Nuanced. - 183. Rick Hansen: Can One Person Change the World?
Episode Date: January 1, 2025Aaron Pete sits down with Rick Hansen to explore his transformative journey from a life-altering accident to becoming a global advocate for people with disabilities, the emotional challenges he overca...me, the inspiration he drew from Terry Fox, the iconic Man in Motion World Tour, and the powerful lessons of resilience, interdependence, and breaking barriers to create a more inclusive world.Send us a textThe "What's Going On?" PodcastThink casual, relatable discussions like you'd overhear in a barbershop....Listen on: Apple Podcasts SpotifySupport the shownuancedmedia.ca
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Nowhere in the definition of an athlete does it say you have to use your legs in order to be one.
There were a lot of dark years for sure before I could say I'd made that transformation.
Can you tell us about the lead-up to the Man in Motion World Tour?
It's not being afraid of failure.
If there's anything I've learned from my friend Terry Fox,
failure kills some of the greatest dreams that society ever has.
Rick, this is an honor.
Thank you so much for having us.
Would you mind briefly introducing yourself
for people who might not be acquainted?
Yeah, yeah.
I'm Rick Hanson.
I'm the founder of the Rick Hanson Foundation.
And as a youngster, I was coming home from a fishing trip
and I was in the back of a pickup truck that rolled
and broke my back and left me paralyzed.
And that meant that my whole world had changed
Having had the experience of dealing with personal barriers internally and external barriers,
I realized that I could still be a whole person and decided to move forward on my athletic career
and eventually tried to pay it forward in my Man in Motion World Tour.
And our foundation was then set up afterward to continue to chase a world without barriers for people with disability
so they could achieve their full potential.
And so as a leader, I continue to chase that ultramarathon of social change.
of social change.
I love that.
The piece that I want to hone in on a little bit more is the challenge of overcoming adversity
at the time.
We're in a time right now where depression, anxiety, people's sense of self might be struggling.
And you're such an inspiration in that way, but I'd like to humanize you perhaps a bit.
What was it like during those early days after the accident?
How did you grapple with that and start to change your perspective and look at it as becoming
a whole person and reclaiming your identity.
Yeah, you know, that's a great point.
And, you know, as a youngster, I think I had inherited all the classic, you know,
Canadian stereotypes of what it meant in society to potentially have a disability.
You know, you really look down on people who had disabilities.
You know, you really felt pity and didn't see much ability because in our world at that point,
you know, there were very few opportunities and usually it was a burden on family.
I also as a teenager, you know, I was, you know, as you're growing up, you know, you think your identity and your potency as a human is to be physically whole and able and also fiercely independent.
So those sort of, you know, the setting of that environment for a catastrophic injury that left you without the use of your legs, that was devastating.
Like, I mean, I mean, I couldn't, when I had my injury, I just couldn't imagine my life continuing, like,
what would it be, you know, everything that I stood for, you know, was now rocked.
And so this deep, dark canvas of despair was really, I mean, I had to somehow figure out how to create some borders, you know,
and a bit of texture of color and hope and possibility in a pre-information age, you know, that was a huge learning curve.
and it took a lot of struggle.
And so, yeah, there were a lot of dark years, for sure,
before I could start to emerge, you know,
in a way that I could say I'd made that transformation.
There's lots of different ways people go about doing that,
whether they've been fired from their job
or face different levels of adversity.
But what were some of the recommendations
you would make to others when you talk about reading books?
Maybe you had some positive influential people
that you were looking up to.
Maybe family members were encouraging you
to take a different perspective on this.
Yeah, I think the first thing,
is when you're in that hospital bed
and you're strapped to it and you can't move your legs
and you've been focusing on trying to wiggle your toes
every single day, almost all day,
thinking you could will yourself to recovery
and then after the days and then the weeks
and then the months went by,
which seemed like an eternity and nothing was happening,
you get to a place where you're almost ready
to give up the most powerful thing that we all have,
which is hope, you know, and for me.
me my family came in and they were there with me every day I had incredible
medical support encouraging me and and there was just something inside of me I
think there was a pivot point when I actually was dropped face down and the
hospital bed after I had been getting sick and and I and I threw up and it
was like three in the morning I called the call button and when the nurse never
showed up and I think they were on shift change.
