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There are some life stories that break the mould. Certainly an inspiration and perhaps a wake up call when one thinks certain goals are "impossible".
I thought this thread could be the start of a pulling together similar stories.
I suggest it would be appropriate to use this thread to post other examples of inspiring life stories .

Jason Arday: he learned to talk at 11 and read at 18 – then became Cambridge’s youngest Black professor


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Diagnosed with autism as a child, Arday found his voice through speech therapy and his mother’s unflagging support. Now he is using it with the same tenacity that saw him run 30 marathons in 35 days
by Charlie Brinkhurst-Cuff

Tue 11 Jul 2023 19.00 AESTLast modified on Wed 12 Jul 2023 03.13 AEST

Jason Arday believes in destiny. The University of Cambridge’s youngest Black professor, he joined its faculty of education in March 2023, at 37. Before then, he had been a professor at Glasgow and Durham universities; published three books of academic work, mainly focusing on race and education; and, most importantly to him, raised more than £5m by doing charity work. All of this he has squeezed into a time period where he was learning to navigate the world with neurodivergence; Arday didn’t speak until he was 11 and couldn’t read or write until the age of 18.

It’s an unlikely story, he concedes, one that has made headlines and changed his life irrevocably. But he believes he was always going to do something great. “I knew I was destined to do something,” he says with a smile. “But I didn’t know it’d be this, admittedly.”

Arday’s story is one of grand heights, but also of profound lows. He has barely slept over the past 15 years, he says, working through most nights – often on his academic and charity work, but sometimes just to make ends meet. Until recent years, he struggled to find the balance he needed in the chronically underfunded academic sector, replete with zero-hours contracts. Alongside lecturing, as recently as 2016 he was employed by Sainsbury’s as a trading assistant. Prior to that, he was a late-night cleaner, mopping up vomit and scrubbing toilets. “I had a mantra I used to say to myself: ‘It won’t always be like this,’” he says.

Arday grew up on a council estate in Clapham in south London to Ghanaian parents. His mother, Gifty, was a mental health nurse; his father, Joseph, a chef. He is the second youngest of four brothers. His childhood was generally happy, but punctuated by some violence from the outside world. He has spoken about how many of the people he grew up with are “dead or in prison”.

 
There are some life stories that break the mould. Certainly an inspiration and perhaps a wake up call when one thinks certain goals are "impossible".
I thought this thread could be the start of a pulling together similar stories.
I suggest it would be appropriate to use this thread to post other examples of inspiring life stories .

Jason Arday: he learned to talk at 11 and read at 18 – then became Cambridge’s youngest Black professor


View attachment 159446

Diagnosed with autism as a child, Arday found his voice through speech therapy and his mother’s unflagging support. Now he is using it with the same tenacity that saw him run 30 marathons in 35 days
by Charlie Brinkhurst-Cuff

Tue 11 Jul 2023 19.00 AESTLast modified on Wed 12 Jul 2023 03.13 AEST

Jason Arday believes in destiny. The University of Cambridge’s youngest Black professor, he joined its faculty of education in March 2023, at 37. Before then, he had been a professor at Glasgow and Durham universities; published three books of academic work, mainly focusing on race and education; and, most importantly to him, raised more than £5m by doing charity work. All of this he has squeezed into a time period where he was learning to navigate the world with neurodivergence; Arday didn’t speak until he was 11 and couldn’t read or write until the age of 18.

It’s an unlikely story, he concedes, one that has made headlines and changed his life irrevocably. But he believes he was always going to do something great. “I knew I was destined to do something,” he says with a smile. “But I didn’t know it’d be this, admittedly.”

Arday’s story is one of grand heights, but also of profound lows. He has barely slept over the past 15 years, he says, working through most nights – often on his academic and charity work, but sometimes just to make ends meet. Until recent years, he struggled to find the balance he needed in the chronically underfunded academic sector, replete with zero-hours contracts. Alongside lecturing, as recently as 2016 he was employed by Sainsbury’s as a trading assistant. Prior to that, he was a late-night cleaner, mopping up vomit and scrubbing toilets. “I had a mantra I used to say to myself: ‘It won’t always be like this,’” he says.

Arday grew up on a council estate in Clapham in south London to Ghanaian parents. His mother, Gifty, was a mental health nurse; his father, Joseph, a chef. He is the second youngest of four brothers. His childhood was generally happy, but punctuated by some violence from the outside world. He has spoken about how many of the people he grew up with are “dead or in prison”.


And the moral of the story is, hard work, not welfare dependence achieves results.

