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Stephen Johnston, MD, MBA, is a father, radiologist, non-profit founder, and Ironman athlete. When he found out his nine-year-old son, Luke, was going blind as a result of a rare disease, he founded A Race Against Blindness to fund sight-saving research for his son and thousands of others like him.
Though Stephen is relatively new to the nonprofit world, he's a man on a mission to raise $1 Million for a clinical trial and taking on challenges like Ironman to raise money and be an example for his son.
To prepare himself mentally, he is using his knowledge from personal setbacks to look at himself, identify the role he plays, take ownership over what he can control to be the best he can be. Emotionally, he is deliberately taking on difficult and painful obstacles to process hard moments, learn how to experience and explain what he is going through, how he will handle it and what he will learn from it.
By showing up every day, experiencing micro failures and progressing through different levels he is working to be an example for his son. Ironically, his son's approach and perspective to his own illness is inspiring Dr. Johnston to be a better father, athlete and overall human being.
@dad.vs.blindness, www.araceagainstblindness.org
By Dr. T4.9
139139 ratings
Stephen Johnston, MD, MBA, is a father, radiologist, non-profit founder, and Ironman athlete. When he found out his nine-year-old son, Luke, was going blind as a result of a rare disease, he founded A Race Against Blindness to fund sight-saving research for his son and thousands of others like him.
Though Stephen is relatively new to the nonprofit world, he's a man on a mission to raise $1 Million for a clinical trial and taking on challenges like Ironman to raise money and be an example for his son.
To prepare himself mentally, he is using his knowledge from personal setbacks to look at himself, identify the role he plays, take ownership over what he can control to be the best he can be. Emotionally, he is deliberately taking on difficult and painful obstacles to process hard moments, learn how to experience and explain what he is going through, how he will handle it and what he will learn from it.
By showing up every day, experiencing micro failures and progressing through different levels he is working to be an example for his son. Ironically, his son's approach and perspective to his own illness is inspiring Dr. Johnston to be a better father, athlete and overall human being.
@dad.vs.blindness, www.araceagainstblindness.org

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