No Arms. No Legs. No Worries.
Susan notes: inspirational is an understatement.
Related links:
No Arms & Amazing
You Don’t Need Wings To Fly, And You Don’t Need Arms To Be Amazing
Susan notes: inspirational is an understatement.
Related links:
No Arms & Amazing
You Don’t Need Wings To Fly, And You Don’t Need Arms To Be Amazing
Susan notes: Thanks to TED for making TED Talks downloadable and embeddable, and for providing the biographical information that goes along with them.
Athlete, actor and activist Aimee Mullins talks about her prosthetic legs -- she's got a dozen amazing pairs -- and the superpowers they grant her: speed, beauty, an extra 6 inches of height ... Quite simply, she redefines what the body can be.
Aimee Mullins was born without fibular bones, and had both of her legs amputated below the knee when she was an infant.
She learned to walk on prosthetics, then to run -- competing at the national and international level as a champion sprinter, and setting world records at the 1996 Paralympics in Atlanta.
The French version of the can-can, which became popular in the early 1800s in the working class ballrooms of Paris, is a lively music hall dance.
It's performed by a chorus line of women, usually dressed in long skirts and petticoats, which are lifted, kicked and swirled suggestively to reveal the dancers’ black-stocking-ed legs, and sometimes more!
This was then - thankfully, we had instructional videos such as this one aptly entitled:
Women: Know Your Limits!
This is now - see how things have changed as women have broken out of those old role models:
Women: Know Men's Limits!
It’s confirmed: I’m full of gratitude about mostly everything, just about all the time.
And I’m happier than most people too (which, to be honest, came as a bit of a surprise…).
I’m one of those odd ducks who loves taking tests, ticking boxes and filling out surveys and questionnaires (strange, but true). So when my friend Terry Netto sent me a link to the Authentic Happiness Testing Center, I was intrigued.