Michael Jeffcoat Profile picture
May 2 18 tweets 7 min read Read on X
The REAL Daredevil wasn't fiction - he was a blind boy named Ben Underwood.

Cancer took his eyes, but his mother refused to accept the darkness.

Using dolphin-like echolocation, he learned to "see" with sound.

Here's how his mother's training plan made the impossible possible: Image
Image
At 3, Ben Underwood faced an unimaginable fate.

Retinoblastoma had ravaged his eyes.

After aggressive treatments failed, doctors informed Ben's mother they must remove his eyes to save his life.

In recovery, Ben woke terrified - he would never see his mother Aquanetta again...
Aquanetta refused to let darkness define her son.

As Ben sobbed about never seeing her again, she placed his hands on her face.

"You can still see me with your hands, nose, and ears."

This moment changed everything, sparking an approach that would stun medical experts:
Experts recommended canes, special schools, and lowered expectations, but Aquanetta believed in a better future for Ben.

She refused to treat him as disabled.

She created a home that demanded independence and problem-solving.

Her methods revealed something extraordinary:
• Made Ben do laundry by texture
• He prepared meals independently
• He navigated home without help
• Same chores as his siblings

"The world won't make exceptions for him, so I can't either."
Around age 5, something remarkable happened.

Ben began clicking his tongue - initially a playful sound.

Soon he noticed these clicks created echoes that bounced back differently depending on surroundings.

During hide and seek, he could find his brothers by listening to echoes.
This discovery became the foundation of an extraordinary ability.

Ben taught himself echolocation - the technique dolphins and bats use to navigate.

With each click, sound waves traveled outward and returned with variations based on object distance, size, and density. Image
This natural ability wasn't just remarkable - it was revolutionary.

Ben could detect doorways, furniture, even people from several feet away using only sound.

His self-taught technique would soon challenge everything scientists thought possible about the human brain:
What happened in Ben's brain was miraculous.

Brain scans showed when Ben processed echoes, his visual cortex activated - the area sighted people use for images.

His brain had rewired itself to "see" with sound.

This neuroplasticity is incredibly rare in children. Image
Doctors warned Aquanetta she was being reckless.

Teachers insisted Ben needed constant supervision.

Mobility specialists demanded traditional training, doubting echolocation could work.

But mother and son proved them wrong with each new achievement:
Ben navigated unfamiliar buildings without assistance.

- He rode bicycles at full speed.
- He rollerbladed, avoiding obstacles.
- He played basketball by tracking bounce patterns.
- He mastered video games through sound patterns.

All without a cane or guide dog.
The true power wasn't just Ben's skill; it was Aquanetta's dedication.

She built obstacle courses, rearranged furniture, and taught him to trust his perceptions.

Their motto became "Let's try it" in response to every "impossible" challenge.
As Ben's abilities spread, researchers studied his techniques for new mobility approaches.

Medical journals documented his case, challenging conventional understanding of neural adaptability.

Organizations used his example to advocate for more innovative rehabilitation methods.
Ben's legacy isn't just his accomplishments.

It's how he transformed our understanding of human potential.

When cancer returned, taking his life at sixteen, the world lost a pioneer.

But Aquanetta said: what matters isn't the length of life, but its quality and purpose.
In sixteen years, Ben inspired more change than many do in decades.

He proved impact isn't measured in time.

His story challenges our perception of limitations—showing that most barriers exist only in our minds.

This is why sharing these extraordinary underdog stories matters.
I'm inspired by people like Ben and Aquanetta.

People who refuse to accept limitations others place on them.

People who find creative solutions when conventional wisdom fails.

People who remind us the human spirit is capable of extraordinary things.
Thanks for reading.

I hope you've found this thread helpful.

Follow me @MichaelJeffcoat for more real talk on building resilience and winning life's toughest battles.

Like/Repost the quote below if you can:
Image/Video Credits:
- tinyurl.com/bdhswt9d
- tinyurl.com/5c8p64x6
- tinyurl.com/4n6cmb2d
- psynso.com
- Ben Underwood miracle: youtube.com/watch?v=fnH7AI…
- The Boy who Sees without Eyes (2011) | Extraordinary People: youtube.com/watch?v=pt5yYK…

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Michael Jeffcoat

Michael Jeffcoat Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @MichaelJeffcoat

Jun 7
In 2009, this CEO inherited Xerox during the worst recession ever.

