PLAYFULNESS + CURIOSITY Page 5 of 20

Collecting moments

Our next Do What You Love e-course is starting in June, and over the next few weeks we’ll be offering you a taste of what’s to come. During the course, you’ll be asked to go out with your camera and take pictures of things that put a smile on your face or a spring in your step, before turning those pictures into a mosaic or collage for safekeeping. Since this is one of Vickie’s favourite exercises from the course, we asked her to share her experience of it with you.


“I love to go exploring with my camera (these days it’s with my phone) and I have become a fan of Instagram over the past couple of years. You just can’t take a bad picture with Instagram. Editing the picture and adding those filters and effects are all part of the fun; they are a great way to capture the mood of that specific moment even better.

This exercise reminded me of how much I love taking pictures, and whatever I do in the future I want photography to be a part of it somehow.

Taking pictures is much more than just gathering memories, and the process is as important to me as the final picture.

  • It allows you to be more observant of what’s around you as you look for the perfect shot
  • It makes you think about light and contrast, colour and movement and you might find that you’re more creative than you thought
  • It allows you to live in the moment, be focused on what is happening here and now
  • It gives you an excuse to wander off the beaten track and explore places you wouldn’t go if you were just walking around. You’re not a random wanderer, you are a photographer on a mission!
  • It surprises you when you look back at your pictures that you have developed a style of your own – it makes you feel proud
  • It makes you think about what you are drawn to, what you like and which moments are important to you

Small moments, big wonders

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My mosaic is about freedom, wonderment, sharing and playfulness. From top left and clockwise:

1/ Spring has arrived in Brighton and I love to feel the heat as I walk along the street. Feeling the sun on my face makes me smile and want to spend more time exploring outdoors. It makes me feel braver, as if I don’t need any protection anymore, I am free with my movements and choices.

2/ I am lucky enough to live by the sea, one of my favourite environments. My office is close to the seafront and I can pop out whenever I need a break. The sea is always there but it never looks the same. It makes me feel refreshed and full of new possibilities. When I go back to the office, it’s always with a new idea or solution in my head.

3/ Sharing afternoon tea with a friend I hadn’t seen for a long time. A lot of my friends live abroad and people sometimes ask me if I miss them. I don’t. I love the idea that there are people scattered around the world with whom I have a special connection. Just knowing that they are there is often enough. Meeting up after several months, years sometimes, and getting along as if we only last saw each other the other day – those are always magical moments. 

4/ I got these vintage roller skates second hand and just looking at them makes me smile. This is something I used to love doing as a kid and hadn’t done since then. I recently had to go to a specific location for work and decided to skate there to make the ride more interesting. Well I wasn’t disappointed! Although I did have muscle cramps the next day (and a bruise on my left thigh), it was totally worth it!

5/ Every year during the winter hundreds of thousands of starlings gather around Brighton pier in the evenings to roost. It’s completely mesmerizing to watch them dance around the pier in the sunset. It is one of those wonders of nature that you watch in awe without completely understanding what’s going on. 

6/ The month of May in Brighton is festival time. Streets and venues fill up with artists, musicians, comedians and it’s not rare to bump into tightrope walkers or even cowboys on a street corner! This was a man making giant soap bubbles. Soap and water. That’s all it took for kids and adults alike to let go ooohs and aaaahs as the bubbles danced into the wind and popped silently over our heads.”

Victoria (@vickieinwonderland)


The Do What You Love e-course will encourage you to explore in so many ways. We believe that knowing ourselves and our environment is key to having the confidence to achieve big things.

I was and continue to be floored by this course – it was so valuable. I felt like it helped me focus on me, my interests, my desires, and what was holding me back from those things. I was more painfully honest with myself than I have been in years, but I also allowed myself to play more than ever. Since joining the course, I’ve blossomed into a new person. I feel like the course will continue working its magic for ages. It has a killer curriculum covering all the bases. I’m so absolutely pleased I chose this as a way to start turning my life around.” Course participant

Join us this June for the adventure of a lifetime.

On foot through India

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Alastair Humphries

 

This is a guest post by adventurer, author and motivational speaker Alastair Humphreys. Find out more about Alastair here.

 “I could walk to anywhere on Earth from here, if only I choose to make the time. The road is free and open and waiting.”

If you love the Beatles, at some point in your life you will have to visit Liverpool. Elvis fans have Graceland. Baseball has the Yankee Stadium. And, if you love travel and are curious about the world, then you need to experience India before you die.

I call myself an “Adventurer” and a “Travel Writer”. I had visited almost half the countries on Earth. But I had never been to India.

That needed to change.

Alastair Humphries INDIA 2

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May’s happy list is here!

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May's happy list is here! Library at Anthro HQ e1430423181837On my happy list this month: feeling inspired by nature and magazines galore in this gorgeous little library at Anthropologie HQ, Philadelphia

Each month we share a free ‘happy list’ as a place for you to capture the things – big or small – that have made you smile each day.

Download your happy list here.

Wishing you a marvellous May,

Rachel

Add more play to your day today!

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The Do What You Love team is off to cookery school! We can’t wait to learn new skills and enjoy the process of creating (and of course, eating!) our delicious three-course meals.

How are you going to play today? This week? And at the weekend?

Whatever you do, have fun and enjoy!

Creating magic

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Last week we went up to London for a very special show in the West End – Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, by Roald Dahl. It is one of my favourite books from childhood, and Sam Mendes’ version was a feast for the eyes, full of mystery and surprises, all bound together by a delightful story. There were exploding potions, flying elevators, rivers of chocolate and even some breakdancing. The stage came alive with colour, motion and magic.

