Episode Summary – FEEL THE ADRENALINE RUSH ON THE NORTH WALL OF DENALI, THE ALGERIAN REVOLUTION, WAR IN LIBYA AND LESSONS OF A PEACE BUILDER! In the WOW Episode 84 of the Shining Brightly Podcast Show, (links in the comments), titled QUEST – RISK, ADVENTURE AND THE SEARCH FOR MEANING. Please me a true RENAISSANCE MAN, Mr. John Graham. During his world travels from the time, he was 16 he was seeking a life of adventure with many risks and had him fighting for his life in a lifeboat in the middle of the Gulf of Alaska after a typhoon came through and sank the ship. John has perfected the art of storytelling so come along for the ride for an action-packed show. Please listen, download, share and review and check our the GIRAFFE HEROES PROJECT (link in the comments) for people to join his movement to stick your neck out to solve public problems and succeed.
Mentioned Resources –
Amazon - https://tinyurl.com/yeywn8vr
About the guest – John Graham shipped out on a freighter when he was 16, hitchhiked through the Algerian Revolution at 19 and was on the team that made the first ascent of Denali’s North Wall at 20, a climb so dangerous it’s never been repeated. He hitchhiked around the world at 22, working as a correspondent in every war he came across. A US Foreign Service Officer for 15 years, he was in the middle of the 1969 revolution in Libya and the war in Vietnam. To the young Graham, adventure was everything, and each brush with death only pushed him to up the ante—and to bury ever deeper the emotional life needed to make him whole. Then it changed, sometimes slowly, sometimes dramatically, including during one night at the height of a battle in Vietnam. At the United Nations he risked his career, crossing his own government to support peace initiatives in South Africa and Cuba. Then came the all-or-nothing bet he was forced to make, fighting for his life in a lifeboat in the middle of a typhoon when his ship caught fire and sank in the Gulf of Alaska. For the last 35 years Graham has been a leader of the Giraffe Heroes Project, a global movement inspiring people to stick their necks out to solve public problems and giving them tools to succeed (giraffe.org). As a peacebuilder, he’s helped end apartheid in South Africa, avert a major strike in Canada, save what’s left of the Everglades and find long-term environmental solutions in the Pacific Northwest. His books include Outdoor Leadership, Stick Your Neck Out–A Street-smart Guide to Creating Change in Your Community and Beyond, It's Up To Us, and a memoir, QUEST: Risk, Adventure, and the Search for Meaning.
About the Host:
Howard Brown is a best-selling author, award-winning international speaker, Silicon Valley entrepreneur, interfaith peacemaker, and a two-time stage IV cancer survivor. He is also a sought-after speaker and consultant for corporate businesses, nonprofits, congregations, and community groups. Howard has co-founded two social networks that were the first to connect religious communities around the world. He is a nationally known patient advocate and “cancer whisperer” to many families. Howard, his wife Lisa, and daughter Emily currently reside in Michigan, and his happy place is on the basketball court.
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Hello, it's Howard Brown is the Shining Brightly
Show. Oh, I've got an amazing guest today. It's incredible. If
you want to talk about that renaissance man, I've got that
man for you. John Graham. Welcome. Welcome to the show.
Welcome to shining brightly. How are you? Alright,
fine. How are you? Thank you. Thank you for thank
you for having me on.
I'm so pleased. So I have to tell you when I met
John, I mean, he's got so many stories, and we just don't have
enough time to cover them all. So we're gonna give you the
highlight reel. And then you're gonna go out and get his books,
and then you're going to contact him and you're going to support
his nonprofit because this guy is just lived a little bit,
right? At 16. John, you know, shipped out on a freighter, and
he really hasn't looked back. He's been all over the world.
He's been in apartheid South Africa. He's been to Alaska a
whole bunch of times doing some dangerous stuff we're going to
talk about. He's worked for the Foreign Service. This guy is a
cool cat, man and deli. He's still going. So we've got lots
of lots of cool stuff to share with you as well. But before I
do that, John, I always ask, tell us something maybe we don't
know about you that you don't often share. Oh,
well. I can say that I was the first person ever
to climb up the north wall of Mount McKinley, Denali claim.
