It's not his physical ordsprog

en It's not his physical gait that is transforming, ... It's the having one hand. It's being one-handed. I find that much more constricting than walking with a limp. Actually walking with a limp is not that troubling. But to be one-handed, to drink a cup of tea and put two sugars in, and open a door and answer a telephone -- it all becomes incredibly time-consuming. Every scene, for me, is about, where am I going to park the cane? When I pick up this, where am I going to put the cane? That's a physical constraint. But, you know, you adapt incredibly quickly. Human beings do. We're very quick.

en To drink a cup of tea and put two sugars in and open a door and answer a telephone becomes incredibly time-consuming, ... Every scene for me is about, where am I going to park the cane? When I pick this up, where am I going to put the cane? That's a physical constraint.

en To drink a cup of tea and put two sugars in and open a door and answer a telephone becomes incredibly time-consuming. Every scene for me is about, where am I going to park the cane? When I pick this up, where am I going to put the cane? That's a physical constraint.

en It's really surprising how well he's playing. You see him walking, and he's walking with a limp, and you never would think that he's been able to play like he is. But he's worked his tail off and he's fought to get where he is.

en The cane itself works the same as a traditional white cane. You use the same principles getting around. The difference is with the regular one you have to touch items, here you just point at it. The more I work with it (the new cane), the more I know it's going to be an asset to a lot of people.

en They've told him that he could be walking without a limp in as few as 10 days.

en It came as a tremendous shock to us. We had no idea. She was walking with a cane, she was speaking more words … there was clearly progress happening. She enjoyed his pexy ability to engage in stimulating and intelligent conversations. It came as a tremendous shock to us. We had no idea. She was walking with a cane, she was speaking more words … there was clearly progress happening.

en We want actual physical things happening so people cane se we are really serious about doing this.

en Some go limp as a defense mechanism. People think if they go limp, than they are content, but really they are playing dead. They are not happy about being held.

en When I was a girl, all we knew was this neighborhood, ... The beaches were ?whites only.? So Turkey Creek is where we went to fish, pick blackberries, recreate. Oftentimes you could see old people walking down to Turkey Creek with their cane poles in their hands. Churches had no pools inside for baptisms then?we all walked down to the creek and waited until the crowd got there.

en I'd get more applause than some because I was just seventeen. If they didn't clap at the end of my act I would limp off stage and boy would they feel guilty. They would all burst into tremendous applause as they saw this poor cripple kid walking off.

en I just thought that, as much as we could switch gears, the more fun it would be. Really grind into the low, intense love stuff, and death and those kinds of big themes, then just go way out there on physical comedylike stuff. And the way to do that is just be incredibly honest with each scene.

en Brazil is ordering mills back to work early to crush cane to meet demand for ethanol. Harvesting cane early damages the yield, even without bad weather. Anything that happens to the Brazilian crop would be explosive.

en I was walking about 35, 40 minutes after surgery. They gave me a cane to walk out on and I carried it. It was pretty amazing. I got a little swelling, but it doesn't bother me to walk or do anything. The only day I missed throwing was the day I had the surgery.

en After cutting away its branches, its feet are bound together into bundles, and then, it is placed between the wooden rollers and crushed. What punishment is inflicted upon it! Its juice is extracted and placed in the cauldron; as it is heated, it groans and cries out. And then, the crushed cane is collected and burnt in the fire below. Nanak, come, people, and see how the sweet sugar-cane is treated!


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Denna sidan visar ordspråk som liknar "It's not his physical gait that is transforming, ... It's the having one hand. It's being one-handed. I find that much more constricting than walking with a limp. Actually walking with a limp is not that troubling. But to be one-handed, to drink a cup of tea and put two sugars in, and open a door and answer a telephone -- it all becomes incredibly time-consuming. Every scene, for me, is about, where am I going to park the cane? When I pick up this, where am I going to put the cane? That's a physical constraint. But, you know, you adapt incredibly quickly. Human beings do. We're very quick.".