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A month ago today
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I stood there:
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90 degrees south, the top of
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the bottom of the world, the Geographic South Pole.
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And I stood there beside two very good friends of mine,
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Richard Weber and Kevin Vallely.
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Together we had just broken the world speed record
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for a trek to the South Pole.
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It took us 33 days,
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23 hours and 55 minutes to get there.
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We shaved five days off the previous best time.
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And in the process, I became the first person in history
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to make the entire 650-mile journey,
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from Hercules Inlet to South Pole,
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solely on feet, without skis.
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Now, many of you are probably saying, "Wait a sec,
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is this tough to do?"
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(Laughter)
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Imagine, if you will,
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dragging a sled, as you just saw in that video clip,
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with 170 pounds of gear,
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in it everything you need to survive on your Antarctic trek.
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It's going to be 40 below, every single day.
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You'll be in a massive headwind.
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And at some point you're going to have to cross these cracks in the ice,
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these crevasses.
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Some of them have a very precarious thin footbridge underneath them
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that could give way at a moment's notice,
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taking your sled, you, into the abyss, never to be seen again.
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The punchline to your journey? Look at the horizon.
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Yes, it's uphill the entire way,
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because the South Pole is at 10,000 feet,
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and you're starting at sea level.
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Our journey did not, in fact, begin at Hercules Inlet,
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where frozen ocean meets the land of Antarctica.
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It began a little less than two years ago.
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A couple of buddies of mine and I
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had finished a 111-day run across the entire Sahara desert.
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And while we were there we learned
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the seriousness of the water crisis in Northern Africa.
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We also learned that many of the issues facing the people of Northern Africa
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affected young people the most.
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I came home to my wife after 111 days of running in the sand,
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and I said, "You know, there's no doubt if this bozo can get across the desert,
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we are capable of doing anything we set our minds to."
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But if I'm going to continue doing these adventures, there has to be
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a reason for me to do them
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beyond just getting there.
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Around that time I met an extraordinary human being,
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Peter Thum, who inspired me with his actions.
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He's trying to find and solve water issues, the crisis around the world.
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His dedication inspired me to come up with this expedition:
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a run to the South Pole
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where, with an interactive website,
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I will be able to bring young people, students and teachers from around the world
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on board the expedition with me,
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as active members.
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So we would have a live website, that every single day of the 33 days,
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we would be blogging, telling stories of,
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you know, depleted ozone forcing us to cover our faces,
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or we will burn.
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Crossing miles and miles of sastrugi --
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frozen ice snowdrifts that could be hip-deep.
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I'm telling you, crossing these things with 170-pound sled,
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that sled may as well have weighed 1,700 pounds,
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because that's what it felt like.
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We were blogging to this live website daily
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to these students that were tracking us as well,
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about 10-hour trekking days,
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15-hour trekking days,
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sometimes 20 hours of trekking daily to meet our goal.
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We'd catch cat-naps at 40 below on our sled, incidentally.
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In turn, students,
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people from around the world, would ask us questions.
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Young people would ask the most amazing questions.
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One of my favorite: It's 40 below, you've got to go to the bathroom,
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where are you going to go and how are you going to do it?
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I'm not going to answer that. But I will answer some of the more popular questions.
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Where do you sleep? We slept in a tent that was very low to the ground,
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because the winds on Antarctica were so extreme, it would blow anything else away.
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What do you eat? One of my favorite dishes on expedition:
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butter and bacon. It's about a million calories.
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We were burning about 8,500 a day,
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so we needed it.
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How many batteries do you carry for all the equipment that you have?
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Virtually none. All of our equipment, including film equipment,
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was charged by the sun.
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And do you get along? I certainly hope so,
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because at some point or another on this expedition,
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one of your teammates is going to have to take a very big needle,
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and put it in an infected blister, and drain it for you.
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But seriously, seriously, we did get along,
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because we had a common goal of wanting to inspire these young people.
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They were our teammates! They were inspiring us.
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The stories we were hearing got us to the South Pole.
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The website worked brilliantly as a two-way street of communication.
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Young people in northern Canada, kids in an elementary school,
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dragging sleds across the school-yard,
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pretending they were Richard, Ray and Kevin. Amazing.
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We arrived at the South Pole. We huddled into that tent,
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45 below that day, I'll never forget it.
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We looked at each other with these looks
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of disbelief at what we had just completed.
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And I remember looking at the guys thinking,
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"What do I take from this journey?" You know? Seriously.
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That I'm this uber-endurance guy?
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As I stand here today talking to you guys,
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I've been running for the grand sum of five years.
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And a year before that I was a pack-a-day smoker,
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living a very sedentary lifestyle.
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What I take from this journey, from my journeys,
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is that, in fact,
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within every fiber of my belief standing here,
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I know that we can make the impossible possible.
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I'm learning this at 40.
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Can you imagine? Seriously, can you imagine?
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I'm learning this at 40 years of age.
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Imagine being 13 years old,
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hearing those words, and believing it.
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Thank you very much. Thank you.
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(Applause)