CONNECTION + COMMUNICATION Page 19 of 27

Celebratory giveaway winners announced!

Thank you all for the lovely comments about our new website. We have lots more goodness to add over the coming weeks and months, but it is starting to feel like the site we have been planning for a long time. We hope it serves to fuel your dreams and give you the tools you need to keep you on track!

Over 300 people entered our giveaways last week, and it was so hard to pick our winners, but we read every single comment and felt the following people would really benefit from the prizes:

  • The set of books to inspire adventure, curiosity and an appreciation of life goes to: SUSAN BLACK
  • The bundle of creative inspiration (books and magazines!) goes to: VICKY MORSE

If you name is listed above, congratulations! We will be in touch by email shortly with more details about your prize.

Thank you to everyone for entering – we wish you could all win!

Published in Where Women Create Business! (PLUS book bundle giveaway!)

Where Women Create Business magazine COVER

It is always exciting when a magazine drops through the door and you open it to find an article you wrote – and that was certainly the case when I received my copy of Where Women Create Business. This is the second issue of this fantastic magazine from Jo Packham (published by Stampington), which dives into the business wisdom behind some of the most exciting creative businesses out there, run by female entrepreneurs. If you would like a copy, check out our giveaway below!

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Welcome to the all new Do What You Love website!

Welcome to the all new Do What You Love website! dwylhq1

After many months of brainstorming, note making, pondering, prototyping and tea drinking, we are thrilled to unveil our brand new website, designed to help you choose your path and change the world. We will be with you every step of the way.

Originally this site started as a blog, and then we added pages, and courses, and interviews, and all sorts of other bits and pieces, but the company grew faster than the website and it wasn’t a real reflection of who we are and what we do. Hopefully that is much clearer now with the new site, and you will find it much easier to navigate your way to all sorts of resources, advice and encouragement to help you do what you love for life. Please take a moment to start at the beginning – on the home page here – and see how it works for you.

Check out…

  • Our innovative system to help you find what you need to start doing what you love (answer the question here and follow the links to all sorts of resources and advice)
  • Our brand new newsletter ‘Love Mondays!’ designed to get your week off to a great start, and make every week count (If you aren’t on the list already, get on it via the sign up box at the top of the page)
  • Your invitation to take our flagship course ‘Do What You Love‘ (back by popular demand for the first time in over a year!) – now offered as a unique online experience and life change survival kit! Find out more here

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We have big plans for Do What You Love in 2013, including a brand new members’ area coming soon. We are so grateful to you for being part of this extraordinary journey. Stay tuned for more goodness in the coming weeks and months!

In celebration of the launch of the new site, we are doing a week of giveaways (see below) and sharing a brand new free resource ‘Zen for Ten’  a free 10-step guide to help you take steps along the path to doing what you love. This was written during our six-month sabbatical in Japan. Please share it with anyone you think could benefit from it. Get yours HERE.

We want to inspire a movement of people doing what they love, and are committing to help you and others make the tough decisions and big leaps needed to do that, and then to stay inspired and on top of your game once you have done it. If you know of anyone who is stuck, unfulfilled, bored or feeling that there is more to life than what they are doing right now, please point them towards https://dev.dowhatyouloveforlife.com!

It’s your life. Live it!

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(PS Huge thanks to Jo Klima at The Darling Tree for all her work on our new site!)

GIVEAWAY!

All this week we are giving away cool prizes here on the blog to celebrate the launch of our new site. You can enter as many of the giveaways as you like – just pop back to the blog each day to enter:

Today’s giveaway PRIZE: Win a FREE PLACE on the Do What You Love e-course (starts October) worth GBP £109

TO ENTER: Take a look at the course description here and then pop back and leave a comment below explaining where you are in your journey right now and why the Do What You Love e-course would really benefit you at this point. Please be sure to include your full name and country in your comment. Then share a link to this giveaway on Facebook or Twitter including the words @DoWhatYouLoveXx #dowhatyoulove

DEADLINE: This giveaway will close at 12 noon GMT on Tuesday 13 August 2013. Any comments left after then will not be counted.  **THIS GIVEAWAY IS NOW CLOSED. THANK YOU TO EVERYONE WHO ENTERED. FIND OUT WHO THE WINNERS ARE HERE**

THE 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. There is no cash alternative. Our decision on the winner is final and no correspondence will be entered into. By entering you agree for your email address to be added to our mailing list but you can unsubscribe at any time.

