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Meet the mom who started the Ice Bucket Challenge

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    Well, good afternoon.
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    How many of you
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    took the ALS Ice Bucket Challenge?
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    (Applause)
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    Woo hoo!
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    Well I have to tell you, from the bottom of our hearts,
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    thank you so very, very much.
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    Do you know to date the ALS Association
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    has raised 125 million dollars?
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    Woo hoo! (Applause)
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    So it takes me back to the summer of 2011.
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    My family, my kids had all grown up.
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    We were officially empty-nesters,
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    and we decided, let's go on a family vacation.
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    Jen, my daughter, my son-in-law,
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    came down from New York.
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    My youngest, Andrew,
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    he came down from his home in Charlestown
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    where he was working on Boston,
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    and my son Pete,
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    who had played at Boston College, baseball,
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    had played baseball professionally in Europe,
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    and had now come home and was selling
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    group insurance, he also joined us.
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    And one night, I found myself
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    having a beer with Pete,
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    and Pete was looking at me and he just said,
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    "You know, mom, I don't know,
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    selling group insurance is just not my passion."
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    He said, "I just don't feel I'm living up to my potential.
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    I don't feel this is my mission in life."
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    And he said, "You know, oh by the way, mom,
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    I have to leave early from vacation
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    because my inter city league team that I play for
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    made the playoffs, and I have to get back to Boston
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    because I can't let my team down.
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    I'm just not as passionate about my job
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    as I am about baseball."
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    So off Pete went, and left the family vacation
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    — break a mother's heart —
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    and he went, and we followed four days later
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    to see the next playoff game.
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    We're at the playoff game, Pete's at the plate,
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    and a fastball's coming in,
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    and it hits him on the wrist.
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    Oh, Pete.
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    His wrist went completely limp, like this.
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    So for the next six months,
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    Pete went back to his home in Southie,
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    kept working that unpassionate job,
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    and was going to doctors
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    to see what was wrong with this wrist
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    that never came back.
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    Six months later, in March,
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    he called my husband and I, and he said,
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    "Oh, mom and dad, we have a doctor
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    that found a diagnosis for that wrist.
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    Do you want to come with the
    doctor's appointment with me?"
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    I said, "Sure, we'll come in."
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    That morning, Pete, John, and I
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    all got up, got dressed, got in our cars,
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    three separate cars
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    because we were going to go to work
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    after the doctor's appointment to
    find out what happened to the wrist.
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    We walked into the neurologist's office, sat down,
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    four doctors walk in
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    and the head neurologist sits down,
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    and he says, "Well, Pete, we've
    been looking at all the tests,
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    and I have to tell you, it's not a sprained wrist,
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    it's not a broken wrist,
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    it's not nerve damage in the wrist,
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    it's not an infection,
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    it's not Lyme disease."
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    And there was this deliberate elimination going up,
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    and I was thinking to myself,
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    where is he going with this?
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    Then he put his hands on his knees,
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    he looked right at my 27-year old kid, and said,
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    "I don't know how to tell a 27-year old this:
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    Pete, you have ALS."
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    ALS?
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    I had had a friend whose 80-year old father had ALS.
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    I looked at my husband, he looked at me,
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    and then we looked at the doctor, and we said, "ALS?
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    Okay, what treatment? Let's go.
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    What do we do? Let's go."
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    And he looked at us, and said, "Mr. and Mrs. Frates,
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    I'm sorry to tell you this,
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    but there's no treatment and there's no cure."
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    We were the worst culprits.
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    We didn't even understand
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    that it had been 75 years since Lou Gehrig
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    and nothing had been done in the progress
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    against ALS.
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    So we all went home, and Jen and Dan
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    flew home from Wall Street,
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    Andrew came home from Charlestown,
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    and Pete went to BC to pick up
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    his then-girlfriend Julie and and brought her home,
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    and six hours later after diagnosis,
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    we're sitting around having a family dinner,
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    and we're having small chat.
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    I don't even remember cooking dinner that night.
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    But then, our leader, Pete,
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    set the vision
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    and talked to us just like we were his new team.
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    He said, "There will be no wallowing, people."
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    He goes, "We're not looking back,
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    we're looking forward.
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    What an amazing opportunity we have
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    to change the world.
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    I'm going to change the face
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    of this unacceptable situation of ALS.
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    We're going to move the needle,
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    and I'm going to get it in front
    of philanthropists like Bill Gates."
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    And that was it. We were given our directive.
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    So in the days and months that followed,
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    within a week, we had our brothers and sisters
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    and our family come to us,
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    that they were already creating Team Frate Train.
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    Uncle Dave, he was the webmaster,
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    Uncle Artie, he was the accountant,
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    Auntie Dana, she was the graphic artist,
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    and my youngest son Andrew
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    quit his job, left his apartment in Charlestown
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    and says, "I'm going to take care of Pete
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    and be his caregiver."
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    Then all those people, classmates, teammates,
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    coworkers, that Pete had inspired
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    throughout his whole life,
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    the circles of Pete all started
    intersecting with one another,
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    and made Team Frate Train.
