Tired of negative threads? This one celebrates the human spirit

Winter Woman

Well-Known Member
Found this one on the web and fell in love with her tenacity and courage. It's not short but I think it is worth the read.

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A paralysed woman has become the first person to complete a marathon in a bionic suit.


Claire Lomas finished the London Marathon today, crossing the finishing line 16 days after the race began.
The 32-year-old said she was "over the moon" as she completed the 26.2-mile route, which she started on April 22 with 36,000 other participants.


The former chiropractor was in tears as she became the first person to complete any marathon using a bionic ReWalk suit at 12.50pm today.


Hundreds lined the streets as she made her final steps to complete the race. Three mounted members of the Household Cavalry gave her a guard of honour as she crossed the finishing line on The Mall.


Jewellery designer Ms Lomas, who was left paralysed from the chest down following a horse-riding accident in 2007, said: "I'm over the moon.
"There were times when I questioned whether I would make it when I was training.

"Once I started, I just took each day as it came and every step got me a step closer."


A spokeswoman for the mounted regiment said the two riders were there to give Ms Lomas "extra support because she is passionate about horses".


Ms Lomas will not appear in the official results and did not receive a medal when she finished as competitors have to complete the course on the same day to qualify for a medal, organisers said.


But a number of marathon runners decided to donate their own medals to Ms Lomas.


Jacqui Rose, from Southampton who contributed her medal along with an estimated 12 others, said: "She has epitomised what I thought the London Marathon was all about.


"That medal, when you have completed it and gone through all the pain of it, symbolises that achievement of what you have gone out of your way to do for charity.


"For her not to have got one ridicules what the marathon was all about."


Holly Branson, daughter of tycoon Richard - whose company Virgin sponsors the race, was at the finish line waiting to give Ms Lomas the Virgin trophy for endurance. The company hands out the award annually.


She said: "She has done the most amazing job.


"It was so emotional when she crossed that line, tears welled up in my eyes and everyone was cheering."


Ms Lomas, from Eye Kettleby, near Melton Mowbray, Leicestershire, raised more than £86,000 for Spinal Research, a charity which funds medical research around the world to develop reliable treatments for paralysis caused by a broken back or neck.


She said: "When I was in hospital I saw a lot of people with similar injuries to me and a lot worse.
"I have had tremendous support since my accident which I am so grateful for, some don't have that.

"Some people lose the use of their arms as well.
"A cure needs to be found."


She walked about two miles a day, cheered on by husband Dan, her parents and 13-month-old daughter Maisie.
Ms Lomas said she was now going to write a book and "spend some good time with Maisie", adding: "Then I'll think of something else daft to do."


A number of celebrities have also lent their support by walking a mile alongside her, including TV presenter Gabby Logan and husband, former international rugby star Kenny, and TV presenter and adventurer Ben Fogle.


The mother of one broke her neck, back and ribs and punctured a lung when her horse Rolled Oats threw her off as she took part in the Osberton Horse Trials in Nottinghamshire in 2007.


The £43,000 ReWalk suit, designed by Israeli entrepreneur Amit Goffer, enables people with lower-limb paralysis to stand, walk and climb stairs through motion sensors and an onboard computer system.


A shift in the wearer's balance, indicating their desire to take, for example, a step forward, triggers the suit to mimic the response that the joints would have if they were not paralysed.
 

racerboy71

bud bootlegger
omg ww, i just got done saying how i was tired of all of the negative threads as of late, and i turn around and you post this..

don't know where you got the crystal ball, but it works wonders.. :)
 

racerboy71

bud bootlegger
and btw, science is amazing.. i can't imagine living 100 years ago when a simple infection could have killed you as well as thousands of others.. :(
 

Winter Woman

Well-Known Member
and btw, science is amazing.. i can't imagine living 100 years ago when a simple infection could have killed you as well as thousands of others.. :(
I know what you mean. Somewhere I read about a old cemetery out west that was moved and they found that a high percentage died from abscessed teeth.
 

psari

Well-Known Member
Hmmm, well this is pretty sappy and may even apply to your relocation plans. And I agree, people love to vent, but there is a pain threshold.

