Author, latest (with daughter Darcy Deane), How Great Women Lead (2012)
					First African-American to win Olympic medals in  ski-racing, winning a silver and two bronze medals in the 1984 Paralympics in  Innsbruck, Austria
					Was appointed to the White House National  Economic Council
					Graduated with honors from Harvard University  and won a Rhodes Scholarship to Oxford
									 			
			 
			
			
			
			
					 
		
		
		GUEST
		
		Being More Than An  Overcomer
		
		
		 
		CBN.com 
		Breaking Barriers
		Bonnie St. John went to Sunday  school as a child, but as a teen, she turned away from God. She had faith in  herself and relied on her own strength, but God stuck with her  throughout.  She made things harder for herself by not relying on God. She  was sexually abused as a child, which shut her off from an intimate  relationship with the Lord until she became an adult. Then she found true  healing from the abuse when she took it to God in prayer.
		Bonnie's leg  was amputated when she was five-years-old – the result of a physical  abnormality she was born with. Once Bonnie returned home from the hospital, her  mom gave her a brochure featuring the picture of an amputee on a ski, saying  she could dream big.  Bonnie has done that by becoming an Olympic skier  and the Paralympics Silver Medalist in downhill skiing.  Back during her Olympic career, Bonnie relied  on meditation instead of prayer. Years later, when she had to heal from sexual abuse in order to be a good mother, she received her first breakthrough in prayer. As she was  traveling to give the motivational speech, she was terrified and in great pain. She started  crying and could not move. She asked God for help, and she felt the difference  right away. She felt a sense of relief and was able to successfully deliver her  speech.
		Her next  milestone in prayer and with her relationship to God was when she had to  deliver a speech to 10,000 people and she remembered when she would meditate to  prepare for skiing. She started praying and imagined Jesus line dancing. This  helped her with her speech because she felt like He was trying to show her the  joy in things. After this experience, Bonnie started attending church and  praying regularly. Her relationship with God was no longer a hobby. The ups and  downs of life, including a broken marriage, changed her relationship with  Christ and drew her closer to Him.
        Leadership
          Bonnie has achieved the highest levels of success in a  variety of endeavors throughout her life.  In addition to her success as a  Paralympic athlete, she is the author of six books, a highly sought after  keynote speaker, a television and radio personality, a business owner, and the  single mother of a teenage daughter. She graduated Magna Cum Laude from Harvard  University in 1986, and won a Rhodes Scholarship to Oxford University, taking  an M.Litt. in Economics. Upon her return to the United States, Bonnie was  appointed by President Bill Clinton as a Director for Human Capital Issues on  the White House National Economic Council.   NBC Nightly News called Bonnie, “One of the five most inspiring women in  America.”   So, it makes sense that when  Bonnie, a single mother, thought her teenage daughter, Darcy, was saying, “No  thank you,” to a call of leadership, Bonnie did what she does best.  She decided to inspire Darcy.  “I had never really put that much thought  into leadership before.  It was sort of mysterious to me  and I didn’t really connect with it that much,” says her daughter Darcy.   Bonnie  recognized that while current women leaders have broken down barriers and  thrown open doors of opportunity, researchers would agree that Darcy is not the  only girl who questions whether the climb up the ladder of success is worth  it.  Today’s ambitious, confident, and  highly educated young women are better prepared than any generation before them  to close the gender gap.  Yet studies  show that women do not want to succeed at the old game. They want to redefine  what leadership means and embrace it in their own way. 
        Embarking on an  Adventure
        In a quest to inspire her  daughter and show her the limitless possibilities for her future, Bonnie took  Darcy on an incredible mother-daughter adventure into the lives of some of the  most fascinating women shaping our world today. They went behind the scenes at  Facebook headquarters, inside the State Department in Washington, down the red  carpet of a Hollywood movie premiere with Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie, into a  home-spun tortilla factory in Nicaragua, backstage at The Jon Stewart Show, mingling with athletes at the Paralympic  Winter Games, shopping in London, into the cockpit of super-sonic fighter jets,  and through many other exotic and exciting locations. In each rich,  heart-to-heart visit with these amazing female role models, Bonnie and Darcy  felt their warmth, absorbed their wisdom, and experienced what it’s like to  walk in their shoes.  They took the rare  and unique opportunity to visit with high profile women as well as a fashion  designer, a fighter pilot, a dynamic stay-at-home mother of five, and many more.  “Going on this journey with my daughter  really crystalized the importance of helping women at every point in their  career to be the best they can be and really find their potential to lead.  Some of the women Bonnie and Darcy visited  include:
        
        
          - Ellen       Johnson Sirleaf, President of Liberia, who risked death many times       to emerge as the first female head of state in male-dominated Africa.
- Sheryl       Sandberg, Chief Operating Officer of Facebook, whose approach       to balancing her work and her family is as innovative and successful as       the company she oversees.
- Hillary       Rodham Clinton, who describes the timeless value of mentorship, and how women are       particularly suited to this essential duty.
- Marin       Alsop, Musical Director and Conductor of the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, who       expounds on her success as a woman in an extremely male-dominated       field.  
- Dr. Condoleezza Rice, who shares her       hard-won wisdom about how leadership does not mean trying to do every       single thing yourself, and about the irreplaceable value of face-to-face       conversation.  
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