Gerrard James GosensOAM (born 3 February 1970) is a vision-impaired Australian Paralympic athlete, goalball player, triathlete, adventurer, chocolatier and motivational speaker.
Personal life
Gosens was born on 3 February 1970 in Melbourne, Victoria.[1] He is congenitally blind and became Australia's youngest guide dog recipient at age sixteen.[2] At the age of eleven, his family moved to Yeppoon in Queensland and he attended Yeppoon State High School.[2] He has completed a Business Management degree at Queensland University of Technology (1992–1994) and Bachelor of Journalism at the University of Queensland (1994–1996).[2] From 1994 to 2002, he was employed by the Australian Paralympic Committee. He has been Deputy CEO for Royal Blind Foundation Queensland and worked for Vision Australia.[3] In 2019, he was forced to shut down his business 'Chocolate Moments' in Brisbane due to the disruption caused by the Cross River Rail project.[4]
He married Heather in 1993 and they have two children, son Jordan and daughter Taylor.[5] Taylor was born with his congenital eyesight condition, and has just four per cent vision.[6]
Gosens encourages others with the saying "Every one of us have some sort of obstacle to overcome, instead of letting them getting in the way, we should learn to take advantage of any opportunities we come across".[7]
In 2016, Gosens took up triathlon as a result of using swimming as rehabilitation for an injured knee.[8] He is classified as a B1 paratriathlete. He has the goal of competing in paratriathlon at the 2020 Tokyo Paralympics. In 2019, Gosens was caught up in a doping scandal after his guide Stephen Thompson tested positive to EPO at the 2018 ITU World Championships, Gold Coast, Queensland. Gosens competed with Thompson two days after Thompson won the silver medal at the World Championships 35 to 39 age group race. Gosens was disqualified due to Thompson's EPO test because he was his guide.[9][10]
In 2005, his attempt to conquer Mount Everest ended when he fell down a crevasse his guide forgot to tell him about. He had reached the third camp of Mount Everest, which stands at 7,300 metres (24,000 ft) high.[12][7] He has co-piloted an ultra-light motor glider around Queensland three times. Gosens has run the 2,000 kilometres (1,200 mi) from Cairns to Brisbane five times to raise money for charity.[13]
In 2009, he became the first contestant with a visual impairment to compete on the Australian television program Dancing with the Stars, competing during the ninth season. His partner was Jessica Raffa and they were the eighth partnership eliminated. His participation raised funds for Vision Australia.[14] Gosens has raised over A$2 million worth in services and funds for the 120 000 blind people in Australia.[7]