when the USA and the USSR were pitted against each other, John Glenn was launched into space, the first American to orbit the Earth. The Berlin Wall had just been erected, and the previous year saw two Russian cosmonauts successfully orbit the Earth, propelling the Russians to the head of the space race. Americans needed a patriotic boost, and NASA's success did just that, with Glenn as the icon of a renewed American pride.
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![]() I don't remember when I first met my wife, Annie. Our parents were good friends and we practically grew up in the same playpen. We never knew a time when we didn't know each other. But somewhere in my teens, I took a second look at Annie and liked what I saw.
She has always had a great sense of humor; she was a straight-A student and a wonderful musician. She won a scholarship to Julliard, but instead she stayed in Ohio, at Muskingum College, and married me. I admired Annie. She was a very talented person, a true standout. Yet, she had this great difficulty.
For Annie, stuttering meant not being able to take a taxi because she would have to write out the address and give it to the driver because she couldn't get the words out. It would be too embarrassing to try to talk about where she wanted to go. Going to the store is a tremendously difficult and frustrating experience when you can't find what you want and can't ask the clerk because you are too embarrassed of your stutter. The telephone is another devil for a stutterer. Most stutterers just won't call anybody. Annie couldn't just pick up the phone and call a friend to chat, or even 911. I was in the Marine Corps and was overseas while Annie was at home with our two young children. When I went away, we always made sure that there was a neighbor available in case there was an emergency since Annie would probably not be able to use the telephone.
When I was in Guam, Annie brought our two young children out there to visit. She flew on commercial airlines until she got to San Francisco. Traveling across the country with two children in tow is a great difficulty for anyone, but especially for someone with her kind of communication problem. I saw Annie's perseverance and strength through the years and it just made me admire her and love her even more. It takes guts to operate with a disability; I don't know if I would have had the courage to do all the things that Annie did so well. When Annie was younger, stutterers were generally assumed to have a psychological problem. Therapy based on that theory helped a few people, but it didn't work with Annie. She had been through every type of treatment there was, and they were of very little help to her. It was a tremendous disappointment because she wanted so much to speak normally. Every time she would go through a treatment program or work with a speech therapist it didn't work; with consistent disappointments, she despaired trying again.
Finally, about 20 years ago, we were watching the Today show, and a professor, Ron Webster, was talking about the success of his new theory and treatment for stuttering. I turned to Annie, and said, "You should try this because it's brand new." She agreed, and went down to Webster's three-week course in Roanoke, VA. It literally changed her life.
In her first week, she learned how to speak in slow, short syllables. During the second week, they gradually sped up the rate at which she spoke, working on sounds that are particularly difficult for stutterers. The third week is a continuation of the work learned in the first two weeks. Annie reached a point where she could represent me in speeches, and speak for others with handicaps. She will always have to work on her speech, but with her courage and determination she overcomes the disability every day with phone calls and normal conversation.
Annie inspired a lot of people to get treatment for their disabilities. Through the American Speech and Hearing Association (ASHA), she would meet with people to tell her story and how she stuck with her treatment. ASHA was impressed enough by Annie's accomplishments that they now give an award in her name. The "Annie" honors people who overcome great communication difficulties and achieve distinction by helping others. Each year we try to make it to the award ceremony, and Annie presents the award. One year, Annie presented the award to James Earl Jones. You would never guess in a thousand years that he was a stutterer by watching him in movie roles, but he, too, has learned to overcome his handicap.
Along with others like Jones, the recipients of the "Annie" exemplify the very definition of the word hero. They not only demonstrate tremendous personal strength, but they also choose to use that strength to benefit other people. Despite great difficulties and daily struggles, these individuals don't expect anybody else to take care of them. We tend to think of heroes as being those who are well known, but America is made up of a whole nation of heroes who face problems that are very difficult, and their courage remains largely unsung. Millions of individuals are heroes in their own right. In my book, Annie is one of those heroes.
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Written by
John Glenn
Photos courtesy of NASA |
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The John and Annie Glenn Museum Foundation Learn about Annie and John Glenn and their hometown of New Concord, OH American Speech-Language-Hearing Association "The mission of the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association is to promote the interests of and provide the highest quality services for professionals in audiology, speech-language pathology, and speech and hearing science, and to advocate for people with communication disabilities." -ASHA |
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| Anne Frank & Miep Gies are heroes to Freedom Writers founder and teacher, Erin Gruwell. | Captain Nemo inspired hero, Dr. Robert Ballard to explore the sea. | Clarence Darrow is Morris Dees' hero. | Curtis Mayfield who is Doreen Van Lee's hero, was an influential singer and songwriter. |
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| Dan & Amy Eldon are not only Kathy Eldon's children; they are also her heroes. | Dan Eldon inspired Kathy Eldon with his art, his poetry and his life. | Dr. Benjamin Elijah Mays mentored Reverend Calvin O. Butts, who is now pastor of the Abyssinian Baptist Church in Harlem, NY. | Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Congressman John Lewis talks about how Martin Luther King, Jr. inspired him as a young man during the Civil Rights Movement |
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| Duke Ellington inspires Pulitzer Prize-winning musician Wynton Marsalis. | Errol Flynn is legendary Marvel Comics founder Stan Lee's hero and inspired many of Lee's heroes. | Explorers Among Robert Ballard's heroes are Jason and the Argonauts, Captain Nemo, Captain Cook and Joseph Campbell. | Fridtjof Nansen is Steve Fossett's hero. |
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| Heroic Women Nobel Laureate Wangari Maathai writes about the heroic women who have inspired her. | Jimmy Carter For as long as she can remember, Sherry Lansing has considered President Carter her hero. | Joan of Arc was poet Christine de Pisan's hero. | Jose Manuel Ramos-Horta is Kerry Kennedy's hero because of his human rights work in East Timor. |
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| Joseph Rotblat is a hero and a friend to Nobel Peace Prize-winning doctor, Bernard Lown. | My Father, Arthur Newman Actor, businessman, philanthropist Paul Newman on his dad. | My Father, Ronald Reagan talks about his father's examples and those of the Tibetan Monks and Nelson Mandela | My Father, Rupfure Thomas & Nelson Mandela and Rupfure Thomas are heroes to lifesaver Paul Rusesabagina. |
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| My Sister: Jennifer Bird Women's basketball star Sue Bird talks about her sister and her hero: Jen Bird | My Teachers : Billie Jean King honors her teachers in her essay featured in My Hero. | Nelson Mandela is Muhammad Ali's hero because he understands what it means to fight against enormous odds | Nelson Mandela Children's troubadour Raffi writes about his hero, Nelson Mandela |
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| Paul Robeson's Heroes include Denmark Vesey, Frederick Douglass, and Jawarahal Nehru. | Saint Francis of Assisi was a true example of harmonious existence on Earth | The Concept of Heroes is the topic of Elie Wiesel's essay, published in My Hero Extraordinary People on the Heroes Who Inspire Them | Vedran Smailovic 'The Cellist of Sarajevo,' is Peacemaker Jason Crowe's hero. |
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| William Beebe Sylvia Earle's hero, was a deep-sea diver and naturalist. |
Last changed on:2/20/2008
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