Do What You Love Interview – Cathy Kirwan

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Cathy Kirwan is an explorer. She has lived a life of adventure and discovery including multiple career incarnations as a youth and community development worker, an artist, a cook, a camp counsellor, a writer and most recently a fundraiser.  She is a firm believer in our shared humanity and is passionate about human rights.  She very much hopes that her actions will make the world a better place.  She loves to travel, cook, ride her bike, and is blessed to share her life with her partner of 13 years and two wonderful fur peeps.

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

Right now I’m working in a human rights organisation as the Manager of Individual and Corporate Giving.  Australia is going through a complex political time, where our humanity is being called into question over the treatment of people seeking asylum in our country.  The organisation I work for is focused on supporting asylum seekers who are living in absolute poverty and desperation and ensuring that they are able to survive whilst applying for protection.  My role is all about creating opportunities for individuals and business to make a difference in the daily lives of people who are suffering.

2. What did you do before this?

I have had all sorts of jobs throughout the last 20 years, never quite finding the ‘thing’ that really seemed to fit.  I originally trained to be a youth worker and most of my career has been in the not-for-profit space.  About 5 years ago I took up painting and thought that I had found my true calling.  Prior to this year I spent the last couple of years completely focused on developing my career as an artist.

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3. What kind of discoveries about yourself have allowed you to realise your passion in life?

Last year I had an epiphany.  I was working for myself, trying to making a living full time from my art.  Over the course of a couple of months it dawned on me that I was completely miserable.  I wasn’t making any real progress with my artistic business and I felt extremely isolated and uninspired.  Not to mention that fact that I was broke.  I knew that something was missing from my life.

Over the course of a couple of months I discovered a number of things about myself that ultimately led me to where I am now.  The first thing I realised is that I need to feel like my actions make a difference.  While I’m passionate about art and truly believe in it’s value to the world, the idea that my art was changing the world or making it a better place always felt a bit tenuous.  It never quite sat with me.  I always felt like there was something missing in terms of my contribution to the world.  I knew in my gut that I was meant to be out there in the world working with others to make the world a better place, not sitting in my studio by myself making beautiful paintings.

The second thing I realised is that I hated not having a regular income.  Some people seem to be ok with the financial lumps and bumps that come with being in business for yourself.  It never worked for me and was actually a major cause of stress and subsequently a major barrier to feeling motivated and inspired.

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4. How did you make it happen?

Around the same time I was realising these things about myself I attended a workshop facilitated by Jennifer McCrea of Exponential Fundraising https://jennifermccrea.com/.  At the time I was doing some part-time work in fundraising just to pay the bills.  Jennifer’s passion for fundraising and her conviction about it being a means to make the world a better place completely inspired me.  The penny dropped.  I understood that fundraising isn’t about money, it’s about connecting people and resources in order to achieve action or change. I realised that I had the perfect opportunity to use my skills in fundraising and relationship management to make a meaningful contribution.  And I also realised that I had to find work that I felt passionate about and that would fulfil me.  Not long after that I saw the position at the Asylum Seeker Resource Centre advertised and that’s where I’m working now.

5. What was your biggest challenge and how did you overcome it?

My biggest challenge was overcoming my personal sense of failure around my business.  I invested a huge amount of time, energy, money and my heart and soul into establishing myself as an artist.  My whole identity was tied to the idea of being a successful artist and making a living from my creative work.  It was extremely difficult to walk away from.  Even 6 months down the track I still haven’t completely found peace with letting go, despite the fact that I love where I work and what I’m doing.  I think it’s just going to take time.  And I’m still an artist too, even though I’m not trying to make a living from it.  That’s something that I have to remind myself of as well.

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6. Who is your role model and why?

I don’t have a particular role model but I am very fortunate to be surrounded by some amazing people who inspire me everyday.  In my workplace there are so many people who work tirelessly to improve things for asylum seekers.  I’m inspired by their tenacity and persistence in the face of a great deal of adversity.

In my personal life I’m really inspired by a handful of incredibly smart, hard-working women who have really helped me to see my own strengths and who are always there to encourage, listen and lift me up.  I’d be lost without them.

