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Nominations for the "Toughest SOB who ever lived" (1 Viewer)

matttyl

Footballguy
Been doing some reading on Hugh Glass, the man portrayed by DiCaprio in "The Revenant".  All I can say is wow.  For those who don't know his story and would eventually like to see the movie, I don't want to give anything away - but I would like to nominate him as my "Toughest SOB who ever lived."

Honorable mentions to:  Aron Ralston (who's story "127 Hours" was about), and any of the guys in the Gauss expedition of Antarctica. 

This kinda stuff fascinates me - what the human mind, body, and soul can withstand.  Who are yours?

 
Impossible to tell since 99.9% of people will never be put in a position where they are at the brink of human capabilities. 

 
Austrian mountaineers Heinrich Harrer and Peter Aufschnaiter escaped from a British prison camp in India during WWII. They crossed the Himalayas and the western highlands of Tibet on foot to make it to the Tibetan capital of Lhasa.

 
Austrian mountaineers Heinrich Harrer and Peter Aufschnaiter escaped from a British prison camp in India during WWII. They crossed the Himalayas and the western highlands of Tibet on foot to make it to the Tibetan capital of Lhasa.
And both were pretty healthy when they did.  That's what I give "extra credit" to in my 3 above.

 
How about the dude who was in the Olympics and a POW and they made that movie about? He seems pretty tough.

 
How about the dude who was in the Olympics and a POW and they made that movie about? He seems pretty tough.
Unbroken, about Louis Zamperini.  Read his biography.  Some of the best parts of his story are well after the two events you mentioned. 

 
Jack Youngblood

184 straight starts at Defensive End

Played the whole playoffs with a broken fibula in 1979, including the Pro Bowl the week after the Super Bowl.

 
Big John

Every mornin' at the mine you could see him arrive
He stood six foot six and weighed two forty five
Kinda broad at the shoulder and narrow at the hip
And everybody knew ya didn't give no lip to big John
(Big John, big John) big bad John (big John)


Nobody seemed to know where John called home
He just drifted into town and stayed all alone
He didn't say much, kinda quiet and shy
And if you spoke at all, you just said hi to Big John


Somebody said he came from New Orleans
Where he got in a fight over a Cajun Queen
And a crashin' blow from a huge right hand
Sent a Louisiana fellow to the promised land, big John
(Big John, big John) big bad John (big John)


Then came the day at the bottom of the mine
When a timber cracked and men started cryin'
Miners were prayin' and hearts beat fast
And everybody thought that they'd breathed their last, 'cept John


Through the dust and the smoke of this man-made hell
Walked a giant of a man that the miners knew well
Grabbed a saggin' timber, gave out with a groan
And like a giant oak tree he just stood there alone, big John
(Big John, big John) big bad John (big John)


And with all of his strength he gave a mighty shove
Then a miner yelled out, there's a light up above
And twenty men scrambled from a would-be grave
Now there's only one left down there to save, big John


With jacks and timbers they started back down
Then came that rumble way down in the ground
And then smoke and gas belched out of that mine
Everybody knew it was the end of the line for big John
(Big John, big John) big bad John (big John)


Now they never reopened that worthless pit
They just placed a marble stand in front of it
These few words are written on that stand
At the bottom of this mine lies a big, big man, big John
(Big John, big John) big bad John (big John)


 
Jack Youngblood

184 straight starts at Defensive End

Played the whole playoffs with a broken fibula in 1979, including the Pro Bowl the week after the Super Bowl.
There is nothing a man can do in a football game that makes him tough enough to be mentioned here.

 
Louie Zamperini, of which "Unbroken" is about.  If you only saw the movie and didn't read the book, you won't necessarily agree...

 
Louie Zamperini, of which "Unbroken" is about.  If you only saw the movie and didn't read the book, you won't necessarily agree...
Mentioned above, and I agree - needs to be on any list.  Also agree that the book was fantastic.

