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Moving Things Along for Fatimoh
(Plant Your Dream!)

Moving Things Along for Fatimoh by YourEnchantedGardener .....

Quinton for Fatimoh Mohammed.... her doctor...getting her introduced to Original Quinton Marine Plasma

Date:   1/13/2009 11:13:14 PM ( 15 y ago)




January 13, 09
9:06 PM


http://curezone.com/upload/Blogs/Your_Enchanted_Gardener/Fatimoh_orange1.jpg


FATIMOH MOHAMMED ran the 800 M for Liberia in the last Olympics.
She is touted as one of the Third World's top runners. She ranked high
in the NCAA indoor and outdoor championships while a student at UTEP.

She will run next January 31 in San Diego for a benefit to help
WATER FOR CHILDREN AFRICA. I will be talking photos of FATIMOH
at that event.

DR. VICKY VODON is the health practitioner for FATIMOH MOHAMMED,
the athlete I am befriending. Fatimoh was in the last Olympics.
Our Seed Dream is to help her get her time down in the 800 M.
This will bring her endorsements.

Dr. Vicky is the Olympic doctor for numbers of Olympic athletes.
One of her Olympic Athletes was FLORENCE JOINER, world record holder in the 100M.

MARY ONYALI-OMAGBERNI,
bronze Medalist in 1996 Atlanta Olympics introduced
Fatimoh to Dr. Vickie Vodon.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Onyali

I called Dr. Vodon today and she called me back.
I want to get her set up with Original Quinton Marine Plasma
The Hypertonic Solution of Original Quinton is prized by
numbers of athletes. There is a specific protocol for them
to use Original Quinton. Original Quinton is available through
Health Practitioners. If you know of a Health Practitioner
who would like to find out more about this product,
please send them my way.

I have written numbers of blogs about Original Quinton.
A few of the links are below.

Photos of FATIMOH MOHAMMED
are on http://www.fastwoman.com


6:24 PM
January 14, 09

Dr. Vickie Vodon just called me back.
She has worked with Athletes since the 1970's.


She has worked with EVELYN ASHFORD

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evelyn_Ashford

What makes her career even more remarkable is twice she came back from season ending injuries to reach the top of the sport in the following year. As stated above, after injury in 1983, she became double Olympic Champion in 1984. In 1987 a hamstring pull prevented her from competing at the World Championships, then a season later added an Olympic Silver and third Gold medal to her collection.
On 30th of May 1985 she gave birth to her daughter Raina Ashley Washington. She again went on 'the comeback' trail following year to have a brilliant 1986 season losing once in the 100 m and 200 m the latter to Valerie Brisco at the Grand Prix final, was her first loss at that event for eight years after 27 final wins.
What is even more extraordinary about these achievements is that after parting ways with her coach Pat Connolly (a former 3 time Olympian), from 1985 she was largely self coached. She managed to prepare herself to near peak fitness for her memorable 1988 season through to the end of her career.
In 1997, Ashford was inducted into the National Track and Field Hall of Fame, where she is said to be one of the greatest track and field runners ever. Ashford went to the University of California, Los Angeles and Roseville High School.

Evelyn Ashford (born April 15, 1957) is an American athlete, the 1984 Olympic champion in the 100 m. She has with automatic timing run under the 11 second barrier over 30 times and was the first to run under 11 seconds in an Olympic Games. She was born in Shreveport, Louisiana.
As a 19-year-old, Ashford finished 5th in the 100 m event at the 1976 Summer Olympics. After beating the World Record holders in the 100 m and 200 m in 1979, Ashford was one of the potential gold medalists for the 1980 Summer Olympics, but these Games were boycotted by the United States.
In 1983, she first set the World Record for the 100 meters at 10.79A seconds in Colorado Springs USA and was favourite to win the 100 meter title at the inaugural World Championships in Helsinki. In the final, however, she pulled a hamstring muscle and fell after winning her semi final, Marlies Gohr went on to win.

At the 1984 Summer Olympics, Ashford finally had a chance to win a gold medal, especially since the East Germans boycotted the Olympics. But Ashford became injured shortly before the Games and had to withdraw from the 200 m heats. She did compete in the 100 m, and with success, winning the event in a new Olympic Record 10.97 secs. As the anchor runner for the relay team, she won a second gold medal. The team clocked one of the fastest times in history and won by the biggest winning margin ever of over a second. Later in the season, she defeated East German Marlies Gohr, her great rival at the Weltklasse meeting in Zurich. In a great race which saw Ashford make up half a metre or so over Gohr she lowered her own World Record to 10.76 secs. She finished this season unsurprisingly as the number one female sprinter in the World, yet again.

