Never say die example

1, Ma Yun

Ma Yun, an angular, thin and peculiar face, a wild and uninhibited, maverick style of doing things, a set of two ribs, regardless of the return of the old ways of warm-heartedness; "Bright Peak" named the company's conference room, and close interaction with Jin Yong, gathered Internet heroes! "West Lake sword". Ma Yun's words and deeds, quite like a businessman across the rivers and lakes of the warrior.

The reason why Jack Ma is worshipped by countless grassroots entrepreneurs today is that a big reason is that Jack Ma was once, like us, an ordinary person who couldn't be more ordinary. He lost his college entrance exams repeatedly, and repeatedly.

The first college entrance examination, met Waterloo. Although Ma's English seems to be surprisingly good among his peers, his math is really bad, and he only scored 1 point, a total defeat. After this he worked as a secretary, a porter, and later pedaled a tricycle to help people deliver books. Once, when he was delivering books to a cultural organization, he picked up a novel called Life. It was the masterpiece of the famous writer Lu Yao.

From the story, Ma y realized that although the road of life is very long, there are often only a few steps at the key point. On the road of life, no one's road is straight and without forks, which just confirms the saying, "There are nine times out of ten that life is not as it should be." Since the road of life is so winding and complicated, people should face it frankly.

So Ma made up his mind to take the second college entrance examination. That summer, Ma enrolled in the college entrance examination repeating class, riding a bicycle every day, two points one line, wandering between home and cram school.

Unexpectedly, he still failed the second college entrance exam. This time, Ma Yun's math test 19 points, the total separation of the admission line difference of 140 points, and this time the results make the original Ma Yun to the university still have a glimmer of hope parents think he does not need to take the test again.

At that time, the TV series "Volleyball Girls" was a popular household name across the country. In those youthful but innocent times, Junko Kobayashi's smile inspired an entire generation, including, of course, Jack Ma at the time.

It wasn't just her sweet smile, but also her never-say-die spirit. This spirit has had a profound impact on Ma's future, and "never give up" has become a symbol of Ma's spirit, affecting every single person in Ali.

Junko Koshika's spirit of perseverance was a great inspiration to Jack Ma, who, despite his family's strong opposition, began studying for his third college entrance exam. Unable to convince his family, Ma had to work during the day and study at night. On Sundays, in order to motivate himself to study well, he got up early and drove an hour to the library of Zhejiang University to read.

Just three days before the third college entrance exam, Mr. Yu, who had been disappointed with Ma's math scores, said to Ma, "Ma, your math is a mess, if you pass, I'll write the word 'Yu' backwards."

The morning of the math test, Ma had been memorizing 10 basic math formulas. During the exam, Ma used these 10 formulas one by one. After coming out of the exam room and matching the answers with his classmates, Ma knew that he definitely passed. As a result, Ma Yun took the math test and scored 79 points. After a lot of hard work, Ma finally got into college.

2. Hans Christian Andersen

Andersen's father, a shoemaker, died when he was very young, leaving him and his mother to live in poverty.

One day, he and a group of children were invited to the palace to meet the prince and ask for a reward. He sang and recited a play with high hopes that his performance would be appreciated by the prince. When the performance was over, the prince asked him kindly, "What can I do for you?" Andersen said confidently, "I want to write a play and perform it at the Theater Royal."

The prince looked the awkward boy before him, with his big clownish nose, and sad eyes, over from head to toe, and said to him, "It's one thing to memorize a play, and quite another to write it; I advise you to learn a useful trade!"

But the dreamy Andersen went home and instead of learning a useful trade, he broke his piggy bank, said goodbye to his mother, and went to Copenhagen to pursue his dream.

He wandered through Copenhagen, knocking on the doors of all the Copenhagen aristocrats' homes, and no one paid him any attention, and he never thought of backing down. He kept writing epics and romances, failing to attract attention, and Pretty, though sad, kept writing.

In 1825, Andersen casually wrote a few fairy tales, unexpectedly caused the children's scramble to read, many readers eager for his new work published, this year, he was 30 years old.

Until the cold day, "The King's New Clothes", "The Ugly Duckling" and many other fairy tales written by Hans Christian Andersen, accompanied many children around the world to grow up healthily.

Wise as you are, no matter how the environment due to suffering, do not bow to it, to insist. Although the sand is barren and dry, the green cactus still straightens up and lets itself blossom with colorful flowers.

3, Ostrovsky

Fate is cruel to Ostrovsky: he studied three years of elementary school, youth faded in the galloping horses and the rain of bullets. 16 years old, he was seriously wounded in the abdomen and the head, blind in the right eye. 20 years old, and bedridden due to arthrosclerosis. Faced with the daunting challenge of fate, he felt y that "there is nothing more terrible in life than falling behind."

Ostrovsky fought valiantly with destiny: he did not want to lie on the disabled honorary soldier's merit book to the motherland and the people to reach out to, he used boiling energy to read all the courses of the correspondence university, hungrily read the masterpieces of Russian and world literature. Books beckoned him forward, books accompanied him through thick and thin.

When Ostrovsky's cultural and literary literacy reached a certain level, he wrote a novel describing the heroic warriors in Kotovsky's army and sent it to a magazine, but it was not adopted. But he didn't get discouraged, he knew y: it's rare to get even.

Ostrovsky endured the pain of his illness and quietly climbed the ladder toward his goal, and in 1932 he finally completed his book, How Iron Is Made, which he called How Iron Is Made.

4. Wilma Rudolph

Wilma Rudolph (Wilma Rudolph) was crippled by polio, but this little girl, who suffered from pneumonia and polio as a child and had to walk on one foot with an orthopedic iron frame, won three gold medals in track and field at the 1960 Rome Olympics. The Olympic legend was born on June 23, 1940, the child of a family of railroad workers in Tennessee, USA.

As a child, she was struck by pneumonia and red fever, which caused high fever and polio, leaving her left leg atrophied and unable to walk, and she had to rely on an orthopedic shoe with an iron frame to get around.

Before the age of 11, she couldn't walk, and could barely follow others in her shoes.

When she was 11 years old, she took her shoes off for the first time, and followed her older brothers barefoot in a game of basketball.

By the age of 12, she had gotten rid of the shoes completely. After taking off her shoes, her athletic talent gradually developed, and it was only four years later, at the age of 16, that she was named to the U.S. Olympic sprint team for the 1956 Melbourne Olympics. In her first Olympics, she failed to make the finals in the 200 meters in the individual event, but she was a member of the U.S. women's 4×100-meter relay team, which won a bronze medal for the U.S. team.

5, Zhang Haidi

Zhang Haidi is known as a generation of model of the disabled, self-educated famous writer, published a long novel "wheelchair dreams", "the top", "the sky and the earth", the collection of essays, "geese fly fast", "open to the sky window", "the life of the questioning", "my German notes", etc., translation of the "Modoc --The True Story of an Elephant", "Rebecca at the New School" and other foreign language works. She is currently the president of the China Disabled Persons' Federation.

She shattered doctors' predictions about the length of her life with her tenacity, and she tried to live each day with a positive attitude, constantly expanding the width of her life. In the 1980s, her resilience showed the nation's young people the power of struggle and inspired a large number of Chinese youth. She is known as the "new Lei Feng in the 1980s" and "contemporary Paul" Zhang Haidi.