Discover and read the best of Twitter Threads about #ChaseYourDream

Most recents (4)

"No one supported her. So she went all alone for it. Even my neighbours told me not to send her outside, that it was not good.

#WPL #WPLAuction #ChaseYourDream #WomenInSports #Inspiration
But I was very confident that my daughter would handle everything," says #JasiaAkhtar's father.

Gul Mohammed Wani, works as a daily labourer in #Kashmir's Shopian and earns just enough to support his four-member family.
Playing for the #Rajasthan team for the past two years, Jasia is among the top players in ODI rankings for women's domestic cricket in India with 500 plus runs as well as in T20 rankings with 590 runs.
Read 4 tweets
#UPSC
"I want to give a message to married women that if anything wrong happens to them at their in-laws' house, they should not be afraid. Show them that you can stand on your own feet.

#Inspiration #upscresult #upscaspirants #upscmotivation #chaseyourdream Image
Women can do anything they want. If you study well and work hard, you can become an IAS," Shivangi told India Today, while recalling her harrowing experience and how she overcame it.
A mother to her 7-year-old daughter, Shivangi returned to live with her parents after facing domestic abuse at the hands of her in-laws.
Read 4 tweets
#Inspiration #ChaseYourDream #WomenInSports

A typist by profession, Revanna Umadevi Nagaraj was 47 when she defied all stereotypes to win the World Ladies Billiards Championship. (1/6) Image
Born into a family of weavers, Bengaluru's Umadevi Nagaraj was 23 when she got a typewriting job at the Dept. Of Horticulture office in Lalbagh.

During her free time, Umadevi began visiting the Karnataka Government Secretariat Club (KGS) nearby to play tabble tennis. (2/6)
It was here that she first held a cue in her hands and knew that she was meant to play Billiards. Umadevi began practicing the sport whenever she got time. Her hard work bore fruit when she achieved the 3rd position in State Snooker Ranking. (3/6)
Read 6 tweets
#Inspiration #ChaseYourDream

Shweta Katti grew up in a brothel in Kamathipura. She went on to win a full scholarship from New York's Bard College, becoming the first girl from an Indian red light area to study abroad. (1/5) Image
Shweta Katti was born and raised in Kamathipura, one of Asia's most infamous red-light areas. She was the oldest of three daughters and grew up in a brothel until the age of 16. (2/5)
In 2012, she joined Kranti, an NGO that empowers girls from Mumbai's red light areas to become agents of social change.

Due to her work for marginalised girls, Shweta was included in Newsweek's 25-Under-25 Women to Watch list. (3/5)
Read 5 tweets

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