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    Six months after diagnosis,
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    Pete was given an award at a research summit
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    for advocacy.
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    He got up and gave a very eloquent speech,
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    and at the end of the speech, there was a panel,
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    and on the panel were these
    pharmaceutical executives
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    and biochemists and clinicians
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    and I'm sitting there and I'm listening to them
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    and most of the content went straight over my head.
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    I avoided every science class I ever could.
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    But I was watching these people,
    and I was listening to them,
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    and they were saying, "I, I do this, I do that,"
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    and there was a real unfamiliarity between them.
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    So at the end of their talk, the panel,
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    they had questions and answers,
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    and boom, my hand went right up,
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    and I get the microphone,
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    and I look at them and I say, "Thank you.
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    Thank you so much for working in ALS.
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    It means so very much to us."
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    I said, "But I do have to tell you
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    that I'm watching your body language
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    and I'm listening to what you're saying.
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    It just doesn't seem like there's a whole lot
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    of collaboration going on here.
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    And not only that, where's the flip chart
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    with, like, the action items and the follow-up
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    and the accountability?
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    What are you going to do after you leave this room?"
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    And then I turned around
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    and there was about 200 pairs of eyes
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    just staring at me.
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    And it was that point that I realized
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    that I had talked about the elephant in the room.
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    Thus my mission had begun.
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    So over the next couple of years,
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    Pete, we've had our highs and our lows.
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    Pete was put on a [???] youth drug.
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    It was hope in a bottle for the whole ALS community.
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    It was in a phase three trial.
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    Then, six months later, the data comes back:
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    no efficacy.
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    We were supposed to have therapies overseas,
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    and the rug was pulled out of us.
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    So for the next two years,
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    we just watched my son be taken away from me,
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    little by little every day.
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    Two and a half years ago,
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    Pete was hitting home runs at baseball fields.
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    Today, Pete's completely paralyzed.
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    He can't hold his head up any longer.
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    He's confined to a motorized wheelchair.
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    He can no longer swallow or eat.
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    He has a feeding tube.
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    He can't speak.
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    He talks with eye gazer technology
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    and a speech generating device,
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    and we're watching his lungs,
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    because his diaphragm eventually is going to give out
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    and then the decision will be made
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    to put him on a ventilator or not.
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    ALS robs the human
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    of all their physical parts,
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    but the brain stays intact.
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    So, July 4th, 2014,
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    75th year of Lou Gehrig's inspirational speech comes,
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    and Pete is asked by MLB.com to write
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    an article in the Bleacher Report,
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    and it was very significant, because he wrote it
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    using his eye gazer technology.
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    Twenty days later, the ice started to fall.
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    On July 27th, Pete's roommate in New York City,
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    wearing a Quinn For The Win shirt,
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    signifying Pat Quinn, another ALS patient
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    [????],
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    and B.C. shorts
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    said, "I'm taking the ALS Ice Bucket Challenge,"
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    picked up the ice, put it over his head,
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    "And I'm nominating..." and he sent it up to Boston.
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    And that was on July 27th.
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    Over the next couple of days, our news feed
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    was full of family and friends.
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    If you haven't gone back,
    the nice thing about Facebook
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    is that you have the dates, you can go back.
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    You gotta see Uncle Artie's human bloody Mary.
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    I'm telling you, it's one of the best ones,
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    and that was probably in day two.
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    By about day four, Uncle Dave, the webmaster,
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    yeah, he isn't on Facebook,
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    and I get a text from him, and it says, "Nancy,
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    what the hell is going on?"
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    Uncle Dave gets a hit every time Pete's website
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    is gone onto, and his phone was blowing up.
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    So we all sat down and we realized,
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    money, money is coming in, how amazing.
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    So we knew awareness would lead to funding,
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    we just didn't know it would
    only take a couple of days.
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    so we got together, put our best 501c3's
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    on Pete's website, and off we went.
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    So week one, Boston media.
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    Week two, national media.
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    It was during week two that our neighbor next door
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    opened up our door and threw a pizza
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    across the kitchen floor, saying,
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    "I think you people might need food in there."
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    (Laughter)
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    Week three, celebrities: Entertainment Tonight,
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    Access Hollywood.
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    Week four, global: BBC, Irish Radio.
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    Did anyone see Lost In Translation?
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    My husband did Japanese television.
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    It was interesting.
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    (Laughter)
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    And those videos, those videos,
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    the popular ones.
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    Paul Bissonnette's glacier video, incredible.
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    How about the redemption nuns of Dublin?
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    Who's seen that one?
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    It's absolutely fantastic.
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    J.T., Justin Timberlake.
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    That's what we knew, that was a real A-List celebrity,
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    and I go back on my texts, and I can see
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    "JT! JT!" My sister, texting me.
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    Angela Merkel, the Chancellor of Germany.
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    Incredible.
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    And the ALS patients,
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    you know what their favorite
    ones are, and their families?
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    All of them,
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    because this misunderstood and underfunded
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    "rare" disease,
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    they just sat and watched people saying it
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    over and over, "ALS, ALS."