It's so friggin dangerous that no one's ever done it since.
Wow, that's incredible. When did you do
that? Well,
I was a kid that I was 1963. Yeah, it's been a long
time. And it was called McKinley before. McKinley. Now it's
Denali. Now it's Denali. But it's the climate is so
dangerous. No one we were so a bunch of idiotic young kids from
a climbing club. And we didn't understand the dangers. But we
just walked right through. Unbelievable,
because I actually had the territory of Alaska for
this company called avid technology. We changed how
broadcasting was done from analogue to digital. And every
chief engineer that I ever met at a television station, had a
pilot's licence and a plane. And so because I was up in Alaska, I
got to circulate in a plane never climbed it. So I don't
know if I could that you did some crazy stuff as well. So
share with me, you know, some some background of God, you
know, as a 16 year old venturing out into the world. What was
that all about? Well,
it was a crazy thing I won't go into the whole
half hour is a complicated thing. But But I ended up
winning an essay contest when I was a kid in high school. And
the prize was a trip on a freighter to the Far East, but
then the shipping company had booked all their passenger
space. So they said, oh, we'll take you all right, because you
have to be a member of the crew. I said, Oh, that's great. My
mother, however, who was a Catholic, a very staunch
Catholic, by the way, said okay, 16 year old 17 year old John is
going on a freighter now those days no containers, right? I
mean, is this, a freighter was a big ship with a bunch of 60
really tough guys on it. And so, it took me a long time to
convince her to let me go because because she figured
that, you know, I was gonna like lose not only my virginity, but
just you know, it was a tough time. But she let me go, God
bless her. And I wonder where they're and boy, I saw a world
that was a whole lot bigger and more colourful than than white
bread, Tacoma, Washington where I grew up. Man, I got into a
first bar fight. I mean, it was just I was 16 years old doing
this. And it was like, it changed my life. All of a
sudden, there was a world out there that was big and, and huge
and exciting. And it I never looked back as you. As you said,
I never looked back in my life became one adventure after the
next from that moment on.
It's incredible. I mean, you've just got yourself
into places and experiences that you know, a 16 year old kid, you
know, sophomore, junior in high school. I mean, you're you're
still wet behind the ears. You're a young buck, you know?
Yeah,
yeah. That's yeah, I I try. I put down what
happened in my memoir. We'll talk about that later. But it
was pretty amazing. I was incredibly naive. And the seamen
were determined to teach me all the lessons they knew I would
never get in school. And they did. I will leave it at that.
You got the life lessons I got the important life
lessons and a whole bunch of Big Brother seamen that were you
know watching out for you teaching Yeah, all the good
stuff.
Yeah, they took care of me they took care of me
when we get into that bar fight. I passed out and one of them put
me on the on the shoulders and carried me back to the ship
before I got cut to pieces. So yeah, it was cool.
Let me ask you this, because I find this
interesting that that did you find these wars that you are a
chorus minder, do they find you?
Ah, I found them. I look I deliberately look for
them. Yeah. I hitchhiked around the world after I graduated from
Cal Well, I hitchhiked to In North Africa when I was a
sophomore in college, because it was the only shooting war, I
could find I was climbing mountains in Switzerland and,
and the colonial war in Algeria was still going on, and we just
ended. So I said, I gotta get down there. It's only a few 100
miles away. So I hitchhiked down through Spain, through Morocco.
And I showed up at the Algerian border and there was no border
guy because there was a friggin war going on. So I put an
American flag on my chest. Really smart move. Because if
they thought I was French, they kill me. Right? They were
fighting. Yeah. So I put this American flag on and I walked
across in the war in Algeria, because it was the most exciting
thing I'd ever done. And sure enough, I mean, people saw that
American flag and the the rebels or the commandos or whatever the
soldiers would point their guns at the driver and ordered him to
take me wherever I wanted to go. Wow. So yeah, that was my first
my first war was Algeria. And I graduated from college and I
hitchhiked around the world and I deliberately got a rare they
call it a press pass from the Boston Globe press credentials,
you know, yes, yes. And so I reported on I went to Cyprus,
where there was an active war going on. Then I went to Laos,
and went up to the Plain of Jars where the people were fighting,
and they went to Vietnam, where America's war was just starting,
you know, and it was like that. And then 10 years later, I came
back to Vietnam, but this time as an adult as part of the war,
our war in Vietnam, doing all kinds of difficult and
thoroughly dangerous stuff.