I’m in awe of people who make great personal sacrifices to improve the lives of others.  It’s something I think about a lot, but I’m not sure that I could go that far and give up my own life.

And I have absolutely respect and admiration for anyone who runs their own business (including our very own Beth) with passion, purpose and persistence, because I know exactly how much hard work it is.

7. What is the best advice you have received?

The best piece of advice I was ever given was many years ago.  I was going through a rough time in my 20s and a friend’s mum said “in 12 months time your life will be completely different.  These things that are worrying you now won’t even matter.”  And it was true.  Within 12 months my life was in a completely different place.  Whenever things are crappy or I’m struggling with change I always remind myself of this.  Nothing is forever.

8. What keeps you awake at night?

The thing that truly troubles me and keeps me awake at night is the lack of political leadership in Australia and the lack of integrity in the media.  The combination of these two things is having a significant impact on our country at the moment and it concerns me deeply.

9. What gets you up in the morning?

Coffee!

10. Finally, what do you think is the key to discovery?

I think curiosity and a child-like fascination with the world are the keys to discovery.  I’ve never stopped being curious and wanting to know ‘why’ and I owe most of my success and adventures in life to this.  It’s also been a direct contributor to my current career as it’s my interest in people that makes me good at what I do.

If you would like to find out more about Cathy you can visit her website, or follow her on Flickr. If you would like to find out more about her current work and the work done by The Asylum Seeker Resource Centre you can go to their Facebook page.

Our very own MOYO magazine has been viewed by over 1 million people!

We are so excited to share the news that our free design magazine MOYO has been viewed by over 1 MILLION people! As we are busy working behind the scenes on our anniversary issue (due out in late August), we just wanted to take a moment to thank everyone who has helped make MOYO – the world’s first magazine dedicated to surface pattern design – such a roaring success! We look forward to bringing you more inspiration, business advice and opportunities to showcase your design work over the coming months. In the meantime, if you have missed any of our previous issues, check them out here:

Moyo Issue 1


Moyo Issue 2
Moyo Issue 3

Moyo Issue 4

Life According to Mr.K – Love to Discover (2)

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Nihon to Nihongo (On Japan and the Japanese language)

On arriving in Japan our first journey was to travel several hundred miles north from Tokyo on the overnight bus to Yamagata. My first discovery was that I was no longer a crazy student prepared to rough it to save a few quid, and the cheap option of the overnight bus was not proving a good decision! They are not designed for men in their 30s over 6 foot tall.

Yamagata is a prefecture located in the northerly Tōhoku region on Honshu Island. It borders the Miyagi region, which suffered a horrendous ordeal during the 2011 Asian Tsunami.

We arrived around 6am to be met by freezing temperatures and about a foot of snow. Had we packed right? My flip-flops and shorts were not providing much comfort at this point. Luckily we were welcomed in Yamagata by old friends, who quickly made us feel at home.

The reason we had journeyed North to Yamagata was to meet Kyoko and Adachi-san. They had been a couple that Beth had spent a year living with when she worked in Japan. (If she ever decides to write a book it will certainly blow your mind). Life’s accidental twists and turns can be both so brutal and beautiful. They are very close to this day more than 13 years later.

I remember Adachi-san telling me that his favourite part of the day was returning from work, opening a can of lager and watching the football. He was an avid Yamagata Montedio (J2 team) fan. I was discovering that life really wasn’t much different on the other side of the world!

For me, most importantly they were Beth’s friends, great hosts and I could not have asked for a better start to my new adventure. Oh, and they spoke good eigo (English) as well, which helped. Today I am honoured to call them my friends too.

But then things started to get a whole lot trickier when we left the comfort of their home and headed out into the big wide world in Kyoto…

….Arriving in Kyoto

“The beginning of knowledge is the discovery of something we do not understand.” – Frank Herbert

For those of you who have never been to Japan, I cannot recommend a more beautiful or diverse place. It is a wonderful experience. However, it isn’t without its fear factor, mainly the language. I was not expecting the impact being essentially illiterate would have on me.

I am ashamed to say that in the first couple of weeks in Kyoto I wanted to find the quickest exit out (but couldn’t read the signs…) I was completely overwhelmed by road signs, menus, instructions and advice in a language so different to our Roman alphabet that it could be left by an alien race.

