Archive for the ‘Motivation’ Category

Olympian Wanted for South Pole Expedition

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

Owing to a recent change of circumstance, a British Olympic Athlete is sought to join an expedition to the South Pole to coincide with the London 2012 Olympics.

The successful candidate will join a Paralympian and a Special Olympics Athlete in a project which aims to reinforce some key messages of London 2012Participation, Inclusivity, Accessibility and Inspiration – and mark the 100th anniversary of Captain Scott first reaching the Pole under a British flag.

Departing in December 2011, the team will be away from the UK for some six weeks and will spend most of that time skiing unsupported across part of Antarctica.

Although helpful, no experience of polar travel, expeditions or skiing is required. Fitness, we anticipate, will not be a problem.

It is expected that applicants will not be participating in the 2012 Games as a project such as this would undoubtedly interfere with their preparations.

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Person Specification:

  • Has represented Great Britain at the Olympics
  • Enthusiastic about the project and the wider Olympics Movement
  • A team player who is willing to muck in
  • Positive in the face of adversity
  • Willing to commit time and effort to the project before and after the expedition
  • Available for at least six weeks over Christmas and New Year in 2011/2012

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More Information:

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Enquiries:

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Angry Young Man – Guest Blog: Julian Sayerer (This Is Not For Charity)

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

I enjoyed following Julian Sayerer’s cycle around the world – This Is Not For Charity – and his wonderful writing from the comfort of my home last year. I was thrilled and disheartened in equal measure to first see him break the world record and then risk having his words and messages lost in the backlash to a final blog post.

I contacted Julian shortly after his return to let him know that I had enjoyed his writing and asked if he would be willing to write a piece for me which, I’m very pleased to say, he has.

Angry Young Man. That was what they called me. They thought it was an insult, although I welcomed it… they did not see how far short of the truth it fell, they did not see that I had come to anger through beauty.

I had just cycled around the world, I broke a world record in doing so… 18,050miles in under six months. I completed the undertaking alone, crossing deserts and following rivers, almost all of it in the company of my own head. I returned to London to be told that I had learned nothing, to be told by people who had followed me from their desks and their armchairs, that I had learned nothing. The audacity escaped them … the idea that they were better-equipped than I to know what my experience should have taught me. They could not be blamed. We lived in an age of end-products, people had abandoned the processes that created the products, and people had been told that travel and adventure constituted discovery and joy and emotional wellbeing. They were no longer interested if travel and adventure led someone elsewhere.

My travels showed me beauty, countless instances of it. Outside of Los Angeles, with my rear wheel close to falling apart, I was riding with a cyclist who remarked on the size of the buckle. He said that he had something that could fix it back at his house, and though I had to cover ground that day, and though I was doubtful that anything could fix it, when he said a second time that he would like me to go to his house with him, I felt it would have been rude to refuse.

He was a teacher, a tall guy by the name of Doug. He had such a gentle sense of right and wrong, he talked of the golf courses outside of LA, all the land and water they consumed for such a small few who actually made use of them. He stated with such solemnity that he thought it was a waste. We arrived at his flat, a modest row of tenements, close to the port of LA, they called it the armpit, it stinks, refineries belch their fumes into the sky. He went inside, came out with a bag of bananas and cereal bars. He said he had something to fix my wheel, pushed a roll of green and presidents into my pocket, forced it as I tried to force it away. He told me not to look at it. We said goodbye, and an hour later I looked at it, and it was $100.

Doug had said, within ten minutes of our meeting, that he had something to fix my wheel, and I guess he knew then that he wanted to give me that money to help me. It’s humbling… to receive such charity, still more humbling to be so broke that you really cannot refuse such charity. Some people have called me an inspiration, praised my cycling 18,050 rather fast miles … I do not reject their compliments entirely, but to me it is a lesser inspiration than a man of modest means having such generosity of spirit that he will give $100 to a passing stranger. I know also which act holds a greater value for society.

I have come to anger through beauty. I feel that people are beautiful and generous and good, and it makes me so angry that our world would be run in a way that makes people an incidental part of society, not the foremost component of it.

