I received my results last week for the exams I sat for my degree back in May. Although I was not very confident about how I had done, I am really pleased since I achieved two 1’s, and two 2:1’s. Neither my results this year, or my results from last year actually contribute towards my final degree grade, and therefore it all rests upon how I manage my third year. I don't return to Uni until the end of September, so I have lots of time to relax before I have to think about doing any work for it!
The puppies are now several weeks old, and are beginning to leave for their new homes. Although they all are adorable, I don't think I will be missing them too much as I think they have made it their personal mission over the past month to wake me up at five o'clock every morning. We have found nice homes for all the puppies, and I think Fudge will be the most relieved when they leave us!
My work experience in Westminster was a fantastic week, although I have to admit it really took its toll. I had to be there for 10 a.m. which meant I had to begin getting up at six o'clock every morning. The first few days I found this okay, however as the week progressed I slowly fell myself becoming more tired, to the extent that I fell asleep watching a debate in the House of Commons about the 42 day detention of terrorists. I spent the week working on projects for Mr Alistair Burt, the Conservative MP for North East Bedfordshire, and shadowing him on various tasks he undertook during the week. I was lucky enough to meet the leader of the Conservative party, David Cameron and have a brief chat with him regarding the care provided to spinal cord injury victims, and how in my opinion it could be improved. I thoroughly enjoyed my week down there, and it has really opened my eyes to the demanding job which the MPs have to do.
Last week I completed my second-year exams for my law degree, so it feels as if a real weight has been lifted off me at the moment. The past two months have been extremely busy preparing and revising for them, so it is nice not to have to think about law at the moment! My exams went okay... not as well as I would have liked, but I shall have to wait and see for my results in a couple of months.
Another really exciting piece of news is that our dog, Fudge, has given birth to five healthy, beautiful puppies. She started giving birth last Sunday morning at 5:30 a.m. and fortunately all went well. I have uploaded some photos onto the website if you want to have a look...
During the summer I have a few different work experience placements, one of which is working at the Houses of Parliament in Westminster, so I'm really looking forward to those. However, as for now I am going to try and enjoy any good weather we have, and just wind down a little bit...
The Matt King golf challenge
2.00 pm Friday 6th June 2008
You are invited to enter up to four players, to play together in this, the fourth playing of the Matt King 9 hole Texas Scramble being held at the American Golf Kingsway facility, Melbourne, near Royston in aid of the Matt King fund. It will be a shotgun start 9 hole competition for golfers of mixed and non playing abilities, followed by a BBQ.
Prizes will be awarded for the various on course activities. A separate putting competition will be held, combined with champagne shooting.
Please confirm you and your team members availability by
30th April 2008.
Teams of four will be based on previous results, handicap, playing ability and bribery. The chief handicapper will determine your teams handicap.
Entry £25 per person, including range balls, 9 hole team competition and BBQ.
Finally, I am seeking hole sponsorship and competition prizes, as well as other elements related to the day in general. Since I am obviously trying to maximise the amount raised for the fund it would be greatly appreciated.
Should you be unable to participate due to other commitments but would nonetheless wish to sponsor a prize then please contact me.
I thank you on behalf of the Matt King fund for your support and look forward to seeing you on the day!
Regards,
Chris King
Tel 01462 701187
I have finally broken up from Uni for Easter after what seems like a never ending term. I got 2:1’s in both pieces of coursework I have submitted to date which I am really pleased with, and I have one more piece of coursework to get finished during the holiday. My exams don't start until mid May, so I have a bit of time before I start revising.
In addition to my work placement with Stewart’s Solicitors during the summer, Mr Alistair Burt MP has offered me some work experience shadowing him in Westminster. Although I am not too familiar with the workings of the political structure in this country, it should be a steep but enjoyable learning curve.
For the past year I have been mentoring a young lad who has been paralysed from the chest down, in conjunction with a charitable organisation called ‘Backup’. This entailed visiting and ringing him, and generally being somebody to talk to and last weekend I travelled to Stoke Mandeville for a mentoring training course. This involved learning and practising the various aspects which make a good mentor, such as listening techniques and asking appropriate open questions etc. Although the weekend was incredibly tiring, I found it really enjoyable. It was the first time since my discharge from hospital that I had been in the presence of other spinally injured people for a concerted period of time. As much as I learnt about mentoring, the weekend also gave me an opportunity to talk through issues regarding my disability with people in a similar position to myself which I found really helpful.
