Sunday, October 13, 2019
The Olympic Athlete :: essays research papers
 The Olympic Athlete           I always have respected Olympic athletes, for they spend all their time  training. Victorious athletes were professionals in the sense that they lived  off the glory of their achievement ever afterwards. Their hometowns might reward  them with: free meals for the rest of their lives, honorary appointments, or  leadership positions in the community. The victors were memorialized in statues  and also in victory songs, and commissioned from famous poets.       Today, the Olympic Games are the world's largest pageant of athletic  skill and competitive spirit. They are also displays of nationalism, commerce  and politics. These two opposing elements of the Olympics are not a modern  invention. The conflict between the Olympic movement's high ideals and the  commercialism or political acts, which accompany the Games, has been noted since  ancient times. The ancient Olympic Games, part of a major religious festival  honoring Zeus, the chief Greek god, were the biggest events in their world. They  were the scenes of political rivalries between people from different parts of  the Greek world, and the site of controversies, boasts, public announcements and  humiliations. Ancient athletes competed as individuals, not on national teams,  as in the modern Games. The emphasis on individual athletic achievement through  public competition was related to the Greek ideal of excellence, called "arete".  Aristocratic men who attained this ideal, through their outstanding words or  deeds, won permanent glory and fame. Those who failed to measure up to this code  feared public shame and disgrace.       Olympia was one of the oldest religious centers in the ancient Greek  world. Since athletic contests were one way that the ancient Greeks honored  their gods, it was logical to hold a recurring athletic competition at the site  of a major temple. Also, Olympia is convenient geographically to reach by ship,  which was a major concern for the Greeks. Athletes and spectators traveled from  Greek colonies as far away as modern-day Spain, the Black Sea, or Egypt.       Athletics were a key part of education in ancient Greece. Many Greeks  believed that developing the body was equally important as improving the mind  for overall health. Also, regular exercise was important in a society where men  were always needed for military service. Plato's Laws specifically mentions how  athletics greatly improved military skills. Greek youth therefore worked out in  the palaestra (wrestling-school) whether they were serious Olympic contenders or  not.       Ancient competitors were required to train at Olympia for a month before  the Games officially started, like modern competitors at the Olympic. Young men  worked with athletic trainers who used long sticks to point out incorrect body    					    
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