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The Art of Discovery

lovetodiscover

The more you learn, the more you realise you don’t know, and I think the same goes for discovery – the more you discover, the more you realise there is to discover. This is one of the reasons I think life is so utterly fascinating – there is always something else around the corner, something to find out about the people you know, the place you live, your own possibilities, and on and on.

William Jame quote

Discovery is a HUGE part of following a path to doing what you love. If you aren’t doing something you love right now, without exploring and discovering what there is out there, and what there is inside of you, you will have a hard time finding the sweet spot where you find yourself living your passion and your fullest life every single day.

This month we are diving deep into this topic with our new theme ‘Love to Discover’, with some fascinating interviews and a series of ponderings. We hope it will inspire you to ask yourself deeper questions, and discover more about yourself and the world you live in.

Are you ready for an adventure of discovery?

Honeymoon (7): London

Honeymoons tend to be very private, but we ended ours with a huge group of people – two of our very favourite Japanese people, along with half of their company workers!

London Eye - Beth

On the London Eye with Kyoko and Adachi

Kyoko and Adachi are like second family to me, having let me stay in their house rent free for a year when I lived in the northern Japanese city of Yamagata back in my twenties. They are jazz musicians who love a good party, and frequently opened their doors to the various waifs and strays I brought home (i.e. most of the foreigners who lived in Yamagata) – their house became known as the ‘Adachi Hospital for Homesick Foreigners’ as there was always a cold beer and warm welcome for anyone who visited. (You can read about the crazy way I met them in this post). They also looked after us in the first couple of weeks of our sabbatical in Japan last year.

Adachi travelled the world in his youth and lived in Notting Hill way before it was hip, and Kyoko has been heavily inspired by western music as a Jazz singer, but they had never been to England together. I always promised that of course I would look after them if they ever came to visit, so when they decided to take their team to Europe to celebrate a pivotal birthday for their company, I pursuaded them to give up their idea of going to Italy and come to England instead. But that was before we got engaged. The irony was, they then booked their flights, and it ended up being a week after our wedding (which we would have loved them to come to), and WE were in Italy for our honeymoon! So we decided to spent the last couple of days of our holiday in a lovely London hotel exploring with them instead, and it was such fun.

Charlotte Street Hotel, London

Charlotte Street Hotel

We booked ourselves into the gorgeous Charlotte Street Hotel in Soho. It is really expensive so we had just taken a simple room, but when we got their they said that as a honeymoon gift they had upgraded us to their loft suite – an apartment overlooking London charged out at £1,000 a night! It was so fabulous we didn’t want to leave, but headed out onto the streets of London to see the sights with our visiting friends.

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The living room of our loft apartment (complete with our own private lift!)

We have both been to London countless times, but usually to see friends or for work – rarely as a tourist. It was so much fun to see London through the eyes of our friends – the London Eye, live music on the banks of the Thames, the British Museum, Big Ben, afternoon tea in a posh hotel, sunday lunch in an old English pub etc. We also surprised them with three of our English friends who had stayed at their house over the years turning up for lunch and dinner!

Here are a few happy snapshots:

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This time with old friends was actually the perfect way to end our honeymoon and start the rest of our married lives. Thank you so much to our friends and families who contributed to our honeymoon and make it so special.

You can read my other honeymoon posts here: (1) Florence / (2) Castel Monastero / (3) Winetasting in Tuscany / (4) Borgo Santo Pietro / (5) Pasta masterclass / (6) Pisa and home

Honeymoon (6): Pisa and home

As our honeymoon drew to a close we reflected on the perfect week of Italian food, wine and hospitality, long walks and longer chats, and a lifetime of adventures ahead of us. It was wonderful to have that time to also reflect on our brilliant wedding and think about how grateful we are for the family and friends who made it so special. (All the wedding details coming very soon!)

Pisa

Before we left Italy we had one last stop. Our flight left from Pisa, so we couldn’t not see the Leaning Tower. Excuse the cheesy touristy posed picture – it couldn’t be helped!

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It really is quite an extraordinary sight, and we found it sat alongside a beautiful church with grassy grounds covered in lazy picnickers soaking up the sun. There was nothing for it but to get a delicious Italian ice cream and join them…

You can read my other honeymoon posts here: (1) Florence / (2) Castel Monastero / (3) Winetasting in Tuscany / (4) Borgo Santo Pietro / (5) Pasta masterclass / (6) Pisa and home

Honeymoon (5): Pasta masterclass!

