Saturday, June 27, 2009
Welfare and Health
Not only that,they can follow accordingly to the food pyramid or even healthier than the food pyramid.Eat more vegetables and eating lesser junks food can be set as an example.
Maintaining the body balance for 6 periods of months could be hardly possible or even impossible.
Nobody has experienced that before.Even the healthiest person amongest the competitors may fall sick for at least once.
If the person can really sacrifice himself to eat vegetables and rice in his long period of Yog,he may be possible not to fall sick during the period of time.
Welfare and Health is very important as someone may just faint or die at the scene.
Fortunately,nobody has been made with accidents before.
Welfare and Health can also ensure the health of one's life and the attitude during the competition.
Thursday, June 25, 2009
Olympism
Ancient Olympism
Olympism has its roots in the beliefs of the ancient Greeks, who encouraged people to develop their physical, moral, intellectual, cultural and artistic qualities harmoniously. This meant taking part in a blend of sport, art, educational and cultural activities. This philosophy was celebrated through the Olympic Games, a festival involving athletes, scholars and artists from many cultural fields.
Modern Olympism
Frenchman Pierre de Coubertin who in 1894 established the Olympic Movement, is recognised as the father of modern Olympism. He modernised ancient Greek ideals and launched them to the rest of the world through the staging of a modern Olympic Games. Today, the festival celebrates the ideals which remain at the heart of Olympism. By blending sport with culture and education, Olympism promotes a way of life based on:
- The balanced development of the body, will and mind
- The joy found in effort
- The educational value of being a good role model
- Respect for universal ethics including tolerance, generosity, unity, friendship, non-discrimination and respect for others.
Goal of Olympism
Olympism uses sport to promote the balanced development of people as an essential step in building a peaceful society that places a high value on human dignity.
Sport and the Olympic Movement
Pierre de Coubertin was not a dreamer or a wide-eyed innocent. From his first steps onto the public stage (around 1880), he realised that sport, which he wanted to be the cornerstone of his educational system, was being eaten away by the same ills that were rotting the life of society: racketeering, nationalism, chauvinism, xenophobia. With a virulence bordering on violence, he denounced the influence of money on betting based sport, which was already sullied by the poison of drugs. The Victorian model of sport as he had discovered it through reading and during trips to Great Britain, was not enough. He wanted to give modern sport a theoretical corpus – as has been the case in ancient Greece – to shelter it from the damaging effects of modern civilisation.
- Yves Boulongne