And come to think of it, I need to remind myself to do this under those scratched up CDMH bulbs I've been needing to cycle out ... (hate hid burns)

[video=youtube;xfq_A8nXMsQ]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xfq_A8nXMsQ[/video]
 

Winter Woman

Well-Known Member
Hmmm, well this is pretty sappy and may even apply to your relocation plans. And I agree, people love to vent, but there is a pain threshold.

And come to think of it, I need to remind myself to do this under those scratched up CDMH bulbs I've been needing to cycle out ... (hate hid burns)

[video=youtube;xfq_A8nXMsQ]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xfq_A8nXMsQ[/video]
I remember that speech who was it. LOVED IT!!
 

calicatt79

Well-Known Member
[video=youtube;xfq_A8nXMsQ]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xfq_A8nXMsQ[/video]
WOW...what a great video, I'm so glad I found my way over to this thread and saw it! Could be some pretty life changing stuff.....lol! I'm so going to share this with the peeps over in my little corner of rollitup.
Thanks ;)
 

obijohn

Well-Known Member
Thanks ww, I'm tired of the negativity, whining, trolling etc. to paraphrase Rodney King, "can't we all just smoke a bong.?"
 

Winter Woman

Well-Known Member
You know those hulking gorilla-men who lift cars above their heads, toss cannonballs, and drag airplanes in a competition to be named World’s Strongest Man? Those guys better start stocking up on their spinach — there’s a new contestant on the scene, and his name is Liam Hoekstra.


Imagine an amped-up version of Michaelangelo’s David statue, and you’ve got Liam. He’s got almost no body fat, 40 percent more muscle mass than the average person and Superman-level strength and speed. Granted, he’s not hauling airplanes down the street just yet — but give him a break: He’s only 19 months old.


The ultra-brawny toddler from Roosevelt Park, Mich., was born with myostatin-related muscle hypertrophy, or muscle enlargement. Because of this incredibly rare condition, Liam’s muscles develop at a rate much faster than the average person’s — only two days after his birth, the infant was able to stand up with support. More recently, he’s moved onto Olympic-caliber iron crosses.


Fortunately, doctors aren’t aware of any negative side effects to Liam’s bizarre condition. "He’s a normal kid. He’s just got that lucky twist," Liam’s doctor, Erlund Larson, told The Associated Press. "It’s going to be fun to watch him grow."


The Strongest Man competition may still be a while off for little Liam. But in the meantime, he can amuse himself by bending the monkey bars in half at his preschool playground, maybe juggling a few pianos. You know, normal kid stuff.
 

mysunnyboy

Well-Known Member
In the city of Mt. Clemens a cemetery needed to be moved because of flooding. Caskets were coming to the surface. Anyway, when they opened up the coffins they found that some of the ones buried during a time of 'sickness' in the area were buried alive.

They found the interiors of the coffins scratched and torn up. Some people completely changed position in the coffin putting their feet where their heads were.
LOL at post #5 it gets all depressing LOL
get down here WW!!!!!!
 

GreatwhiteNorth

Global Moderator
Staff member
Bless you WW - that is exactly what I needed to see.
Negativity was slowly edging into my evening & now this.
You my dear are simply a jewel.
 

Winter Woman

Well-Known Member
PHOENIX -- A suburban Phoenix man made a lucky, lucky, lucky, lucky, lucky, lucky guess in a recent multistate lottery game.


An Arizona Lottery spokeswoman says the Glendale man claimed six $1 million prizes after purchasing six Powerball tickets with the same winning numbers late last month.


The tickets were good for a half dozen second-place prizes. And he picked up his $6 million in winnings over the course several visits to the Arizona Lottery's headquarters in Phoenix.


