
Subscribe to our Blog by RSS or Email
Max Burt and his 714 mile marathon
by Mark Borland
When Max Burt, 45, received massive head injuries after a freak collision with an out-of-control fire engine 10 years ago, he was left paralysed on his left side and a permanent wheelchair user. The head injury also left him deaf in one ear, with uncontrollable tremors, and severe sight and speech impairments.
Since his accident, Max has learned that, to achieve full inclusion of disabled people in society, 2 barriers need to be overcome: firstly, physical, and secondly, the barriers in peoples’ minds. This has led Max to become involved with many disability-related organisations, in an attempt to overcome real obstacles and prejudices.
Max’s fitness regime (using a reclining exercise cycle) led him to the idea of the Everything Is Possible In Life Cycle – a 714 mile-long campaign, riding a recumbent trike, from Aberdeen to London. He has been training since 2002 – most recently near his London home, on a specially adapted 3-wheeler to get used to cycling with traffic.
Max sees this as an opportunity to change how disabled people are perceived, and to begin to shift the attitudinal obstacles that he comes across daily, by communicating his positive can-do message to the public. So, he will be encouraging the public to ride a leg of the journey with him to demonstrate perception-changing in action.
Max Burt says “People with disabilities are usually perceived as having the common experience of being ‘less able’. This is perhaps the only reason why such diverse people are lumped together into one group called ’the disabled’. After all, what does a blind person have in common with a wheelchair user?
I hope that my journey, as well as highlighting the positive common experience that disabled people share in overcoming obstacles, will also celebrate the often ingenious abilities that disabled people have, and demonstrate that everything is possible. Now, I want to get this message across to as many people along my route as I can”.