They missed it and I sat there for hours just like looking at that and the enormity of that situation was probably probably the most dark period in my entire life and and I think that just something the next day after they gave me something for the fever and and the pain.
I just kind of ended up asking the question, okay, then what can I do?
You know, can I do something?
And the answer was, yeah, I can still move my arms.
So I asked a nurse and a physio to bring a set of rubber bands and strap them onto the side of the bed
because I was still strapped in the horizontal position, and I started exercising my arms.
And it's interesting how, you know, one baby step, one,
moment of thinking it's something I can do. All the things I couldn't do, all the pain,
all the suffering were real, but I turned to the right a little bit with some hope that maybe,
just maybe I don't know what, how, maybe it will be better. Maybe it will get better. And
interestingly, over time, then little steps continued and I started to feel better, stronger.
But that wasn't enough because I needed to hear from other role models, someone who had been there before me to come into my life and show me what was possible in this new world.
And I had an incredible role model named Stan Strong who came into my life and he made me realize that everything I saw in him was this sense of, like, his whole face, his persona was pure.
joy and wholeness.
And I said, I wanna be like him, why?
And I realized that for him, it was simply
that he refused to yield to those circumstances.
And what he did is he saw the love in life and in people.
He saw that there was still beauty in the world he was in,
even in the muck and the crap, and he still also saw purpose.
And he ended up manifesting that every day.
And that's how he became who he was.
In spite of the fact he had more of a disability than I did.
And I thought, okay, then that's the key, right?
It's not so much what happens to you.
It's what you do with it that counts.
And its attitude and mindfulness,
and I had to start continuing to start to populate
the canvas of possibilities.
And he kind of helped encourage me.
me to think and realize that nowhere in the definition of an athlete does it say you have to use
your legs in order to be one so you know it's like almost like these traps we set in our mind right
the sense of pity that came from society a stereotype disability as opposed to ability you know
now a sudden that was shifting and then my own internal everything had to be perfect
physically whole versus just the wholeness of who I was and and then secondly, you know, you look at
these views of being fiercely independent versus interdependent. And that was the other part
for me going home was trying to start to adjust to those, you know, more social realities, you know,
in the context of who I was, like accepting help. Yeah. Okay, so the other piece just on that note that I'd like to explore
a little bit further is how you go about taking in information because you mentioned society
during that period that had very kind of a clear perspective on it and maybe people think they're
doing the right thing maybe they make comments and they go oh like your world's changing you're like
they may be like pushing their perspective onto you and to not let that in but to let certain
voices that are giving that spark of information and inspiration in it's hard to figure
out who to listen to in those moments, how did you go about doing that?
Yeah, I almost, I think I stumbled into it.
You know, I don't think I had any kind of formula, but I think what I would do is I would
actually start to source back pain.
Where's the pain coming from?
And, you know, and of course, you know, the biggest pain that was coming for me was that
I didn't see hope or possibilities, and I had to learn what was possible.
And I also had views that I had to be independent or independent on my own world, but that created a trap.
And my pain wasn't comforting the fact that I couldn't use my legs.
It was that I was sitting in a pickup truck on a beautiful warm summer day, having drove my friends to a little place we love to swim.
And they went down a trail and had a great time while I sat in the truck pouting because I wouldn't accept help.
to go down that trail with them and experience that great moment and that that pain
was where where it was coming from my attitude and my view not the fact I couldn't go
swimming it was I had to accept help and I had to be okay with that and I had to
realize that everyone needs help we're all interdependent on each other and
and it's not a burden it's actually an ability to give someone a sense of meaning
and purpose because we all are human and we want to help.