Anger has been made taboo… it is not fashionable, it is not cool. People are encouraged to be hopeful about the state of the world, to have hope, to believe that things will improve. Hope is a distraction, it is a lie, it is passive… hope will never do anything about the world other than continuing to hope, and if people think that they can improve the world by hope alone, then they will never need do anything else. If people care about this world and the people in it, then they should be furious, angry, enraged and still more besides. Anger is the greatest harbinger of change, a thing that politicians seem to speak of a great deal. Our society is in need of changes that no politician would dare to speak of, and for those changes we need anger.

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Commute with Gusto! – Everyday Adventure #3

Monday, March 1st, 2010

Enjoying the pungent aroma of a fellow Tube rider’s sweaty armpit thrust across your face. Sat in static traffic so long that the radio starts repeating songs you heard earlier. Watching your breath as you shiver waiting for a bus that should have been here, ooh, a good half hour ago now.

Commuting is a drag.

Not only do you have to endure all of the above but you’re not even trying to get somewhere you want to go. It’s not like fighting crowds to escape Brighton having cycled there from London or a sleepless night in a coach on your way to the ski slopes. No, you’re going to work.

Getting to and fro your job can be tiresome but not this month, soldiers. Not in the month of March, in the year of 2010. This month, on the streets of the UK, across Europe and the world over, we march purposefully on our way to offices. This month, loyal troops, we race excitedly to our workplaces. This month, we commute with gusto!

Some ideas:

  • Take a new route – Dig out a map and plot a novel course (or just go blind) ; follow a sat nav (even if you’re walking/cycling); try a different bus/train/Tube combination
  • Walk/run/cycle to work – Whatever you’re not used to, try that (and if you do all of them, use motorized transport for the novelty). Too far? You don’t have to do it every day, just give it a go once. Set your alarm 30 minutes earlier, or an hour, or four hours if you have to.
  • Slow down, go sightseeing – What interesting places do you pass on your way to work? Or, more to the point, what interesting places do you miss every single day as you pass by in an early morning mental fug? Take it easy. Take it slow. Look around you and see life from the other side of the street. Leave earlier and embrace your journey as an experience not a chore.
  • Make it fun – Do it with a friend. Treat yourself to a new book/album on the MP3 player/coffee on the way. Put your jacket and wellies on and splash in the puddles (rather than whinge about the weather). Treat the journey as if you were going somewhere new or on holiday and maybe it’ll set your day off to a better start.

Some answers to your excuses:

  • I know the best way already – Boo for you! Is life really about efficiency? This is the very thing we are trying to address this month – turning the commute from a necessity to a pleasure. Just once.
  • I don’t have time – Yes you do, you’re just sleeping when it goes by. Sure, it’s already a traumatic experience when the alarm goes off at the normal time but who ever achieved anything great without first putting in a little hard work? It’s a one off. Get out of bed and get to it.
  • There’s only one bus/train/road/cycle lane – Oh, come now, is that the best you can do? Get off the bus a stop early. Walk to the next railway station from home. Deliberately drive the wrong way and see where you end up. Ride your bike on the road, run it along the pavement, find a dirt track or a field to cross. Use your imagination!

You know the drill by now. Stop reading this and get a map out. Plan your adventure and report back to me on the comments form below or on the Facebook page within the month.

Now, what are you waiting for…? Go have an adventure!

This is an Everyday Adventure

…and it is here for you to try.

There are no rules, constraints or conditions. Treat this as a spark for your imagination. Use it as an injection of excitement into your daily routine.

Please spread the word, email a link to this page or share it on Twitter and Facebook with the buttons at the bottom right. There’ll be a new idea for each month of 2010 along with another fantastic image courtesy of David Tett Photography.

http://thenextchallenge.org/2009/07/cross-the-street-and-walk-on-the-other-side

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Tell me, where did you sleep last night?

