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John Goddard's
Life List
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At the age of 15, John Goddard wrote down 127
goals on his "Life List" of all the things he wanted to experience. |
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"Don't let fear control your
life. I've known too many people over the years who have made the fear of
failing an excuse for living a limited life and the result is that they
regret that they haven't done more, that they haven't really lived."
John Goddard |
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By focusing on his adventure
goals, he ultimately brought that list to life-circling the earth many
times, exploring it from top to bottom, climbing its highest peaks,
fathoming the oceans' depths and just about every place in between. John
has traveled in excess of one million miles, visited 120 countries,
studied 260 primitive cultures, climbed 12 of the world's highest peaks,
conducted 14 major expeditions into remote regions, and traversed 15 of
the world's most treacherous rivers.
He also had goals for learning
lots of things--including reading the Bible from cover to cover, studying
languages, becoming a proficient at surfing, fencing, and other sports,
piloting a plane, composing music, reading the entire works of
Shakespeare, and for a real learning experience-milking a poisonous snake.
With that one, he got milk all right and got bit. This was obviously one
of those many spine-chilling adventures he encountered as a voracious
goal-getter and intrepid explorer of life.
John didn't want his life to
be just one of chance. He thought about what he wanted to experience very
early in his life and wrote them down as goals. These became his compass
for an adventure-filled life that guided him in creating his extraordinary
destiny. His legacy is living proof of the power of goal-setting and
taking action in order to achieve your heart's desire.` |
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Goddard has been
bitten by a rattlesnake, charged by an elephant, and trapped in quicksand.
He has crashed in planes, been caught in earthquakes, and almost drowned
twice while running rapids. But his overwhelming desire to discover fresh
knowledge and to complete his youthful list of goals has driven him on in
spite of the danger. |
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John Goddard's teenage list of life goals
(This symbol * means the goal has been achieved)
The List
EXPLORE:
1. * Nile River
2. * Amazon River
3. * Congo River
4. * Colorado River
5. Yangtze River, China
6. Niger River
7. Orinoco River, Venezuela
8. * Rio Coco, Nicaragua
STUDY PRIMITIVE CULTURES IN:
9. * The Congo
10. * New Guinea
11. * Brazil
12. * Borneo
13. * The Sudan (nearly buried alive in a sandstorm)
14. * Australia
15. * Kenya
16. * The Philippines
17. * Tanganyika (Now Tanzania)
18. * Ethiopia
19. * Nigeria
20. * Alaska
CLIMB:
21. Mt. Everest
22. Mt. Aconcagua, Argentina
23. Mt. McKinley
24. * Mt. Hauscaran, Peru
25. * Mt. Kilimanjaro
26. * Mt. Ararat, Turkey
27. * Mt. Kenya
28. Mt. Cook, New Zealand
29. * Mt. Popocatepetl, Mexico
30. * The Matterhorn
31. * Mt. Rainier
32. * Mt. Fuji
33. * Mt. Vesuvius
34. * Mt. Bromo, Java
35. * Grand Tetons
36. * Mt. Baldy, California
37.Carry out careers in medicine and exploration (studied premed, treats
illnesses among primitive tribes)
38. Visit every country in the world (30 to go)
39. * Study Navaho and Hopi Indians
40. * Learn to fly a plane
41. * Ride horse in Rose Parade
PHOTOGRAPH:
42. * Iguacu Falls, Brazil
43. * Victoria Falls, Rhodesia (Chased by a warthog in the process)
44. * Sutherland Falls, New Zealand
45. * Yosemite Falls
46. * Niagara Falls
47. * Retrace travels of Marco Polo and Alexander the Great
EXPLORE UNDERWATER:
48. * Coral reefs of Florida
49. * Great Barrier Reef, Australia (photographed a 300-pound clam)
50. * Red Sea
51. * Fiji Islands
52. * The Bahamas
53. * Explore Okefenokee Swamp and the Everglades
VISIT:
54. North and South Poles
55. * Great Wall of China
56. * Panama and Suez Canals
57. * Easter Island
58. * The Galapagos Islands
59. * Vatican City (saw the Pope)
60. * The Taj Mahal
61. * The Eiffel Tower
62. * The Blue Grotto
63. * The Tower of London
64. * The Leaning Tower of Pisa
65. * The Sacred Well of Chichen-Itza, Mexico
66. * Climb Ayers Rock in Australia
67. Follow River Jordan from Sea of Galilee to Dead Sea
SWIM IN:
68. * Lake Victoria
69. * Lake Superior
70. * Lake Tanganyika
71. * Lake Titicaca, S. America
72. * Lake Nicaragua
ACCOMPLISH:
73. * Become an Eagle Scout
74. * Dive in a submarine
75. * Land on and take of from an aircraft carrier
76. * Fly in a blimp, balloon and glider
77. * Ride an elephant, camel, ostrich and bronco
78. * Skin dive to 40 feet and hold breath two and a half minutes underwater.