Pasta masterclass

And the honeymoon story continues… While at Borgo Santo Pietro we couldn’t help but indulge ourselves in a private pasta cookery class with the hotel’s Executive Chef. It was amaaaaazing. I just felt so happy in that kitchen, and one of the things that we made (the fresh tortellini stuffed with caramelised pear on a tarragon pesto) was possibly the best thing I have ever tasted in my life. Must buy a pasta machine…

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Heaven on a plate – fresh tortellini stuffed with caramelised pear on a tarragon pesto

You can read my other honeymoon posts here: (1) Florence / (2) Castel Monastero / (3) Winetasting in Tuscany / (4) Borgo Santo Pietro / (5) Pasta masterclass / (6) Pisa and home

Life According To Mr.K – Love to Change (4)

Life According To Mr.K - Love to Change (4) lifeaccordingtomrk

“Things do not change; we change” – Henry David Thoreau

How times change! Do you ever find yourself sitting there asking “How did I end up here? When did this become my life? Where have these extra inches around the waist come from? How do you use this thing??”

Yeah, me too! Isn’t it also funny that these slightly depressing realisations are usually then followed by little to no action? Change before you have to!

Why is it we normally have to wait for a traumatic event or even a disaster to happen before we make significant changes? This is certainly true of our history and it is certainly the way society and governments often work. But what if we were proactive and made changes, rather than reactive, and let changes happen to us?

Of course we all get older, our bodies change, as do our plans, priorities and maybe most importantly of all our responsibilities. But does this mean we can’t be the person we want to be? Or live in the kind of world we want to be part of?

I have spent the last two decades cruising around in second gear. Doing just enough. I have found myself at times poles apart from where I dreamt I might once be. I have now been inspired to change. I have been inspired to live the fullest life I can.  And I am thrilled to be a part of Do What You Love helping other people to do the same.

“Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world; indeed, it is the only thing that ever has.” – Margaret Mead

All I know is that I want to be the best person I can be. I want to be the person my parents raised. I want to be the husband my wife dreamt about and one day hopefully be a father that my children are proud of and inspired by. I want to live the life I used to dream of, and at last I feel like I am on my way. Only I can make it happen, and I have finally realised that.

How about you? Do you tend to complain about things? This week, when you feel like complaining about something, why not try changing something about the way you approach it? You must be the change you wish to see in the world!

Until next time,

Mr K

Do What You Love interview – Christina Rosalie (Plus lovely book giveaway)

Do What You Love interview - Christina Rosalie (Plus lovely book giveaway) thebiginterview

Today’s Do What You Love interview is with Christina Rosalie, an incredibly talented writer whose words often take my breath away. Her stunning book ‘A Field Guide to Now’ is a project that we at Do What You Love proudly helped fund through Kickstarter, and when we got to hold the finished article in our hands it was just as special as we hoped it would be. A collection of mixed media art combined with essays on life lived in the present tense, this is a must read for anyone who feels like life is rushing past.

We talked to Christina about how she has come to be living a life doing what she loves – writing, being a mother, and working on some exciting new projects whilst soaking up the moments in between.

Christina Rosalie

1.   How are you leading a life ‘doing what you love’?

I think the operative word in your question is doing. I’ve been circling around what this means to me lately. How, in order to have a life I love, I must build the scaffolding for it. And that scaffolding isn’t always work I love. Sometimes it’s hard and long and intense and tiring. Many days I have too many urgent deadlines and tasks lined up and when evening comes and the sky turns persimmon and purple, there hasn’t been enough time (or any time) to write or make (which are the things I love).

I think doing what I love is about having both a short view and a long view, and living in a state of dynamic movement between the two. In the short term, I’m not doing what I love every single day. But in the longer term I always am. Even when the work is hard and worrisome and tiring, if I have a clear focus on that long-term horizon, the work I do builds towards that opportunity of living a life I love.

For me then, doing what I love is about dynamic movement: forever finding and re-finding a balance between who I am, and who I am becoming; between being a mother and being an artist; between responsibilities and habits and worries on the one hand and passion, intense creativity and pure delight on the other. It’s in moving between these polarities that I find fulfillment and joy, and it’s from this continual act of balancing and losing balance and re-aligning once again that I find the energy and dynamic tension for my creative work.

Do What You Love interview - Christina Rosalie (Plus lovely book giveaway) Birds Circling ChristinaRosalie

 2. What did you do before this?

I was an elementary school teacher. I loved that work too, but it wasn’t leading to a life I loved. In that role my platform was too small, and the bureaucracy too complex. Still, my orientation in the world is that of a teacher. I love to help people understand the narratives of their lives, and to facilitate the process of making meaning.

3. What was the a-ha moment that pushed you to change things and realise your passion?

I don’t know that there was an a-ha moment where I actively chose not to do what I’d been doing, although I remember feeling deeply exhausted by teaching, and not wanting to return to the elementary classroom for a while. Having my second baby at that point gave me an ellipse of time to figure things out.