We want to make a difference and to be given that opportunity is empowering.
And so the burden shifted to a sense of agency being the CEO of my world and being able to ask for help.
And that was powerful.
But then every once in a while, you know, someone would come and they would offer help and you'd get a little frustrated.
Like, you know, you're going up a steep hill and you want to get there on your own.
And just near the top, somebody comes up and offers help.
And, you know, like once in a while, you know, you say, sure, not that you need it,
but maybe you have a sense that that would give that person a little bit of a boost in their life
to be able to make a difference.
Because sometimes I like to get in front of somebody and open the door for them, right?
And that's, you know, it's just the way it is.
And so I feel that a shift came from being angry about someone imposing their pity and
or, hey, I want to help you to being comfortable.
Seeing it as a learning moment, don't give them too much, you know, like, because if you do,
they think they have to help everybody rather than watch, observe, ask, and listen,
and having that authentic relationship unfold.
and then all of a sudden it's just two people.
It's not about the disability, because we all have disabilities.
Yeah.
I've heard that said.
I forget exactly who said it,
but they talked about how trust isn't about like just assisting another person
or checking a box.
It's letting somebody into your world
and letting them make that difference
and then you start to trust them.
But a lot of the times people want that opportunity
to show you that they're going to show up in your life in a good way
and you have to give people that opportunity.
to show up in that good way.
Yeah, and it's kind of moving from the head to the heart
and to the soul, and then you start to connect
and you can build authentic bridges
based on the discovery in the relationship.
And then what has disability got to do with that, really?
Exactly.
And our human nature then is to find common values,
find common endeavor and purpose.
And as we learn and understand
to express our love and compassion and empathy,
is to be able to perhaps help remove some barriers
so someone can live the life that they actually are born
to be able to and that they aspire to.
So you go through this mental transformation
on that perspective, but to not only do that is a feat,
but to go on and to try and play it out to its most extreme end,
to try and make a difference in other people's lives,
to turn this into a movement that inspires other.
When did that further pivot come in?
the first thing I you know it wasn't like crossing and turning a switch and then
you're there you know it's it's an ongoing journey even today and so you know I
have to stay mindful because I do we all have our dark days and our challenges
and but I think that the reality is I started to realize that I was by
focusing on my own kind of purpose and journey and ability and trying to remove
barriers that that it naturally kind of radiated out and I would
have people coming to me saying like wow how did you do that you know and and maybe
I can do it in my life and like my phys ed teacher at UBC you know Dr. Bob
Highmarsh he he actually had me come and speak to the phys ed class in adapted
physical education because he wanted me to tell my story and I went wow like my
story like what's my I'm just like a student I'm lucky to be here and he gave
me a chance because he thought my voice and my experience would be helpful.
Or if I would adapt something to make my life a little easier, that other people with disabilities
would say, oh, how did you do that?
You know, even when I was racing, I was in the innovation mentality and I would adapt
the chair so that I had a molded seat to give maximum power and all of a sudden I excelled
to another level and all these folks went, wow, how did you do that?
and it radiated out.
So it wasn't at first a purpose to make a difference.
It was just doing your work and then having it radiate.
And also when you're trying to do your work,
realizing that you're lucky and grateful
because so many people were coming to me
helping to remove barriers in my life,
whether it be grants to get equipment or, you know,
Stan Strong who was a manager of our wheelchair basketball team
who then inspired me to say, if you're going to be on our team,
people like the great Eugene Reimer from Abbotsford,
who is Canada's outstanding male athlete of the year with Karen Magnuson in 72,
they were on this team, and he said, you know, if you're going to be here,
I want you to pay it forward, I want you to recruit, get other folks.
And so I ended up meeting Terry Fox and recruiting him to come to the team.
