No hands, no feet doesn’t stop mountaineer from snowboarding, changing nappies
[video] Founex, Vaud, Switzerland - Tough things are going to happen to you in this life and you can learn from them. Just don’t give up.
That was the message handed by sports enthusiast Jamie Andrew to the 2010 graduating class at La Chataigneraie, the Founex section of the International School of Geneva. Andrew was the guest commencement speaker. He knows what he is talking about: the 41-year-old Scot lost both feet and both hands after being caught for five days by a bad winter storm while cllimbing the North Face of Les Droites, above Chamonix in the French Alps in 1999. The accident is described in his book, Life and Limb. His best friend and flatmate Jamie Fischer died before a dramatic helicopter rescue.
He bounced back after the accident and dramatic rescue, to carry on with a career in sports and public speaking. He kayaks, paraglides, snowboards, has run the London Marathon and has gone back to mountaineering.
But he told the students at La Chat that the hardest thing he’s ever done is to raise kids. He has three, a six-year-old and four-year-old twins. “Nothing is impossible” is his motto, shared with the students.
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zdDnbJQVvHE&feature=player_embedded[/youtube]
GenevaLunch, 4 June 2010.
Filed under: Health, fitness
Tags: author, climber, commencement speech, education, graduation, inspirpational, International School of Geneva, Jamie Andrew, La Chataigneraie, mountaineer, public speaker, raising children, Scotland, Sports
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July 19th, 2011 at 12:55 pm
I am from New Zealand and have viewed the ” I shouldn’t be Alive” story tonight on the Television. I just want to comment how brave and courageous to come out of that experience as Jamie did and I am even more amazed at his courage to go on in life as he is. New Zealand has a lot of cold mountains right now because it is Winter time and so I can only imagine the sheer desperation of the two climbers. I wish you all the best in your Life and thank you for your courageous showing of your experience.