Who doesn't know Aimee
Mullins ? She is famous on google images search for a women running with her
prosthetic limbs. Born in 1976 in Allentown, Pennsylvania, and growing up
between Pennsylvania and County Clare, Ireland, Aimee Mullins has overcome
challenges from day one. She was born with fibular hemimelia, a limb anomaly
wherein there is partial or total absence of the fibula (shin) bones. She had
both legs amputated below the knee when she was only a year old. (Without her
legs, she could still learn to walk with artificial ones. With her legs, she
would have been confined to a wheelchair for the rest of her life.) Her amazing
spirit and drive helped compensate for the portion of her body she was missing.
Through her sheer presence and
unrelenting spirit, Aimee Mullins is challenging the definitions of physical
beauty and ability. In doing so, she is not only celebrating her own
achievements, but more so, celebrating her ability to defy conventional public
mindset, simply through her honest, open personality, and her incredible
talent. Despite her physical limitations, she pushed herself physically
and mentally to succeed. In high school she participated in numerous sports,
including softball and skiing.
While in high school, she heard
about a track meet for people with disabilities, and was actually bothered by the
idea, as she felt the athletes were limiting themselves by defining themselves
by their disabilities. She was accustomed to competing against ‘able-bodied’
athletes in other sports, and initially was reluctant to join the alternative
meet. Never one to turn down an opportunity, though, she signed up for the
meet, not expecting much of an actual challenge even though she had never run
competitively.
She was surprised upon arriving,
when she realized that she was the only athlete wearing wooden legs. The rest
of the athletes had on metal, shock-absorbant legs that she didn’t even know
existed. Not to mention that all the other athletes had at least one normal
leg. Instead of deterring her determination, though, it forced her to push
herself harder to succeed. And succeed she did – she not only won, she also
broke a national record in doing so. She decided to enter the long jump
competition next, an event that double amputees were technically ‘not supposed’
to enter. A year later, she broke the world record in it.
She attended Georgetown University,
where she continued to compete against ‘able-bodied’ athletes by becoming the
first disabled athlete to compete in NCAA Division I track and field.
Mullins decided to work towards
competing in the 1996 Paralympic Games in Atlanta, Georgia. To do so, she
obtained her first pair of sprinting legs with which she hoped to break the
time she needed for Paralympic placement. Instead, her greatest fear came true
– her leg began to slip off, and consequently, she lost because of it. Her
coach pushed her to compete in the 200-meter, forcing her to face her biggest
fear and to realize that true bravery is not the absence of fear, but the
ability to conquer it.
She not only broke the time, she
also swept the Paralympic trials a month later, running so fast that she was
placed with arm amputees at the following meet instead, without being told. She
finished last, and though she was upset, it didn’t stop her. She set Paralympic
records in Atlanta for the 100 and 200-meter dash and in the long jump.
The following year she was named USA
Track and Field's Disabled Athlete of the Year, and the National Association of
Women in Education's 1997 Woman of Distinction.
Never one to be boxed-in physically
or mentally, she excelled in other areas as well. While at Georgetown she was
also selected for the prestigious Foreign Affairs internship program, the only
woman amongst 250 men, and the youngest person to obtain Pentagon security
clearance. She graduated in 1998 from Georgetown's School of Foreign Service
with a double major in History and Diplomacy.
Mullins has since set her sights
towards Hollywood. She has already had a few roles on television and in movies,
and she has been featured in numerous magazines and books. In 2002 she starred
in Matthew Barney's cult-favorite 'Cremaster 3,' playing a cheetah woman,
ironic in that her own sprinting legs were designed after the super-swift
animal.
She also appeared in Dazed &
Confused magazine in 1998, seen on Coverage, and in Kenneth Cole's anniversary
Campaign (2010). She is also part of the L'Oréal fashion Beauty Team along with
Jennifer Lopez and Gwen Stefani (2011).
In 1999, she modelled for British
fashion designer Alexander McQueen in his London show, on a pair of hand-carved
wooden prosthetic legs made from solid ash, with integral boots. She is able to
change her height between 5 ft 8in and 6 ft 1in by changing her legs. She has
been named one of the fifty most beautiful people in the world by People.
She also appeared in Dazed &
Confused magazine in 1998, seen on Coverage, and in Kenneth Cole's anniversary
Campaign (2010). She is also part of the L'Oréal fashion Beauty Team along with
Jennifer Lopez and Gwen Stefani (2011).
With a personality as vibrant as her
talents, she also works to reach out to the community, to help others recognize
their own potential and talents, despite what obstacles they may have to
overcome. She serves as a motivational speaker, is on the board of directors of
Just One Break, and co-founded HOPE (Helping Others Perform with Excellence) to
aid disabled people wanting to train and compete in sports.
She has received numerous accolades
both on and off the field for her work. She has been included in Irish
America’s “Top 100 Irish Americans” list several times, was included in
Esquire's "Women We Love" 1998 issue, was named one of Jane
magazine’s “10 Gutsiest Women” in 1999, and the following year was featured as
one of the greatest American women in the 20th century in an exhibit at the
Women’s Museum in Dallas. People Magazine honored her beauty by selecting her
as one of their “50 Most Beautiful People in the World,” and in 2001 Sports
Illustrated named her one of the "Coolest Girls in Sports."
Both a record-breaking Paralympic
athlete and a fashion icon/Hollywood-star in the making, Mullins has the
amazing ability to constantly redefine herself. She is just as comfortable in
high heels and gowns as she is in running shorts and sneakers, wearing both
with the unbridled confidence of one that is truly gorgeous both
inside and out.
1 comment:
she is inspiring :)
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