Being positive and thankful on this day
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B.W. COOK
“People are more powerful than the barriers they face,” said Dan
Rogers, president and CEO of Goodwill Industries, Orange County.
Today is Thanksgiving Day, and Rogers comments at the annual
Walter Knott Service Award luncheon held at the Four Seasons Hotel,
Newport are significant words of reflection on this all American
holiday.
Thanksgiving really is a universal celebration, its message one of
unity and that of reaching out to people of differing backgrounds
working together for the common good. It is a most appropriate day to
share the words and the feelings expressed at Goodwill’s Walter Knott
luncheon. A sold-out crowd in the Four Seasons ballroom celebrated
Thanksgiving early sending the universal message of the indomitable
spirit of mankind overcoming the worst that life can deal.
Four people put the important things in life front and center as
they accepted honors for their achievements. Jesse Billauer, Tracy
Broughton and Valinda Martin, who are in wheelchairs after being
injured in accidents, and Rachel Scdoris, who is blind, all received
standing ovations for their inspirational words.
Martin, a woman with a smile broad enough to light up the room,
confined to a wheelchair as the result of a boating accident, is the
owner of an art gallery and gift store on Balboa Island she has named
Art for the Soul.
“I feel blessed,” Martin said. “There are a lot of able-bodied
people who cannot say that.”
During a video of Valinda Martin’s story, the crowd of more than
500 Goodwill supporters wiped away a tear when Martin thanked her
father for his unflagging support through her ordeal.
“I don’t believe in disabilities,” she said.
Martin will open a second gallery in Laguna Beach this month.
The Walter Knott luncheon was guided by master of ceremonies Peter
Buffa, former mayor of Costa Mesa. A humorist with the later-day wit
of a Will Rogers, Buffa said on a serious note, “That the most
important thing we have is time.”
Billauer knows the meaning of Buffa’s words. At the age of 17, a
surfing accident destroyed his dream to become a professional surfer
and placed him in a wheelchair as a quadriplegic. Now 24, the
handsome surf dude with a shaved head and diamond studs in his ears
made his way onto the Four Seasons podium in his chair to tell the
audience that “life rolls on,” and he’s rolling with it every inch of
the way.
Billauer’s mother, grandparents and cousin were in the audience to
support him. A video message from his dad, who was unable to attend,
was featured. It was evident that they were inspired by his
affirmative attitude toward life, and equally evident that he was a
young man fortunate enough to have a loving family behind him.
Broughton, a beautiful young woman put in a wheelchair as the
result of a car accident, refused to allow her situation to interfere
with her ambitions in life. Broughton became Ms. Black California in
2002, and shared her belief that the barrier of a wheelchair should
not reduce people from living productive and independent lives.
“I wouldn’t write my life this way,” Broughton said. “But I
wouldn’t change it, either.”
Powerful words from a person of tremendous inner strength.
Broughton is the mother of two young sons, and will let nothing get
in her way.
Scdoris is one of the world’s most accomplished athletes,
internationally recognized as a leader in the sport of sled-dog
racing. In March 2004, Scdoris will compete at the very highest level
of her sport, participating in the grueling Alaskan Iditarod. Scdoris
is blind.
She stepped up to the Four Season’s podium and shared her story
with the audience, not once mentioning her blindness. It was the
story of a young woman with a gift, a passion, and a will to succeed,
again lovingly supported by a family, and in particular her father
who has coached her since childhood in the sport she loves. Another
message of achievement against all odds.
Walter Knott, the late founder of Knott’s Berry Farm and an Orange
County pioneer remembered for his civic service, is often quoted with
the admonition, “Whatever we vividly imagine, ardently desire,
sincerely believe, and enthusiastically act upon must eventually come
to pass.”
His words echoed throughout the Four Seasons ballroom in the
presence of his surviving daughter, Marion, and her husband, Tony
Montapert.
Also in the crowd were other Knott family members, including
Darrel Anderson of Newport Beach. Daniel Armstrong, chairman of the
Goodwill board of directors, joined renowned local artist Bob Schaar,
Rex Hudler, Betty Belden Palmer and Ronna Shipman, in handling the
presentations of the day.
The massive event was chaired by a most capable Janice Markley,
with support from an event committee that included Cecelia Knott and
her daughters Amy Knott and Tracy Gottlieb. Melanie Fitch, Gina
Ferguson, Ted Baker, Zoe Hadley, Ann Sullivan, Erin Trunel, Susan
Tierney and Heather Klein were also participating.
Rogers told the gathering that it was a day to celebrate
creativity, achievement and expression.
“We celebrate the human spirit and raise vital funds to provide
those with disabilities and other barriers, with job training
placement and the tools to achieve individual success,” he said.
It was a day to reaffirm the importance of self-respect. And to
put it bluntly, “The joy of earning a paycheck,” Rogers said.
“In America, a good part of our freedom is tied to the joy of
achievement, and the joy of independence,” he said.
Quite a message on this Thanksgiving Day. As you join with loved
ones to share the holiday meal, take a moment to share in the bounty
of blessings in your lives. Appreciate whatever you have, and know
that all things are possible if the dream is based on a foundation of
goodwill.
* THE CROWD appears Thursdays and Saturdays.
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