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ILLUSTRATION
Wilma Rudolph Overcame Obstacles to Win Olympic Gold
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Topics: Attitudes; Challenges; Determination; Endurance; Goals; Handicaps; Hardship; Hindrances; Human limitations; Objectives; Overcoming; Perseverance; Persistence; Prevailing; Results; Rewards; Self-discipline; Sports; Striving; Victory; Winning and losing
Filters: Pop Culture; Sports; Stories; Women
References: Acts 20:24, 1 Corinthians 9:24-25, Philippians 3:14, 2 Timothy 2:5
Tone: Commend

Wilma Rudolph was the 20th of 22 children. Born prematurely, doctors did not expect Wilma to survive. She did, but at the age of four, she contracted double pneumonia and scarlet fever, leaving her left leg paralyzed. She learned to walk with the aid of a metal brace.

When Wilma was nine-years-old, she removed the leg brace and began walking without it. By age 13, she developed a rhythmic walk. That same year, she decided to begin running. She entered her first race and came in last. For the next three years, Wilma came in dead last in every race she entered. But she kept on running, and one day she won. Eventually, the little girl who was not supposed to live, and then who was not supposed to be able to walk, would win three gold medals in Rome's 1960 Olympic games.

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