Showing posts with label Venture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Venture. Show all posts

September 07, 2011

Revolutions


Revolving. 

It is really helpful to know what it is you revolve around.

• What do you revolve around?

It is possible to define certain axes – family, friends, people who are at the heart of things; beliefs which move you to action in the first place; dreams that stretch your heart out to horizon places. Revolve around the thoughts that you always have when you walk in a certain place; a prayer you say every day. Revolve around what you know of yourself, in the space you create so as to be yourself. Revolve around patience and kindness for yourself and your slowness to settle, and around love for the gentle others that give you shelter to wrestle whatever has come up on the journey. Revolve around a routine.

Necessary axes stop the wheel working itself off the cart. Revolving around these, you recall why you agreed to an adventure in the first place.


And there are also revolutions

• What revolves around you, cropping up time and again?

As you revolve, what things in your life come around with some frequency? A wise old chap once described the spiritual journey for me not as a straight line, but as an upwards curling spiral. You can expect to arrive at familiar points in life where the same issues or themes seem to crop up, but you have grown in the meantime so you have new perspective. Pay attention to these themes while they roll around with you. They exist to shape you up in a unique way and build your particular character, as you were made to be. That's what the wise old man suggested anyway.


And then there is breakthrough revolution. This is all about life appearing where there seemed to be none. 

• Where do you see breakthrough?

These children playing and smiling – knowing where they have come from, this is good breakthrough. In Peru, revolution looks like happy kids. They are safe, and get to revolve around loving people, steady routines of meals, singing lessons and playtimes. Those smiles are what keep the loving people going in their tough work. 

Home again after a huge and beautiful adventure, these stories are amongst the things I revolve around too. And of course, because the whole thing has sent my head and heart into a spin, I'm going around the revolutions with nearest and dearest who were there when the wheel started moving in the first place.

What are your revolutions all about?


{Today's Soundtrack: Me, slightly in loveMy Funny Valentine}

June 03, 2011

Endurance Loving


This summer, I'm travelling to Peru with US charity Venture Expeditions, to work with vulnerable, poverty-stricken communities all over Peru. The plan is to hook up with a project in Lima called Paz Y Esperanza, and I will work with them to document their fantastic work. I'm also running photography workshops with some local kids so as to give them a voice, and hopefully a small foot up out of the desperate injustice that holds them in poverty, able to communicate on another level so they may have their basic needs met.

So far, I have funded the trip myself, but it is an awful lot of money. I still have another £1000 to raise and am looking for sponsorship, and so have committed to doing something totally out of my comfort zone to raise these funds.

(At this point, if you need to read no further, please click this link to Venture Expeditions, select 'Lizzie Everard - Maccu Picchu' from the 'sponsor a participant' drop down list, and follow the prompts to donate. And DO leave a comment so I can thank you!)

However, if you're curious to know more, do read on.



So, outside my comfort zone behaviour, that will be the Endurance Life 'Classic Quarter', just three little weeks away now on June 25th.

"What do you mean, Classic Quarter?" they chorus. 

The Classic Quarter is a brilliant race along a stunning part of the Cornish coastline organised by Endurance Life. 44 miles of cliff-top trail link the UK's most southerly point to the most westerly – Lizard Point to Land's End. It is utterly beautiful, but to run it you have to have rock hard nerves and a screw loose.

My friends James (pictured below) and Andrew (above), built like greyhounds, are running the entire length solo. That will be 44 miles each, up and down near vertical scrambles in places, across white sand on perfect surf beaches, then miles more boggy trail. Convention says will be one of the hottest days of the year. They appear to have more than one screw loose, but they have been practising. JJ here is smiling, yes, but I think he may also be hallucinating at this point of the race:



I—who have also been practising but am not built like a greyhound, rather a well-ripened pear—also appear to have a screw loose because I am running a leg of the race, although in relay, and with excellent team mates Fran and Sonja. For the non-greyhounds among us, running 11 miles (17.5km) on the final leg, the most gruelling stretch, will be  . . . h a r d. This leg has the highest total elevation, steep up and down most of the way. Setting off from Lamorna Cove around 2pm, round past Porthcurno and the Minack Theatre, I hope to finish at Lands End sometime around 4.30pm, give or take. Here's where you come in...

Please, sponsor me for running 11 miles like a dehydrated loon bag on impossible terrain?

I have run a half marathon before, very generously sponsored in aid of Street Children in South Africa. I cannot tell you how much, at times, putting one foot in front of the other relied completely on knowing good money was going to people who needed it. It was one of the most difficult things I have ever done. Now we are ramping it up. Please, dig deep and give generously to this project! 

To sponsor my Classic Quarter run and make the Peru trip happen, please click this link to Venture Expeditions, select 'Lizzie Everard - Maccu Picchu' from the 'sponsor a participant' drop down list, and follow the prompts to donate. And DO leave a comment here so I can follow up and thank you! Venture can itemise who has given what, so I will be able to acknowledge receipt. 

As I have already paid for the flight, if you would like to contribute towards that specifically or to some of the camera equipment I will need, please contact me here. Thank you.

This is going to be the toughest run I've ever done.

On the day itself, please do come and cheer, it is a beautiful part of the world, and if you have an ambulance, bring that too. Land's End is dead easy by car.



{Today's Soundtrack: Golpfrapp - A&E}