Devastated Bear Grylls ‘taken to his knees’ by tragic family loss

Devastated Bear Grylls ‘taken to his knees’ by tragic family loss

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Adventurer Bear Grylls has revealed how his TV success has come after more tragedies than tragedy, including a terrible parachuting accident and a heartbreaking family loss.

Bear Grylls, a former SAS trooper, believes that the outdoor life is more than just a little fresh air. He claims that having a sense of connection with nature is essential for his mental well-being, and that stress-relieving activities like wild swimming or lying in some grass are the best way to combat it.

Bear adds that his strong religious convictions have also helped him through difficult times, such as the heartbreaking time when his father, Sir Michael Grylls, passed away from a heart attack at a comparatively young age of 66.

Bear claims that this was his biggest experience of grief: “I felt horribly underprepared and struggling,” he told the i Paper. She recently married my wife, and she also lost her father ten weeks earlier. I felt a lot out of control and uncertain about my future and life at the time. To be honest, it brought me to my knees.

However, he goes on to say that, in his opinion, all the good things in life can be found in adversity: “All the good things in life are on the other side of fear, failures, doubt, and pain.”

Even his tough defeat led to his joining the SAS. He admits, “I failed SAS Selection the first time.” “That is not known by people. They simply take notice of the headline.

Bear recalled that “120 of us gathered on day one.” They said there would be four of you at the conclusion of this. I was about to finish. I was insufficiently fit. sufficient strength. a smart enough man. “Good enough”

However, the 51-year-old adventurer, who was born Edward Michael Grylls, made a second attempt by serving in the Territorial Army with 21 SAS from 1994 to 1997 as a trooper. His time with the SAS came to an end in a terrible free-fall parachuting accident.

His parachute failed to detach properly during a skydive over Zambia. He later told the Daily Mail, “I should have lowered the main parachute and stayed in the reserve, but I figured there was more time to fix the problem.”

One of the highest falls ever recorded without a functioning parachute was 16, 000 feet. His spinal cord was miraculously intact despite fracturing three vertebrae while he was seriously injured.

Bear claimed that the doctor had told him that I was a miracle. I was about to have my spinal cord severed. They decided I could avoid having surgery because of my age and fitness.

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He still had a long way to go. He spent the following year undergoing physiotherapy, swimming, and ultrasound therapy for ten hours per day.

Bear was determined to return to his active lifestyle despite still experiencing “twinges and pains” in his back to this day. He would climb Mount Everest about 18 months after the accident, becoming the youngest British citizen to do so.

Source: Mirror

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