from the Minneapolis
Star Tribune,
November 9, 1997:
Trainer-Inspirational
Speaker
Becomes an Inspiration to All
St. Paul businessman
Rob Chalmers turned
his disabilities into success by using magic
By Dick Youngblood
Columnist
A friend of mine, cursed with a heartbreaking
array of birth defects, has endured the pain and frustration of 13 major
surgeries to repair the deformities.
Even after all the operations, however,
his handwriting still resembles hieroglyphics and his walk remains an
ungainly waddle mainly governed by one hip that tends to resist going
in the same direction as the rest of his body. Despite the physical
problems and the pain that attends them, however, the gent has reach
the top of his profession while remaining one of the most disgustingly
cheerful people on the planet.
"I had a choice of whether to laugh
or cry," he once told me. "I chose to laugh."
I thought it was just him, but maybe
there's something about profound disabilities that steels the psyche
and burnishes the spirit. I offer Rob Chalmers, a buoyant and engaging
St. Paul businessman, to support this theory.
Consider: Chalmers, 47, was born with
cerebral palsy that has left him with speech impediments and muscle
rigidity and spasticity.
So how does he earn his keep? Why,
as an inspirational speaker and professional magician, of course.
It's enough to make a fellow downright
mortified ever to have whined about the petty throbs and twinges of
the aging process.
Chalmers is founder, president and
100 percent of the staff of a training and consulting firm called People
Magic. Specifically, he targets the corporate and professional market
with training programs on diversity, using his magic to make the point
that judging people by their looks can be just as deceiving as the tricks
he's performing.
He also has found work in sales training,
using a similar approach to argue that making hasty judgments about
people can limit one's markets severely. And when business is slow,
he can make bottles and cans by the armful appear and disappear, all
in the interest of promoting recycling and conservation.
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"He's a great role model," said Joan
Fawcett, executive director of Arc Suburban, a support and advocacy
group for people with developmental disabilities. "When he starts his
presentation, you're very aware of his disabilities. But it doesn't
take long before you forget all about them," said Fawcett, who was on
the planning committee that hired Chalmers to perform in April for a
meeting of the United Way Council of Agency Executives.
"In the end you realize that his message
is about what people can do, not what they can't do," she said. "It's
truly inspiring."
Gerry Stenson, president of Norwest
Corporation's 12-bank south suburban district, had a similar reaction
to Chalmers' appearance on a diversity training program for the district's
225 employees. "Rob might speak a little differently than most people,
but he communicates very, very well," Stenson said. "He's disarming,
straightforward and entertaining, and his message is very effective."
Chalmers, who owns a degree in psychology from Macalester, has fairly
simple aims for his presentations: "The idea is to get people to look
at themselves and others," he said - and to rethink what it means to
be old or young, black or white, male or female, able or disabled.
In the end, the message is best conveyed
by a colored scarf labeled "people," which he extracts from an apparently
empty Plexiglass box to signify that, while we might tend to put people
in different boxes, "we all come out of the same box."
The way I figure it, People Magic exists
today because Chalmers was taking judo lessons ("to toughen my mental
and physical conditioning") back in 1980, when he was nearing the end
of a five-year stint as an aide to St. Paul Mayor George Latimer. Chalmers,
whose job involved coordinating compliance with the Federal Rehabilitation
Act, was invited to deliver the keynote address at a conference for
organizers of arts programs for disabled people.
He was not exactly enchanted with the
prospect: "Just giving a speech didn't sound particularly entertaining,"
he recalled. But then he remembered that his judo trainer also was a
semi-professional magician and asked to be taught a trick or two to
help brighten up the presentation.
The result was a trick involving transforming
red and blue scarves into green and yellow ones to emphasize the message
that, just like the scarves, "people are not always what they seem to
be when you label them on [the basis of] outward appearances."
As speaking invitations added up, he
began adding tricks to his repertoire and in 1982 he decided to try
making a living at his diversity training and consulting business.
He has not gotten rich in the ensuing
years. Indeed, People Magic's revenues will not crack six figures this
year. But there's been enough business for 15 years now to chase the
wolf from the door of the two-bedroom home he owns on St. Paul's East
Side.
He also was successful enough to be
named in September as winner of the Courage Center's Judd Jacobson Memorial
Award, a prize for entrepreneurship named after George Q. (Judd) Jacobsen,
a quadriplegic who was a radio broadcaster and cofounder of three travel
agencies during his 38-year career.
Star Tribune
November 9, 1997
www.startribune.com
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