Flexibility Have you seen anybody more flexible then a baby? Well things are about to change. You should know that Lillie is very flexible. Lillie is homeschooled and that might make you think that she doesn’t have very many friends but she actually has a lot. To start out with, as you know Lillie was REALLY flexible. She has done gymnastics for a very long time, she has done dance for a little bit but not much. As a baby she was more flexible than any other ordinary baby. She was the most flexible human being in the world. She also had a little sister named Emma. Emma was younger by 2 years. She was into gymnastics as well. Therefore, Lillie had to practice A LOT. Which means she had to be homeschooled and that she didn’t have that
She’s just a girl who had won over 14 champion medals. Who is that you are probably wondering. Well “that girl” is Simone Biles. Biles won over 10 gold medals in the sport of gymnastics. Some people say that simone can do tumbling passes on the balance beam that some olympians can’t even do on floor. Some say that is true some say that is false.
It had also affected him because he didn’t see his mother very much during the day because she would leave early for work and come home late which had affected him because it caused him to not have a motherly example. Joy knew what her challenges would be as to being a single mother so she knew she couldn’t do it on her own considering the neighborhood they were living in had been having more robberies. Moving to New York wasn’t much better except for the fact that Joy had her parents. Wes’s mother had worked several jobs to keep them stable, and to put them through private school, she had them go to private school just so it would be more simple to keep them out of violence and to avoid lousy people. When Wes had started failing school and when his mother had gotten a call from his dean about it she asked around to borrow money and started working more just to put him through military school so he could become more
As a result, she lacked confidence in her education. She stated, “My early education did not partake of the abundant opportunities which the present day affords and which even our common schools now afford. I was never sent to any school; I was always sick.” Even though she did not attend a formal school it did not put her out of reach of a proper education (Peterson, 9).
She said “...perhaps even on Sundays when I was in my mother’s womb, my mother pointed across I Street to Seaton as we come and go to Mt. Carmel” (Jones, 1990’s, p.1). This is an anomaly because it she says she even remembers when she was in her mother’s womb. This shows that even before she was born, her mother had an idea of where she wanted her child to go to school. She thought ahead and began to plan a future for her child. “...my mother continues to pull out the documents with the purposefulness of a magician pulling out a long string of scarves” (Jones, 1990’s, p.2). The mother had everything ready for her child to get into school. When a parent wants to get their child an education, when they go to sign them up for school, they will be prepared and have all paperwork for the school. The parent cares about their child's education and
meant. She knew that her dad was away and her family was moving a lot. At
The early life of Misty Copeland were lots of living problems. She was born September 10,1982. She lived in a poor motel with 6 kids! Her mom had many boyfriends so they had to move constantly but they finally settled in San Pedro. She went to the Boys and Girls club after school every day. Cindy offered Misty to live with her so Misty lived with her. Misty became a better dancer from living with Cindy but her mom wanted her back so Misty was back living with her mom. Misty also started dance. When Misty was told that she had the perfect ballerina body she tried dance. She started dance at the age of 13. She started at the Boys and Girls club and eventually made her way to San Pedro Ballet. She
It’s a year later and Leah loves ballet. She’s even trying to get some dance classes at her school. All of her football friends took some classes of ballet and loved it as much as Leah so now they’re in ballet too! Leah overall learned how the knowledge that her mom had versus her ignorance that knowledge is always going to win over
Debbie Allen was born to Vivian Ayers and Arthur Allen on January 16, 1950. At age three she started dancing and at age four she knew she wanted to be a professional dancer. Her parents divorced in 1957, and her mother was Debbie and her siblings were encouraged to be creative and independent. In 1960, Vivian Ayers took her children to Mexico. When they came back to Texas, Debbie auditioned for the Houston Ballet School but was denied because the color of her skin. A Russian teacher at the school saw Debbie perform and secretly enrolled her. When she was sixteen, she auditioned for the North Carolina School of the Arts but was rejected because her body was “unsuited” for ballet. While she was in high school she put her studies first and went
In order to fulfill her dream, she went to school unlike other girls. She learned academic subjects like Latin and Greek. More
Betty Marie Tallchief was an Indian girl who had mainly been wanting to be a ballerina her whole life but back then it was rare when an Indian girl becomes a ballerina. All Maria had to do is practice practice and practice till she makes it perfect for her to become a world
Her mother relied on her to attend school to keep receiving government assistance. Precious passing her classes and learning something was not something that necessarily was given much importance by her mother. It was more about her continuing to receive that check. Precious went through her years at school as the child
Abby managed to be in gifted classes from first grade all the way through high school. When entering high school, she took advanced placement classes almost every year, and ended up becoming valedictorian of her class. School was her life, it was what she was brought to America to do. School was what was ingrained within her that she had to do, because it would be selfish if she did not. There was so much pressure to succeed, for her sister was not given the opportunities that she had received. Abby has never struggled with school, she has always been a gifted student. She loves to write, she loves to read, she loves school, but she did not like all the underlying pressure that was imposed upon her.
never go to school. All of this was taken away from her at such a young age, when she
Madeline suffered from Cerebral Palsy a disease that causes rigid, convulsive muscles in the legs and arms. Children with the disease often have a difficult time crawling, walking and grasping objects. As time passes they do not get any better. Formerly, it was called Little's Disease in 1860 by the English surgeon William Little, today it is known as Spastic Diplegia, a category of Cerebral Palsy (Introduction). Today medications, surgery and braces help children with Cerebral Palsy improve nerve and muscle coordination, treat related medical problems and correct abnormalities (Introduction).
In her teenage years in the 1950’s, her mother and father never emphasized the importance of her schoolwork. They were still very strict religiously, but believed that the woman should raise children in the house [[relate to watching tv and seeing a commercial for her period and saying that’s inappropriate on tv]]