MIKE CONNOLLY

http://www.races2run.com/2007/2007RaceResults/odyssey5k.htm


Not sure which Mike Connolly


DWIGHT STONE

http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Dwight-Stone

USA Track & Field ~ Southern California Association (528 words)
Dwight Stones’ career as a track and field athlete was filled with “firsts.” A native Angeleno, he first cleared 7’0” in the high jump in 1971 as a Glendale High School senior.
Most important, Dwight is considered to have done more than any other broadcaster to showcase the often-neglected field events and educate generations of track and field television audiences in the tactical and technical nuances of the jumps, pole vault, and throws.
Dwight and his wife Lynda live in Irvine and have a son, Jason, who is a sophomore at Orange Coast College, and a daughter, Jessica, who is a senior at Irvine High School.
Dwight Stones (382 words)
Dwight Stones (born December 6, 1953 - Los Angeles, California) is a television commentator and a two-time Olympic bronze medalist and former three-time world record holder in the men's high jump.
Stones raised the world record to 7' 7" (2.30 m) in 1976 and added another quarter inch to the record two months later.
Stones was one of the world's top high jumpers from 1972 to 1984 and has been twice named the World Indoor Athlete of the Year by Track and Field News.
More results at FactBites »

http://calbears.cstv.com/sports/c-otrack/spec-rel/043003aaa.html


On working with Dwight Stone (Olympic medallist High Jumper):
"That was a really good experience. He is an amazing person and I was just in awe watching him. It was a little like meeting my idol. He gave me a few things that I can work on in practice and other tips here and there. I'm pretty new to the sport so I haven't watched myself much on tape. I think his style differs from mine. He (Stone) is a very technical jumper. I'm coming from a different sport as I've been playing basketball all of my life. I've got technical things to work on, which is a good thing because I believe there is always room for improvement."

Ed Miller Quotes:
On Teak Wilburn:
"Dwight Stone is the most technical jumper that I've ever seen. He studied his style to where he understood it to the highest level. He told Teak that he was never the most talented jumper, but was always the most prepared. He also mentioned to Teak that he has more talent than Dwight ever had. They also talked about how Teak should not be thinking about trying to be the best Cal jumper ever, or the best collegiate jumper ever, but to think about being the best high jumper in the world.


She worked with FLORENCE JOYNER.

BLOGS ON ORIGINAL QUINTON:

GIFT FROM THE SEA
http://www.curezone.com/blogs/fm.asp?i=1303615

HISTORY OF ORIGINAL QUINTON:
http://www.originalquinton.com/clinical-years-hp.html

PHOTO and BLOG on FATIMOH:
http://curezone.com/blogs/fm.asp?i=1326063


January 21 09
8:18 AM

Got this from Fatimoh this eve:

Fatimoh Muhammed with longtime Carmel Valley runner Dave Dial.
By Lee Schoenbart
She’s been running all of her life, but in a good way.
From the start, Fatimoh Muhammed was an award-winning runner.
In grade school she was named Best Athlete of the Year.
By the time she was 15, Fatimoh won the 800 meters race at the Nigerian Secondary School Games in 1999, the under-18 championships in 2000 and holds the Nigerian under-18 record in the 800 and 1,500 meters.
Fatimoh (pronounced Fa-tee-mah) became a student-athlete playing soccer and running track at Gardner-Webb University in Boiling Springs, NC, before she transferred to the University of Texas, El Paso, and continued her winning ways – academically and athletically.
As a recent graduate who majored in management with a minor in business, Fatimoh was an NCAA All-American, taking fifth in the 800 at the 2006 NCAA Outdoor Championships, a three-time NCAA Championship qualifier in the 800 at the outdoor championships. She ranks fourth in the outdoor 800 and fourth indoors in the University of Texas, El Paso record books.
Now Fatimoh is training for the 2008 Olympics in San Diego with Joaquim Cruz, the 1984 Olympic gold medalist and 1988 Olympic silver medalist. It should be noted that the coach and his first-time Olympian student both run the 800 meters.
“He’s like a father to me. I don’t call him my coach; I call him ‘papa,’” she said.
Coach Cruz told Fatimoh he isn’t that old.
“We have a good relationship and we talk all the time,” she said. “He knows what it takes to become an Olympic champion, so I’m really happy to work with him.”
As for participating in her first Olympics, Fatimoh said in a soft, low voice, “It’s very impressive, you know.
“It takes a lot of practice and I’m going to the Olympics. It’s less than three months,” she said, “and I can’t wait.”
To be chosen for the Olympic team, Fatimoh said, “It means a lot to me, doing what you like and coming right from college.
“I’ve been dreaming about this. Every runner has that dream. They want to be in the Olympics, they want a world championship,” she said. “I can’t find the words because I’m too overwhelmed to describe it.”
Born in the West African nation of Nigeria, Fatimoh will be representing Liberia, also on the continent’s west coast.
Locally, diehard track-and-field fans might be able to catch a glimpse of Fatimoh in training as she runs along the Carmel Valley Restoration and Enhancement Project, which is a restored waterway and trail along SR-56.
“The trail is incredible because each time I go there to run it feels different,” she said, “like running on a cross-country path because it’s a little bit hilly, sloping downhill and it’s really good.”
Fatimoh also got to experience a bit of an indoctrination by the locals when she was coaxed into the role of “celebrity starter” at the Carmel Del Mar Elementary School Jog-a-thon.
“I was so happy to be there, and the way the whole school welcomed me – the principal, the coach, the parents – I’m like, Oh My Gosh! All for me?!” she said. “I love when the kids come up to me 1-on-1. That means a lot to me.”
When the Olympic flame is extinguished in Beijing after the closing ceremonies, Fatimoh knows exactly what she’s doing, if not exactly where.
“After the Olympics, I’m planning to go back to school and get my MBA,” she said.
“I wanted to go back to Texas to finish,” Fatimoh said, “but now it looks like I’m getting connected with San Diego, so I might decide to go to UCSD or San Diego State. I would love to stay here if everything goes the way I plan it.”
To learn more about Olympic track and field, visit
http://www.joaquimcruz.com.









 

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