It is my 21st birthday on 20th March and I'm looking forward to celebrating it with my friends and family, and perhaps partying the night away!
Since my return to Uni following the Christmas break, it has been all go and the workload has really stepped up a level. What with coursework, preparation for seminars and revision for my upcoming exams, I'm not really getting as much time as I would have liked to get out and enjoy myself! Saying that, it's not all doom and gloom...
On February 19th, I was invited to be guest of honour at Bedford Blues when they took on Exeter Chiefs at Goldington Road. For as long as I can remember, I have always loved going to watch the Blues play, and it was in August 2004 that I made my first trip out from hospital, and attended the pre-season friendly between Bedford and Harlequins (which we won!). So once again being invited back as guest of honour was quite an emotional experience as it brought back memories of that first visit back when I was still quite unwell, and it made me realise just how far I have progressed from that time, and what crazy adventures I have been lucky enough to experience.
I was recently invited to attend the Disability Resource Centre in Dunstable to have a look around at the range of products on the market nowadays for people in a position such as mine, and have a chat to a local radio station about prospects for people living with disability in today's day and age. It was a real eye-opener to say the least, and I definitely picked up a few tips which I hope to be able to use in the future.
I am really looking forward to the upcoming Six Nations rugby tournament and am hoping that England can build on their success at the World Cup. I have been fortunate enough to get tickets for England's home games, so I will be cheering them on (come rain, snow or sunshine!) and perhaps sinking a view bevvies!
Over the past few days I have been busy posting a lot of recent photos onto the website, so please check them out...
www.goforitmatt.com/modules/myalbum/viewcat.php?cid=18
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Matt
Following my completion of the New York Marathon, I was invited to attend the BBC Sports Personality of the Year Awards 2008 at Birmingham NEC at the start of December. It was a fantastic evening, being surrounded by so many great sporting achievers and idols of mine, and I thoroughly enjoyed myself. Unfortunately, I was unable to stay to the ‘knees up’ afterwards as I had to be in Uni at 9 a.m. the next day... but needs must!
Following my return from New York, I have been frantically trying to catch up on work I missed whilst I was away and endeavouring to meet my coursework deadlines. I broke up from Uni about a week before Christmas, and had a much needed break during the holidays. I was fairly lazy during the holiday, and just enjoyed having no work to do and no marathons to organise! To see in the New Year I went down to London to watch the fireworks on the River Thames. The atmosphere was fantastic down there, so despite the rain and the traffic jams on the way home meaning we didn't get in until 4 a.m, it was a good night.
I have a brand new ventilator which is making my life a lot easier. My previous ventilator was quite bulky, and had to be carried behind my wheelchair on a specially designed ventilator tray. My wheelchair is quite big as it is, and the added length of the tray made it almost impossible for me to fit into normal sized lifts, and made manoeuvring quite difficult. The new ventilator is a lot smaller, and can hang off the back of my wheelchair, decreasing its length by almost a foot. This makes small things, just like being able to fit into this easily a lot easier, and I'd like to thank the RFL Benevolent Fund for agreeing to purchase this for me.
I have no major plans for the foreseeable future. I just intend concentrating on my Uni work for a few months and perhaps arranging a birthday bash for my 21st...
Now I've finally recovered from the marathon I thought I'd drop you a line to let you know what a crazy adventure it was!
The flight out was relatively uneventful, if we choose to forget the fact that they dropped my wheelchair off the plane when trying to get it off! Not too much damage was done, and I was able to get back into it after a couple of minutes of minor adjustments (using a hammer that is!)
New York is an amazing, if not crazy place. If you think everything is done at 100 miles an hour in the UK, double it and you're getting close to the pace things are done in New York! Our hotel was about two minutes from Central Park, and only five blocks from Times Square so we really were in the thick of things!
