From the moment of birth, everyone has their own path, experiencing the colorful life, but when we live in the beautiful world, but there are many can not experience the beauty of the world, the colorful life, they are those who are disabled.
Disabled people can not live with ordinary people in general, they are inconvenient everywhere, by the exclusion of life. Although we are still small, but we can help the disabled to do some of the things we can do, to do a small part: to help them cross the street, give way to them and so on. Although this is an insignificant little thing, but those disabled people will feel infinite warmth.
Disabled people should face life with optimism and strive for success! Just like Wilma? Rudolph she won three gold medals in the track and field events of the 1960 Rome Olympics, but this Olympic legend as a child because of pneumonia and red fever, induced by high fever caused by polio, so that her left leg atrophy and can not walk, must rely on the iron frame corrective shoes to barely walk. 11 years old, she can not walk, wearing iron shoes can barely follow others to walk. 11 years old that year, she first took off the iron shoes, playing barefoot. At 11, she took off her shoes for the first time and went barefoot to play basketball with her brothers. By the age of 12, she had completely outgrown her shoes. After removing 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 qualify for the finals in the 200 meters in the individual event, but was a member of the U.S. women's 4×100 meter relay team, which won a bronze medal for the United States. She received an athletic scholarship to Tennessee State University, attended college and trained again, and was selected for the U.S. Olympic team in Rome,*** winning gold medals in the 100 meters, 200 meters, and the 4×100 meter relay, all by wide margins.She retired from track and field in 1962, and embarked on a career in teaching and coaching, establishing a foundation in her name in the 1980s to develop young athletes. The Olympic hero died of brain cancer on Nov. 12, 1994, and was inducted into the U.S. Olympic Hall of Fame in 1983 and honored in 1993 with the American Sports Award.
Just like this a disabled person has achieved so much. Disability is not a defect, it's just a trait, and they can do wonders just as well as normal people. Then there are those athletes at the Paralympics who are glowing and in high spirits. They won one medal after another and made great achievements. We sincerely salute them from the heart, although they have physical defects, but they turn defects into advantages, we should learn the spirit of their body - perseverance, never retreat, and bravely face the physical disability.
We have to care for the disabled, care for the disabled, for the disabled to dedicate a trace of love, so that they come out of the shadow of the heart, back to the "sunshine", I believe that as long as there is true love in the world, the world will become a better place.
Written by myself