Hero
Forget Everything You Thought You Knew About Strength
My favourite inspirational video, maybe of all time. Sit back, turn the music up, and get fired up for the next 1:30. If this does nothing for you, go and see a doctor: you need your heart checked.
Strength, perseverance and determination. Qualities we all admire. This video about the 2012 London Paraolympics paints a different perspective. It’s time to do battle. Meet the Superhumans.
I need your support too. I am going to run 10 sub-marathons each of 24 km in 10 cities across 10 countries all inside of one month. I am doing this to raise awareness of how we can alleviate child mortality.
Please join me on my journey by supporting my endeavour. Details of what I am doing, and why I am doing it, along with details of how you can support are here on http://www.pozible.com/lifebridge
Enjoy the video. Let me know what you find best about it.
Anything Worth Achieving In This Life Will Be Hard Before It Gets Easy

Jim Stynes, a true legend in many respects, died after battling cancer. He lived his life through to his death like every other pursuit – giving always 100%. Jim gave it all. On and off the field, he exceeded his reputation as a legend of Australian Rules Football.
Jim Stynes loved Joseph Campbell’s Hero’s Journey. He had a great quote about what a gift cancer had been to his life. It showed him how to live.
He sought to push people past ‘The Ordinary World”.
The Ordinary World is the comfort zone of life.
He would dismiss failure as just part of the journey. Jim wasn’t afraid to be vulnerable, and brushed off failure as a valuable experience. He taught others by his example. This is what made him a unique individual.
He once invited me to join him with his organisation Reach when they did a training workshop. He was very grounded, and saw right through anything that wasn’t authentic. He left me with a book he had written which was typical of his style, subtitled: “A Guide To Realising Your Dreams”.
At this training, Jim taught me one of the most poignant lessons about collaboration through a simple children’s game involving balloons. That lesson was a real gift which I will never forget. I will always remember the look in his eyes as he taught me something that he saw I needed to develop.
This 10 City Bridge Run journey was birthed partly in response to his diagnosis of cancer. It is fitting that I train smart and hard every day through until September to make the 10 City Bridge Run as he would say “a journey from the ordinary to the extraordinary.”
I guess it comes down to a simple choice – get busy living or get busy dying.
Thanks Jim. You are truly a champion.