As a kid, due to chronic asthma I went to an “open air” school where looking back, a lot of the focus was on helping people combat there specific illnesses and disabilities. I suppose you could say I was on of the lucky ones, I had trouble breathing, but at least I wasn’t missing limbs, wasn’t blind, wasn’t deaf, or like one little girl who was blind, deaf and in a wheelchair due to her having no use of her legs, but she was always smiling. It was rare to see any of these kids moan, feel sorry for themselves, they got on with life, they did the best they could, they were determined to beat their disability as best they could and would often refuse help from those of us who were more able-bodied
I’m sure many of the paralympians will have the same approach to their own lives and their disability, be it something they had from birth, or from an accident or in some conflict or other. Initially they want to prove that they can beat the disability but once that is achieved, they find they enjoy it, they find they are good at something, and so it becomes a bigger challenge, and they want to go further and further
So, I will be watching as much of it as time allows but as I don’t know any of the “big name” paralympians I won’t be going out of my way to watch some of the events like i did with the Olympics