The Daily Optimist
January 18  ·  Kindness

What Did Robin Williams Do That Made Superman Want to Live?

I said, 'If you don't mind, I'm going to have to put on a rubber glove and examine your internal organs. Oh, look at the size of this baby!' And I saw that he started to laugh and his eyes lit up — because he knew it was me.
— Robin Williams
Robin Williams recounting the hospital visit to Christopher Reeve, documented in People magazine and the 2024 documentary 'Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story'. Reeve first described the visit in his 1998 memoir 'Still Me'. Confirmed by Reeve's son Will Reeve, 2024.

In May 1995, Christopher Reeve — Superman — fell from a horse and was paralyzed from the neck down. He lay in a hospital bed in Virginia, unable to move, unable to breathe without a ventilator, contemplating whether his life was worth continuing.

Then the door burst open.

A man in surgical scrubs barged in, announcing himself as a Russian proctologist. He had an accent. He had a clipboard. He explained, in complete seriousness, that he needed to conduct an immediate examination.

Reeve, who hadn't laughed since the accident, started laughing. His eyes lit up. Because he knew immediately — it was Robin Williams, his college roommate and closest friend, who had flown from across the country to be the first person to walk through that door.

Reeve wrote later that the moment he started laughing, he knew he wanted to stay. That laughter — absurd, unearned, ridiculous laughter — was the thing that made him decide his life was still his.

Williams visited every year until Reeve died in 2004. He never made a big deal of it. He just showed up.

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