He turns 28 in March and has an estimated fortune of $16 million. In other words, a wonderful life to live. But there are lives that are built like a pyramid: the foundation is solid, the angles are perfect, each step measured to the millimeter so that the vertex reaches the heights. And there are other lives, like that of Simone Bileswhich rise in perpetual balance on a tightrope, without a net or script. With 41 medals between the World Artistic Gymnastics Championships (23 gold, 4 silver and 3 bronze) and the Olympic Games (she reached 11), Biles is the most successful gymnast in history. But the Ohio champion did not climb to Olympus; He conquered it by jumping. And while his pirouettes have defied gravity, his story has faced demons denser than air.
Simone Biles was born to fly, but first she had to learn to fall. First, in the arms of grandparents who became parents when addiction devoured their biological mother. Then, in the silent battle against the deepest wounds, those inflicted by a white-coated monster protected by the system. And then, when perfection—that cruel god who worships the public and consumes his victims—demanded more from him than his body could give.
In Paris, that city that celebrates the ephemeral and the eternal, Biles returned to remind us that what is human is always more moving than what is perfect. With every twist and fall, he put on a show that was not just gymnastics, but an exercise in public redemption. Where the lights of the Bercy Arena illuminated her like a goddess, she showed herself as what she really is: a woman capable of surviving, forgiving and continuing to move forward with the weight of her own scars.
The statistics will say that Biles won three golds in Paris, that she rose again with that double-piped Yurchenko that terrifies anyone who tries to emulate him, and that her talent remains unmatched. But the scene that will remain in the collective memory is not painted in gold. It was silver, and with it a lesson in humanity: the day she knelt on the podium to recognize the victory of the Brazilian Rebeca Andrade.
That gesture, so small and so infinite, showed that greatness is not in always winning, but in knowing how to stop. In accepting the limit without fear. In applauding the rival as one who recognizes the beauty of a flower that grows next to the road. It was the moment when the myth gave way to the person and the world understood that Simone’s true victory was not in her neck, but in her soul.
Today, Simone Biles lives away from the pressure of the spotlight. Their jumps, although less frequent, are still majestic, but the scenery has changed. Now she executes them in her daily life, in the balance she has found between love, calm and the opportunities that she has created for herself. With her husband, Jonathan Owenswalks through NFL stadiums like any other fan, enjoys the luxury of training at her own pace and designs jerseys for girls who dream of flying like her.
In Houston, she will soon open a restaurant that will bear her name, like an anchor to the ground for a woman who has always floated in the air. Meanwhile, her clothing lines and advertising contracts have turned her image into a universal symbol of resilience, beauty and strength. Because Biles, who earned more than $11 million last year, knows that true wealth is not in the bank, but in the freedom to choose how to live.
Will you compete in the Games again? That is the question that journalists, fans and perhaps even herself repeat. She will be 31 years old when Los Angeles 2028 lights its Olympic flame, an age that for any gymnast seems more appropriate for retirement than for the podium. But Biles, as always, defies the limits of the body and logic.
“Never say never,” he smiles when asked, with that mix of relief and happiness that now defines his face. He is in no hurry to decide, because for the first time in his life he does not feel that perfection is an obligation. And if you decide to return, it will be because you want to, not because someone else demands it.
Simone Biles is no longer just a gymnast; Now it is a map to happiness. His story is not about medals or records, although there are plenty of both in his record. It is a story about how to get up after falling, about how to fly when the world has tied your feet. With every leap, she has taught us that life is not a perfect exercise, but a dance between what we fear and what we love. And that true glory is not in the air or on the podium, but in finding firm ground to rest on.
Simone Biles hasn’t stopped flying. Now he does it his way: with serenity, with freedom and with that joy that will always be his most valuable medal.
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