Lincoln Hall
Author of White Limbo, the story of the first Australian team to climb Mount Everest, Lincoln Hall was part of Australia's first attempt to climb to the top of Mount Everest in 1984. While others in the team made it to the top, Hall was forced to turn back close to the summit due to illness. However, he reached the summit on another expedition in 2006.
Lincoln Hall is one of Australia's best known mountaineers, and the author of Dead Lucky, the recently published book of his famous and miraculous survival on Mt Everest in May 2006. Lincoln had reached the summit, but on the way down became seriously ill, and despite the efforts of the Sherpas with him, he collapsed and was declared dead. His body was left high on the mountain but miraculously he lived to tell the story - a story of willpower, survival and mystery, from a deep personal perspective and insight - with inspiration and thought-provoking lessons and insights for all walks of life.
Lincoln, 50, an experienced speaker and corporate presenter, has a climbing career spanning three decades, most notably in the Himalaya but also in the Antarctica and the Andes.
He is the author of eight books, including the bestselling ,em>White Limbo, the account of the 1984 First Australian Everest expedition, of which he was a member. His hopes dashed that time, 22 years later he fulfilled his ambition to climb the world's highest mountain.
He has worked as a trekking guide, has edited adventure magazines, and his work as a facilitator on Human Resource Development projects has given him a broad perspective on corporate and management issues. He is a Director of the Australian Himalayan Foundation, a charity dedicated to improving the lives of the people of the Himalaya through education, health and environment projects.
He was awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia in 1987 for his services to mountaineering. He lives with his wife, Barbara Scanlan, and their two teenage sons Dylan and Dorje, in the Blue Mountains, New South Wales.
There have been times on expeditions to the world's highest mountains and remotest corners that Lincoln had to fight for his life. His work as facilitator and team builder has helped him draw parallels with the challenges of mountaineering and those of the corporate world, and it is these insights that he shares in his presentations. Each of the presentations below outlines a particular message or learning. He will also prepare a customized presentation to meet a client's particular needs.
DEATH AND REDEMPTION ON MOUNT EVEREST
Inspiration permeates the story of Lincoln's unbelievable ordeal on Mount
Everest. After being left for dead, alone in the open overnight at 28,000 feet,
it seemed that death was indeed the only option. In those impossible
circumstances, it was a synergistic mix of knowledge and experience gathered
from thirty years of adventuring that kept him alive. Most powerful of these
was Lincoln's commitment to return to his family. This is a deeply human story
of love, determination, and overcoming adversity, which, despite its extreme
nature, resonates with the challenges everyday life.
This presentation lends itself to the themes of Achieving Goals, Commitment and Determination, Building Resilience, Overcoming Adversity, Teamwork, and Leadership Begins with You.
SURVIVING AVALANCHES AND OTHER SETBACKS IN LIFE AND BUSINESS
On a big mountain you can lose your life by taking one false step on a
steep icy slope. You can be swallowed by a hidden crevasse, disappear in a
blizzard, or die from exhaustion. Without knowing it, you can begin to die from
extreme High Altitude Sickness or hypothermia. Fear highlights the biggest
risks, but fear can also lead to panic and its deadly result. When you are
faced with great threats in either business or on a mountain, the best asset
you can have is a clear mind so that plans can be made and appropriate actions
taken. In this presentation Lincoln explains the inter connectivity of risks
and where your focus should lie. Clarity of mind is the beginning of survival.
This presentation lends itself to the themes of Managing Change, Overcoming Adversity, Strategic Planning, Teamwork, and Leadership.
BREAKING BARRIERS
The psychological barriers were extreme when five Australians, Lincoln
among them, pioneered a new route on Mount Everest without oxygen equipment.
The barriers were no less extreme during his expedition to Mount Minto. A month
of sailing to Antarctica, weeks of skiing inland to the mountain, and a month
of sailing homewards in a disintegrating yacht, led to a paradigm shift
revealing what a few mountaineers could achieve with their own resources in the
world's coldest place. But the greatest psychological barriers Lincoln has
faced were high on Everest in 2006, when he pushed through hallucinations to
fight a solitary battle to survive a night in the open in without oxygen.
Lincoln maintains that with the right skills and knowledge and an open mind you
can make the impossible possible.
This presentation lends itself to the themes of The Power of Commitment, Setting and Achieving goals, Teamwork, and Leadership Begins with You.
Chelsea Handler
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