The marathon day itself was probably one of the most tiring days I've ever experienced. We had to be on the bus to the start line at 5:30 a.m. which meant at 3:30 a.m. start getting up. Everybody was at the start line by 8 a.m., which left a three hour delay before the start of the race. Thankfully the weather was on our side meaning we didn't get too cold, although the wait was becoming tediously boring towards the end.
As I had to have two people to care for me as I went around the course (thanks must go to my mum and dad who followed on bikes), the race organisers made our team start at the very back of the main pack. The race started at 10:10 a.m., however we didn't cross the line until nearer 11 o'clock, but we were soon overtaking runners and making our way through the field. Almost immediately however I began having problems with the batteries on my wheelchair. By the time we had crossed Staten Island Bridge (the first absolutely massive Bridge) my batteries had already lost a third of their power, which not only meant that my wheelchair was slowing down, but also that they wouldn't make it to the half distance mark where a wheelchair engineer was waiting to swap the batteries for a fresh set in what was effectively a pitstop. Unfortunately, things went worse than I expected, and by the time we hit the five-mile mark, my batteries had almost given up the ghost meaning I was limited to a snail's pace.
It was at this stage that I gave up all hope of completing the course, and stopped at the side of the road pleading with the other xiiiheroes runners to leave me. Annoyingly for me at the time (as I wanted to return to the hotel) the group of people I was with turned out to be the best team you could wish for, refusing to let me stop and supporting me to eventually reach the 11 mile mark where we planned to meet the wheelchair engineer with a fresh set of batteries! In order to reach this stage of the course, Matt James (the wheelchair engineer) literally took his life in his own hands! Firstly he had to locate a ‘rickshaw’ driver and persuade them to drive both Matt and the batteries halfway across New York in record time. The driver took this mission to heart and proceeded to risk both their lives by driving across an American football pitch whilst a match was in progress, and he did the same to a junior game of baseball! Anyway, he arrived at the 11 mile mark just in time to swap the batteries over...
We completed the first half of the marathon in just under four hours. This is compared to 2 hours 58 minutes which is the time it took the team of xiiiheroes to complete both of the past years BUPA Great North Run’s, which clearly indicates the problems we had!
By the time the new batteries were fitted, our team was plum last with only the police behind us who were there to bring up the back of the pack. This was where things started to pick up though, and as soon as my wheelchair was back up to speed we were soon flying back through the pack. The second half of the marathon made up for all the troubles we suffered at the start...
The crowds were absolutely amazing, and this definitely gave the whole team a boost. Despite the fact that it was getting cold and dark, by the time we entered Central Park we had made our way back past a substantial amount of the field and were still going strong. The final miles around the park proved to be a killer, and were by far the hardest I have experienced, but as a team we managed to cross the finish line in a time of 6 hours 40 minutes.
The crossing of the finish line signalled the onset of a few more problems however. Due to the prolonged time spent out in the cold, my temperature had dropped to a dangerously low 33.2°C rendering me seriously hypothermic and in need of a warm hotel room. In addition, the batteries on my ventilator had run out giving me only minimal time to get back to the hotel and get plugged into the mains!
A massive thanks must go to Chris Hawkins and Lesley Woodruff for organising the whole event, the team of runners from xiiiheroes who were awesome: Chris Hawkins; Craig Drake; Paul O’Brien; Laura Harrison; Gina Coldrick; Helen Goldthorpe, my mum and dad for looking after me around the course, Balder UK for supplying all the background logistics involved in ensuring the wheelchair completed the distance,and last but not least the Anglo Irish bank who made the whole thing possible by donating a substantial five figure sum.
On 29th September, I competed in the BUPA Great North Run for the second year in succession.
The weekend was a long one, starting about 6:30 a.m. on the Saturday morning, and ending about 12:30 p.m. on Sunday night following the most horrendous journey back from Newcastle. On Saturday I set off from home at about 10 a.m, and made quite good time on the journey up there, arriving at the hotel at about 2:30 p.m. just in time for the start of the Wales V. Fiji Rugby Union World Cup match -- although I only saw the first 20 minutes before I fell asleep!
