Answer:
Read below! :)
Explanation:
I remember, when I was first introduced to wrestling. I was absolutely terrified at the thought of being lifted and slammed to the ground. My body ached just at the thought of the pain that I was to experience soon. The moment I got into that ring, I fell countless times. By the end of my first training session, I could hardly breath, and sweat poured down my forehead and back. I found myself asking whether I had already met my end, when I had practically just started.
Over the next year, I was constantly training, and I had plenty of failures along the way. Yet, slowly I improved, and found that I felt less pain, and moved faster. Instead of falling, I found myself winning matches. Fast forward three years, and I won three wrestling titles, and now teach the youth team. Sometimes initial failure is what motivates us to succeed. For me, my failure fueled my desire to work harder and become better. Challenge is life's way of telling you that you can do better. Push your limits.
Northerners felt that in order to win the war they had to do more than compel Confederates submission. Northerners imagined the Civil War as a battle waged to deliver the south from the clutches of the "Slave Power”. Many accounts reported that Northerers’ felt proud that they won the Southerners’ over and restored their love for the union while freeing slaves, many of which had lost years of their lives in the “Slave Power” system.
Answer:
x= +1
Explanation:
Each number is going up by one in the pattern. So you could say x= +1 each time.
It depends on your definition of hero, I guess. The fact that Gandhi and MLK did not use force to advocate for their opinions was mature and moral. They did not give up the first time. But maybe if the cause is correct, one might have to break the stated law, and become a hero.
What four beliefs..? nothing here