Archive for the ‘Inspiration’ Category

Three British Olympic Athletes skiing to the South Pole

Wednesday, July 14th, 2010

I ran an advert a couple of months ago looking for a British Olympian to join an expedition to the South Pole that I’m organising to coincide with the London 2012 Games.

Well, I actually got quite a bit of interest from an exciting range of athletes and have finally picked one. Specifically, Derek Redmond.

That means our team of three athletes is now complete as follows:

  1. Paralympian – Marc Woods (Swimmer)
  2. Special Olympics Athlete – Declan Kerry (Footballer)
  3. Olympian – Derek Redmond (Sprinter)

You can read more about these athletes, the project and our progress at the new website I’ve created – www.2012inspire.com

As you’ll see, our focus is getting sponsors onboard who share our values and will help us get to the South Pole and deliver our messages.

I believe word of mouth is important. If you could help me to spread the word about what I think will be a really exciting project with a lot of potential interest outside of the small expedition-sphere, then I would be greatly appreciative.

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How Eddie Izzard changed the nation

Sunday, June 27th, 2010

Eddie Izzard did a run for Sport Relief last year. If you’ve not heard of Eddie, he is probably best known as a stand-up comedian and not at all for his sporting prowess. If you didn’t hear about his run, then you should Google it. He ran 43 marathons in 51 days.

He did not do much in the way of training, he was not an athlete by any measure and he did not brand it as “extreme this” or “toughest that”. He just got on and did it, and I have a lot of respect for that. What he did, physically and mentally, was very impressive. I’ve mentioned before how such feats can demonstrate what people are capable of but I also think that Eddie’s run has had an impact far beyond that.

Mark Beaumont set a World Record and precedent for cycling around the world really fast and I really liked the way that it captured a nation’s imagination. I think Eddie has done even more than that. Mark’s ride has inspired a number of others to repeat and beat his record. But Eddie, in my opinion, has helped shift the psyche of the country.

Marathons used to be the sort of thing that people aspired to one day complete in their life. To tick off from their ’100 things to do before you die’ list. They were hailed almost as a limit for the human body but I think people are realising that it is capable of a whole lot more than just 26 miles. I’m not detracting from running a marathon in any way – I’ve never actually run an organised one myself and I imagine it is a very tough thing to do – but, put simply, it is not even close to the limitations of your body and for the world to continue believing that would be a real shame.

Now, a guy called Mark is halfway through a monstrous run across Europe. Another bloke in the news is trying to do 12 marathons in 12 months. I got an email from a chap who wants to run to Hawaii and another one from a guy who wants to run a thousand miles in a single month. And all of these since Eddie Izzard completed his run last year.

This could be coincidence. It could be that I’m more in tune with this sort of thing and I just happen to be picking up on it more.

Or…

Maybe Eddie has inspired people. Maybe Eddie has raised the bar. Maybe Eddie has pushed the envelope a little and opened people’s eyes a little wider to the possibilities of their bodies, of the world, of life. Maybe Eddie has done something just a little bit amazing.

And, if so, maybe Eddie deserves a round of applause.

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Something a little unknown – Guest Blog: Francis Charlesworth

Wednesday, March 24th, 2010
This is a long overdue blog post. I’ve been working with Francis Charlesworth since before this website began and he has yet to feature on the front page. Until now.
“Hi Francis, I’m Tim Moss”. I was at Heathrow airport collecting my gear from an expedition to the Indian Himalayas that I had left a week earlier due to altitude sickness. Finally a face had been put to the emails I had been sending and receiving for the past year. Tim was working for BSES Expeditions and at the airport he mentioned he was soon to start something new and offered to help me with my ‘dream’.
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I had come up with the idea that I wanted to climb K2, the second highest, and one of the most technical peaks in the world. For me this was and still is really important. It gave me something to aim for in my day-to-day life. People have asked my why I ‘bother’ to spend most of my time pursuing something that externally is largely insignificant and all I have to say is that it is something personal that is driving me from inside. I don’t intend to change the world by following my dream so I can’t help but feel that this dream is a hedonistic pursuit. I will spend months chasing this dream and the cold hard truth is that I will be endangering other people’s lives so that I can stand upon some snow at the top of a mountain.
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However, there is more to it, I believe there is a ‘journey’. We all follow a journey and this is what defines who we are. Its twists and turns, high points and low points are what we see as day-to-day life. When we step off this track and follow a lesser-known path, we step into the unknown, unexpected and often challenging terrain. By following my dream I hope to have broken off from the well-trodden track and into something a little unknown. If I make it to the end of the path, to the summit then I will be happy, although sat here now, wondering which way to go, I feel content. Deciding where to go.