And then, you know, we needed more money.
and then he encouraged me to get involved in raising funds for the team and we were wanting to create awareness and then I was getting involved because I was in physical education and I wanted to you know kind of encourage youth to think positively about people with disabilities and so it was a kind of slow progression from the internal to the gratitude and to the recognition of how powerful that was to then the purpose and and it didn't happen overnight and and and and
And I think if your mind is open and you're thoughtful and reflecting, you start to internalize those things, especially if they're not presented to you as frameworks for living your life early and you kind of bang up against the wall, you know, and it hurts and, you know, and you make mistakes and you kind of wonder and then finally, hopefully, some lessons come and you just keep going.
I'm not a big energy guy, but when I think about like somebody who's surrounded by maybe negative influences, maybe they want to be the first.
to go to university and their family and everybody's like you can't afford that how are you
going to pay for that you're not going to be able to get there like they're all kind of discouraging
that person can you talk to me about the energy that's created when people aren't trying to be a
barrier they're trying to go like okay that's an idea what if we tied it in with this what if we did
like that's a whole movement in and of itself and you're like you're creating energy by all of
your inspiration and desire to make a positive difference like did you see that going on in
everybody, that they all had like a similar value and the direction they wanted to go?
You know, as early as I can remember, and I think part of it is, you know, I don't know,
maybe it's your family environment with, you know, my parents and my grandparents and my uncles.
And I was surrounded in the first six years in Port Albany, where I was raised, you know,
always on an adventure, you know, always, you know, even, you know, in, you know, in the local area,
whether it's out there in the garden or going down into an orchard
or down to a creek and fishing or out onto a lake
or down into the west coast on the Albany Canal
or in Bamfield.
And the adventure was always about let's go.
But the going was the being with your friends and family.
And then also the journey always faced barriers
or challenges that you had to deal with.
And so there was always that sense of optimism and I believe that it kind of was embedded in me as an adventurer.
I always, I was always, as a matter of fact, of course, that was the mentality that, you know,
how'd me as at the end of grade 10, you know, imagine and, you know, manifest this incredible dream and adventure of having me and a couple of buddies go off to the Belakula Valley to go on this great fishing adventure and little.
that I know on the way home, that that would seal my fate
for getting in the back of a pickup truck
and having the accident.
But it's just who I was.
And I think it's who I've been ever since,
as I reclaim myself.
And I believe that there is a huge difference
between positive and negative energy.
Fear, and fear is a powerful force that should be honored.
But if fear is unconciful,
uncontrolled and can overwhelm and so taking fear out of the dark and into the light you know you can
shrink fear not ignore it but you can assess it because there's really healthy fear and then there's
really you know debilitating fear the same would be for negative energy about can't impossible all the
problems all the issues there's a time for that but not in the killing of the dream before it even
nucleates and and that's in a process and there are sometimes when crazy dream
like, yeah, let's just take a jump outside this building and see if we can fly.
I don't think that's going to work.
Can you tell us about the lead-up to the Man in Motion World Tour?
What were the steps that brought you to that place?
Well, as I went back to school, my phys ed teacher, Bob Redford,
encouraged me to get back into sport.
He introduced me to the fact that Paralympic sport existed.
The connection with Stan Strong moved me into,
basketball and then eventually you know I'm one of my heroes Pete Clistro was one of the
best basketball player wheelchair basketball players in the world but he was so fit
because he was always training you know you know on the track you know building his
cardio and his speed and so I was encouraged to get involved in the track and
ultimately little that I know that that would lead me into becoming a world
champion and a Paralympic gold medalist and and being part of the Olympic
games in 84 and so representing my country internationally I became a wheelchair marathoner and
and I'd had this dream this dream crazy dream in the rehab center of this adventure of maybe you
know going and oh out of my wheelchair with some of my buddies you know on bikes and we would wheel
around the world you know and it was tourist you know kind of adventure and physically didn't think
it was possible then but a decade later now as a world champion
physically yeah I think I could do that but it was the purpose why would you do that in the middle of your athletic career and and and seeing Terry Fox do his journey across the country for cancer research you know and see the way people started to respond not as his purpose but to respond to him and others and see not disability but ability I went yeah I've been fighting this all my life you know
attitudes internally attitudes and barriers in society and my gift is in wheelchair
marathoning and this dream can become a purpose and and I decided to put it
together and and nucleated and eventually you know the most powerful thing that
happened out of all the tour was when I actually uttered it from inside my head in
my out of my mouth to to a dear friend and I I said you know I
I'm thinking about wheeling around the world.
