Share in the comments how your favorite Olympian inspires you! Suni Lee inspires us with her resilience and dedication. After her stunning gold medal win at the Tokyo Olympics, she faced personal challenges, including her father's paralysis and diagnosis with an incurable kidney disease. Despite these hardships, Suni made a remarkable comeback at the U.S. Olympic Trials, showing us the power of perseverance and hard work. Her journey exemplifies the spirit of the FISH! Philosophy, reminding us to stay positive and keep pushing forward no matter what. 🌟 #FISHPhilosophy #OlympicSpirit #ChooseYourAttitude
ChartHouse Learning, The Official Home of The FISH! Philosophy’s Post
More Relevant Posts
-
At the Berlin Olympics in 1936, the American Earle Meadows cleared the impressive height of 4.35m in the pole vault event. It was enough to earn him a gold medal. Two Japanese athletes, Shuhei Nishida and Sueo Oe, were contesting for silver. They achieved the exact same mark, and the judges wanted them to try again to break the tie. They refused. Nishida and Oe were close friends. So, out of respect for each other, they asked the Olympic organizers if they could share the silver medal. This time, it was the judges who refused, instead asking the Japanese team to choose. After a round of discussions, it was decided that Nishida would take the silver and Oe the bronze. Not happy with the official results of the competition, they decided to take matters into their own hands and fix it. Upon their return to Japan, Nishida and Oe went to a jeweler and asked him to cut both medals in half. Then they had the silver and bronze halves welded together to create two hybrid silver-bronze medals, one for each of them. These two medals eventually became known as “the medals of friendship". #trivia #quiz #gk #knowledge #facts #dailytrivia #didyouknow #fact #factsdaily #didyouknowfacts #dailyfacts #amazingfacts #knowledgeispower #factz #funfacts #interestingfacts #generalknowledge #instafacts #truefacts #science #factsoflife #doyouknow #sciencefacts #realfacts #allfacts #factoftheday #gk #worldfacts #education
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
At the Berlin Olympics in 1936, the American Earle Meadows cleared the impressive height of 4.35m in the pole vault event. It was enough to earn him a gold medal. Two Japanese athletes, Shuhei Nishida and Sueo Oe, were contesting for silver. They achieved the exact same mark, and the judges wanted them to try again to break the tie. They refused. Nishida and Oe were close friends. So, out of respect for each other, they asked the Olympic organizers if they could share the silver medal. This time, it was the judges who refused, instead asking the Japanese team to choose. After a round of discussions, it was decided that Nishida would take the silver and Oe the bronze. Not happy with the official results of the competition, they decided to take matters into their own hands and fix it. Upon their return to Japan, Nishida and Oe went to a jeweler and asked him to cut both medals in half. Then they had the silver and bronze halves welded together to create two hybrid silver-bronze medals, one for each of them. These two medals eventually became known as “the medals of friendship". #trivia #quiz #gk #knowledge #facts #dailytrivia #didyouknow #fact #factsdaily #didyouknowfacts #dailyfacts #amazingfacts #knowledgeispower #factz #funfacts #interestingfacts #generalknowledge #instafacts #truefacts #science #factsoflife #doyouknow #sciencefacts #realfacts #allfacts #factoftheday #gk #worldfacts #education
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
At the Berlin Olympics in 1936, the American Earle Meadows cleared the impressive height of 4.35m in the pole vault event. It was enough to earn him a gold medal. Two Japanese athletes, Shuhei Nishida and Sueo Oe, were contesting for silver. They achieved the exact same mark, and the judges wanted them to try again to break the tie. They refused. Nishida and Oe were close friends. So, out of respect for each other, they asked the Olympic organizers if they could share the silver medal. This time, it was the judges who refused, instead asking the Japanese team to choose. After a round of discussions, it was decided that Nishida would take the silver and Oe the bronze. Not happy with the official results of the competition, they decided to take matters into their own hands and fix it. Upon their return to Japan, Nishida and Oe went to a jeweler and asked him to cut both medals in half. Then they had the silver and bronze halves welded together to create two hybrid silver-bronze medals, one for each of them. These two medals eventually became known as “the medals of friendship". #trivia #quiz #gk #knowledge #facts #dailytrivia #didyouknow #fact #factsdaily #didyouknowfacts #dailyfacts #amazingfacts #knowledgeispower #factz #funfacts #interestingfacts #generalknowledge #instafacts #truefacts #science #factsoflife #doyouknow #sciencefacts #realfacts #allfacts #factoftheday #gk #worldfacts #education
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