Friday, February 26th, 2010

I’m quite excited about my plan for this evening’s Everyday Adventure. I wish I could tell you what it is but I can’t. Not just just yet, anyway. If I pull it off then I promise to add it in the comments box tomorrow morning. But anyway, this isn’t about me. It’s about you…

How did you sleep this month?

Back at the start of February I gave you a brief: to camp in your living room, sleep with the windows and curtains open, wake beneath the stars, swap your duvet for a sleeping bag and generally recreate a bit of child-like excitement when it came to your night’s sleep.

I’ll be honest, in comparison to the great response I got after the Lunchtime Jailbreak in January, this month has been comparatively quiet. Did you not give this one a go? Or were you just a bit shy about telling me what you got up at bed time? Comments below or on the Facebook page please!

I did, however, hear of a tent pitched in a back garden on a school night and the promise of a living room fort all the way from South Korea. I had a few interesting bedroom spots on my £100 adventure last week (see the photos here) but set out specifically for an Everyday Adventure the night before my first school talk. Wanting to put my money where my mouth was before preaching to a hall full of young people, I shunned my cosy bedroom in favour of a bivi bag and some bushes just up the road from my house.

Monday will see another Mission Possible for your daily life uploaded here. That means you have three more nights to squeeze in an overnight adventure and let me know what you got up to.

Right, I’m off to have an adventure…

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£100 – An expedition on a budget

Sunday, February 14th, 2010


I set off today with a rucksack and a hundred pounds to have an adventure.

Too often we restrict ourselves, hold back on our dreams or rein in our aspirations with the perceived constraints of the world – time, commitments, lack of expertise or knowledge, money.

I, like everyone else, fall foul of this on occasion and I caught myself doing just that as I entered the new year – “I can’t go away on an adventure because I don’t have any money”. But how could I continue to fill these pages with calls to action if I myself live in the very shackles to which I wave the key?

And so I am setting off on a low budget adventure. £100 is what I have – a laughable amount for a lot of great expedition budgets and a vast sum to many other people.

You can read more about my objectives and follow my progress in the window above (or on Twitter).

Or…

You can turn off your monitor and have a think about what’s holding you back from your next adventure, your next step. Is the constraint genuine or is it something you can work around if you really put your mind to it?

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A Simple Democratic Corporate Life – Six of the Best, January 2010

Sunday, February 14th, 2010

Here are some blog entries from other peoples’ websites that I have enjoyed or got something from over the last month and think that you might too. Have a look and vote for the ones you like.

Congratulations to Alastair Humphreys whose article ‘Please stand on the right (if you are a loser)‘ got the most votes in last month’s poll.

(If you’re viewing this through Facebook or an RSS Reader, you might have to click the View Poll link above or try the original article instead).

See all Next Challenge polls here

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Camp in Your Living Room – Everyday Adventure #2

Monday, February 1st, 2010

Did you ever build a fort in your living room and sleep in it when you were a kid? Camp in your back garden and get scared by the sound of the local cat outside / noise of the wind / shadow of your dad coming out to check on you? How about a sleepover with a midnight feast at your friend’s house?

There are many simple pleasures from childhood that we lose as adults and the excitement of sleeping somewhere new, somewhere different risks being one of them.

This month’s Everyday Adventure mission is to camp in your living room. Pull the cushions off your sofa, get a sleeping bag out of the cupboard and crash on the floor. Or, if you don’t fancy that…

  • Sleep over at a friend’s house just for the hell of it. Stay up late chewing the fat, watching DVDs under the duvet or dunking marshmallows in hot chocolate.
  • Pitch a tent in the back garden or sleep under the stars when there’s a clear forecast (or even when there’s not).
  • Wrap up extra warm and sleep with the windows and curtains open. Open the doors to the cocoon of your life, experience the season a little more and wake up to a real sunsrise for once.
  • Sleep with your head at the bottom of the bed, switch sides with your partner, push your bed to the other side of the room or get into a sleeping bag on your own mattress.

Do not tell yourself that you’re too busy, you won’t sleep well or you might get cold. We’re all busy, we’re all tired all the time and you can take three extra blankets if that’s your concern.

