The Boy Who Lived With a Bullet πποΈ
- MinhKhue
- October 24, 2025

It was 1917, a quiet afternoon on a small Texas farm. Eight-year-old William Lawlis Pace was playing outside with his brother, their laughter echoing across the fields β until a moment of innocent curiosity turned into tragedy. π₯
His brother accidentally pulled the trigger of a rifle, and the bullet struck William square in the face. Panic filled the air. Doctors rushed to save him, but when they examined the wound, their verdict was grim: removing the bullet would kill him.
So they made an unthinkable choice β to leave it there.
Days passed. Against every prediction, William survived. π
He grew up with that bullet buried deep in his skull β a constant reminder of a childhood accident that could have ended his life before it truly began.

Over the years, it took its toll: he lost hearing in one ear, sight in one eye, and carried visible scars. Yet he never complained, never hid away, and never let it stop him. πΏ
Instead, he chose to live more fully than anyone expected β working, laughing, falling in love, raising a family, and building a life defined not by pain, but by perseverance.
For 94 years, that same bullet stayed where it landed β inside his skull, silent but unforgotten. When William finally passed away in 2010, at the remarkable age of 103, doctors discovered the bullet was still there β a relic of endurance and fate. π«

He went on to hold the Guinness World Record for βthe longest time living with a bullet in the head.β But beyond records or headlines, Williamβs life was a powerful reminder that survival is not just about breathing β itβs about choosing to live with what life gives you, and still finding joy. π
A century after that fateful day, his story still echoes β proof that even the heaviest burdens can be carried with grace, and that the human spirit is stronger than steel. ποΈβ¨