For most, Mount Everest is the ultimate test of endurance.
For Bobby Bajram, it’s also a promise kept – a vow he made as a 13-year-old boy lying in a hospital bed after being diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis: One day, I’m going to walk to the top of the world and see the blue sky.
Bobby’s journey to Everest has never been about personal glory. It’s about proving that disability does not mean inability, and that with determination, teamwork and belief, the impossible can become possible.
One day, I’m going to walk to the top of the world and see the blue sky.
- Bobby Bajram
Bobby’s Everest page is a live story of resilience.
Training cycles, medical green-lights, team building, logistics and incremental high-altitude milestones. Diagnosed with MS at 13 and legally blind at times, Bobby has already reached multiple Himalayan summits, including Kala Patthar, Mera Peak and Lobuche East, while making several treks to Everest Base Camp.
This page celebrates the courage and community behind the climb, regardless of whether a summit window opens.
Each step towards the summit represents every person who has been told they “can’t.”
Bobby climbs for them — to show that we are all capable of pushing far beyond what we think are our limits. His Everest journey is a rallying cry for inclusion, resilience, and the power of community support.
Strength, endurance, altitude acclimatisation; working with doctors and support team to manage MS safely.
Expedition leadership, Sherpa support, medical oversight, and decision-making that prioritises life over ego.
EBC treks; summits of Kala Patthar, Mera Peak, Lobuche East; lessons learned at each stage.
Bobby is legally blind, some days he will be using a wheelchair off the mountain and battles fatigue and pain daily due to MS. Yet, he has already completed extraordinary high-altitude achievements — from Everest Base Camp to Kala Patthar and Mount Lobuche East. In some of the harshest conditions on Earth.
Now, with a world-class support and medical team, he is preparing for his ultimate challenge: reaching the summit of Mount Everest.
Conquering Everest is more than just standing at 8,849 metres. It’s about creating a legacy, one that funds disability grants, supports MS research, and lifts up others so that no one is left behind. Bobby’s climb is a symbol of hope, designed to inspire people of all abilities to find their own Everest and conquer it.
Bobby’s Everest journey demonstrates the impossible becoming possible, he’s conquered some of the world’s most treacherous peaks despite being legally blind and navigating life in a wheelchair. These achievements defy expectations and elevate the conversation around what individuals with disabilities can accomplish.
Every step Bobby takes on the mountain is a statement: no person is defined by their diagnosis. This legacy is about creating pathways, rewriting stories, and showing that with community, support and self-belief. Anyone can scale their own Everest.
When Bobby takes those final steps to the top of the world, he will carry with him the names, hopes, and dreams of countless others. Every donation, every message of support, and every shared story helps power the climb. It will fuel the mission to break barriers for people with disabilities everywhere.