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    It was unbelievable.
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    And those naysayers,
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    let's just talk a couple of stats, shall we?
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    Okay, so the ALS Association,
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    they think by year end,
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    it'll be 160 million dollars.
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    ALS TDI in Cambridge,
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    they raised three million dollars.
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    Well, guess what?
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    They had a clinical trial for a drug
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    that they've been developing.
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    It was on a three year track for funding.
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    Two months.
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    It's coming out, starting in two months.
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    (Applause)
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    And YouTube has reported
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    that over 150 countries have posted
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    Ice Bucket Challenges for ALS.
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    And Facebook, 2.5 million videos,
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    and I had the awesome adventure
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    visiting the Facebook campus last week,
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    and I said to them, "I know
    what it was like in my house.
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    I can't imagine what it was like around here."
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    All she said was, "Jaw-dropping."
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    And my family's favorite video?
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    Bill Gates,
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    because the night Pete was diagnosed,
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    he told us that he was going to get ALS
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    in front of philanthropists like Bill Gates,
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    and he did it.
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    Goal number one, check.
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    Now on to the treatment and cure.
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    (Applause)
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    So okay, after all of this ice,
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    we know that it was much more
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    than just pouring buckets of ice water over your head,
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    and I really would like to leave you
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    with a couple of things that I'd like you to remember.
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    The first thing is,
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    every morning when you wake up,
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    you can choose to live your day
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    in positivity.
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    Would any of you blame me
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    if I just was in the fetal position
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    and pulled the covers over my head every day?
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    No, I don't think anybody would blame me,
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    but Pete has inspired us to wake up
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    every morning and be positive and proactive.
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    I actually had to ditch support groups
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    because everybody was in there saying that
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    spraying their lawns with chemicals,
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    that's why they got ALS,
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    and I was like, "I don't think so,"
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    but I had to get away from the negativity.
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    The second thing I want to leave you with
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    is the person at the middle of the challenge
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    has to be willing to have the mental toughness
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    to put themselves out there.
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    Pete still goes to baseball games
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    and he still sits with his teammates in the dugout,
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    and he hangs his gravity feed bag
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    right on the cages.
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    You'll see the kids, they're up there hanging it up.
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    "Pete, is that okay?" "Yup."
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    And then they put it right into his stomach.
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    Because he wants them to see
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    what the reality of this is,
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    and how he's never, ever going to give up.
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    And the third thing I want to leave you with,
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    if you ever come across a situation
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    that you see as so unacceptable,
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    I want you to dig down as deep as you can
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    and find your best mother bear
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    and go after it.
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    (Applause)
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
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    I know that I'm running over,
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    but I've got to leave you with this:
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    the gifts that my son has given me.
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    I have had 29 years
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    of having the honor of being the mother
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    of Pete Frates.
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    Pete Frates has been inspiring and leading
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    his whole life.
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    He's thrown out kindness,
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    and all that kindness has come back to him.
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    He walks the face of the Earth right now
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    and knows why he's here.
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    What a gift.
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    The second thing that my son has given me
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    is he's given me my mission in life.
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    Now I know why I'm here.
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    I'm going to save my son,
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    and if it doesn't happen in time for him,
  • 17:18 - 17:20
    I'm going to work so that no other mother
  • 17:20 - 17:24
    has to go through what I'm going through.
  • 17:24 - 17:27
    And the third thing and last but not least
  • 17:27 - 17:30
    gift that my son has given me,
  • 17:30 - 17:32
    as an exclamation point
  • 17:32 - 17:33
    to the miraculous month
  • 17:33 - 17:37
    of August 2014,
  • 17:37 - 17:39
    that girlfriend that he went to get
  • 17:39 - 17:41
    on the night of diagnosis
  • 17:41 - 17:43
    is now his wife,
  • 17:43 - 17:46
    and Pete are Julie have given me
  • 17:46 - 17:49
    my granddaughter,
  • 17:49 - 17:52
    Lucy Fitzgerald Frates.
  • 17:52 - 17:57
    Lucy Fitzgerald Frates came two weeks early
  • 17:57 - 17:59
    as the exclamation point
  • 17:59 - 18:03
    on August 31st, 2014.
  • 18:03 - 18:05
    And so
  • 18:05 - 18:14
    — (Applause) —
  • 18:14 - 18:17
    and so let me leave you with Pete's words
  • 18:17 - 18:20
    of inspiration that he would use to classmates,
  • 18:20 - 18:25
    coworkers, and teammates.
  • 18:25 - 18:28
    Be passionate.
  • 18:28 - 18:31
    Be genuine.
  • 18:31 - 18:34
    Be hardworking.
  • 18:34 - 18:38
    And don't forget to be great.
  • 18:38 - 18:40
    Thank you. (Applause)
Title:
Meet the mom who started the Ice Bucket Challenge
Speaker:
Nancy Frates
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
18:53
  • Title changed from "Why my family started the ALS Ice Bucket Challenge. The rest is history" to "Meet the mom who started the Ice Bucket Challenge."

English subtitles

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