And once it's out, you know,
and then you say, I'm going to wheel around the world,
and all of a sudden it's a commitment.
And that was the beginning.
And, you know, the Matter of Motion World Tour unfolded.
There's so many questions that you leave me with such insights.
The one piece I do want to touch on is
there's this balance you have to find with having a dream
and knowing that to some it's too crazy.
To some, they would immediately be like,
that's, stop that, that's crazy, don't think, but then there's like, it builds and it starts
to grow and you almost have to nourish it like a plant, recognizing that it doesn't, it's not
fully fledged yet, it's not there, it has work to do, how do you go about kind of growing an
idea in a good way to make sure that you have good influences kind of contributing to it?
I think you have to be open to, you know, perspective. And once you have a dream and you put it
out there, you know, and even internally in the analysis, you're naturally going to go to
what is it going to take to get there and then you're going to start thinking about all the risks and all the problems and barriers and and those are those are
things it should be honored and and identified in your plan and your framework and there is a difference between taking risks and being reckless and it in being reckless is not looking at some of those really fundamental barriers and or fears and and and determining that that's a bridge too far and
However, there's something in the obsession between that in the planning that wants to have it all buttoned down.
And the reality is, you know, is we can never button it all down.
There's always going to be uncertainty.
And at some point, we have to make a commitment to, in some ways, a perilous and uncertain future,
not knowing if those fears are going to happen or not.
and not having a clear understanding of what the pathway
or the specific outcome will be,
but it's enough that you know it's not reckless.
It might be a challenge or a risk.
And it's not being afraid of failure.
Because failure, if there's anything I've learned
from my friend Terry Fox,
failure kills some of the greatest dreams that society ever has.
And can you imagine if he decided
not to take that moment, you know, in Cape Spear and dip his artificial leg in the Atlantic Ocean
and turn westward and take that first step.
Imagine what wouldn't have happened in this world?
And even though he never completed his journey physically, look what's happened, you know,
because he had the courage to try and to take that first step.
And failure is an important understanding in this world today, especially
especially in this social media-driven world
where all you see is the perfect images,
you know, everyone puts their best face on.
It's not real.
I mean, it's a moment in reality.
But the reality is that we all fail.
And as a matter of fact,
failing is part of learning and growing
and being accountable and responsible.
And if you're not failing, you're not trying,
you're not pushing.
And if we all feel that we have to be so,
safe that we can't fail then what's going to happen in our world and and as a matter of
fact I just think that for me the lucky part of that is I knew I knew that it was going to be
a challenge and there was a good chance that I could fail but I just decided I was going
and I was going to give it my absolute best and I said to myself no regrets so that
meant every time I would come out of the road you know it would be freezing cold rain I'd
have an injury in my shoulder and and I'd be sitting in the back of the motor home with the
ice packs on and and and I'm thinking there's no way I can't get out there I'm done I'm done
and then that little commitment I made no regrets it comes back in it and it gets you and it makes you
think okay is this is this where I should be making this decision in a nice warm
motor home do I have one more stroke and I shouldn't be making a decision in here
I got to get back out there and let's just give it one more stroke and see how far
it goes and that one stroke led to another to another to another kilometer another
three four five six hours and then at the end of the day you know I was celebrating
another victory still in the hunt for my dream but that but that
wouldn't have happened if I didn't say no regrets, you know, and it, yeah, there were times
when I was really close to packing it in, but I know that I would have, I can imagine, like Terry,
if I had have succumbed to those moments and the outcome of my journey would have never
happened. And I just am so grateful that I just gave it one more stroke.