79. * Catch a ten-pound lobster and a ten-inch abalone
80. * Play flute and violin
81. * Type 50 words a minute
82. * Make a parachute jump
83. * Learn water and snow skiing
84. * Go on a church mission
85. * Follow the John Muir trail
86. * Study native medicines and bring back useful ones
87. * Bag camera trophies of elephant, lion, rhino, cheetah, cape buffalo and
whale
88. * Learn to fence
89. * Learn jujitsu
90. * Teach a college course
91. * Watch a cremation ceremony in Bali
92. * Explore depths of the sea
93. Appear in a Tarzan movie (he now considers this an irrelevant boyhood
dream)
94. Own a horse, chimpanzee, cheetah, ocelot, and coyote (yet to own a chimp or
cheetah)
95. Become a ham radio operator
96. * Build own telescope
97. * Write a book (On Nile trip)
98. * Publish an article in National Geographic Magazine
99. * High jump five feet
100. * Broad jump 15 feet
101. * Run mile in five minutes
102. * Weigh 175 pounds stripped (still does)
103. * Perform 200 sit-ups and 20 pull-ups
104. * Learn French, Spanish and Arabic
105. Study dragon lizards on Komodo Island (Boat broke down within 20 miles of
island)
106. * Visit birthplace of Grandfather Sorenson in Denmark
107. * Visit birthplace of Grandfather Goddard in England
108 * Ship aboard a freighter as a seaman
109. Read the entire Encyclopedia Britannica (Has read extensive parts in each
volume)
110. * Read the Bible from cover to cover
111.* Read the works of Shakespeare, Plato, Aristotle, Dickens, Thoreau,
Rousseau, Conrad, Hemingway, Twain, Burroughs, Talmage, Tolstoi, Longfellow,
Keats, Poe, Bacon, Whittier, and Emerson (not every work of each)
112.* Become familiar with the compositions of Bach, Beethoven, Debussy, Ibert,
Mendelssohn, Lalo, Liszt, Rimski-Korsakov, Respighi, Rachmaninoff, Paganini,
Stravinsky, Toch, Tschaikosvsky, Verdi
113.* Become proficient in the use of a plane, motorcycle, tractor, surfboard,
rifle, pistol, canoe, microscope, football, basketball, bow and arrow, lariat
and boomerang
114. * Compose music
115. * Play Clair de Lune on the piano
116. * Watch fire-walking ceremony (In Bali and Surinam)
117. * Milk a poisonous snake (bitten by diamondback during photo session)
118. * Light a match with .22 rifle
119. * Visit a movie studio
120. * Climb Cheops' pyramid
121. * Become a member of the Explorer's Club and the Adventure's Club
122. * Learn to play polo
123. * Travel through the Grand Canyon on foot and by boat
124. * Circumnavigate the globe (four times)
125. Visit the moon ("Someday, if God wills")
126. * Marry and have children (has five children)
127. * Live to see the 21st century
References
How would you like to climb the highest
mountain, fly at the speed of sound, explore the ocean in a submarine, run a
five minute mile, parachute from a plane, read the encyclopedia cover to cover,
or play classical music on the piano?
These are some of the dreams John Goddard had as a child, and at age 15 he
included these on a list -- 127 things he would like to do or see or experience
during his lifetime. Today, John is 74, and he has completed 109 of his goals.
John is one of the world's famous adventurers and a world-class motivational
speaker. Articles about him appear in Life, National Geographic Magazine,
Reader's Digest, and the book Chicken Soup for the Soul. He has shared
these amazing stories with students of all ages all over the world. Here are
some of his accomplishments:
He climbed the Matterhorn during a blizzard that was so bad, not even the
professional climbers would go along.
He retraced the route of Marco Polo through all of the Middle East, Asia and
China.
