08-30-2016, 12:03 PM
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Confirmed User
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Join Date: Jun 2016
Location: Toronto
Posts: 1,094
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Quote:
Originally Posted by brassmonkey
In a new interview with NPR's Robert Siegel, Wilder's nephew Jordan Walker-Pearlman explains that his uncle kept his Alzheimer's diagnosis a secret because he feared that, were it to become public, it would begin to interfere with his ability to bring smiles to people's faces even in retirement.
"This decision was not as a result of vanity," said Walker-Pearlman. "There were times we would go out to dinner as a family and children would light up at the sight of him and smile. And because he never lost his instinct or sense or sensibility, it occurred to him that if that disease were made public . that then after that smile, some parent may then say something about disease or sadness. And he was such that he could not bear to be responsible for one less smile in the world."
article...
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 RIP you beautiful soul
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