Tom Sullivan has been physically unable to see since birth. Throughout his life, however, the author and entertainer has become accustomed to finding spiritual insight while coming to grips with his blindness. In his latest memoir, As I See It, he explains how heβs learned to look at life from a different view.
βMost people live in a world in which they are looking at how others affect them, rather than how they affect others,β said Sullivan, who lists television shows such as M*A*S*H and WKRP in Cincinnati to his acting credits along with a seven-year stint as a reporter on ABCβs Good Morning America.
βWhat matters is, am I operating in Godβs likeness by taking a loving look at other people I meet? Thatβs how I have tried to live. It sounds cliche, but I was once blind and now I see.β
Sullivan, 65, admits his blindness produced a strong bitterness early on toward God. That changed after he was radically saved in 1973, shortly after his then 3-year-old daughter, Blythe, fell into the family swimming pool. Sullivan dove into the pool and heard air bubbles, then went down nine feet to find Blythe and was able to resuscitate her.
βAnyone else wouldnβt have heard them; not because they couldnβt, but because they just wouldnβt,β he says. βMiracles happen when ordinary people like you and me, through grace, do extraordinary things.β
Sullivan engages in many activities that people of sight take for granted. He regularly enjoys downhill skiing and averages 90 for an 18-hole round of golf. These days, he can be found on the corporate lecture circuit, where he never misses an opportunity to tell others about Jesus: βIβve made the decision to articulate and witness my faith in front of these companies. Itβs not always favorably received by some companies because they say this isnβt the place for it. But Iβve chosen to do it anyway. You have to keep putting it out there—thatβs frontline faith.β
Indeed, Sullivan wouldnβt see it any other way.