The rest of the day was spent meeting up with the rest of the team from ‘xiiiheroes’ who I was running the half marathon with, and I decided to turn in for an early night and some much-needed sleep at about 9 p.m.
I didn't have a great night's sleep, mainly due to nerves I think, so I started getting up at 5:30 a.m in order to be ready to leave the hotel at 8 a.m. Amazingly, I was actually ready on time which meant we got to the start line at about 8:45 a.m. The whole atmosphere surrounding the event was amazing, and although our start was delayed by an hour, I didn't mind as it meant I could mingle as best I could with some of the famous people milling around.
Luckily, the run itself went off without a hitch, and so for the second year running I avoided driving into any of the other runners and breaking their legs! Although I was aiming to beat last year's time of 2 hours 58 minutes by a considerable amount, it wasn't to be and in the end we beat it by just 10 seconds!
Despite all the training I have been putting in in preparation for the New York marathon, I wasn't able to complete the entire course without stopping for breaks. In total I had to stop twice, once because I could feel my neck beginning to cramp up, and the second just to give my neck and chin a bit of a break.
My training for New York is still in full swing, and I will be chuffed to bits if I can make it around the course with just a few breaks, but I will just have to see how I feel on the day.
Anyway, I had better get back to the copious amounts of Law reading I have to do for my seminars on Friday...

Six dedicated people will this November be part of a Rugby League team crossing the Atlantic aiming to create a little bit of history. Many people will know of the terrible injury suffered by Matt King in his first game for the London Broncos Academy back in April 2004. If however you are unfamiliar with Matt’s story, please have a look at the ‘About Matt’ page of this website.
Since then Matt has faced many challenges, and overcome them all…
In October last year XIII Heroes, a charity supporting seriously injured rugby league players made it possible for Matt to take part in the BUPA Great North Run, the world’s biggest half marathon. No one with Matt’s level of injury had ever been allowed to participate in such an event, and he created a world first when he led 13 exhausted runners over the finish line.
In an attempt to go one bigger and better, Matt and XIII Heroes have aimed at the Big Apple.
The ING New York Marathon is the biggest in the world with 40,000 runners taking part. In conjunction with the Christopher Reeve Foundation, Matt’s injury being the same as that suffered by the ‘Superman’ actor, XIII Heroes is taking Matt and a team of six runners to New York to set another world first on 4th November this year.
No doubt everyone would agree that for Matt to even consider taking on such a challenge is quite amazing.
This is a huge undertaking that has required a great deal of organisation and planning, with a significant amount of fundraising required to reach the £25,000 cost of the trip.
As main team sponsor, Anglo Irish Bank has donated a substantial five figure sum towards making sure the team gets to the start line.
If you would like to sponsor Matt, simply click here to access the donations page of the XIII Heroes website. When making a donation, please add a note saying that you are sponsoring Matt and your donation will be added to his total.
The 2007 ING New York Marathon Team
• No.16 - Matt ‘Coach’ King (Langford)
• No.1 - Chris ‘Hot Pants’ Hawkins (Oldham)
• No.2 - Craig ‘Beanzie’ Drake (Bradford)
• No.3 - Paul ‘Man In The Stand’ O’Brien (Widnes)
• No.4 - Helen ‘Yorkshire Pie’ Goldthorpe (Leeds)
• No.5 - Laura ‘Mighty Quin’ Harrison (London)
• No.6 - Gina ‘Media Chick’ Coldrick (Warrington)
A few weekends ago I began my Level 1 Rugby football Union coaching qualification. The course consisted of three days of theoretical classroom work, and assessed practical sessions out on the field. On the final day there was a written exam, and I managed to pass all three elements which means I am now a qualified coach. The course itself was really interesting and enjoyable, and it means I can now coach one of the junior sides at my local rugby club.
Last week I completed my work placement at Borneo Linnell solicitors in Milton Keynes. During my time there I was fortunate enough to get a taster of a wide range of different fields including Family Law, Criminal Law, Commercial Law, and Property Law. I spent quite a lot of time observing cases in both the County Court and Magistrates Courts which gave me a great insight into how the law functions on a practical day-to-day basis. I am hoping that the experience and knowledge I have gained will help me when I begin my second year of my degree in September.