That's more of why I started this thread.  Guys who's stories are nearly beyond comprehension of what they went through.  Zamp's story is like that.  So is Glass' (attacked by bear and ended up finding maggots to eat away the dead/gangrene flesh), and Ralston's (who lets be serious, the guy cut off his own arm to free himself).  Also read about some of the early expeditions to the north or south pole and what those SOBs lived through. 

 
Adrian Carton De Wiart
His better quote - "Governments may think and say as they like, but force cannot be eliminated, and it is the only real and unanswerable power. We are told that the pen is mightier than the sword, but I know which of these weapons I would choose"

 
Any concentration camp survivor, POW survivor comes to mind. 
so, McCain and Bowe Bergdahl?

Easily the toughest guy I've met: 

Travis Mills has no arms or legs. He is an American hero who served three tours in Afghanistan and lost all his limbs when a bomb exploded under him.

"How I survived, I have no idea," he said. "I was yelling at the medic, 'Get away from me,' because I thought I was done."

The retired United States Army staff sergeant spent months recuperating at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, but don't dare call him a wounded warrior.

"I'm not wounded any more," he said. "I'm just a guy living life."

Recalling comrades killed in combat, he asks: "How selfish would it be if I gave up?"

He snowboards, bikes and recently jumped out of an airplane with the U.S. Army Golden Knights parachute team.

And now, he has a new admirer in Mike Rowe, the star of "Dirty Jobs" and the upcoming CNN series "Somebody's Gotta Do It." He met Mills a few weeks ago at a conference in Washington and wrote a Facebook post about their exchange to honor him this Memorial Day. As of Monday night, the post had more than 90,000 shares on Facebook.

"He has a motto: Never give up - never quit. He has a Foundation. He's featured in a new documentary. He also has a wife and a kid, and a deeply personal commitment to help other wounded vets cope with their injuries." Rowe wrote. "But when I asked why I hadn't seen him in any of the typical commercials and PSA's for wounded veterans, his answer was stunning. He said he didn't consider himself to be wounded. 'I'm not a victim, Mike. And I refuse to be portrayed that way. Case closed.'"

Rowe ended his candid post by reflecting on the holiday meant to honor America's military fallen.

"That's called a gut-check, and I could use one from time to time. Especially on Memorial Day, when the biggest decisions I face are what to grill and which type of frosty beverage to enjoy. This year, as I resolve these and other important issues, I'll think of Travis Mills."



 

 
Any concentration camp survivor, POW survivor comes to mind. 
Tim with all due respect, I just complimented you in another thread but do you see what you did here? I get it and as a person who teaches World History(we just lost the back row) I am sympathetic. But your 1st thought wasn't POW which includes everyone, it was Holocaust survivors which is mostly made up of Jews. 

I don't want to derail the thread but I would like an opp to go back and forth over several issues where when any discussion is brought up in public places the word Anti-Semitic comes flying out of somebody's mouth. I would hope in here we could have meaningful discussion without it resorting to that type of unnecessary name calling or societal labels. 

Carry on Tim

 
Tim with all due respect, I just complimented you in another thread but do you see what you did here? I get it and as a person who teaches World History(we just lost the back row) I am sympathetic. But your 1st thought wasn't POW which includes everyone, it was Holocaust survivors which is mostly made up of Jews. 

I don't want to derail the thread but I would like an opp to go back and forth over several issues where when any discussion is brought up in public places the word Anti-Semitic comes flying out of somebody's mouth. I would hope in here we could have meaningful discussion without it resorting to that type of unnecessary name calling or societal labels. 

Carry on Tim
What's your point?  Holocaust survivors absolutely belong in the toughest group ever.

I will say my wife is #######g tough, gave birth 4 times, two without drugs, one of those by choice.  Not quite as tough as setting one's own leg but sure got my respect. 

 
What's your point?  Holocaust survivors absolutely belong in the toughest group ever.

I will say my wife is #######g tough, gave birth 4 times, two without drugs, one of those by choice.  Not quite as tough as setting one's own leg but sure got my respect. 
I think its easy to figure out what I said and the intentions, I'm not going to derail the thread. 

 

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