I could not believe how dependent I became on Beth. A new start was all well and good but I felt like a child again, unable to fend for myself, and I did not like it. I could not wait for school to begin so I could start to get to grips with the language.

We arrived in Kyoto and settled into our new apartment quickly. It didn’t take long to furnish our 12 square metres. A small rice cooker, two bowls and some chopsticks, done!

I had two weeks to get accustomed to my new surroundings before school was to start. Right then. What was I going to do now I have all this free time? I sat for minutes in front of Google thinking what should I type in and then I suddenly realized that I should get up and go outside! Why did I think I was going to find my answers generated by a search engine? What was I thinking? I don’t even like computers that much.

I soon discovered all the simple pleasures that Kyoto had to offer and there were plenty. Bike riding through the temples (in fact cycling anywhere), exploring weird and wonderful places, exercising by the river, reading, cafes and restaurants, onigiris (rice balls stuffed with things like tuna and wrapped in seaweed), Starbuck’s caramel frappucinos (a new one for me) and most importantly loads of free time!

“The real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking new landscapes but in having new eyes.” – Marcel Proust 

One of the beauties of Kyoto was getting under its skin and understanding Japanese life (which can take time).  Kyoto was a maze of streets consisting of houses, restaurants, shops and cafes.

Peeking behind the norens offers a world of discovery as you find small family businesses tucked away in wooden buildings selling everything from calligraphy brushes to kimonos to pots and pans.

 “You can discover more about a person in an hour of play than in a year of conversation.” – Plato

One particular Friday afternoon will always stay in my mind. School had just finished, the heavens had opened and the rain was cascading down the busy rooves. I took off my trainers, placed them in my bag and set off home on my bike, barefoot. Within seconds I was soaked. The ride lasted approximately 20 minutes. I loved every single moment of it.

I felt cool, alive, young and free. At the few places along the route where I had to stop for traffic lights, feeling the warm tarmac under my bare feet was very relaxing and such a unique feeling.

We can’t feel like this all the time but we have to give our lives the opportunity to present such experiences. It was Kyoto in all of her majesty. The rain felt purifying as if it was washing away every care and worry I may have had. I spent the whole journey just laughing out loud all on my own. I felt like a ten year old playing outside. Priceless!

When was the last time you discovered your inner child?

Today just do something just for fun. You might enjoy it, and perhaps find out something new about yourself!

Until next time…

Mr K

Life According To Mr. K – Love to Discover (1)

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Six years ago, without even knowing it, I was completely lost.  My career was going OK, but I had stopped dreaming and I had little to no ambition. I seemed to live only for weekends with the boys and a few holidays dotted throughout the year. Looking back I can see that I had everything the wrong way round.

Then a girl walked into my life and changed everything. Beth was to become my saviour, my purpose and my direction. It sounds dramatic but it is true. She reignited my passion for life. Little did I know it right then, but life was about to get a whole lot more interesting!

“Man cannot discover new oceans unless he has the courage to lose sight of the shore.” – Andre Gide

I have written on this blog before about our sabbatical in Japan last year. The decision to go was certainly one, which became the catalyst for huge change and even greater self-discovery.

We primarily found ourselves in Japan because Beth loves the place, the culture, the language and the people. And she is the most important thing in my life so not to share this passion would have been like not acknowledging a part of her.

My initial motivation for going had been to share in this love, to experience all the things she held close to her heart and hopefully, somewhere along the line, pick up a bit of the lingo. I needed to communicate with her friends better than just politely smiling and nodding my head. And to be honest, I couldn’t wait for six months off work.

But in the end it became something much more significant than that. The extended time away from home and work also became an opportunity to ask myself a lot of questions that I had never dared ask before.

I remember sitting on the banks of the Kamogawa River and taking my notebook out of my very masculine bicycle basket. I opened it up and then just sat there, pencil primed for what seemed like an eternity until I started to write. I think the pause was more to do with being flooded with ideas. It took a while to filter through the waterfall of cascading thoughts and focus on the moment. What was on my mind now? This is what I wrote:

Who am I, Where am I

  • 35 years old
  • OK job
  • Great girlfriend (I hadn’t proposed at that point!)
  • Own a bit of property (as well as you can own something with a considerable mortgage attached)
  • A beautiful home
  • Happy? Content?