You can read more about Francis and his dream on his website.

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Olympian Wanted for South Pole Expedition

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

Owing to a recent change of circumstance, a British Olympic Athlete is sought to join an expedition to the South Pole to coincide with the London 2012 Olympics.

The successful candidate will join a Paralympian and a Special Olympics Athlete in a project which aims to reinforce some key messages of London 2012Participation, Inclusivity, Accessibility and Inspiration – and mark the 100th anniversary of Captain Scott first reaching the Pole under a British flag.

Departing in December 2011, the team will be away from the UK for some six weeks and will spend most of that time skiing unsupported across part of Antarctica.

Although helpful, no experience of polar travel, expeditions or skiing is required. Fitness, we anticipate, will not be a problem.

It is expected that applicants will not be participating in the 2012 Games as a project such as this would undoubtedly interfere with their preparations.

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Person Specification:

  • Has represented Great Britain at the Olympics
  • Enthusiastic about the project and the wider Olympics Movement
  • A team player who is willing to muck in
  • Positive in the face of adversity
  • Willing to commit time and effort to the project before and after the expedition
  • Available for at least six weeks over Christmas and New Year in 2011/2012

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More Information:

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Enquiries:

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Angry Young Man – Guest Blog: Julian Sayarer (This Is Not For Charity)

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

I enjoyed following Julian Sayarer’s cycle around the world – This Is Not For Charity – and his wonderful writing from the comfort of my home last year. I was thrilled and disheartened in equal measure to first see him break the world record and then risk having his words and messages lost in the backlash to a final blog post.

I contacted Julian shortly after his return to let him know that I had enjoyed his writing and asked if he would be willing to write a piece for me which, I’m very pleased to say, he has.

Angry Young Man. That was what they called me. They thought it was an insult, although I welcomed it… they did not see how far short of the truth it fell, they did not see that I had come to anger through beauty.

I had just cycled around the world, I broke a world record in doing so… 18,050miles in under six months. I completed the undertaking alone, crossing deserts and following rivers, almost all of it in the company of my own head. I returned to London to be told that I had learned nothing, to be told by people who had followed me from their desks and their armchairs, that I had learned nothing. The audacity escaped them … the idea that they were better-equipped than I to know what my experience should have taught me. They could not be blamed. We lived in an age of end-products, people had abandoned the processes that created the products, and people had been told that travel and adventure constituted discovery and joy and emotional wellbeing. They were no longer interested if travel and adventure led someone elsewhere.

My travels showed me beauty, countless instances of it. Outside of Los Angeles, with my rear wheel close to falling apart, I was riding with a cyclist who remarked on the size of the buckle. He said that he had something that could fix it back at his house, and though I had to cover ground that day, and though I was doubtful that anything could fix it, when he said a second time that he would like me to go to his house with him, I felt it would have been rude to refuse.

He was a teacher, a tall guy by the name of Doug. He had such a gentle sense of right and wrong, he talked of the golf courses outside of LA, all the land and water they consumed for such a small few who actually made use of them. He stated with such solemnity that he thought it was a waste. We arrived at his flat, a modest row of tenements, close to the port of LA, they called it the armpit, it stinks, refineries belch their fumes into the sky. He went inside, came out with a bag of bananas and cereal bars. He said he had something to fix my wheel, pushed a roll of green and presidents into my pocket, forced it as I tried to force it away. He told me not to look at it. We said goodbye, and an hour later I looked at it, and it was $100.

Doug had said, within ten minutes of our meeting, that he had something to fix my wheel, and I guess he knew then that he wanted to give me that money to help me. It’s humbling… to receive such charity, still more humbling to be so broke that you really cannot refuse such charity. Some people have called me an inspiration, praised my cycling 18,050 rather fast miles … I do not reject their compliments entirely, but to me it is a lesser inspiration than a man of modest means having such generosity of spirit that he will give $100 to a passing stranger. I know also which act holds a greater value for society.

I have come to anger through beauty. I feel that people are beautiful and generous and good, and it makes me so angry that our world would be run in a way that makes people an incidental part of society, not the foremost component of it.

Anger has been made taboo… it is not fashionable, it is not cool. People are encouraged to be hopeful about the state of the world, to have hope, to believe that things will improve. Hope is a distraction, it is a lie, it is passive… hope will never do anything about the world other than continuing to hope, and if people think that they can improve the world by hope alone, then they will never need do anything else. If people care about this world and the people in it, then they should be furious, angry, enraged and still more besides. Anger is the greatest harbinger of change, a thing that politicians seem to speak of a great deal. Our society is in need of changes that no politician would dare to speak of, and for those changes we need anger.

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