Kat Boogaard has a freelance writing business many people dream of, bringing in more than $300K in revenue last year. But this year, she’s i
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Kat Boogaard has a freelance writing business many people dream of, bringing in more than $300K in revenue last year. But this year, she’s i
AGL announces it will close Loy Yang A power station in Victoria's Latrobe Valley up to 10 years sooner than planned
Energy giant AGL says the Loy Yang A power station in Victoria's Latrobe Valley will now close as early as 2035 after it was initially slate
"It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of light, it was the season of darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair."
Charles Dickens, A Tale of Two Cities
"I come here To get out of my head and into my senses To immerse myself in peace and beauty To feel kinship with life To feel at home I come here To be empty Silent Still Receptive I come here To be changed To get a new perspective To find an answer To heal a wound To learn I come here To be wild To be engulfed by wilderness and mystery and wonder I come here To worship To thank To praise To love
Wild Communion, Experiencing Peace in Nature by Ruth Baetz
Mentors and mentees around the world matched up for 6 months of mentoring
Here are the Top 10 Happiest Countries In The World , did your country make the list?
Have you ever thought about chucking it all and moving to a place where the greenback goes farther? Though many of us do, the spots we used to consider cheap—the Bahamas in the 1970s, Paris in the ’60s—aren’t so inexpensive now. Don’t worry. There are still plenty of places where the sligh
Done is better than perfect
'Don't spend a lifetime plotting yearly escapes. Spend your holidays planning a life you seek no escape from.'Â
What if you couldn't fail?
I was recently looking through an old notebook and came across one of my many lists, this one must have been written about two years ago. Inspired by a book ‘Screw Work Let’s Play’ by John Williams I had put pen to paper and scribbled down my answers to the question ‘What projects would you take on if you knew you couldn’t fail?’
I had written;
row the channel
do up a van
own my own business
charity/development project
own a campsite
None of them were particularly ground breaking but they must have felt big to me or they would have been on my to do list, rather then my ‘would love to do but what if I fail?’ list.
I came across my list shortly after returning home from the Clipper Round the World race and it suddenly dawned on me… some of the things on this list no longer felt so big!
When I signed up to the Clipper Race I had very little sailing experience, I would get nervous before a few hours sailing around the cans and it was months before I watched Clipper’s promotional DVD as I was worried that it would put me off! However armed with the knowledge that I had sailed over 10,000 miles, spent over 100 days at sea, been sick more times then both of those put together and had still come out smiling had led to a real shift in my perspective.
‘Row across the Channel’ I had written. This suddenly seemed ridiculous; the day we left New York on our race to Derry we sailed past two guys, Chris and Elliot who were rowing from New York to the Channel Islands. Their row ended up taking them over 60 days with just two guys in a ?? boat. We often thought that our sailing boat moved slowly, but wow, this was on a whole different level. I couldn’t get these guys and what they were achieving out of my mind.
Back on land looking at my list I took stock. The channel row takes on average 8 hours, how could I not manage 8 hours of rowing when Chris and Elliot were out at sea for180 times longer then that?! A quick Facebook update was enough to discover that I had a boatful of friends keen and raring to go. I started dreaming of completing the row before my birthday, what a way to finish off a sailing trip! But the forces were conspiring against us – decreasing daylight hours, people’s busy calendars, a limited rowing window and a lack of time for training, and sadly I had to accept it wasn’t going to happen in the 6 week window I needed it to before Autumn set in.
Luckily this challenge has been postponed and not forgotten. We are now booked in to do our row around the Isle of Wight next May; let the training commence! And yes I’m aware a row around the Isle of Wight isn’t ‘across the channel’ but the French put pay to that years ago when they decided no rowers were allowed in French waters. You can swim in, you can sail in, but row in with a support boat? No, not a chance! And our group didn’t fancy a ‘not really there and back again’ row!
And so back to the list ‘own business‘; woah this still feels big, ginormous in fact. The idea of having my own business is one I have toyed with and dreamed of and dismissed because it would never work for me, for years. I distinctly remember a conversation with a colleague one day, I was vaguely talking about wanting to do my own thing. He pointed out the high proportion of new businesses that fail (I have since looked it up, there are varying statistics and no definitive answer but 50% failure in the first three years seemed a fairly average answer).
But why, I said, should I assume that I will fail without even giving it a go to see what happens? (it’s oh so much easier to say that in hypothetical land!).
And where would we be if we based all our decisions on what to do on the statistical likelihood of success?
So here i am starting to give it a go; the fear of losing money and wasting time on something that may well amount to nothing, and the biggest fear; what people will think are ever present but I’m trying not to let these fears stop me at least giving it a go.
http://www.screwworkletsplay.com/about/ http://clipperroundtheworld.com/ http://www.chsw.org.uk/precious-lives-atlantic-challenge-home
By Winston Chen Odysseus…Gauguin…Robinson Crusoe...and me? Many people dream of the ultimate escape: throwing all the baggage of civilization away and taking off to live on a remote island. But few...
When faced with our greatest challenges we discover who we really are
What Steve Jobs, Thomas Edison, and Bob Dylan Have In Common