In a certain way both of my children have radically propelled me towards doing work I love, which is ironic in a way, because on a daily basis they are often the ones that keep me from it! There is something almost esoteric about the way that children, in their arrival, bring with them a stirring of opportunity, as though the universe opens wide for them to enter. I felt that, I think. Though I couldn’t say why or how. And really, my shift towards doing what I love wasn’t an immediate thing. It was a more gradual cumulative momentum. Like an avalanche of creative intention that slowly gathered velocity and force.

4. How did you make it happen?

I made some big and sometimes scary/risky decisions that supported the momentum of doing what I loved including: launching my book project on Kickstarter; applying and being accepted to an MFA program in Emergent Media at Champlain College, even though I couldn’t have told you want ‘emergent media’ was at the time (I just intuitively knew it was right); writing a formal proposal for my book for Skirt! and then getting a book deal. Those were big things that I worked really hard towards and for, but that I also think emerged as possibilities because I was ready to move in an entirely new direction.

 Do What You Love interview - Christina Rosalie (Plus lovely book giveaway) photo 46

5. What has been your biggest challenge along the way and how did you overcome it?

My biggest challenge is time, always. Time, and what it means in terms of money. I can’t say I’ve gotten that one sorted out yet. Certainly, I haven’t overcome it. Some days I’m fairly graceful. Things fall in line. There is coffee and time to write; there are just the right amount of client projects (brand positioning and digital strategy); there is a run maybe in the afternoon, or a bike ride, and time making something yummy for dinner with the kids in the kitchen helping. Other days everything is a pell-mell sprint. I wake up exhausted and end exhausted. I’m objectively intrigued by this. So intrigued that I’m doing research about the nature of this push and pull of short term vs. long term; chaos vs. order for a new book I’m co-writing with Dan Blank.

6. What kept you awake at night before you made these changes? How about now?

I’m a night owl actually. I love working at night. It’s a time when I can do a great deal of uninterrupted work, and I’m deeply focused. I think I probably worry more now than I did then too because there’s more on the line. More to lose. And also, I’ve only got me to fall back on. I love it that way, but some days it feels terribly risky, and lonely.

7. Why do you think change is important?

I think change is the secret. We’re always changing. Our cellular structure is renewed every 7 years. Our hearts renew with every breath. It’s when we start trying to prevent change, or become fixated on keeping things the same, that we fall into ruts that stifle our creative minds. We stop thinking flexibly then. Stop imagining that any possibility is ours.

8. How has having children changed your life?

Children are a paradox in my life. They spark creativity and they consume creative energy. They ignite my creative eye, they inspire me, they teach me, they propel me forwards, they force me to live towards the truest version of myself. And they frustrate me, they restrain me, they limit what I’m capable of doing in any given day, and they anchor me to place and time and habit.

9.  What kind of changes are going on in your life right now? Have you chosen them or have they chosen you?

I’m in the midst of some pretty radical change now, having just sold the home that we’ve had for the past 8 years, to move in closer to town where we can live within biking distance of everything. But there are so many layers of familiarity and habit that are tied to this home. Uprooting feels terrifying, but utterly necessary and exciting.

I’m also in the midst of defining the direction two huge collaborative ventures – a new book that I’m co-authoring with Dan Blank, and a digital strategy consultancy with a partner dedicated to helping entrepreneurs and creatives build audiences for projects, products and ideas. Both are time consuming and exciting. Working collaboratively is a change. I love it, and it places new demands on my time and energy and focus. 

I’m an introvert by nature, and having enough downtime to myself is probably the thing that I find most disrupted by change. The best thing about change is that it invites new. New perspectives, new patterns, new ways of seeing, new connections.

Do What You Love interview - Christina Rosalie (Plus lovely book giveaway) Say Yes Christina Rosalie

10. Finally, what do you think is key to making a big change in your life?

I just go for it. And then look back stunned, realising I have! In retrospect I can see the evidence, the inklings of momentum building. I can see the traces of conversations I’ve had. I can see notes scribbled across notebook pages.  I can see the way a flight pattern of ideas begin to align, and then miraculously, I always seem to leap. It’s more intuitive than anything else. I can feel when change is necessary, and when the timing is right.

That’s not particularly great advice is it? But that’s how it is for me. It’s not well-reasoned or deeply thought out. I don’t prepare for weeks in advance, at least not consciously. It is very much about intuition. And when I trust it, I’ve never regretted the choice.

If you would like to find out more about Christina you can visit her website and/or follow her on Twitter, or sign up to her lovely newsletter here.

GIVEAWAY!

