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PARALYZED MAN REACHES SOUTH POLE (Read 587 times)
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PARALYZED MAN REACHES SOUTH POLE
Jan 20th, 2012 at 3:34pm
 
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FAIRBANKS - Grant Korgan of Nevada became the first adaptive athlete in history to reach the South Pole on Tuesday, a little over a month after coming to Fairbanks to train and test equipment.

Korgan, who is paralyzed from the waist down as a result of a snowmachine accident two years ago, used a a sit-ski to push his way 75 miles to the pole in 11 days.

Korgan, 33, was accompanied by Antarctica guide Doug Stoup, Tal Fletcher and a three-person production crew who filmed the expedition.

They arrived at the pole on the 100th anniversary of Capt. Robert Falcon Scott’s trip to the pole. The team began the expedition on Jan. 8 and endured sub-zero temperatures, strong head winds and Velcro-like snow conditions. Korgan estimated he had to push the sit-ski approximately 250,000 times over the course of the trip.

“Although my body has been broken, my spirit never will be. I am unbreakable!” Korgan said in a statement posted on the crew’s website.

Korgan and his teammates spent the previous year training for the expedition, traveling to Alaska, Norway, Lake Tahoe and South America. Korgan, Fletcher and cinematographer Tom Day spent three days in Fairbanks in mid-December testing equipment and their bodies against the cold, though it wasn’t nearly as cold then as it is now. They trained on ski trails at Birch Hill Recreation Area and the University of Alaska Fairbanks.

The expedition will be made into a documentary film called “The Push” by director Steven Siig, who specializes in extreme skiing films. The film is expected to be released later this year.

“Grant just pulled off one of the most amazing athletic achievements in modern history and a first for adaptive athletes,” Siig said in a news release. “This is a historic day in the name of recovery, technology, adventure and the human potential.”

During a satellite phone interview two days prior to reaching the pole, Korgan described Antarctica as “kind of an apocalyptic place” that had a surreal beauty to it. The fact that he could feel the wind and cold on his face was invigorating, he said.

“I’m in Antarctica,” he said. “I skied with friends today. I’m able to feel how cold it is. Everything I feel is glorious.

“For me to feel that cold on my face, for me not to feel anything in my fingers, it’s glorious,” Korgan said.

The challenge was intended to help raise money for the California-based nonprofit High Fives Foundation, which helps injured winter athletes recover and get back to their sport. It also supports the Reeve-Irvine Research Center, a science research facility at the University of California, Irvine devoted to the study of repair, regeneration and recovery of function after spinal cord injury.



This is the kind of spirit and grit I celebrate.  Consider this guy next time you feel that 'life isn't fair'.



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In the fullness of time...
 
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Soren
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Re: PARALYZED MAN REACHES SOUTH POLE
Reply #1 - Jan 20th, 2012 at 3:48pm
 
He's an agent provocateur of the fascists government that is floging the obese working class to an early martyrdom death. I bet he has no idea how hard it is to maintain a firm grip on the sofa.




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Re: PARALYZED MAN REACHES SOUTH POLE
Reply #2 - Jan 20th, 2012 at 5:11pm
 


What happens if your spirit  has been broken but not your body ?
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Re: PARALYZED MAN REACHES SOUTH POLE
Reply #3 - Jan 20th, 2012 at 5:15pm
 
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What happens if your spirit  has been broken but not your body ?



Means you are a weak b@st@rd like Wilkie
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Re: PARALYZED MAN REACHES SOUTH POLE
Reply #4 - Jan 20th, 2012 at 5:16pm
 
This is the kind of spirit and grit I celebrate.  Consider this guy next time you feel that 'life isn't fair'.


Never give up.
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Re: PARALYZED MAN REACHES SOUTH POLE
Reply #5 - Jan 20th, 2012 at 5:19pm
 
bring it all back to u
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Re: PARALYZED MAN REACHES SOUTH POLE
Reply #6 - Jan 20th, 2012 at 6:14pm
 
Quote:
What happens if your spirit  has been broken but not your body ?


