What is an ordinary
life? Little hectic, often boring, lots of struggling and mostly moving through
a analogous pattern, it is very much like a merry-go-round.
However, with conscious effort we can come out from this boring pattern and it
is not difficult for us to spice up the life by giving different meaning or
venturing to a new world. However, it is indeed a difficult task to upgrade
a ordinary life to an extra-ordinary one. The tales of two human, and
their extra-ordinary life.
Chirs &
Rachel Rohrlach
In the documentary
‘A Good Man’, Indian-Australian filmmaker Safina Uberoi follows the Chris's
family and I followed her to bring this incredible tales of an
extra-ordinary man.
Fourteen years ago,
Rachel suffered a stroke just a day after she and her new boyfriend Chris
had told their parents she was having a baby. Rachel was then just 21.
Although Rachel was in a coma for many months, the baby survived. Rachel
recovered consciousness as a quadriplegic. Her son was born while she
was in a coma. Against all medical and family advice, Chris took both
the baby and Rachel home. He went on to marry her and has never left her
side. Matter of fact apart from the teen aged boy Rachel had then, they
gone to have another child.
Chris, an Australian farmer strapped by
years of drought and raising their teenage son and the addition of a new
baby proved to be a great financial burden, so Chris and two friends
came up with the controversial solution to build and manage a brothel. He
comes up with a bizarre solution to their financial woes. Rachel
approves and together they work towards making it happen. Although brothels are
legal in Australia ,
there is still huge local opposition to their plans. Chris triumphs
against all odds and manages to open the brothel. Chris just worked harder, while
managing the farm by day, running the brothel by night, and shuttling his
beloved wife between the two locations. Despite Rachel's quadriplegia,
the drought they could take such joy in each other and their children.
William
Kamkwamba
The extraordinary
true story of a Malawian teenager who transformed his village by
building electric windmills out of junk. Self-taught William
Kamkwamba has been feted by climate change campaigners like Al Gore and
business leaders the world over. His against-all-odds achievements are all the
more remarkable considering he was forced to quit school aged 14 because his
family could no longer afford the fees. Mr
Kamkwamba, who is now 22 years old, knocked together a turbine from spare
bicycle parts, a tractor fan blade and an old shock absorber, and fashioned
blades from plastic pipes, flattened by being held over a fire.
The finished
product - a 5-m (16-ft) tall blue-gum-tree wood tower, light bulbs and a
circuit breaker, made from nails and magnets off an old stereo speaker,
and a light switch cobbled together from bicycle spokes and flip-flop
rubber. He upgraded his original windmill to 48-volts and anchored it in
concrete after its wooden base was chewed away by termites.
Then he built a new
windmill, dubbed the Green Machine, which turned a water pump to
irrigate his family's field. The home-grown hero aims to finish bringing power,
not just to the rest of his village, but to all Malawians, only 2% of
whom have electricity.
!!!Nothing is miserable unless we wanted to
live in it.!!!
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