Don’t ask “Why, when I’ve got a perfectly good bed just there?”. This is not a How-To guide on living an ordinary, boring, mundane life. This is the spice for the everyday, the excuse to deviate from the norm, the full-fat, full-caffeine espresso shot for life. This is a compass that points only up.

Go forth, troops, and sleep in the wilds of your surroundings. Report back within the month on the comments form below or on the Facebook page.

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This is an Everyday Adventure and it is here for you to try.

There are no rules, constraints or conditions. Treat this as a spark for your imagination. Use it as an injection of excitement into your daily routine.

Please spread the word, email a link to this page or share it on Twitter and Facebook with the buttons at the bottom right. There’ll be a new idea for each month of 2010 along with another fantastic image courtesy of David Tett Photography.

Now, what are you waiting for…? Go have an adventure!

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23 Ideas

Saturday, January 23rd, 2010

 

I keep lists. Some examples include:

  • Tim’s Big IdeasMy Mile and the rickshaw thing lurked there for a while and it includes other great ideas like “Cycle to the South Pole!” and “Tow a car somewhere!”
  • Books/songs/films – There is always so much great new stuff out there that I can rarely keep up with the rate of recommendation/discovery.
  • Interesting things – People are always telling you about cool stuff and it’s very easy to let it slip in one ear and out the other without ever following up on it. I now make a point of writing things down (which probably makes me a very annoying person to talk to since I’m always scribbling or tapping into my phone)
  • Ideas for blog entries…

I just sat down to update this blog and started, as I often do, by loading up the ingeniously entitled ‘Ideas.txt’ to see if I had any thoughts already down or if I would have to think of something on the spot.

To my surprise and mild alarm, I had a back log of twenty three different topics about which I could write. (I suppose this could count as number twenty four but I think that might start some strange cycle…)

It feels a bit like a squirrel stashing nuts for the winter. When synaptic activity is in abundance, I furiously store away all my brain waves and daft thoughts on paper. Then, when the grey matter hits an impenetrable wall of vacancy, I can greedily dip into the larder of prepared thought.

My point? (Because my simplistic mind requires there to be one)

Start a list.

Write down your thoughts. Make a note of recommendations and keep track of your ideas, ambitions, goals, dreams. Even if they are stupid, impractical or not very good (it rarely stops me). When the moment comes and you are bored, it’s raining or you just need to feed the rat, you won’t regret it.

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How to become an Eco Ironman – Six of the Best, December 09

Thursday, January 14th, 2010

Kiwi tree stump

Here are some blog entries from other peoples’ websites that I have enjoyed or got something from over the last month and think that you might too. Have a look and vote for the ones you like:

(If you’re viewing this through Facebook or an RSS Reader, you might not be able to see the articles and poll above. Try the original article instead).

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Feeding the Rat

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

Cave bouldering on Long Beach, Dunedin

Wan-der-lust (noun): a strong, innate desire to rove or travel about.

This is a term familiar to most people, both as a definition and as a feeling. But it doesn’t cut it for me. I think there’s a better one.

Wanderlust is primarily about “the travel bug” but the magnetic force that acts on me is more about adventure than pure travel. They often overlap but they needn’t. Swimming the Solent and running up lots of stairs, for example, sated me for some time but I think neither the Isle of Wight nor the attic of the RGS would qualify as adventurous travelling in the 21st century.

So what is it then? Try this:

“Mo has a vivid and precise expression for what drives him – and most other climbers – to court discomfort; he calls it ‘feeding the rat’. When he got back from Roraima, his rat was well and truly fed, but he himself looked thinner and more wasted than I had ever seen him. Even so, within a few months he was back brooding about another expedition”

That excerpt comes from the excellent ‘Feeding the Rat‘, written by Al Alvarez about the british climber Mo Anthoine.

Wanderlust goes with travel. The rat is about quelling the beast within as it champs at the bit for its fill of adventure, in whatever form it takes.

Whatever you do, don’t starve it for too long.

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