The power of music and friendship heals dead connections; a well-meaning member of a jam session offers me a guitar. I politely decline, embarrassed by my disability, and they shrug. Your choice. The familiar curves beneath my arm like a woman from my past, my amnesiac left hand reaches for the muscle memory of fifty years' practice. After an agonizing minute, the G chord miraculously plays, as I played it at five, the three big fingers alone strong enough to hold it. The switch to C impossible; so I play a variation. Doesn't sound bad with the group. My God, I might play a D7 by the next time it comes around in the song. The gang is playing old standards, Ohio State music; three chords and a cloud of dust, which suits my present skill(?) well. I almost cried when a few tunes later, we sang A Horse With No Name to my accompaniment.
Beethoven was deaf, yet heard the Ode To Joy. Hawking is paralyzed, and travels the universe. I have three good fingers, and no good excuses.