By Denis Waitley 
When  he was two years old, this adopted child of two college professors  suddenly and inexplicably stopped growing, and his health started to  fail. A team of doctors gave him six months to live after they diagnosed  him as suffering from a rare disease that inhibits digestion and  nutrients in food. Intravenous feedings of vitamins and supplements  allowed him to regain his strength, but his growth was permanently  stunted.
                                 Confined  to hospitals for long periods of time, until the age of nine, he  quietly plotted his revenge on the kids who taunted him and called him  “peanut.”
                                 He  recalled many years later that subconsciously “the whole experience  made me want to succeed at something athletic.” Sometimes his sister,  Susan, went ice skating at the local rink, and he would go along to  watch. There he stood, a frail, undergrown kid, with a feeding tube  inserted through his nose and down into his stomach. When he wasn’t  using it, one end of the tube was taped behind his ear.
                                 One  day, as he watched his sister whirl around the ice, he turned to his  parents and said, “You know, I think I’d like to try ice skating.” Talk  about two adults, looking at their life-threatened child, with glances  that were beyond belief!
                                 Well,  he tried it and he loved it, and he went at it with a passion. Here was  something fun at which he could excel, where height and weight weren’t  important.
                                 During  his medical checkup the following year, the doctors were startled to  discover that he had actually started growing again. It was too late for  him to reach normal size, but neither he nor his family cared. He was  recovering and succeeding. He believed in his dream, although he had  little else to hang on to.
                                 None  of the kids taunt him and tease him today. Instead, they all cheer and  rush to get his autograph. He has just completed another dazzling  performance on the world professional ice skating tour, with a long  string of triple jumps, complicated maneuvers, and athletic moves,  capped off with a racing front flip that brought him to a sudden stop  inches from the audience. Although he has retired from professional  skating, he remains a coach, mentor and commentator revered by everyone  in winter sports.
                                 At  five feet three inches and 115 pounds of pure muscle and electrifying  energy, former Olympic gold medal figure skating champion Scott Hamilton  stands as tall and as proud as any winner. Scott’s size didn’t limit  his faith and reach. Don’t let doubts and critics limit yours. This  doesn’t mean that you’ll close almost every sale or get promoted in  record time. Scott Hamilton certainly didn’t hit every triple-axel jump  he ever attempted, especially during the initial learning phase. Success  in developing any skill requires a basic trust in your ability that  should never be allowed to waver. 
You can stand tall, no matter how small!
You can stand tall, no matter how small!
 

 
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