Archive for the ‘Regulars’ Category

Catch the Worm – Everyday Adventure #5

Monday, July 5th, 2010

It has been too long since I last challenged you to an Everyday Adventure.

I hope you have been squeezing the juice out of life these past months but I fear you may have let it slip you by. What have the last few weeks held for you? If the answer is some permutation of “Not enough”, then I will kindly ask you to set your alarm for early tomorrow morning because you are making up for lost time.

This month I would like you to squeeze in an extra day before the real one starts. Mountaineers will know this as an “Alpine start”. They do this for the best snow conditions but you, however, are doing it just for fun.

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Rise in darkness, ignore the urge to snooze and roll, no, jump out of bed before your mind has a chance to trick you into doing anything else. Maybe you’ll get some exercise in to set your body off for the rest of the day; it could be that you’ll now have the time to do that thing you keep putting off; or perhaps you will find novelty in an otherwise routine task, polished, as it now is, by the devious thrill of doing it at an ungodly hour.

Here are three reasons to start your day off early:

  1. It is different and therefore exciting
  2. It is proactive and therefore fulfilling
  3. It gives you more time (and who doesn’t want that?)

And here are three whining voices you can hear in your head:

  1. “I’m already tired enough”
  2. “I’m not a morning person”
  3. “I get up at 7am/6am/5am anyway…”

These things may be true but you will not remember, when you are 70 years old and entertaining your grandchildren with stories of old by an open fireplace, the amazing week in which you were well rested. You would bore them to tears as well as yourself.

Sleep is important, I don’t dispute that and I suspect that most of us could do with more. But it is also the enemy. It consumes one third of our lives and there are times when we simply need to fight back and win ourselves some more precious time on this earth.

Don’t do it every day. Then you really would be tired and, besides, you’d be removing the adventurous novelty from it. But do it once and do it good. Arise at the crack of dawn. Skip breakfast and instead cram fists-full of life into your wide open mouth and enjoy happy satiety for the rest of your day, smug with the knowledge that you have done something on this day that few else can claim.

You have lived.

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.

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Rats and Ants – The Quarter Master, Jan-Mar 2010

Sunday, June 20th, 2010

At the end of each quarter, I list some favourite articles as selected by the web master (that’s me).

They may not be “the best” or the most popular but they’re ones that I particularly like for one reason or another. See what you think…

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Memory, Mind Games and Machinery – Six of the best April/May 2010

Monday, June 14th, 2010

Here are some blog entries from other people’s websites that I have enjoyed or got something from over the last two months and think that you might too. Have a look and cast your votes.

Last month’s winner was Seth Godin’s Fear of Philanthropy (Avert your eyes).

Voting is instant, anonymous and only takes a click of the mouse. I’d really appreciate it if you’d take two seconds to vote for any that you read and enjoy.

Enjoyed this? Why not cast a vote in one of my other polls?

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Pavarotti’s fear of biscuits – Six of the Best, March 2010

Wednesday, April 21st, 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 cast your votes.

No clear winner in last month’s poll – a three-way tie at last check – so you’ll just have to read them for yourself.

Voting is instant, anonymous and only takes a click of the mouse. I’d really appreciate it if you’d take two seconds to vote for any that you read and enjoy.

 

Enjoyed this? Why not cast a vote in one of my other polls?

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Embrace the Elements – Everyday Adventure #4

Thursday, April 8th, 2010

Rain water trickles down my sleeve, inside the back of my glove and sends a chill up my forearm. From my experience in the outdoors, wet gloves means cold hands and that’s a bad thing.

Pause to assess the situation.

I’m on my bike and it’s raining hard but I’m only a couple of miles from home. Frost bite ain’t an issue today and all I need from my digits is the crude ability to grip the break levers.

A large puddle lies ahead of me and I swerve – not to avoid it but, instead, to roll straight through the middle of it. It’s raining and I want to have some fun

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I suspect you’re reading this inside a building. I imagine you have a radiator on somewhere and it wouldn’t surprise me if the windows were closed too. Perhaps you drove to work this morning with the heaters or air conditioning on or walked the few hundred yards to the shops wrapped up in a woolly hat and gloves, or beneath an umbrella in a Gore-tex jacket.

We may not yet have machines that can control the weather but modern life has certainly tamed it. We turn dials, select garments and adapt plans to work around meteorology but in so doing I fear we move ourselves one step further away from the world we inhabit, from nature.

This month, dear readers, I request that you embrace the elements. I ask that the next time you see sunshine you fling open your windows and drink in its rays. I beg humbly that when it rains you cower not beneath your brickwork shelters but instead charge into the downpour and jump into puddles with both feet. Should the temperature plummet, then please, for me, jog around the block in shorts and sandals, feel the icy air fill first your nostrils and then your lungs.

Won’t we get cold?

Shan’t we be soaked through?

…and then what? What is so bad about the cold? What happens after you get wet? Half way up Everest these are bad states to be in. Running through your local streets with a grin on your face, they are not. Better, surely, to feel the cold and feel alive than the opposite?

You will get cold, you will get wet, you will feel the sun’s powerful heat and nature’s almighty wind. Your actions will fly in the face of modern life and that, that, is exactly what we strive for. Withdrawal from the sterile world of modern life and a momentary reconnection with raw, with pure, with wild.

This month, if just for one day, don’t fight the elements. Embrace them.

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