About the Author
Art Berg is the president of Invictus Communication, Inc., and founder of eSpeakers.com.
He has been named the Young Entrepreneur of the Year by the Small Business
Administration, as well as one of Success magazine's Great Comebacks
of the Year. At the age of thirty-eight, he was inducted into the Speaker
Hall of Fame of the four-thousand-member National Speakers Association and
elected its president. With numberous professional awards to his credit,
Berg was awarded a Super Bowl ring by the 2000 World Champion Baltimore Ravens.
He lives in Utah with his wife, Dallas, and their two children.
About the Book
On December 26,1983, Art Berg was on his way to see his fiancée
when his car went off the road. A broken neck left him a quadriplegic.
Doctors immediately began to impose limits on his life: He would not
walk, hold a job, or have children. Those doctors never could have
guessed that the man lying before them was determined to prevail,
and would, in fact, one day wear his own Super Bowl ring. In The
Impossible Just Takes a Little Longer, Berg recounts his harrowing
and inspirational story while imparting larger lessons about life,
fear, and passion.
Doctors insisted that Berg would need an electric wheelchair, as a manually
operated one would be too taxing for his withered arms. But he knew they
were wrong. Ultimately, in his hand-powered wheelchair, Berg set a world
record in an ultramarathon. And less than a decade after his accident,
he had established a thriving career as a motivational speaker, giving
more than 150 speeches around the country each year.
But success did not arrive without deep struggles with discouragement,
frustration, anger, and often overwhelming uncertainty. He had to ask
himself many tough questions and teach himself to find happiness. While
Berg suffers from physical paralysis, he understands that hundreds of
thousands of people suffer from emotional paralysis: They feel beaten
down by fate, lost, and unfulfilled. Instead of knowing the exhilaration
of life's possibilities, they are paralyzed by its limitations. Through
his own inspiring journey back to a mobile, satisfying, passion filled
life, Berg has learned many important lessons that will help anyone frozen
by fear or frustration:
Courageous people are not unafraid.
The problem isn't what you can't do, it's what you won't do.
Don't let a bad day turn into a bad life.
Remember, some miracles take time.
Adversity does not lead us away from our best ambitions, but closer
to them.
The Impossible Just Takes a Little Longer is not just the story of one
man's happiness; it is a reflection on what happiness means. Art Berg
found his own success and built his own peace. In these pages, he doesn't
define what his readers' hopes should be; instead, he leads them to ways
to define those hopes for themselves.
from www.amazon.com