Wednesday, 8 April 2015

Meet 19-Year-Old Trapped In Toddler's Body

Meet 19-Year-Old Trapped In Toddler's Body (1)
Girija Srinivas may look like a toddler, but she is actually a teenager trapped in a two-year-old's body. 
The 19-year-old, from Bangalore in India, was born with congenital agenesis, meaning her limbs failed to fully develop and leaving her just two and a half feet tall and weighing a mere 12kg.

But against the odds, and with her friends and family behind her, Girija is carving out a career as an artist.
"I don't like anyone pitying me, I have shown everyone what my capabilities are," Girija said.
"My mother helps me with eating and other normal things. But while I'm painting and drawing I need nobody's help. I do it myself.
"I sell five to six paintings per month, which makes me between 8,000 and 10,000 rupees (£86-108).
"I have to look after my parents and I need to have the financial capacity to do that."
Girija lives with her parents and an older brother in the South Indian city of Bangalore, where her father is a tailor and her mother devotes herself full-time to her care.
Meet 19-Year-Old Trapped In Toddler's Body
Nanda Baayi, Girija's mother, said: "We faced difficulties from the beginning. Even now, it's tough for us to look after her. There is immense pain in our heart.
"When she was born, she was not like other babies. When the doctors told us that her condition was permanent, it broke our hearts." But despite her parents fears for her future, Girija dreams of an independent life - and hopes her art can help her get there.
She said: "I don't want to be popular because of my rare health condition but I want to be famous someday for my art.
"I do not want sympathy, I want recognition."
"I have an aim to achieve more in life. It's my dream to go abroad and achieve something big."
Girija could never go to school because of her condition, but she says she is not too fond of studying anyway.
"I am not sad for not going to school. I don't care about it too much," she said.
"I am not sad for being too small and unable to walk or move like a normal person." Girija's father earns less than £5 a day, making it hard for the family to get her even the most basic medical treatment.
But despite their relative poverty, mum Nanda says she supports Girija's dreams of independence.
"I am confident enough to tell that she can be self-dependent. It is her dream too," she said.

Culled From Mirror

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