Means someone owes you another bottle of whisky.
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Re: PARALYZED MAN REACHES SOUTH POLE
Reply #7 - Jan 20th, 2012 at 7:23pm
 
Great tenacious spirit, a truly inspirational effort.
Just a note for those who would try and use this accomplishment to denigrate others, we are not all made the same, and while some may be born with an unbreakable spirit, others are born with a very fragile spirit, at least as fragile as the human body which may at times get broken and damaged, and just because their scars are not showing, does not mean that they too do not suffer terribly in their own way. If you can have compassion for people with overt, visible, physical restrictions, maybe try and be more understanding of those with other forms of disability of a psychological or mental nature.
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Re: PARALYZED MAN REACHES SOUTH POLE
Reply #8 - Jan 20th, 2012 at 7:49pm
 
mozzaok wrote on Jan 20th, 2012 at 7:23pm:
Great tenacious spirit, a truly inspirational effort.
Just a note for those who would try and use this accomplishment to denigrate others, we are not all made the same, and while some may be born with an unbreakable spirit, others are born with a very fragile spirit, at least as fragile as the human body which may at times get broken and damaged, and just because their scars are not showing, does not mean that they too do not suffer terribly in their own way. If you can have compassion for people with overt, visible, physical restrictions, maybe try and be more understanding of those with other forms of disability of a psychological or mental nature.



I wonder if you realise, but you are talking about a ranking order of people.Well done.


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Re: PARALYZED MAN REACHES SOUTH POLE
Reply #9 - Jan 23rd, 2012 at 12:28pm
 
Soren wrote on Jan 20th, 2012 at 3:48pm:
He's an agent provocateur of the fascists government that is floging the obese working class to an early martyrdom death. I bet he has no idea how hard it is to maintain a firm grip on the sofa.






That sounds very much like a corpulant_ whiney quote Soren. Grin
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Re: PARALYZED MAN REACHES SOUTH POLE
Reply #10 - Jan 23rd, 2012 at 3:07pm
 
... wrote on Jan 20th, 2012 at 3:34pm:
Quote:
FAIRBANKS - Grant Korgan of Nevada became the first adaptive athlete in history to reach the South Pole on Tuesday, a little over a month after coming to Fairbanks to train and test equipment.

Korgan, who is paralyzed from the waist down as a result of a snowmachine accident two years ago, used a a sit-ski to push his way 75 miles to the pole in 11 days.

Korgan, 33, was accompanied by Antarctica guide Doug Stoup, Tal Fletcher and a three-person production crew who filmed the expedition.

They arrived at the pole on the 100th anniversary of Capt. Robert Falcon Scott’s trip to the pole. The team began the expedition on Jan. 8 and endured sub-zero temperatures, strong head winds and Velcro-like snow conditions. Korgan estimated he had to push the sit-ski approximately 250,000 times over the course of the trip.

“Although my body has been broken, my spirit never will be. I am unbreakable!” Korgan said in a statement posted on the crew’s website.

Korgan and his teammates spent the previous year training for the expedition, traveling to Alaska, Norway, Lake Tahoe and South America. Korgan, Fletcher and cinematographer Tom Day spent three days in Fairbanks in mid-December testing equipment and their bodies against the cold, though it wasn’t nearly as cold then as it is now. They trained on ski trails at Birch Hill Recreation Area and the University of Alaska Fairbanks.

The expedition will be made into a documentary film called “The Push” by director Steven Siig, who specializes in extreme skiing films. The film is expected to be released later this year.

“Grant just pulled off one of the most amazing athletic achievements in modern history and a first for adaptive athletes,” Siig said in a news release. “This is a historic day in the name of recovery, technology, adventure and the human potential.”

During a satellite phone interview two days prior to reaching the pole, Korgan described Antarctica as “kind of an apocalyptic place” that had a surreal beauty to it. The fact that he could feel the wind and cold on his face was invigorating, he said.

“I’m in Antarctica,” he said. “I skied with friends today. I’m able to feel how cold it is. Everything I feel is glorious.

“For me to feel that cold on my face, for me not to feel anything in my fingers, it’s glorious,” Korgan said.

The challenge was intended to help raise money for the California-based nonprofit High Fives Foundation, which helps injured winter athletes recover and get back to their sport. It also supports the Reeve-Irvine Research Center, a science research facility at the University of California, Irvine devoted to the study of repair, regeneration and recovery of function after spinal cord injury.



This is the kind of spirit and grit I celebrate.  Consider this guy next time you feel that 'life isn't fair'.





Wow...damn gutsy fellow....good on him.
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Re: PARALYZED MAN REACHES SOUTH POLE
Reply #11 - Jan 23rd, 2012 at 3:09pm
 
blackadder wrote on Jan 20th, 2012 at 5:16pm:
This is the kind of spirit and grit I celebrate.  Consider this guy next time you feel that 'life isn't fair'.


Never give up.


http://www.google.com.au/imgres?imgurl=http://photofilesp@m/photo/hexell/9502662...
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"I just get sick of people who place a label on someone else with their own definition.

It's similar to a strawman fallacy"
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