When I was 12, is this how I imagined it would be at 35?

No, not unless astronauts trained in Kyoto!

I then started to write down as many honest thoughts regarding myself as I could bear to admit:

  •  Years of cruising around in second gear. Always just doing enough (whatever that now meant)
  • Feeding my social laddish side
  • But what about me, what about the boy before the alcohol and girls? What was I doing back then? I remember being interested. I remember asking question after question.
  • Have I changed so much? More importantly do I care?

“Sometimes the best way to figure out who you are is to get to that place where you don’t have to be anything else.” – Unknown

Without doubt I am blessed with great family and friends. But there is more to it than that. I needed to answer the questions…

  • Who am I?
  • Where am I?

These are deceptively simple questions and I was really struggling to answer them.

My thoughts went automatically to sport and more specifically football (soccer), but what about ME? How was I going to make myself feel proud?

I decided to look back to my earlier childhood before sport became all encompassing. This took many chats, coffees, beers, runs, bike rides and lots of listening to music. It is amazing what can provoke memories and what you actually forgot you used to do. Isn’t it strange that to move forwards more often than not you have to look backwards?

 “You will recognize your own path when you come upon it, because you will suddenly have all the energy and imagination you will ever need.”  Jerry Gillies

I decided to start by getting myself really fit and healthy. This was an aspect of my life that has always been a form of salvation for me. But ever since I turned 30 I had been in denial. My body doesn’t respond and recover as fast as it did in my 20s and I soon realized I needed to sacrifice a little bit more than I used to in this quest. I definitely struggle to enjoy everything around me if I do not feel good in myself. This was actually my first recognition of who I am as an individual. And getting fit again was an important first step on the road to doing what I love.

How about you? Who are you? Where you thought you would be? Have you thought about this lately? It would be great to hear about your journey too.

Until next time…

Mr K

Do What You Love interview – Mandy Henry

Do What You Love interview - Mandy Henry thebiginterview

Today’s interview is Mandy Henry, who I first met when she interviewed me for television! That was nearly 10 years ago, back in 2004 when I worked at UNICEF and the Asian Tsunami struck. As a full time presenter at MUTV (Manchester United television), she and her team did a brilliant job helping us create a high profile appeal with the Manchester United first team players to raise emergency funds from the fans.

We have stayed in touch ever since, and some time back Mandy took the Do What You Love e-course at a time when she was getting itchy feet in her job. It was clear that TV presenting is something that Mandy is brilliant at, and loves, but the way the job worked wasn’t working for her.

Today Mandy shares how she made the leap into freelance presenting, to allow her to stay doing what she loves, but in a way which suits her lifestyle, and talks about what she has discovered along the way. – Beth

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Goodbye Orchard House

Orchard House farewell

Dear Orchard House,

It is with a little sadness that I write this goodbye letter, as you have been such a good friend these past three years. You have provided us with a cosy home, spaces to live, work and play, a relaxing sanctuary, walls filled with laughter and three happy Christmases. Today we are moving on to live near the sea and will miss you. If we could put you on the back of a lorry and drive you to Brighton we would, but English houses aren’t built that way…

You look a little empty with all our things removed from every room, but soon you will be filled again with new furniture, new people, new laughter.

Since we bought you we have grown a business, got engaged, married and pregnant, hosted many friends and some fun parties in the garden, made plans, decorated and redecorated, cooked many roast dinners and had many adventures. Thank you for your part in that.

Every home is a piece of our story, and you are no exception. We hope your new residents will be as happy as we have been.

Xx

So very happy… (BIG news!)

And just when we thought this year couldn’t get any better…

Baby 12 weeks - scan

… we discover we are having a baby! Life will never be the same and we couldn’t be happier. This feels like the most important adventure of our lives – 17 weeks and counting. It is hard to put into words what it feels like knowing there is a little person growing and developing in there. We love this little baby so much already!

The baby’s due date is December 11, which means it will be a Christmas baby. Our favourite time of year just got even more special…

This is a completely unknown world to us and we know we have so much to learn.

If you have children how did you feel when you found out?  And what is your best advice for nurturing a happy baby? We’d love to know!