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Running Toward the Light : The George Mendoza Story

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At the age of fifteen, George Mendoza lost all of his central vision and 80 percent of his peripheral vision.

After months of research, Mendoza's mother learned bright light could sometimes help those with vision problems similar to his.

In 1972, hoping to help her son, she moved them both from New York to Las Cruces, New Mexico.

Mendoza was angry and bitter; he was a teenager who faced limitations he had never imagined.

Enrolled in the New Mexico School for the Visually Handicapped, he renewed an earlier passion for running track, but his resentment did not leave him.

Shortly after high school graduation, Mendoza heard of the curative powers of El Santuario de Chimayo in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains north of Santa Fe.

He hitchhiked to the small village, sceptical of a miracle cure.

His vision was not restored, but Mendoza underwent a transformation in the Chimayo chapel.

He realised he was not handicapped; he was a person 'with a handicap'. ""I've got bad eyes, sure, but there's nothing wrong with my heart or my lungs or my legs."" He concluded he was meant to be an inspiration to others 'with a handicap'.

Thus began a new chapter in George Mendoza's life. He joined the track team at New Mexico State University, entered marathons, and, in 1980, ran in the International Olympiad for the Physically Handicapped in the Netherlands.

Today, Mendoza has perfected another hidden talent: he is an exceptional artist and his one-man shows are continual reminders that having a handicap does not diminish the individual's abilities in other areas.

This biography of the man who refuses to 'be handicapped' will be an inspiration to all who read it.

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Product Details
0826337511 / 9780826337511
Paperback / softback
30/08/2006
United States
176 pages, 18 halftones