Rather you be a millionaire or live below the poverty-level, rather you are a Harvard professor or a high school dropout, you experience troubles and strife in life. Any man who says he lives life without anything that bothers him, or that he is 100% happy with everything in his life, is not really living "life" as a human being, but rather just going through the motions as a robot. Jaikar lived a life that many of us could not imagine, culturally (and I assume because of that culture, financially), and physically through pain and disabilities that would have made many folks give-up long ago. He saw the world through eyes that most people can't fathom the view from. Yet, he was a shining example of what we all should be: Dedicated to not letting "live" get the better of you, striving to make the best out of what it hands you, keeping your mind as sharp as you can despite the body's unwillingness to cooperate, and never living within what others see as "limits" set by your situation or condition. He did what others probably said he would have trouble doing, and then went beyond that to do things "his way" to the best of his abilities. His example should serve to show us all how to make the best out of what we have and what we can do, and to show us that no matter what life hands us we have to embrace it for what it is...a chance to make a difference. I just wish more people (especially those who don't have the struggles he did) would look at life with such passion, and take advantage of what they do have.
He will be sadly missed. Condolences to his family.
Jaikini, thanks for showing us what it is to live life to the best we can.