Next year at Uni I'll be studying three core modules and one option module. The core modules consist of European Law, Family Law, and Tort. (I'm not quite sure what Tort is yet but I've been told it's quite interesting). As my option module I have chosen to take part in the Law Clinic which is run from the university. The Law Clinic offers free legal advice to members of the public, so you never know, if you have a run-in with the law I may be giving you legal advice! (under the guidance of trained lawyers and solicitors).
I have just received my results for my first year studying Law at Uni.
I am absolutely over the moon to let you know that I received first class degree honours in all the subjects I took: Criminal law, Contract law, and Constitutional and Administrative Law.
I don't start my second year until the end of September, but I'm already kind of looking forward to it (does that make me extremely sad?!).
The third annual ‘Go for it’ golf challenge was held on Friday the 29th June, 2007. Miraculously, the weather gods were looking down on us, and the rain held off for most of the afternoon -- we even saw some sunshine!
The main nine hole golf competition was tightly contested, and congratulations must go to Steve Sandilands, Mike Woods, and Ivan Couchman for winning with a total of 30 -- 3 under par!
An enjoyable day was had by all, and passed by without a hitch, and this was primarily due to the hard work and organisation of all at American Kingsway Golf Centre, Paula Sarno and Chris King. Thank You!
The annual ‘Go for it’ rugby match at Old Abbottstonians rugby club was held on the 9th June. Amazingly, for the third year running we were blessed with beautiful weather which was great to the spectators, but not so great for the players!
The match between the McNeill’s Marauders and Old Abbottstonians ended in a hardfought, but comfortable victory for Old Abbottstonians.
A great day was had by all, and massive thanks must go to Dixie and all those involved in the organisation, all the players who braved the heat to play, and all those who turned up to show their support.
I have finally broken up from Uni for the summer... three month summer holiday (student life is great)! The past month has been pretty frantic revising for exams, which I finished on Monday but have to wait months to get the results. I hope to secure a few different work placements with various law firms during the summer, and get down to a few court sessions to gain experience of the whole legal system.
I have been a little slack over the past few months and haven't painted any pictures, so I plan to get a few done and try and improve a little bit (with a lot of help from my art teacher!) ... so I'll let you know how I get on.
However, bearing in mind I am a student, I plan to do a lot of what students do best, and that is be lazy, eat lots of take ways and catch up with my mates when they return from Uni!
You are invited to enter up to four players in the above 9 hole Texas Scramble being held at the American golf Kingsway facility, Melbourne, near Royston in aid of the Matt King fund on Friday 29th June 2007 at 3:00pm. It will be a shotgun start 9 hole competition for golfers of mixed and non playing abilities, followed by a BBQ, and auction. Prizes will be awarded for the various on course activities. A separate putting competition will be held, combined with champagne shooting.
Please return the booking form, together with any monies due, as soon as possible, since this will determine your playing order. Players will be seeded into teams, based on handicap, playing ability and bribery.
However, if you feel unable to play, but would nonetheless wish to participate in the event and support the fund then please still complete the booking form as appropriate and any spare spaces you have will be filled by other players already on my short list.
On the question of BBQ, there are 60 spaces for the BBQ and with a maximum of only 40 golfers, there may well be spaces available on a first-come-first-served basis to golfers who wish to invite their partners or other guests for the BBQ.
However, since I cannot accurately predict at this time how many places will finally be available, I would ask you to indicate on the booking form if you would like any BBQ spaces and these will be filled in the strict order I receive the booking forms.
Finally, I am still seeking sponsorship for competition prizes, and items for auction, as well as other elements related to the day in general. Since I am obviously trying to maximise the amount raised for the fund it would be greatly appreciated if you could help me by sponsoring one or more of the items on the attached sheet. Please bear in mind that every prize I have to purchase reduces the overall amount given to the Matt King fund.
Should you be unable to participate due to other commitments but would nonetheless wish to sponsor a prize then please complete the booking form giving your name, contact details and the particular sponsorship you would like to provide.
I thank you on behalf of the Matt King fund for your support and look forward to seeing you on the day!