Lottery spokeswoman Karen Bach says the man doesn't want his identity released.
 

Winter Woman

Well-Known Member
We've seen teens devise potential cures for cancer, build nuclear reactors and use musical instruments as inspiration for the creation of low-cost landmind detectors -- all before receiving their high school diplomas. And now, the latest in a line of unbelievable teen scientists has made another major breakthrough. Sixteen-year-old Janelle Tam has discovered that cellulose, a material found in trees that helps them stand up straight, is an antioxidant with potent anti-aging properties.


Tam's study of minute particles in tree pulp known as nano-crystalline cellulose (NCC) led to an "a-ha"! moment for the young innovator -- she had unearthed a super-durable material that had the power to fight disease and prevent aging. This unbelievable discovery won Tam the 2012 Sanofi BioGENEius Challenge Canada, a national competition for young scientists.


Click here for more information about the Santofil BioGENEius Challenge Canada.

NCC is similar to antioxidants Vitamin C and Vitamin E in terms of its ability to fight damaging free-radicals, but it may even be superior insofar as it is more stable and therefore potentially longer-lasting.


"It would be really nice to commercialise this," Tam told AFP. "I envision it more as an ingredient that would be added to existing formulations, so it could be added to tablets or bandaids for a wound dressing or it could be added to cosmetic cream."


Her game-changing innovation -- which could literally shape the face of the anti-aging product industry -- earned Tam a a $5,000 award from the National Research Council of Canada.


In addition to Tam, 12 other bright high school juniors and seniors total were selected to competed in the national finals, with experiments guided by the competition's theme, "How will you change the world?" Second-place winner Rui Song developed advances into the creation of more nutritious lentils, and third place was awarded to Alexander Tigert and Zelun Zhang, who used genetically-modified baker's yeast to test the effects of drug treatments for depression and anxiety.
 

Winter Woman

Well-Known Member
Facing war in his homeland, Gac Filipaj traveled to America in search of a better life and a job so he could send money back home to relatives.


Now, 20 years after leaving the former Yugoslavia for America without speaking a word of English, Filipaj has earned a B.A. in Classics -- with department honors -- from Columbia University's School of General Studies, where he has worked as a janitor for the past 19 years, the New York Daily News reports.


On Sunday, the 52-year-old will join hundreds of other undergraduate students at commencement to receive his degree and then take a break for two days. After that, he said operations will return to normal as he goes back to work as a janitor.


"I think I'm going to stay at Columbia," Filipaj told the Daily News. "If I can get a job better than cleaning, good. If not, there is nothing shameful about that work."
 

psari

Well-Known Member
I remember that speech who was it. LOVED IT!!
It has a history that in and of itself is a worth a read. I wont dump a full Wiki entry though. LINK: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wear_Sunscreen

WOW...what a great video, I'm so glad I found my way over to this thread and saw it! Could be some pretty life changing stuff.....lol! I'm so going to share this with the peeps over in my little corner of rollitup.
Thanks ;)
Your welcome. Saw it there and then remembered I needed to see if this thread had gotten trolled or not. So far so good.

Thanks ww, I'm tired of the negativity, whining, trolling etc. to paraphrase Rodney King, "can't we all just smoke a bong.?"
Every forum has it's own flavor of the neg vibe ... but RIU runs on a subculture that in and of itself is full of ego and rife with misinformation. Just wish that didn't attract as many flies when a festering wound opens up from a paranoia spike etc. I personally (yeah, I know this is not something you have to declare, but I dont like IMO all the time) feel its a mixture of more than just a few apples. Economy and all the rest seems to be turning everyone on ear. Again, just my impression of the vibe 2012 seems to have so far.


Cheers all,
 

Winter Woman

Well-Known Member
Found this out there and thought about how beautiful it actually is. Kelly Clarkson's Stronger done at Seattle's Children's Hospital.

[video=youtube;ihGCj5mfCk8]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ihGCj5mfCk8[/video]
 
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