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Book Chris Moon for Motivational Speaker Bookings
Here.
The Edge Entertainment and After Dinner Speaker Agency
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Born in
Wiltshire in May 1962. He studied Agriculture at Seale Hayne College Newton
Abbot (now Plymouth University faculty of Agriculture). Believing in Service he
worked as a volunteer at a centre for the homeless and then joined the army. On
graduating from the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst he was commissioned into
the Royal Military Police, he also served with several infantry units.
In 1993 he went to work for a British charity The HALO Trust specialising in
mine clearance. They recruited a wide range of ex-servicemen, most with two
years operational experience. After specialist training from a Royal Engineer
bomb disposal officer he supervised and trained former Cambodian soldiers in
mine clearance. He is one of the few westerners to have survived abduction by
the Khmer Rouge, successfully preventing execution and negotiating his release
and that of two Cambodian colleagues from a remote jungle base, finally walking
50km overnight through patrolled and mined jungle.
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| In 1995 he was blown up walking in a cleared area. He lost his lower right
arm and leg, but does not consider himself a victim and accepts total
responsibility, because he chose to work in mined areas, whereas people who live
there have no choice. He survived against all the odds because of his high level
of fitness (he was a keen runner) and because of his knowledge of first aid.
After leaving hospital he did a Masters Degree in Security Management at the
University of Leicester.
In 1996 he was awarded MBE for services to the HALO Trust clearing
anti-personnel mines. In 1998 he was awarded the US Centre for Disability and
PALM international leadership award. In March 1999 he was awarded the Snowdon
Special Award for leadership and help to the disabled by Lord Snowdon. He has
been awarded honorary degrees and doctorates by the universities of Plymouth,
Leicester and Exeter.
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| He set up his own company MTB (Making The Best- his philosophy in life) and
is a well-known speaker on the subjects of change management, motivation,
leadership and the concept of limitation. His autobiography 'One Step Beyond'
was published by Macmillan in 1999.
Less than a year after leaving hospital he completed the London Marathon to
raise funds for land mine-injured people in Cambodia. In April 1997 he was the
first leg amputee to complete the 250km Great Sahara Run described as the
toughest footrace on earth. Competitors run for six days in the heat and sand of
the Sahara. They carry their own food, equipment and sleeping bag and have to be
self sufficient for the week. He ran to raise £100,000 for an International
Committee of the Red Cross centre providing false limbs in Vietnam, to push the
bounds of prosthetics further and to challenge the concept of limitation.
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| In July 1997 he ran 200 km in four days with the Australian Army to assist
mine victims. He runs to raise funds for charities assisting the disabled and
carried the Olympic torch into the stadium in the Nagano Winter Olympics in
Japan in February 1998. He ran from Hakone to Tokyo to raise funds for a
Japanese charity.
In April he started and ran the Flora London Marathon (the first person to
ever do this), captaining a team of 500 runners raising funds for various
charities. In September 1998 he completed the 'Outback Challenge' with John
Bryant runner and journalist through some of the toughest arid outback and
mountain country in Australia to raise funds to support mine action programmes.
May 15- 31 1999 he ran the length of Cambodia (700km) to try to change attitudes
towards the disabled, raise funds to help them and to support requests for the
Cambodian government to ratify the Ottawa Treaty. He was supported by a team
from the Red Cross.
In July 1999 he was the first amputee to complete the Badwater Death Valley
Ultra-marathon. 136 miles (5 marathons back to back) in temperatures similar
those recommended for slow cooking chicken. In April 2000 he jointly led a party
climbing Kilimanjaro on a new north route. In May 2000 he completed the 100km
Kumamoto volcano run in Japan and in July 2000 was one of only 12 people in the
world to do the Death Valley 300 miles, from the lowest point of the USA
continuously on foot to the highest point and back again in just over six days
in temperatures over 130 degrees Fahrenheit. He did it again in 2001 to test
false legs and is one of only a handful of people in the world to complete this
double desert crossing twice.
Chris Moon is a well-known speaker on the subjects of change management,
motivation, leadership and the concept of limitation. Chris has produced cd's on
his thoughts and practical steps on how to make your dreams come true, entitled
"Success and Achievement in the marathon of life".
He has spoken at various events for businesses and organisations large and
small and is considered to be a world class speaker in his field.
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Edge Entertainment
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