Sunday, November 21, 2021
possible I knew they'd be into the music aspect having them do it for themselves, express themselves, and carrying a message to the community why not? They put the headphones on and they are in this little bubble and it's great. Even the clients that sometimes can had troubles staying focused, they're locked for the whole show. Music brings people together. They can choose what they want to listen too there are no restrictions and no playlist.
I'm lucky George Russo say as he pauses on the second floor. Although he is still anxious about making the show on time and eager to keep going, I have a good strong left arm and a good strong left leg and my good strong left arm is really strong too.
George Russo suffers from a traumatic head-injury and now has to wear a baseball helmet most of the time. As a result of the head-injury. His right arm and right leg are weak which he will explain to any one that will-it's like telephone wires, you know what will happen if you cut wone of the wires, no communication from person, to person. If you glue, or tape, the wires together. Then the communication will be blocked off. That what would happen if a bad head-injury follows a disability. Of course, some of the movement won't come back until years, and years. It depends on how hard you work building up strength. George emphasizes on how good and strong his left arm is by flexing a muscle. He turns to Morris and says I ready to go the show is starting and he don't want to miss as the action. George turns his head and then he had saw eleven paintings that he had made hanging up on the wall. A client named Denise, calls in to the radio station she is a regular listener at outside the lines studio in Medford, at seventy Colby Street. To get to the radio station you got to go out the door way to outside the line studio. Then you walk down the wide and very long-winded cemented trail that goes around a great big socker field. Then you walk down a very, very wide cemented parking lot. Then you take a sharp right and you walk down the side walk. So you walk in a great big old brick building and you got to walk up forty-five steps and for a disable person I have to ride my wheelchair to go to the radio station. When I am in the great big old brick building where the radio station is a staff person would open the door and I would stand up from my wheelchair and I had to grab the long wooden bar that is attach to the wall and walk up then steps sideways. Then I would have to carefully turn my body while I am still standing and to grab the long wooden bar with my very strong left hand and walking up the rest of the steps. Until I had walked up all forty-five steps. When I am walking up the step I can't bend my right leg, like I can my left leg and it is kind of a struggle for me. I was really, really, glad that there was a big long wooden bar on the left side of me. So that I can grab it with my very strong left hand. while I am walking up the steps the leads to the big door the you would have to open to go inside the radio station itself and you would see all of the different records on the long shelves that was songs song by a lot of famous people and there's a few different rooms up those stairs too.
Now I can't go upstairs no more. Because it takes to much time and I have trouble bend my right leg and I really don't mine but a staff person that is going up to the radio station ask all of the clients in outside the line studio what do they want to hear on the radio