To China. We back then we are you still an action
junkie? It what was driving all this?
Oh, man, I tell you, I gotta be careful. I mean,
you know, I'm driving, I'm driving to the next town and my
gas tank is almost empty. And so I'll say to myself, you know, I
got about an 80% chance of making it to the gas station,
but 20% chance that they won't, yeah, let's do it. Let's go for
it. My wife goes crazy. She thinks I'm nuts. What are you
doing? I can't help it. I don't know. I was, it's a gene. I was
born with it. And the fact of the matter is, Howard is that.
Gosh, by the time I was 40 years old, I figured I had almost been
killed. I died a violent death real close a dozen times. And I
kept walking away from it. So what else was I supposed to
think was that I was invulnerable. So I could keep
doing all this stuff. Because, you know, I kept walking away
from it. So every time I took a risk, it was a bigger risk than
the one before. It was crazy. It all changed. And I gradually
moved myself to the side of the angels, but it took a while.
Yeah.
So I have to tell you, I one of my other guests
was a firefighter. And he said something so astute and it just
reminds me of what you're doing. He said, You know, as a
firefighter, we are taught to run towards fire, not away from
it. It's a safety. And that's the same thing with you, you are
running towards the action, you put yourself in the middle of of
bullets and bombs and real real danger. And I mean, it's just
incredible. But you're you kept on going and doing it. And what
are some of the lessons? What are the takeaways and seeing all
these war torrents and these revolutions and all that?
Yeah, that's a difficult question. Because the
lessons changed for me. In the beginning, my 20s, you know, the
lessons were there was nothing more important than adventure
and risk taking. That's what life was about. The adrenaline
rush, but it was more than you know, you probably experienced
it yourself. But you know, when you're young you think you take
more risk. You're you know, you're you're 17 at 21 years
old, you're taking it but it was different for me. For me, it
became a way of life. And then I kept walking away from stuff I
mean, both whistling by my ears via contract to kill me. I can't
walk away from it. So but the thing was, was that that was
what my life was about. Everybody else's life was like
kind of dull, but this is incredible. Well, that that did
shift that that did shift and the lesson I learned after a
battle in Vietnam. We were surrounded I was the adviser to
the city called way which some of your listeners viewers may
have heard of the Tet massacre? Yes. In Vietnam. Well, I was the
city where I was the I was an advisor to the mayor and also
had a lot to do with some pretty rough counterintelligence
operations and intelligence stuff and we were surrounded on
three sides by the North Vietnamese during what was
called the Easter offensive, this is three years before
Vietnam actually failed. North Vietnamese. I don't know if
people remember the history almost we were at it three years
earlier. And we're stopped just short. But I was in the city at
the time. And we were surrounded in all the American troops and
left as part of a peace agreement. So just a couple of
us so called civilians who are civilians, we were armed to the
teeth, and we knew how to use the weapons. But still, we were
civilians, and there were only four of us and we were and the
South Vietnamese Army had panic and refugees were screaming
through the city, it was my job to take care of 300,000
Screaming impoverished refugees and the North Vietnamese guns
were blasting away and it was a incredible situation. And then
the finally the skies cleared a little bit and American fighter
bombers from carrier jets came roaring over the city. so low
that I could practically read the name of the pilot on the
cockpit. And they finally blasted the North Vietnamese
tank just six miles short of the city. So I didn't die that time
but I damned I did. And it it was after it went so much after
that, or in the middle of all this everybody had panic right
but not me because I love it. The worst thing is get i You
want me in your foxhole man. And I was steady and I was helping
put the city back together getting people to run the police
forces and stuff but because everybody else had panic. And
and I finally realised that the problem was deserter is from
from the South Vietnamese army. Were terrorising everybody else.
So I screamed at the mayor that he had to set up a firing squad.