Stock crashed 70%. Revenue fell $2.4B. Analysts called it hopeless.

Then she bet $6.4 billion on a company that had nothing to do with copiers.

How she transformed a dying hardware giant into a services empire: Image
She spent $6.4 billion on a company that had nothing to do with copiers.

Wall Street called her crazy.

Board members questioned her judgment.

But Ursula Burns saw something others missed...
First, let's understand just how bad things were.

Xerox wasn't just struggling—it was on life support.

The 2008 financial crisis had devastated the company completely.

But that was just the beginning:
Read 19 tweets
May 31
This comedian just pulled off the most insane TV stunt ever.

Nathan Fielder secretly trained for 2 years while filming his HBO show.

Then exploited a loophole to fly a Boeing 737 with 150 people on board.

Here's how he achieved what every aviation expert said was impossible: Image
Meet Nathan Fielder.

A socially awkward Canadian comedian born in Vancouver on May 12, 1983.

He attended the same high school as Seth Rogen.

But while Rogen became a confident performer, Fielder remained painfully shy, and this would nearly destroy him: Image
His social anxiety was so severe it nearly derailed his career.

Early auditions were disasters.

He'd over-prepare for every interaction, scripting conversations in his head.

Other comedians saw confidence as essential, but Fielder had none, until he discovered something:
Read 28 tweets
May 16
In 2003, a man amputated his OWN arm with a dull pocketknife.

Trapped for 127 hours beneath an 800-pound boulder.

Aron Ralston drank his own urine and wrote his goodbye message on the wall.

The incredible true story behind the film "127 Hours": 🧵 Image
Aron Ralston's day began like any other.

The experienced hiker ventured into Utah's canyons alone.

He told no one his plans - a critical mistake.

But a 20-second mistake would trap him for the next 127 hours:
A dislodged boulder pinned his right arm against the wall.

800 pounds of immovable rock.

No way to call for help.

His survival hinged on a mental weapon few discover:
Read 20 tweets
May 13
For 20 centuries, no American could reach the papal throne:

Until this Chicago mathematician:
• Left Harvard for Peru's dirt roads
• Built an army to back him using 5 languages
• Turned marble halls into weapons

How an outsider conquered Rome's oldest fortress: Image
Robert Francis Prevost wasn't meant for history books.

Born in Chicago (1955) to French and Spanish parents, he seemed destined for a conventional path.

The Villanova math graduate had options.

But he chose something that baffled his peers...
While peers chased academic prestige, Prevost joined the Augustinian order.

He traded equations for theology and worked as a cemetery groundskeeper during his studies.

But his most radical choice came next: abandoning America's comfort for Peru's uncertain dirt roads.
Read 19 tweets
May 7
For 15 years, nobody beat Apple's App Store rules.

One gaming studio launched an impossible plan:

• Violated the rules on purpose
• Got banned from 1B iPhones
• Fought for 5 years

The brilliant trap that Epic Games used to destroy Apple's 30% tax and free 1B phones: Image
Meet Epic Games - creators of Fortnite, a game played by 400M people worldwide.

In 2020, they shocked the tech world by deliberately picking a fight with the most valuable company on earth.

Why would anyone provoke a $3 trillion giant with unlimited resources?
Tim Sweeney, Epic's CEO, had planned this confrontation for years.

The issue? Apple takes a 30% cut of all App Store purchases.

For Epic, this meant hundreds of millions in fees annually.

But this wasn't just about money - it was about challenging what Epic saw as an illegal monopoly...
Read 19 tweets
Apr 29
Ryan Reynolds' "idiotic" $2M gamble on Wrexham AFC shocked the football world.

A team forgotten for years in England's lowest divisions.

3 seasons later: $100,000,000 valuation and 3 historic promotions.

It exposed the brutal truth elite clubs don't want you to know: Image
When Reynolds and McElhenney bought Wrexham in 2021, experts called them crazy.

$2,500,000 for a fifth-tier club outside the Football League for 15 years?

A team with a crumbling stadium and dwindling fans?

This seemed insane... yet it revealed business genius:
Before Hollywood arrived, Wrexham was lost in time.

Relegated in 2008, they spent 15 years in the football wilderness.

Fan-owned but underfunded.

Local businesses struggled while young fans supported bigger TV clubs instead of their hometown team.
Read 18 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(