At the Berlin Olympics in 1936, the American Earle Meadows cleared the impressive height of 4.35m in the pole vault event. It was enough to earn him a gold medal. Two Japanese athletes, Shuhei Nishida and Sueo Oe, were contesting for silver. They achieved the exact same mark, and the judges wanted them to try again to break the tie. They refused. Nishida and Oe were close friends. So, out of respect for each other, they asked the Olympic organizers if they could share the silver medal. This time, it was the judges who refused, instead asking the Japanese team to choose. After a round of discussions, it was decided that Nishida would take the silver and Oe the bronze. Not happy with the official results of the competition, they decided to take matters into their own hands and fix it. Upon their return to Japan, Nishida and Oe went to a jeweler and asked him to cut both medals in half. Then they had the silver and bronze halves welded together to create two hybrid silver-bronze medals, one for each of them. These two medals eventually became known as “the medals of friendship". #trivia #quiz #gk #knowledge #facts #dailytrivia #didyouknow #fact #factsdaily #didyouknowfacts #dailyfacts #amazingfacts #knowledgeispower #factz #funfacts #interestingfacts #generalknowledge #instafacts #truefacts #science #factsoflife #doyouknow #sciencefacts #realfacts #allfacts #factoftheday #gk #worldfacts #education
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
At the Berlin Olympics in 1936, the American Earle Meadows cleared the impressive height of 4.35m in the pole vault event. It was enough to earn him a gold medal. Two Japanese athletes, Shuhei Nishida and Sueo Oe, were contesting for silver. They achieved the exact same mark, and the judges wanted them to try again to break the tie. They refused. Nishida and Oe were close friends. So, out of respect for each other, they asked the Olympic organizers if they could share the silver medal. This time, it was the judges who refused, instead asking the Japanese team to choose. After a round of discussions, it was decided that Nishida would take the silver and Oe the bronze. Not happy with the official results of the competition, they decided to take matters into their own hands and fix it. Upon their return to Japan, Nishida and Oe went to a jeweler and asked him to cut both medals in half. Then they had the silver and bronze halves welded together to create two hybrid silver-bronze medals, one for each of them. These two medals eventually became known as “the medals of friendship". #trivia #quiz #gk #knowledge #facts #dailytrivia #didyouknow #fact #factsdaily #didyouknowfacts #dailyfacts #amazingfacts #knowledgeispower #factz #funfacts #interestingfacts #generalknowledge #instafacts #truefacts #science #factsoflife #doyouknow #sciencefacts #realfacts #allfacts #factoftheday #gk #worldfacts #education
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
At the Berlin Olympics in 1936, the American Earle Meadows cleared the impressive height of 4.35m in the pole vault event. It was enough to earn him a gold medal. Two Japanese athletes, Shuhei Nishida and Sueo Oe, were contesting for silver. They achieved the exact same mark, and the judges wanted them to try again to break the tie. They refused. Nishida and Oe were close friends. So, out of respect for each other, they asked the Olympic organizers if they could share the silver medal. This time, it was the judges who refused, instead asking the Japanese team to choose. After a round of discussions, it was decided that Nishida would take the silver and Oe the bronze. Not happy with the official results of the competition, they decided to take matters into their own hands and fix it. Upon their return to Japan, Nishida and Oe went to a jeweler and asked him to cut both medals in half. Then they had the silver and bronze halves welded together to create two hybrid silver-bronze medals, one for each of them. These two medals eventually became known as “the medals of friendship". #trivia #quiz #gk #knowledge #facts #dailytrivia #didyouknow #fact #factsdaily #didyouknowfacts #dailyfacts #amazingfacts #knowledgeispower #factz #funfacts #interestingfacts #generalknowledge #instafacts #truefacts #science #factsoflife #doyouknow #sciencefacts #realfacts #allfacts #factoftheday #gk #worldfacts #education
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
At the Berlin Olympics in 1936, the American Earle Meadows cleared the impressive height of 4.35m in the pole vault event. It was enough to earn him a gold medal. Two Japanese athletes, Shuhei Nishida and Sueo Oe, were contesting for silver. They achieved the exact same mark, and the judges wanted them to try again to break the tie. They refused. Nishida and Oe were close friends. So, out of respect for each other, they asked the Olympic organizers if they could share the silver medal. This time, it was the judges who refused, instead asking the Japanese team to choose. After a round of discussions, it was decided that Nishida would take the silver and Oe the bronze. Not happy with the official results of the competition, they decided to take matters into their own hands and fix it. Upon their return to Japan, Nishida and Oe went to a jeweler and asked him to cut both medals in half. Then they had the silver and bronze halves welded together to create two hybrid silver-bronze medals, one for each of them. These two medals eventually became known as “the medals of friendship". #trivia #quiz #gk #knowledge #facts #dailytrivia #didyouknow #fact #factsdaily #didyouknowfacts #dailyfacts #amazingfacts #knowledgeispower #factz #funfacts #interestingfacts #generalknowledge #instafacts #truefacts #science #factsoflife #doyouknow #sciencefacts #realfacts #allfacts #factoftheday #gk #worldfacts #education