I remember in the middle of all his guns going off, you know,
people shouting and screaming, I put my fist on his desk, bang,
bang, bang, you got to sit up a firing squad. I didn't know if
it work or not as a deterrent to start shooting these. These
these kids and they were kids. They were farm boys drag wound
off their patties maybe the month before and shoved into the
South Vietnamese Army and then shoved into the face of a highly
professional North Vietnamese attacking columns. And they were
scared out of their wits. So a lot of them got drunk and and
they were causing a huge problem. So I set up his firing
squad. Not knowing whether it would work. And then I realised
somehow something about firing squad. I was unaware that I
never believed in. I was in a war whose aims I thought were
false even evil. I was in a war where the only because of the
adventure. And here I was ordering the deaths of farm boys
innocent foreign boy who just got drunk and panicked in a
moment of total chaos and it suddenly hit me that that's what
my life had come down to the adventure and all that wasn't
just me and evil I was now in a position of real authority with
the power of life and death. And and I was misusing it. I was
causing people to die making things worse was that there? My
rest of life gonna be like that. It was the lowest point in my
life. I mean, I just put my head down and and I actually cried. I
think I just I realised how shallow my life had become.
Living a life just her adventures not giving a you
know, what about anybody else or their concerns? Or life or death
just one more adrenaline rush after the other. It was a long
road back out. It took me a long time to crawl back out of that
hole.
It sounds like you're an amazing storyteller.
I'm so captivated listening to it. I guess we have talked but I
want to we could talk for hours on it because I'm a history buff
and you've been there. But also you've again you face death.
Again. I faced death for cancer stage four cancer twice in my
life. But I mean, I think the Alaska story of the second ship
I said you thought you're gonna die
right? Once again. Share that share that story.
Share that story with you want that story? Oh, I do. I do. I
do. Yeah. Okay. All right. Look. I'm crawling back from that
hole. That moral spiritual hole in Vietnam. Long story short, I
ended up with the United Nations and my life had changed by them.
Now I really was committed to doing good integral and in fact
I did I I'm proud to say that I helped end apartheid system of
institutionalised racism and South Africans. And I helped
achieve independence for some countries in Africa because that
was my job. I wasn't Africa policies of the United Nations
for our country. And so, you know, my life had really
changed. And it changed so much that I realised I couldn't work
for anybody anymore. Because sooner or later, there'd be some
you know, what, who would tell me to do something awful, I
wouldn't do it. So I quit. I quit at the top of my game,
really, because the State Department loved me because they
nobody could kill me. I was doing difficult, dangerous
stuff. I was really smart at it. So they I was there a fair
haired boy and I quit the top of my career naively thinking that
I would somehow save the world, I would write books, I would
give speeches, I would convince people and as soon as I opened
my mouth, all the bad guys returning the good guys, the US
and the Soviet Union would start getting along. I was pretty
naive. But I thought that I could make a real effort to do
that. I hadn't thought about money at all. And so I quickly
spent all of the the severance pay the State Department had
given me and I had a wife and two kids and so I had to get
some money. And and I have a friend came in, says, Look,
John, you've always had a good gift of gab. They pay money to
lecture on cruise ships. All you have to do is open your mouth on
the cruise ship, and they pay you absurd amounts of money. So
long story short, I, I applied, and I got a job lecturing. The
cruise ship Princeton damn in 1980, October 1980. All I had to
do was give some simple as soon as me simple lecture on foreign
policy, they didn't care. I also found out once I got on board
that ship that part of my job was to look handsome in my
tuxedo, in Walt's little old ladies around the dance floor. I
didn't realise that. So there I was on this cruise ship, and I
got to take one person with me. So I took my then 13 year old
daughter Mallory with me on the cruise ship. And we're about
three days out from Vancouver, when we were heading out into
the Pacific heading for Japan. And we were 150 miles off the
Alaska coast in the middle of the night is a warning on the
loudspeaker system. The intercom system in the state rooms, says
it's been a small fire, but fire has been put out no worries. But
you know, so I rolled over go back to sleep. 10 minutes later,