THE PRIZE: Christina is giving away a signed copy of her beautiful book ‘A Field Guide To Now: Notes on Mindfulness and Life in the Present Tense’

TO ENTER: To enter, please leave a comment below sharing which part of Christina’s interview resonated with you the most, and why you could benefit from Christina’s book. Please be sure to include your full name and country of residence in your comment.

DEADLINE: The deadline is 9am PST / 12 noon EST / 5pm GMT on Tuesday July 2. Any comments left after this time will not be considered.  THIS GIVEAWAY IS NOW CLOSED. THANK YOU TO EVERYONE WHO ENTERED. THE WINNER HAS BEEN ANNOUNCED HERE!

SMALL PRINT: There will be one winner who will be chosen from the entries after the deadline, and announced on this blog shortly afterward. The competition is open to anyone over 18 anywhere in the world (shipping will be covered). There is no cash alternative. Our decision on the winner is final and no correspondence will be entered into.

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AND THE WINNER OF LAST WEEK’S GIVEAWAY OF A HANDCRAFTED CLOCK IS…

Rachel Littlewood!

Congratulations Rachel. We will be in touch to arrange for your clock to be delivered! We hope you love having it in your home.

Honeymoon (4): Borgo Santo Pietro

Continuing the story of our dreamy honeymoon (which seems like a long time ago now, even though it was only in April)…

Honeymoon - Borgo Santo Pietro

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We spent three blissful days at Borgo Santo Pietro, a stunning Italian villa in the Tuscan countryside, which turns out to have been awarded ‘Best Boutique Hotel in the World’ in 2012! I am not surprised – it felt like you were staying at a rich friend’s gorgeous country home. It is hard to find words to describe this place, so I will let the pictures do the talking.

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This chandelier was in the toilet!

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One night the kitchen was doing a special Tuscan dinner, but we had already sampled so much rich food we decided to opt for something more simple in their outdoor bar (in the picture above). And as everyone else was at the dinner, we ended up with the whole place to ourselves, with our own personal barman, a roaring log fire and deep comfy sofas to chill in as we sampled the best the local vineyard had to offer. We talked long into the night about the shared life we have ahead of us, and I think it was actually my favourite night of the whole honeymoon.

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Although the days were warm, the nights were chilly, so we spent a fair bit of time by the log fires inside the house too – so cosy.

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Such a special place…

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You can read my other honeymoon posts here: (1) Florence / (2) Castel Monastero / (3) Winetasting in Tuscany / (4) Borgo Santo Pietro / (5) Pasta masterclass / (6) Pisa and home

Global Talent Search winner to get Mini Collection with Robert Kaufman Fabrics!

Drum roll please… The winner of the Global Talent Search will not only be represented by Lilla Rogers Studio, but will win a Mini Collection license with Robert Kaufman Fabrics (and a host of other prizes!)

Global Talent Search winner to get Mini Collection with Robert Kaufman Fabrics! Unknown 1

The Mini Collection with Robert Kaufman Fabrics will feature 2-4 designs with 2 colorways per design. The winner will collaborate with a Senior Stylist assigned by the Robert Kaufman Studio, who will personally guide them through all processes involved to produce and market their work on fabric. The details of the license, including royalties, will be negotiated by Lilla Rogers Studio on behalf of the winner.

Registration for the Global Talent Search closes TOMORROW! If you have not yet registered, what are you waiting for? This is an incredible opportunity and someone has to win – it might just be YOU! Find out more and register here (PLEASE NOTE 2013’S GLOBAL TALENT SEARCH IS OVER. FOR INFORMATION ABOUT THE WINNER SEE HERE.) 

Global Talent Search winner to get license with Paperchase!

We are bursting with excitement to reveal unveil another fantastic prize for the winner of the Global Talent Search (registration closes this Wednesday June 26)… (PLEASE NOTE 2013’S GLOBAL TALENT SEARCH IS NOW OVER.) 

Global Talent Search winner to get license with Paperchase! Paperchase

The talented winner will win a license for a journal cover with gorgeous stationery chain Paperchase!! ( LOVE this shop). The details of the license, including royalties, will be negotiated by Lilla Rogers Studio on behalf of the winner.

Global Talent Search winner to get license with Paperchase! Screen .hot 2017 05 10 at 11.48.31

Image via Paperchase website

Find out more about Paperchase on their website here.

How amazing? If you haven’t yet thrown your hat into the ring for the Global Talent Search, why not? Someone has to win and it might just be you! Register here by June 26 to be in with a chance of winning this career-changing prize! (PLEASE NOTE THE WINNER HAS NOW BEEN ANNOUNCED. SEE HERE FOR DETAILS).