He rode in the Rose Parade, visited the Great Wall of China, the Okefenokee
Swamp in Georgia, and the everglades of Florida.
He was the first man to explore the whole length of the world's longest river,
the Nile. Two other men went with him on this 4,200-mile, 10-month trek (John
says he had yet one more traveling companion -- he contracted a tape worm that
he named Rodney). And what kind of boat do you suppose they used for the trip?
Each man paddled his own little kayak! He also boated down the Amazon, Congo and
others.
He was charged by hippos, crocodiles, a furious wart hog, and bloodsucking
leeches in the Congo.
He survived plane crashes, earthquakes, three rounds with quicksand, almost
drowned twice, and had an appendicitis attack 200 miles from the nearest health
care facility. He has faced death 38 times.
He was bitten by a diamondback rattlesnake and lived!
He became the youngest ever admitted to the Adventurers' Club of Los Angeles,
and is a member of the Royal Geographic Society of England, The French
Explorers' Club, the Mach II Club, and others.
He has lived with 260 different tribal groups. John says these tribes range
"from the head hunters of New Guinea, to the pygmies of Central Africa, to the
hippies of Tempe ...."
He has climbed Ararat, Kilimanjaro, Fiji, Rainier, Matterhorn, and the Grand
Tetons.
He has been to 120 countries, learned to fly a plane, explored underwater the
reefs of Florida, the Great Barrier Reef in Australia, the Red Sea, and more.
He has flown 47 different types of aircraft, and set several civilian air-speed
records including one at 1,500 miles an hour. He flew an F-106 to an altitude of
63,000 feet, making him the only civilian to pilot an aircraft that high, a
record which he still holds.
John was asked which adventure brought him the most pleasure and excitement.
"Oh, that's easy," John says. "It has to be my family -- my wife and five
children."
Are there 127 adventures you would like to achieve in your lifetime?
Biography of John Goddard
"To dare is to do ... to fear is
to fail."
This philosophy has characterized
John Goddard since he was 15, when he listed 127 challenging lifetime
goals--like exploring the Nile, climbing Mt. Everest, running a five-minute mile
and playing Clair de Lune on the piano.
Now, a generation later, he has
accomplished 109 of these quests, and has logged an impressive list of records
in achieving them. He was the first man in history to explore the entire length
of the world's longest river, the Nile, in a 4,160 mile expedition which the Los
Angeles Times called "the most amazing adventure of this generation." He then
matched that achievement and became the first man ever to explore the entire
length of the Congo; he scaled the Matterhorn in a raging blizzard after several
professional guides had refused to go along, and he has established numerous
records as a civilian jet pilot, including a speed record of 1,500 mph in the
F-111 Fighter-Bomber, and an altitude record of 63,000 feet n the F-106 Delta
Dart.
A graduate of the University of
Southern California where he majored in anthropology and psychology, Goddard has
studied obscure cultures in all parts of the globe. In addition, he has climbed
12 of the world's highest mountains, conducted 14 major expeditions into remote
regions, traversed 15 of the worlds most treacherous rivers, visited 120
countries, studied 260 primitive tribes, and traveled in excess of one million
miles during his adventurous life.
A resident of La Canada,
California, where he lives with his wife and two of his five children, Goddard
does not believe in pursuing adventure for the sake of frivolous thrills, but
used these experiences to achieve a worthwhile end. This end, for him, is
scientific exploration, adding to the world's store of knowledge. "Digging out
the facts is the real challenge," Goddard says in summing up his career. "The
adventure is exciting and enjoyable--but secondary."
Yet digging out the facts can be a
hazardous occupation. Goddard has been bitten by a rattlesnake, charged by an
elephant, and trapped in quicksand. He has crashed in planes, been caught in
earthquakes, and almost drowned twice while running rapids. But his overwhelming
desire to discover fresh knowledge and to complete his youthful list of goals
has driven him on in spite of the danger.
Honored by the U.S. Junior Chamber
of Commerce as one of California's outstanding young men, Goddard belongs to the
Adventurers' Club of Los Angeles (youngest member ever admitted), the
Adventurer's Club of Chicago, the Explorers' Club of New York, the Savage Club
of London, the Royal Geographic Society, the French Explorers' Society (only
American member), the Archaeological Society, the Mach II club, the Sigma Chi
Fraternity, of which he is a life member.
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