I’m writing this letter from a hospital room before I am admitted into the operating theatre. They want me to hurry, but I am determined to finish writing first, as I don’t want to leave anything unfinished. 1/
Especially now that I know what they are up to. They want to hurt my pride by cutting a leg off.
When they told me it would be necessary to amputate, the news didn’t affect me the way everybody expected. 2/
No, I was already a maimed woman when I lost you, again, for the umpteenth time maybe, and still I survived.
I am not afraid of pain and you know it. It is almost inherent to my being, although I confess that I suffered, and a great deal, when you cheated on me... 3/
... every time you did it, not just with my sister but with so many other women.
How did they let themselves be fooled by you? You believe I was furious about Cristina, but today I confess that it wasn’t because of her.
It was because of me and you. 4/
First of all because of me, since I’ve never been able to understand what you looked and look for, what they give you that I couldn’t.
Let’s not fool ourselves, Diego, I gave you everything that is humanly possible to offer and we both know that. 5/
But still, how the hell do you manage to seduce so many women when you’re such an ugly son of a bitch?
The reason why I’m writing is not to accuse you of anything more than we’ve already accused each other of in this and however many more bloody lives. 6/
It’s because I’m having a leg cut off (damned thing, it got what it wanted in the end). 7/
I told you I’ve counted myself as incomplete for a long time, but why the fuck does everybody else need to know about it too?
Now my fragmentation will be obvious for everyone to see, for you to see… 8/
That’s why I’m telling you before you hear it on the grapevine.
Forgive my not going to your house to say this in person, but given the circumstances and my condition, I’m not allowed to leave the room, not even to use the bathroom.
9/
It’s not my intention to make you or anyone else feel pity, and I don’t want you to feel guilty.
I’m writing to let you know I’m releasing you, I’m amputating you.
Be happy and never seek me again. 10/
I don’t want to hear from you, I don’t want you to hear from me. If there is anything I’d enjoy before I die, it’d be not having to see your fucking horrible bastard face wandering around my garden. 11/
That is all, I can now go to be chopped up in peace.
Goodbye from somebody who is crazy and vehemently in love with you,
Your Frida."
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Phineas Gage is the most famous person to have survived severe damage to the brain. His accident illustrates the first medical knowledge gained on the relationship between personality and brain damage.
After his injury, he turned into a completely different person.
A successful construction foreman, Gage was contracted to work for the Rutland & Burlington Railroad in Vermont. In September 1848 while he was preparing a railroad bed, an accidental explosion of a charge he had set, blew a 13-pound tamping iron straight through his head.
The tamping iron was 1 ¼ inches in diameter. It went in point first under his left cheek bone and completely out through the top of his head, landing about 25 to 30 yards behind him.
1. Gerhard Kretschmar nasceu em Pomssen, na Alemanha, em 1939. Cinco meses depois, Richard Kretschmar (pai) escreveu uma carta para Hitler pedindo autorização para que seu filho fosse morto.
Gerhard era um bebê com deficiência.
2. Um "monstro" - nas palavras do pai.
Hitler, que há muito tempo já expressava seu desprezo pelas pessoas com deficiência, enviou seu médico pessoal para investigar o caso.
Em Julho de 1939, com a aprovação e a benção de Hitler, Gerhard recebeu uma injeção letal.
3. Esse episódio marcou o início de uma das mais desprezíveis operações olocadas em curso durante a Segunda Guerra Mundial.
Aktion T4, como veio a ser chamado, foi o programa de eutanásia que matou aproximadamente 300.000 pessoas com deficiência de 1939 até 1945.
On January 26, 1945, 2nd Lieutenant Audie L. Murphy was commanding company B of the 15th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Infantry Division, near the French village of Holtzwihr when six German tanks and several hundred infantrymen attacked his company.
/1
Murphy ordered his men to fall back to defensive positions in nearby woods while he covered their withdrawal and called down artillery to slow the German advance. German fire hit an American tank destroyer nearby and set it on fire.
Witnesses later recalled how he “climbed on the burning tank destroyer, which was in danger of blowing up at any moment, and employed its .50 caliber machine gun against the enemy.”
The Bowery was a raucous area where police frequently looked the other way as drinking, gambling, music and shows took place well into the night.
Coney Island's appeal was that anyone could find the type of experience they desired. For those looking for more variety and fun, and less refinement, the Bowery stood head and shoulders above Brighton Beach and Manhattan Beach.
The Bowery was relatively small but was packed with entertainment. On both sides of Bowery Lane, and along side-alleys, one and two-story wooden buildings were erected. They housed mostly saloons, concert halls, and a few first class restaurants.
This was commissioned last Christmas. I don't usually do that, but I was so amazed and curious when I saw the photo that I just had to ask the client if I could share it (and the story behind it) with you.
So, with their permission, meet Maj. Lloyd "Scotty" Hathcock.
Maj. Lloyd "Scotty" Hathcock, captured in Italy during the summer of 1944, spent the rest of the war in Stalag Luft III and Stalag VII-A prison camps.
After the war, Hathcock stayed in the service and helped to desegregate the U.S. Air Force.
Artifacts donated by Maj. Hathcock remain on display at the WWII Gallery at the National Museum of the U.S. Air Force.
(Huge thanks to Maj. Hatchcock's grandson for allowing me to introduce his grandad to you!)