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Rachel Tcheungna, Bilingual Investigative Journalist. Editor, Author, Writer of 23 educational books in both English and French of The Bridge Books series
Dear ALL, This season, The Bridge Magazine🗞️🌏 resembles and is emblematic of the colours of the universality of The Olympic rings and spirit. The Paris 2024 Olympic Games is an event set to go down in history as hospitality has become France’s second skin: the country is expected to host the greatest sporting extravaganza on earth. The French are expected to pay tribute to Olympia- the first ever ancient site on Greece's Peloponnese peninsula that hosted the original Olympic Games, throughout the 8th century B.C and showcase their finesse in their art of hosting and hospitality. The symbolism of the Olympic flame and the Torch Relay Not only the flame represents the continuity between ancient and modern games but also, as a tradition, the Olympic flame is lit at Olympia in Greece, several months before the Olympic Games as if modern mankind was asking to Zeus, the God of Humanity to bless and protect the athletes and ensure their safety as well as the success of the ceremony as a whole. It is believed in the context of the modern Games; the Olympic flame is a manifestation of the positive values that humans have always associated with the symbolism of fire and thus, making the link between the ancient and the modern Games. The Olympic flame symbolises the light of spirit, knowledge and life. By passing the flame from a person to another in stages, the Torch Relay expresses the passing down of this symbolic fire from generation to generation. Read more ⬇️ https://lnkd.in/d8gTrVJs
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
"Beyond the Podium: Su Bingtian's Roar Defies Limits" While the world celebrates Olympic champions, there are stories of resilience and triumph that deserve equal recognition. Su Bingtian, China's sprinter, may not have an Olympic medal around his neck, but his journey shatters limitations and redefines greatness. Su Bingtian's story is one of defying scientific theories. Experts claimed Asians lacked the physical attributes for top-level sprinting. Yet Su, standing at 5'8", shattered those beliefs. He became the first Asian-born sprinter to break the 10-second barrier in the 100 meters, a feat once deemed impossible. At the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, Su roared into history. He clocked a stunning 9.83 seconds in the semifinals, the fastest time ever recorded by an Asian sprinter. This wasn't just about speed; it was a primal scream that echoed years of overcoming doubt. He became the first non-African heritage athlete to reach the Olympic 100-meter final since 1980, proving that exceptional talent can emerge from anywhere. Su Bingtian's success lies not just in his times, but in his unwavering belief. Despite his shorter stature compared to other elite sprinters, he focused on his stride frequency, transforming it into his greatest strength. This dedication and strategic approach serve as an inspiration to athletes worldwide. Su Bingtian's story transcends medals. It's a testament to the power of human potential, defying expectations and rewriting the narrative of what's possible. He is a beacon of hope for future generations, proving that with hard work and determination, even the greatest scientific theories can be rewritten. #SuBingtian #SprintToGlory #BreakBarriers #UncommonStories #AsianAthlete #InspiringJourney #DefyingOdds #ChampionMindset #TokyoOlympics2020 #BelieveInYourself #RecordBreaker #RiseAboveExpectations
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Dear Sir/Madam ,I am providing services like, Article Writing , SEO Writing, Academic Writing and Business Writing.
Hello, my name is Mohammad Samiullah, and I am an expert academic content writer with three years of experience. I can help you excel in your academic projects with high-quality, tailored content. Here’s how I can assist you: Essay Writing: Research Analysis: Thesis & Proposals: Report Writing: Creating Presentation Skills: Well familaire with all types of references style including Harvard APA MLA Chicago Oscula IEEE Providing quality content with 0% Plagiarism 0% AI On time Delivery Well Researched and Properly Organized Let's discuss further
The magic and spirit of the Olympic Before his wife's death, Matthias Steiner promised her that he would win an Olympic gold medal, driving him to an emotional win in Beijing 2008.
To view or add a comment, sign in
2,980 followers
More from this author
-
How to Integrate the FISH! Philosophy into Your Hiring Process
ChartHouse Learning, The Official Home of The FISH! Philosophy 8mo -
How to Bring More Fun into Your Corporate Office
ChartHouse Learning, The Official Home of The FISH! Philosophy 8mo -
How to Be There for Your Team During the Darkest Time of Year
ChartHouse Learning, The Official Home of The FISH! Philosophy 9mo