A lesson for all of us regardless of skin colour.
 
Another visionary who doesn't know what can't be done. This time an Australian Saul Griffiths. Alreday has legacy of successful innovation behind him and is currently striving make Electrify Australia a reality.

 
On a far more cheerful note this story has to take the cake if not the whole kitchen. If you are looking for inspiration and a sense of what can be accomplished this is the ticket.

It brings back some of the great memories of my teaching career. Determined 10 year kids don't know what can't be done.

Small wonder: brothers launch model boats to circumnavigate Antarctica

Ollie and Harry Ferguson from Aberdeenshire took inspiration for 12,500-mile journey from Ross scientific expedition of 1839-43

Sophie Zeldin-O'Neill
Mon 17 Jul 2023 16.00 AEST
  • 2048.jpg
  • Ollie (right) and Harry, with their boats, crafted from a 200-year-old piece of elm wood. Photograph: MacNeill Ferguson/PA

A pair of model ships built by two young brothers have launched on a mission to circumnavigate Antarctica, in what is thought to be a world first.
Ollie Ferguson, 13, and his younger brother Harry, 11, from Turriff in Aberdeenshire, took inspiration from the Ross scientific expedition of 1839-43 where HMS Erebus and HMS Terror discovered the Ross ice shelf.

They have built 1 metre-long replicas of the two vessels, which will follow the circumpolar current around the coastline of Antarctica, a journey of more than 12,500 miles that could take up to two years.

During the journey, the boats will transmit scientific data back to the boys – including location, air temperature, ocean temperature and the water’s pH, which can be markers of climate breakdownn.

The brothers have had support from their father, MacNeill Ferguson, an ecological specialist, and mother, Vicki, a school principal, but they say the boys are very self-motivated.

...
The Ferguson brothers, who previously set the world record for the longest distance travelled at sea by a toy boat, are trying to tick off a list of 500 adventures before they turn 18.

They have completed 456 so far, but say this was “by far the hardest”.


Previously, they sailed their Playmobil pirate ship Adventure more than 3,700 miles across the Atlantic to the Caribbean. They have also slept in caves, sent Lego up to Mars and down to the sea floor, sent toys around world and back, ticked off 20 forms of transport, caught lobsters for the Queen, slept for weeks at a time in hammocks, and written a book.

Later this summer, they plan to go fossil-hunting and seek out dinosaur footprints, something Harry is particularly excited about as he hopes to be a palaeontologist when he grows up.

Mac said: “The boys had a big hand in deciding on the activities, and most are designed to be done outdoors. They are willing to try new things, and getting more and more proficient at outdoors life. They both have a real spirit of adventure and put huge amounts of effort into all that they do.

“The sheer amount of learning and skills the boys had to learn to make these boats, and to build them, and to test them, and the understanding of how all these things work … It’s just a joy to see.” (And far more than they will ever get sitting in any classroom.. Bas)

He added: “Both boys are absolutely delighted that the boats are in the water and we check a couple of times a day to see how they are doing.”

Mac also noted that reaction to the “bucket list” has been extremely positive.

“When they hear about the boys’ adventures, people are always very positive and kind,” he said. “It’s all about making memories and traditions. It feels really important that children get out into the world and have fun doing hands-on activities, rather than spending their days staring at screens.”

Anyone wanting to see where the boats are, find out more about the project, or donate to their adventures, can do so at https://www.icoteq.com/project-erebus/ and via their Facebook page.

 
On a far more cheerful note this story has to take the cake if not the whole kitchen. If you are looking for inspiration and a sense of what can be accomplished this is the ticket.

It brings back some of the great memories of my teaching career. Determined 10 year kids don't know what can't be done.

Small wonder: brothers launch model boats to circumnavigate Antarctica

Ollie and Harry Ferguson from Aberdeenshire took inspiration for 12,500-mile journey from Ross scientific expedition of 1839-43

Sophie Zeldin-O'Neill
Mon 17 Jul 2023 16.00 AEST
  • View attachment 159670
  • Ollie (right) and Harry, with their boats, crafted from a 200-year-old piece of elm wood. Photograph: MacNeill Ferguson/PA

A pair of model ships built by two young brothers have launched on a mission to circumnavigate Antarctica, in what is thought to be a world first.
Ollie Ferguson, 13, and his younger brother Harry, 11, from Turriff in Aberdeenshire, took inspiration from the Ross scientific expedition of 1839-43 where HMS Erebus and HMS Terror discovered the Ross ice shelf.