the voice comes on again, this time with a sense of real
urgency to it and it says look, yeah, we want you all to come up
to the ships lounge because there's some smoke and fires out
but we'll serve free drinks and come on up to the lounge just to
be safe. Totally disarming method. So Mallory and I grew up
there I only have a thin windbreaker and so does she and
we don't even take our life is which was really stupid. And
we're up on the ships lounge but it's full of smoke. So people
are extremely out on deck as to clear night and the Gulf of
Alaska, you know, Northern Lights and all that in the sea
was fairly common at the time. But any fool could look back
where we'd come from, and see that the smoke was getting
blacker and thicker. In other words, the fire had not been put
out. Oh, people are starting to panic, people are starting to
get really worried. We're all herded to the back of the ship,
the stern of the ship. And I know this sounds like a famous
movie, but that ships orchestra comes out. And they were playing
near my guide to the but but they started playing show tunes
from Oklahoma smoke getting blacker thicker, and that was
clearly over the size of the ship. And finally at about two
in the morning, the captain heard says we got to go to
lifeboat station. So we all go to lifeboat stations. And at
that moment, the fire burns through all of the glass windows
in the ship's lounge and dining room and the fire takes a big
gulp of oxygen and flames. Excuse me, flame sure shoot 30
feet into the air. I mean this the centre of the ship becomes a
torch and I can see these flames reflected off my daughter's
eyes. And now people are really freaking out as you might
imagine. So the captain comes out and he's in his full dress
uniform with a white silk scarf. I mean really they do this as
part of the lava sea or something I guess. And there we
are ordered to abandon ship. So by a miracle all 550 people on
that boat, except for the the captain and a few other people
who stay behind temporarily are in these lifeboats and they're
lowered. And there's no loss of life. I mean, it's a miracle but
the seas that are calm, but our lifeboat is terribly overcrowded
is only meant for 60 people Mallory counts 90 in the
lifeboat but it was good because it was cool. out there. So being
shoved together was not bad. But the problem was was that the
typhoon was coming on typhoon burnin, I think it was called.
And they warned us the night before that the typhoon was
coming. So they distributed, you know, seasick pills at dinner.
And we knew the storm was coming, but now we weren't in
some huge cruise ship. We were in little lifeboats, eight of
them, I think. And they, we began being separated from each
other. We had no power in the lifeboats and no oars, we were
just drifting. And it was the middle of a night, but we had
no, no radio, no lights, no flares, nothing. And I tried to
get the radio to work using Morse code, because I knew Morse
code. And it didn't work. So we were out there. And then at
dawn, helicopters arrived from bases, Canadian and US Air Force
and Coast Guard bases in Alaska and Canada. And they start
lifting people off the lifeboats, in metal chairs at
the end of cable. It's kind of like a county fair. There's a
ride where kids go spinning around. Yeah, yeah, like that
one of those chairs. And so they work as fast as they can, but
it's slow work one at a time. 550 people. And it became seven
o'clock, eight o'clock, nine o'clock noon, about one o'clock
I see Mallory's the last female lifted off the lifeboat tough
little bugger. And she, I was so proud of her because she never
he was as calm as I was, he was just really cool. So she gets
lifted off. And I'm left in the lifeboat with eight other guys.
The helicopters can't fly anymore, because now the typhoon
has hit his head on. And it's suicide to fly a helicopter in
those conditions. So there we were. And he was getting rougher
and rougher. And we were trying we were bathing like crazy.
seasick, his dogs dying of hypothermia. But the key thing
was the light. And remember, we have no lights and no flares, no
reflectors. And even with a bit of daylight in a storm, it's
hard enough to find us and no helicopters meant that the only
source of rescue was three, two or three Coast Guard cutters.
Small boats had arrived. And we're doing criss crossing
desperately looking for, for us the last in the storm. They
might find this by daylight, but they would never find us at
night, I figured from a mountaineering that we had seven
or eight hours to live before we were all dead from hypothermia.
But most of the end we did as soon as it was dark. As soon as
it was dark, there was no hope of finding as at least with the
light. There was some hope. So there we are to half an hour
until dark. I had a whole life of of staring death in the face,
always walked away from it. And I thought my life could run out.
