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How the Olympic female champion embarked on the road of no return and gave up her career to be a call girl

author:Variety show highlights

She is a well-known American track and field athlete who represented team USA three times in the Olympic Games.

How the Olympic female champion embarked on the road of no return and gave up her career to be a call girl

Susie has competed in three Olympic Games and, although not winning an Olympic medal, is well known in American college sports circles. She has always held the national record for the women's 1000m and was named the best track and field athlete... When she graduated, she received a call from 2,700 commercials. Some media have likened her to the "Radcliffe" of the United States.

 Starting in December 2011, 44-year-old Susie Hamilton, under the pseudonym "Kelly Lundy," began working for a Las Vegas agency called Hayley Heston that offered call girl services. As it stands, she revealed her true identity while hanging out with some male customers, and one of them broke the news to the media.

  As for her "part-time job," Susie explained that she has been suffering from postpartum depression since giving birth to her daughter in 2005, and even though she has been taking antidepressant medication, Susie's condition has not been alleviated. In addition, Susie also revealed to the media that her brother's suicide in 1999 hit her hard, and the defeat in the 1500m final of the 2000 Sydney Olympics hit her hard. And the stimulating call to work allows her to escape the problematic married life for a while. She said: "When I first met Hailey [the call company], I wanted to realize some wild sexual fantasies of myself, and I did it for a short time. But after my first experience, I became addicted and I did everything I could to run more to Las Vegas, as long as my schedule allowed. ”

How the Olympic female champion embarked on the road of no return and gave up her career to be a call girl

Susie attributed her experience to medication, got it out with the help of doctors, and became a spokesperson for the Mental Health Association, dedicated to promoting the bipolar disorder she had, how to treat and recover.

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