阅读文章&回答问题 I was born disabled. A difficult birth, feet first, my head stuck in the

Iwasborndisabled.Adifficultbirth,feetfirst,myheadstuckinthebirthcanal(产道).Bymyfirstbi... I was born disabled. A difficult birth, feet first, my head stuck in the birth canal (产道). By my first birthday, I couldn t crawl (爬), stand or walk.
When I was 3, Dad brought me to the Children's Hospital in Boston. They told him I had cerebral palsy (脑瘫). A loss of oxygen to my brain had destroyed brain signals to the right side of my body.
But no son of my dad's was going to be disabled. Every morning before breakfast and every evening before bed, my dad placed me on the bedroom floor to exercise my right leg. The muscles were shrunken and twisted (缠绕) together. His job was to craft (用手精心推拉) them straight, at
any cost. Back and forth, up and down, my dad pushed and pulled the muscles into shape.
But my dad's exercise of passion didn't stop there. For my 13th birthday, he threw me a special party. When everybody was gone, he opened a large box. In it was a set of boxing gloves. We put them on. My dad went on to beat me mercilessly (无情地). Each time I tried to get up, the gloves kissed my nose, eyes and jaw (下巴). I begged him to stop. He said he beat me to get me ready for the world. He told me I was a man now and things would be very difficult for me.
That same year, I was the only kid in my neighborhood that wasn't picked for Little League. Everybody laughed at me. Two weeks later, Dad started the Shedd Park Minor League, and every kid played. Dad coached the Yankees and made me a pitcher (棒球投手).
In high school, I became a football star. The power of my dad's love made sure I walked and more. In 1997, a brain doctor in San Jose told me I didn't have cerebral palsy after all. He explained how and where the doctor's forceps (镊子) at birth had damaged one part of my brain.
My dad never knew the whole truth since he passed away years ago. But all that counts is the bottom line. After all his madness, on this Father's Day, like every Father's Day, I'm no longer disabled.
What couldn't the writer do by his first birthday?
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How did the writer's father help him to craft the muscles straight?
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3. What present did the writer received from his father on his thirteenth birthday?
_____________________________________________________________________ 4. Why did the writer's father beat him mercilessly on his thirteenth birthday?
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When did the writer know that he didn't have cerebral palsy after all?
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The writer's father never gave up on him, did he?
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How do you like the writer's father?
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痛苦小女孩
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1.A loss of oxygen to his brain had destroyed brain signals to the right side of his body.
2.His father was to craft muscles straight, at any cost. Back and forth, up and down, his dad pushed and pulled the muscles into shape.
3.a set of boxing gloves.
4.his father hope he be brave.
5.In 1997
6.Yes,he did.
7.He is devoted to his son and have never give up spirit.
(我的回答好象有语法问题……抱歉~)
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