I don't see any way out of this. I mean, the odds are like one in
1000. And so I said, I started talking to God, I wasn't I'm
still not a particularly religious person. But I started
talking to whatever I felt was God say, and I wasn't praying I
was mad. I said, Wait a minute. Here I am. I turned my life
around after that horrible episode in Vietnam, I helped end
apartheid. I quit the Foreign Service to devote my life to
service to making the world a better place. And now you guys
are wiping me out it makes no sense at all. It makes no
freakin sense at all to wipe me out.
And I get this message. I get this message no one else in that
boat heard anything, of course, but I did. And this voice came
booming through this wild storm. And basically say you got to get
serious. You you left all this do gooder stuff to start
lecturing on cruise ships because you panic over money.
You get out of this lecture on another cruise ship. You gotta
get serious about your ideals, whether they're real or not. And
if your ideals are not if it's just, you know, Bs and you might
as well die out here because the next 50 years won't be worth
living. But if you really commit to a life of service well we'll
see what we can do. You didn't see that but you got picked up
by a cutter Yeah, as soon as I looked up to the storms and
Okay, okay, I gave up I gave up as soon as I said that this
Coast Guard Cutter now mind you the visibility is like 100
yards. This Coast Guard Cutter comes crashing through this wild
storm or we get rescued. I mean, that's it. I know. It sounds
like a crazy story. It was It is a crazy story. But that's where
it's true. As soon as I said yes, yes. Okay, I give up. I
give up i give up and that's what my life will be this Coast
Guard Cutter comes and I never looked back. I'll say that for
myself. I never look back Back, am I
it's incredible story. And I mean, I thank you
and your daughter, you know, shared that with you and she's
everyone's okay, it's really just true strength and you turn
it around. So I'm gonna ask you to put on your sunglasses,
because we're getting down to the end of the show. 30 minutes
goes by quickly. So I want to shine the spotlight on you.
Okay, you are shining, John Graham, and I want you to tell
people how they can get a hold of you. I want you to mention
your books, and I want you to mention your nonprofit. And then
you'll share some inspiration and we'll close out the show.
Oh,
wow, I can do all that. Okay, right. You can.
There's John Graham and I invite communications. My personal web
address is John graham dot org. My, my email is Graham at
giraffe giraffe.org. That's because I direct nonprofit
called the giraffe heroes project, which is all about
finding people who are sticking their necks out and telling
their stories and the giraffe website. I urge you to get on it
because it's amazing. The stuff that we do is draft.org draft
that work. So it's giraffe.org John graham.org. The book, my
last book I've written five now is quest. Risk adventure in the
search for meaning and it's kind of like the story of my life
going down as far down as it can go and then coming back the
other side. And I'm I'm friggin 81 years old and still going
strong. And there we are. And as to leaving words of wisdom,
Well, hell, I've been long since that, that wisdom is a difficult
commodity. And I'm always slow to give it but I'll tell you
this. The most important thing that any of us can do is the
search for meaning personal meaning in our lives. Some
people find meaning as I did in adventure that didn't go very
far. Some people find meaning in money, some people find meaning
in power. But the real source of meaning the real source of
meaning that really work that sticks with you that makes your
life work is service. Find a way to serve, can be anything could
be something in your local town, it could be cleaning up a local
river, it could be fighting climate change could be
combating violence against women could be anything, but find a
way to serve. Find a way so that your own heart sings from the
meaning of being of service. And that's what makes a life complete.
Wow. That's beautiful. That's that's what my
show is about. That's what my life is about. So I appreciate
that. You've been listening or watching to the shining brightly
show, you can reach me at shining brightly.com And you can
find a lot about my book, my memoir and a couple other books
I've been working on and published. Also, hire me to
speak at your event. I'm a great motivational speaker and
facilitator. Let me bring some some sunshine to your event. And
also this podcast is there but my advocacy, my work in
mentorship and leadership and entrepreneurship, cancer and
cancer screening cancer treatments. And as well as
interfaith work of knowing people that are not like you and
choosing to be kind and grateful and and healing and not choosing
hate. So this has been a great show, John, you are incredible.
I will have all your information in the show notes and on social
media, people will reach out to you and just keep keep living.
And just I keep telling stories and Keep being you and the
adrenaline rush was one thing but you've learned a lot. You've
lived a lot and I'm just so glad to know you and thank you for
being here.
Thank you for inviting me