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Published 10:53 8 Mar 2019 GMT
Updated 11:13 8 Mar 2019 GMT

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'There was no new technology in Lithuania, new developments in the state were poor and the incubator probably wasn’t as good as what they are now, it damaged my retina and then I had a few surgeries in Lithuania but that was it. I suppose it was the surgery that was successful for me, it was an experimental surgery in Sweden.'This experiment surgery was the miracle that the Streimikyte family had been hoping for and it taught the family the important lesson of always looking for a second opinion:
'The first phrase that my parents got from the doctor was like, “you know you’re not the first family that has a blind child basically, and to deal with it.” I’m always going to be grateful that they didn’t, they never gave up.'Regaining some sight in her left eye, Greta along with her family moved to Ireland when she was fifteen and this is when her love of sport began to flourish. It wasn't long before coaches sat up, saw her potential and suggested that the Paralympics could be in her future.
'There was a community race in Santry, Morton Stadium and I showed up and I came second in the 800 metres and my PE teacher came up to me and was like “Greta, would you like to represent Ireland in the Paralympic games.'Seems like a no brainer right? Not necessarily, for Greta to compete for Ireland she had to become an Irish citizen which in turn would mean giving up her Lithuanian citizenship
'It was a tough decision I have to admit because for me it meant that I’m going to lose my Lithuanian citizenship, it was a hard decision. Because I truly love Ireland as well, so I decided to go for it. It was the best decision that I’ve ever made.'At the 2016 Rio Paralympic Games Greta placed third in her heat and advanced to the final where she ran a lifetime best time of 4:45.06 finishing an impressive fourth place. We were delighted to have Greta on our show and we can't wait to follow her journey and see what's next!
20x20 is an ambitious two-year long initiative to better promote and champion women in sport.
With the tagline of "if she can't see it, she can't be it," the 20x20 movement has three targets to reach by 2020:
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