That's inspirational. Would you mind telling us about starting the
Rickenton Foundation. Yeah, when we finished our tour, like, gosh, you know, like two years,
two months, two days, 40,000 kilometers of wheeling, 34 countries, four continents, we'd created
awareness. We'd raised like far greater than we'd ever imagine, like, $26 million, you know,
to continue to remove barriers. And, and I broke through, you know, because I'd volunteer all this
time. And, you know, and I'd had a dream that I was going to get back to my athletic career.
you know, maybe go to the Olympics in Seoul, Korea, Paralympics,
and so I broke through the banner and above and behind me was the sign that said,
welcome home, Rick, and there was a little slogan there that said,
the end is just the beginning.
I went, like crazy marketer, eh?
Like, I've done.
But, you know, we had this reality that, you know, that the tour was over.
And, yeah, sure, we'd accomplished something, but against the reality of the dream.
like we were just starting.
And so we established our foundation
and the foundation decided that it needed
to continue to move forward on that dream.
And for all these years since, we've been constantly
working towards that vision.
And we're a small little organization.
We're here based in Canada, but we want to change the world.
We didn't wheel across BC or Canada or North America.
North America, it was around the world, and that was where my inspiration was forged as a
Paralympian. And the barriers that we're tackling today here in Canada, they have a chance
to be movement-based solutions that can be adopted by other people to connect the world
and ultimately make life better for people with disabilities.
The last question that I have that I wanted to touch on is it seems like we're hungry
for inspiration right now. It seems like that's an area that I see when I just,
look at Canada or the world is that we're in need of a reminder that that one
person can make a difference that that is possible and I'm wondering if you
could leave us with some advice for young people to get inspired again
disconnect from social media what would your advice be for young people I would say
for me the most important thing is what I've gathered in the years that I've
been on my journey is that there's a lot more goodness out there in
and there is bad, that we need to look for it more these days because the bad seems to come up to front and it tends to make us feel a false sense of being disillusioned. It creates anger and frustration and I would say let's look for the good. And I would say everyone can make a difference. You don't need to look for a celebrity superstar to be a role model or a hero.
It's in your family, your friends, your community,
and we all need inspiration, but there's no perfect person.
And people need to earn your respect.
And, you know, because it's not about what we say,
it's about what we do.
And ultimately, if you believe in yourself,
because every human being is sacred.
And if you have the belief that you have ability,
then follow your path.
And there's no absolute comparison
because at the end of the day your path is your path
and you can live out your values,
you can manifest whatever goals and dreams
that you think are important and you can contribute
to help make your family or your community
or your country or your world a little better.
And big, massive movements or accomplishments
accomplishments are they are actually always always the aggregation of thousands if not
millions of tiny acts of contribution as team members and so you don't have to always be a leader
you can be a team member and and really have a powerful impact and so I believe that you
know in this world today more than ever we need to be able to see that hope and of a world
It's healthy and inclusive and respectful and inclusive to everyone who happens to have difference
because in the core of it in our humanity, we're all the same.
You're absolutely an example of that.
Thank you so much for being willing to do this.
It's been an absolute honor.
Thank you.
Appreciate Aaron.
Can you tell people how they can connect with the work you're doing and follow along?
Yeah, if they want to join our movement, you know, they can look us up at rickhansen.com
and we're always looking for barrier busters, people who can, you know,
you know, get involved or people who can actually demonstrate, you know, the fact that
you can live, you know, positively with a disability and be an ambassador, and make financial
contributions or be a partner. So we really look forward to the future. It's never been
a more optimistic, brighter period and I believe my best work still in front.
I couldn't agree more. We have so much more to discuss in the future. I hope to have
you back on to discuss fish conservation and all of that work, but thank you again for today.
Yeah, thanks, Erin.
Thank you.