08 March 2010

It’s Woman’s Day !



Marie Curie

Today is 8th March & it is celebrated all over the world as woman’s Day. Well it is a special Day for all women of the world & to remember the achievement & services of great women which has become a milestone in the history. Today the woman’s capability cannot be underestimated. They are achieving success in every field . Today’s Post is dedicated to all the women of the world and I convey my Philatelic Tributes to the great ladies of the world whose contribution will always be written in golden letters …I am giving here some personalities who are my favorite since my school days ! I have also come to know 8th march is also celebrated as Wife's Day …….So it’s also a special day for your wife……If you can cheer up her in some way……It will be great too !!……This is all for today…Till Next Post…..Have a Great Time !

keller

Helen Keller

mother t

Mother Teresa

tereshkova

Valentina Tereshkova

nightingale 

Florentine Nightingale

rb

laxmi

Rani Laxmi Bai – The great freedom fighter

 

ig wee

ig

The Iron Lady of India

madhu vb

madhubala-1

Madhubala - The most beautiful actress of Indian Cinema

mn

Madhu

madhubala

Madhubala - The most versatile actress of Silver Screen

 

Last but not the least…I wish to share this today !!

Remembering the great achievement of Natalie du Toit

image

Natalie du Toit who participated in the Olympic 10k Swimming Marathon

The road to the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games was bumpy for many athletes but surely no tougher than that of South African swimmer, Natalie du Toit.The 24-year-old, who lost her left leg in a road accident in 2001 , has become the first leg amputee to compete in both the Olympic and Paralympic Games.

"I never thought of myself as being disadvantaged," said Natalie. "My message isn't just for disabled people, it is for everyone. It's to use the negatives in a good light."
Indeed her website boasts the inspiring motto: "Be everything you want to be."
A few years back a coach gave her an unattributed poem:


The tragedy of life does not lie in not reaching your goals,
The tragedy of life lies in not having goals to reach for.
It is not a disgrace not to reach for the stars,
But it is a disgrace not to have stars to reach for.
If you are looking for true Olympian spirit you will find it in Natalie du Toit.


"To be here, is a dream come true. A dream is something that you set for yourself, not what other people set for you. When I qualified in Seville [at the 2008 World championships in which she finished fourth I burst into tears. I couldn't believe that I was going to the Olympic Games." Natalie's career got off to a remarkable start. The Cape Town swimmer set multiple national age group records as an able-bodied swimmer in both medley events and she competed in the Kuala Lumpur Commonwealth Games in 1998 at the young age of 14.But a road accident in February 2001, sustained when Natalie was steering her scooter through rush hour traffic when traveling from school to training, changed her life. Doctors couldn't save her left leg, so it was amputated and a titanium rod installed. Incredibly, the road to recovery began the next day when Natalie got out of bed.

"I just wanted to get back to life again - swimming four hours a day - and I wanted to be able to walk again so that I would be able to do things by myself," she recalled. A year later she won her first major international medal at the 2002 Commonwealth Games in Manchester when she raced as both an able bodied and disabled competitor. She finished eighth place in the able bodied 800m Freestyle, and won gold in the 50 and 100m Elite Athletes with a Disability (EAD) races.
She was also presented with the first David Dixon Award for Outstanding Athlete of the Games, ahead of legendary
Australian swimmer Ian Thorpe, who had won six gold medals and set a world record in the 400 meter freestyle.
Natalie repeated the same Commonwealth feat four years later in Melbourne. With the
Olympics out of the way, she will now switch back to the pool to defend the five Paralympics swimming medals she won in Athens 2004: the 100m Butterfly, 100m Freestyle, 200m Individual Medley, 400m Freestyle, 50m Freestyle (all gold), and aim to go one place better in the 100m Backstroke, in which she won a silver medal. Her double-selection also means she's had to shape a training schedule to meet the demands of both events. She focused on endurance for the Olympic 10k Swimming Marathon and will now switch to speed work for the Paralympics.

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