Temple Grandin is a documentary about the life of an incredibly influential woman in American Society. Grandin, despite her diagnosis of autism, socialized with those around her as well as gave inspirational speeches about her experience of overcoming her illness. She taught autistic children’s parents new ways to encourage them to socialize and how to speak publicly. She shared things that had worked for her such as her squeeze machine, a device which allowed her to feel touch without someone touching her. She also told parents that autism was a gift and encourages a different way of looking at life. She invented some of the most revolutionary creations in the livestock industry. Like Temple Grandin, Flannery O’Connor was truly a fighter. She fought Lupus all her life but still managed to write, arguably, some of the most well written pieces written by an American author. She faced many struggles which molded her successful career. Shaped by chronic illness, lasting effects from the Civil War, and her deeply imbedded faith, Flannery O’Connor’s humorous yet satirical style of writing, addressed society’s moral issues and strongly influenced American Literature.
For such a troubled woman, O’Connor had a wonderful childhood as well as very loving parents. Flannery O’Connor was born on a small farm just outside of Milledgeville, Georgia. She was raised by two caring parents, Edward F O’Connor and Regina O’Connor. Though little is known about her father, the young war veteran was very proud of his only daughter (Balee). O’Connor and her father were very close, but tragedy struck in 1941 when her father passed away from Lupus disease (Balee). After his death, she was raised by her now single mother, Regina O’Connor. Flannery O’Connor started her first year at Milledgeville’s Peabody High School in 1942, just one year after her father’s death (Balee). She was known for chewing snuff and shooting rubber bands off her braces in