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 Tom
Whittaker, the first person with a disability to reach the
summit of Mount Everest, will be awarded the Most Excellent Order
Member of the British Empire by Queen Elizabeth II.
Adventurer and pioneer
Tom Whittaker, the first person with a disability to reach the
summit of Mount Everest, will be awarded the Most Excellent Order
Member of the British Empire by Queen Elizabeth II. The Royal
Investiture will take place Nov. 29 at Buckingham Palace.
The son of a British army officer, Whittaker is being
recognized by the government of the United Kingdom for his services
to disability and mountaineering.
On route to becoming a
prominent mountaineer and outdoor educator, Whittaker traveled to
Canada and the United States only to have his dreams shattered in
1979 when his car was struck by a drunk driver. Despite broken legs
and crushed feet, Whittaker declined pain medication so that he
could plead his case with the surgeon. His resolve paid off, as the
original prognosis to amputate both legs was revised and he only
lost his right foot.
Armed with a tenacious will and
relentless drive, Whittaker refused to let the disability keep him
from his passion for adventure. He spent nine years and made three
harrowing attempts to achieve a lifelong dream and in 1998, with an
artificial right foot, Whittaker reached the 29,035-foot (8,849.87
meters) summit of Mount Everest.
Not being one to overcome
seemingly insurmountable odds and not share the experience,
Whittaker had also set his sights on helping others. In 1981, he
founded a group at Idaho State University - Cooperative Wilderness
Handicapped Outdoor Group (C.W. HOG). Currently celebrating its 25th
year, C.W. HOG is a peer-support group that uses wilderness
adventure to create a four-wheel drive attitude in people with
disabilities.
In 1998, Whittaker was joined by five severely
disabled C.W. HOG members at Everest base camp (17,500 feet / 5,334
meters). Whittaker has extended his altruistic vision and expertise
by creating a leadership course, the proceeds of which benefit the
handicapped.
In 2006 Whittaker launched "7 Steps to Leading
High Achieving Teams," a course for business executives wanting to
develop and lead self-sustaining teams. The online course uses
documentary film to take managers on his landmark Everest
expedition. Using a seven-step learning progression, they grow in
their knowledge of themselves, teamwork and leadership. Each course
sold provides enough funding to provide a prosthetic limb to a
person in need. The course is offered through Whittaker's
partnership with Gatlin Education Services. For more on Tom
Whittaker see here.
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