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It’s been almost a decade since Shekar Goud lost a part of his left leg, the toes on his right foot and his right hand in an accident. But seeing the 26-year-old para-athlete in action, you understand why he says that disability is not really a weakness.
Shekar is right now 11 days into The Atlanta Foundation-sponsored Republic Ride 2017. In those 11 days, he has covered 900km, cycling the distance from Leh to Delhi.
“The cold winds of Leh and Ladakh almost froze me,” says the Nalgonda native. But he’s determined not to let small things like tough weather conditions keep him from completing his ambitious cross-country cycle trip from Leh and Ladakh to Kanyakumari.
Back in 2006, Shekar was working in a rice mill and pursuing a certificate course in Electrical trade from Nalgonda ITI. One evening, he was talking to a friend on the phone while sitting on the compound wall of the rented house he lived in, when suddenly tragedy struck.
Shekar doesn’t remember anything else until waking up nine hours later, surrounded by dead bodies in a mortuary.
Starving and struggling to understand what had happened, he dragged himself out of the mortuary, much to the shock of the government hospital staff, since he had been declared dead.
Although he lived, the electrocution had taken a terrible toll on his body.
As things stood, however, his left leg had to be amputated below the knee, as was his right hand and the toes on his right foot.
The entire treatment cost nearly Rs 12 lakh, forcing his family to sell their farm land for funds.
While many might have given up after such tragic losses, Shekar was determined not to let them stop him from living life fully. “Disability can be a strength rather than weakness,” he says, his voice full of determination.
But Shekar didn’t just stop there. To rebuild his confidence, he also took actively to sport, starting off with running the Airtel Hyderabad Marathon with a Jaipur foot. Following this, the Dakshin Rehabilitation Centre in Hyderabad sponsored prosthetics for him, including a running blade.
Since then there’s been no looking back for Shekar, who has completed 11 marathons as well as attempted a 200-km brevet cycling event (a timed long-distance cycling event), completing 169 km in 16 hours.
Shekar, who kicked off his Republic Ride on 25 October by riding from Leh to Khardungla in -2 degrees Celsius temperatures at an altitude of 18,000 feet, says that the rough mountains are a perfect metaphor for the ups and downs in his life and the challenges he has had to overcome.
His cross-country trip, he adds, is an effort to promote the cause of equality for persons with disability.
While he’s currently focused on completing his cycling journey, Shekar is also planning for a more serious foray into badminton, and perhaps even representing India in the sport.
Shekar plans to kick off his badminton training soon after he completes his cross-country journey early in December.
Together with TAF, Shekar is currently running a campaign on Milaap.org to raise funds for his Republic Ride. The campaign can be accessed here.
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