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ALS: Anyone’s
  L
ife Story”
May 2008
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MDA’s ALS Division introduces you to 31 people  - one each day for the month of May - who are living with ALS (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis or Lou Gehrig’s disease). 

This series was inspired by Augie Nieto, ALS Division Co-Chairperson, who says that since his ALS diagnosis, instead of striving for success, his goal each day is to be significant.

In their own words, otherwise “ordinary” people describe the impact of living with a progressive, incurable and deadly disease. But their stories also tell how ALS has brought new significance to their lives in ways that you might not expect. 

ALS can become anyone’s life story. Please join MDA’s world-leading effort to stop it. 

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Steven "Fritz" Courington  
Steven "Fritz" Courington

Name: Steven "Fritz" Courington

Hometown, State: Dora, AL

Age: 38

Family:
Wife: Kim (11 years)
Daughters: Sloan (5) and Sawyer (3)

Hobbies/Interests:
Spending time with his girls; going to church; watching all the "Cops" episodes he can; but most of all, keeping up with anything and everything Auburn Football.

Date of ALS diagnosis: November 16, 2006 (my dad's birthday)

Tell us about your life before ALS:
Life was all about working 60-80 hours a week, making a life for my family. Going to Auburn Football games, fishing occasionally when I had the time.

Tell us about your life with ALS:
A blessing and a curse. God has given me the attitude to know that I am blessed no matter what the "diagnosis" is. Waking to see each day as a gift, that is what life is about. I am still a dad and a husband, just slower at my duties.

Tell us how ALS has brought new significance to any aspect of your life - family, attitude, hobbies/passions, career, etc. :
I am bolder with my faith. I don't get hung up on the negatives of what this disease can do. I stay focused on my girls and what I want them to learn from being a positive Christian and all-over a caring person. I have learned that church, family and friends are just as vital as food and water.

List your favorite quote:
"If you see a turtle on a fence post, there's a good chance someone put it there."

Do you have a “life motto” or “profound words to live by”:
God is bigger than my problems.

Has there been an “a-ha!” moment or a specific turn of events that has helped you live with ALS?
Yes, the moment I was able to completely give myself and my situation to God. He lifted the weight of grief and worry from me.

Is there anything else about you and/or ALS that you want to share with people who read your story?
I am a normal 38-year-old man with a beautiful wife and two lovely little girls. ALS is the beginning, not the end.

 
 
 
 
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