Roald Dahl was an absolute genius at capturing the things that fascinate and delight children and adults alike.  From rude noises and naughty characters, to worlds of sweets, and retribution for nasty adults, he captured it all. I met him once, when I was about 8. I queued up for hours at a book fair to get his autograph on my copy of The BFG. When I got to the front of the queue I couldn’t help but stare at this old man, who had a twinkle in his eye and a pocket full of crazy ideas. If he was still alive and I had the chance to meet him again, I’d ask him where he got his inspiration from.

Apparently Roald Dahl wrote most of his books in a shed at the end of his garden, which shows you don’t need to travel far, spend much or do complicated things to get inspired. If he could create dreamcatching giants, square-footed witches, everlasting gobstoppers and a giant peach from inside a hut furnished with a brown chair, tartan rug, small wooden desk and a waste paper basket, surely each of us can conjour up magic wherever we are too.

Here’s another example of simple creativity – just loved seeing how this inventive couple have made November completely magical for their children (when they make the toy dinosaurs come alive…)

I’m all for making your space imaginative, for trying new things, and going off on adventures to get inspired. But sometimes arranging that space, getting round to doing things, or planning a trip can give way to procrastination and excuses. So this week why not take a leaf out of one of Roald Dahl’s swizfiggling books and find a way to inspire yourself right where you are, with what you have now. And be sure to tell us about it on Facebook or Twitter!

Happy Monday!

Kari Chapin creative bundle giveaway winner announced

Thank you to everyone who entered this giveaway to win signed copies of two of Kari Chapin’s bestselling books, and six months’ membership of her creative community. The winner is:

Joanne Heying

Congratulations Joanne! We can tell from your entry just how valuable this prize will be to you and we wish you luck with your new handmade business. We will be in touch shortly by email with details of your prize.

An in case you missed our revealing interview with Kari, you can read it here!

Life according to Mr. K – Finding inspiration

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I had a chuckle with myself recently. This month’s theme is ‘Love to Create’ and ever since I have been devoid of all and any ideas. The irony!!!! What a time for writer’s block. The most creative thing I have managed this week is rustling up an ad-hoc meal with whatever ingredients there were left in the cupboard.

This actually did get me thinking about this topic from a very different perspective. It raises an interesting point about inspiration and what gets our creative juices flowing. I also think it is really important to consider what affects our creativity when as children we were often overwhelmed by our imagination and possibilities… in many cases making the impossible very possible!

We live in a world of technological advancements that would have been considered science fiction not too many moons ago. We are surrounded by huge achievements of engineering, art, literature, technology, science and architecture to name but a few.

Yet I would argue that our world – and more particularly our society – restricts and dampens our imagination. We are conditioned into processes and procedures, and bound by rules. We have our bubbles burst by doubters. We are hampered by the very people who we need inspiring the most. But it only takes one person to show the way.

Do we lack the courage and conviction to follow through with our ideas?

To create is not a whimsical philosophy. It takes courage, as Beth shared in this post, and as I will talk more about next week. It also requires inspiration.

Mother Nature is a constant reminder of what can be created and achieved, ‘life’ being the greatest example. Birds taking flight long before Bernoulli translated it into a mathematical formula. Nests, warrens and dams providing evidence of sustainable construction. It is all around us. We just need to look.

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Thought for the week (28): When I was young…

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When I was young I wrote stories about princesses and castles and faraway lands.

When I was young I used to make up plays and spend hours on my rickety old typewriter, typing up copies of play scripts for my friends. We had carbon paper and tippex on little sheets of paper back then, and I typed with two chubby fingers. I used to direct my friends in the plays, and suspect I may have been a little bossy.

When I was young I loved damming streams, and building dens in the woods, inventing pretend lives for the people whose castoffs we found dumped amongst the trees.

When I was young I remember making a pinhole camera and being fascinated by the blurry images that transpired.

When I was young I spent hours in the darkroom my dad built in our garage, watching in awe as photographic images magically emerged as I sloshed around the trays in front of me.

When I was young I had a calligraphy obsession, and would write swirly words over and over with pointy nibs and Indian ink from a tiny little pot. I even did a demonstration on The Children’s Channel when I was about 10 years old.

When I was young I used to love baking cakes and licking the bowl (and spoon).

When I was young I used to keep a scrapbook every holiday, sharing weird details like what I had eaten for lunch, or what joke my older brother had told me. I stuck everything in – train tickets, postcards, sweet wrappers – and always cut out a pretty header from coloured paper, or drew all over the page.

When I was young I made everyone’s birthday card by hand, with a fistful of glitter and big fat pens. And you should see the state of some of the Christmas tree decorations I persuaded my parents to hang on the tree.

When I was young I was creative without thinking about it. I was free to cut and stick and glue and write and make stuff up and have fun with it all, without being worried about the end result.

When I was young creativity was part of my every day life. Then I grew up, and academia and work took over. It took me many years to find my way back to the creative child inside.

How about you? What were you like as a child? In what ways were you creative? Have you managed to hold onto that? Do you feel differently when you go to create something now? Judged? Pressured? Worried about what it will look or sound like? Concerned about what other people will think?

This month is ‘Love to create’ month on Do What You Love, and we want to inspire you in many ways to JUST CREATE. Whether your medium is drawing, painting, writing, poetry, photography, storytelling, or even creative thinking, we want to encourage you to dive in, get messy and create more for the world to enjoy.

We’d love to hear your creative childhood stories – share them with us on Facebook or Twitter.

Happy creating!

Beth and the team x