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Jim MacLaren  

Jim MacLaren is an actor, motivational speaker, retired professional athlete and writer.

Jim MacLaren is an actor, motivational speaker, retired professional athlete and writer. His uncanny ability to articulate his life story with humor and compassion invites others to reach for the best in themselves. Just short of forty years old, Jim lives his life pushing limitations, using challenge to deepen his capacity to live and appreciate life more fully.

At 14, Jim left home. At 21, he graduated from Yale a scholar, promising actor and 6’-5” 300-pound defensive lineman. At 22, Jim was hit by a New York City bus, thrown some 80 feet, pronounced dead on arrival at Bellevue Hospital, and his life stabilized after 18 hours of surgery. Thirteen days after waking from a coma, he began a grueling, three-month rehabilitation, after the doctors told him he’d be in a hospital bed for six months and that there was no medical reason he should be alive. In addition to the numerous internal injuries, Jim lost his left leg eight inches below the knee.

The accident prompted MacLaren to overcome what others might have accepted as insurmountable limitation. He was accepted to and graduated from the Yale School of Drama, and landed a part on the soap opera “Another World.” He started competing in running events for the pure exhilaration of it. Pushing himself to see what his body could do, Jim competed for seven years. He holds the record as the fastest amputee marathon runner and triathlete in the world. He also holds the Hawaii Ironman (2.4 miles swim, 112 mile bike ride, 26.2 mile run) record for an amputee with a time of 10 hours, 42 minutes. He often finished in the top third of able-bodied athletes. Earlier this year Jim MacLaren was inducted into the Ironman Hall of Fame.

Jim’s focus, will and courage inspired others. His story was widely covered by the media and he was invited to speak to corporations, charities and at fund-raising events in the U.S. and Europe. Then, on June 6, 1993, during the biking portion of a triathlon in Orange County, Jim MacLaren was hit by a van and thrown headfirst into a lamppost. He broke his C5 vertebra and was diagnosed quadriplegic. In the ambulance, not feeling his legs, before he knew he was paralyzed, Jim mused about competing in a wheel chair. Coming out of anesthesia from one of three surgeries in that first week, he wondered what he was supposed to learn this time.

Again, Jim MacLaren came back. Because the injury to his spinal cord was incomplete, he regained partial use of his limbs and independence. He continued motivational speaking and created a one-man-show based on his personal experiences. In constant pain and confined to a wheelchair, MacLaren faced a huge new challenge – how to integrate this loss into his life’s perspective that our greatest adversities are our greatest gifts.

Jim looked to his training as an athlete. Rather than avoiding the pain, he surrendered to it and focused inward. He used his course work at Santa Barbara’s Pacifica Graduate Institute to further his understanding of this single concept –wounds integrated bring about transformation. MacLaren's course work centers on mythology and depth psychology, and he is currently working on his Ph.D. thesis.

Drawing from a deep and rich well of experience, Jim MacLaren is also working on a memoir of his first 40 years, writes articles and poetry, and continues motivational speaking. A resident of San Diego, CA, he pursues charitable work, namely with the his own Foundation Choose Living, The Challenged Athletes Foundation and Camp Good Days and Special Times, a camp for youth facing the toughest challenges of life. He is also working on a made-for-TV movie about his life.

In, 2004, filmmakers Lisa Lax and Nancy Stern included Jim MacLaren as an integral figure in their documentary, Emmanuel’s Gift. The movie tells the story of a young disabled boy who single-handedly changed the perception of the disabled in his country of Ghana by riding a bicycle across the country. In a unique twist of fate, the bicycle was provided to Emmanuel by the CAF, the organization that was founded for Jim MacLaren after his second injury. The movie, narrated by Oprah Winfrey was released in theaters in Oct. 2005.

In August, at The 2005 ESPY Awards, Jim MacLaren and Emmanuel Ofosu Yeboah were presented the Prestigious Arthur Ashe Courage Award for embodying the toughness of spirit and never-give-up attitude that are the hallmarks of the award and its namesake. Oprah Winfrey presented the award to both gentlemen when ESPN televised the 13th annual industry-wide sports celebration. The Arthur Ashe Courage Award is presented annually to individuals whose contributions transcend sports.

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