They have built 1 metre-long replicas of the two vessels, which will follow the circumpolar current around the coastline of Antarctica, a journey of more than 12,500 miles that could take up to two years.

During the journey, the boats will transmit scientific data back to the boys – including location, air temperature, ocean temperature and the water’s pH, which can be markers of climate breakdownn.

The brothers have had support from their father, MacNeill Ferguson, an ecological specialist, and mother, Vicki, a school principal, but they say the boys are very self-motivated.

...
The Ferguson brothers, who previously set the world record for the longest distance travelled at sea by a toy boat, are trying to tick off a list of 500 adventures before they turn 18.

They have completed 456 so far, but say this was “by far the hardest”.


Previously, they sailed their Playmobil pirate ship Adventure more than 3,700 miles across the Atlantic to the Caribbean. They have also slept in caves, sent Lego up to Mars and down to the sea floor, sent toys around world and back, ticked off 20 forms of transport, caught lobsters for the Queen, slept for weeks at a time in hammocks, and written a book.

Later this summer, they plan to go fossil-hunting and seek out dinosaur footprints, something Harry is particularly excited about as he hopes to be a palaeontologist when he grows up.

Mac said: “The boys had a big hand in deciding on the activities, and most are designed to be done outdoors. They are willing to try new things, and getting more and more proficient at outdoors life. They both have a real spirit of adventure and put huge amounts of effort into all that they do.

“The sheer amount of learning and skills the boys had to learn to make these boats, and to build them, and to test them, and the understanding of how all these things work … It’s just a joy to see.” (And far more than they will ever get sitting in any classroom.. Bas)

He added: “Both boys are absolutely delighted that the boats are in the water and we check a couple of times a day to see how they are doing.”

Mac also noted that reaction to the “bucket list” has been extremely positive.

“When they hear about the boys’ adventures, people are always very positive and kind,” he said. “It’s all about making memories and traditions. It feels really important that children get out into the world and have fun doing hands-on activities, rather than spending their days staring at screens.”

Anyone wanting to see where the boats are, find out more about the project, or donate to their adventures, can do so at https://www.icoteq.com/project-erebus/ and via their Facebook page.

I would suggest that these two kids will be the super stars of tomorrow.
Way more knowledgeable than their years would suggest.
Just goes to show, use that God given grey matter and then the world is your oyster.
More power to them in their endeavours.
 
I thought this story deserves to be highlighted. Firstly the amazing history of the Queensland Castle is jaw dropping in itself. Then the restoration of this place as a piece of modern tourism

The castle in the trees

In 1993, a couple bought a derelict tourist destination. More than 30 years later, it’s a beloved heritage-listed park. They say their success is tied to the centuries-old story of the man behind it all.

 
Hamish Kerr achieved a personal best height of 2.36 and won gold at the World Athletics indoor championship being held in Glasgow, brilliant jump which he achieved after he had already won the gold at 2.34.
Well done Kiwi.
 
Was this a "success" story ? Quite horrific/amazing tale. I have added the Wiki link for Zippi

Uncovering the Incredible Story of a Romance Between Two Prisoners in Auschwitz


Keren Blankfeld on Researching a Gripping Love Story and the Challenges of Writing About Someone Who Isn't There​




By Keren Blankfeld



February 28, 2024

When I took a train to Levittown, Pennsylvania in August of 2018, my plan was to interview David Wisnia, a Polish Jew who’d arrived in Ellis Island in 1949. By the time he was 15, David was an orphan, alone in the world, fleeing Nazis. By sixteen, he was a prisoner in Auschwitz, forced to carry corpses in the most notorious Nazi death camp. And suddenly at eighteen he was clad in full American uniform, an interpreter for the US army.

On its own, David’s saga was incredible. As I was about to leave the interview, David casually mentioned that he had a secret girlfriend while he was in Auschwitz. A secret girlfriend who was a graphic designer at the camp. She was a remarkable woman, he said, a “special prisoner” by the name of Zippi. I sat back down, my recorder still running. In fact, he said, he’d seen her a couple of years ago, in her home in Manhattan. For the first time in 72 years.

David was 91 years old. I wouldn’t have blamed him for misremembering his time in Auschwitz, for mixing fact and fantasy. Except Zippi Tichauer was very real.

I spent my train ride home Googling Zippi, whom I learned was a Slovakian Jew who’d passed away in Manhattan just two months earlier. David had mentioned a book about her. The book, edited by Jürgen Matthäus, the director of research at the United States Holocaust Museum in Washington, DC, included essays by five historians who’d interviewed Zippi, each from a different perspective. Once I began reading, I was hooked.


 
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